At the end of November, Eric Trump showed a wave of hardcore content on his personal social account - the Mining Farm his American Bitcoin company set up in Texas.
This Mining Farm is not small. With 35,000 liquid-cooled servers operating around the clock to mine Bitcoin, it also provides security maintenance for the network. It uses local energy from the United States, making it truly localized operation.
According to the data they released, this Mining Farm extracts a certain proportion of the global daily Bitcoin production. The electricity resources in Texas are abundant, and with liquid cooling technology controlling costs, it seems this combination strategy is quite stable.
In mining, equipment, electricity costs, and computing power all involve money. The ability to manage funds and resources on such a large scale is evident.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
24 Likes
Reward
24
10
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
StakeOrRegret
· 2h ago
Wow, 35,000 units? The amount of funds must be terrifying.
---
It's true that electricity is cheap in Texas, but at this scale... how many political connections would be needed?
---
Liquid cooling technology to reduce costs? I feel like the key still lies in that trump card behind...
---
Bitcoin mining is just a money-burning game; you need a constant stream of investors.
---
So, in the end, mining is really about who has the deepest pockets, right?
---
A certain proportion of global daily production? This sounds so vague... what are the specific numbers?
---
Domestic energy in the U.S. + big capital = monopoly? I've seen this script before.
---
How much does it cost to maintain 35,000 servers daily? That's the real cost.
---
In short, having money and power makes things easier; what do other miners rely on?
---
Texas has become the new Silicon Valley for Bitcoin...
View OriginalReply0
JustAnotherWallet
· 8h ago
35,000 liquid-cooled servers? Backed by Texas power, this setup is indeed aggressive.
---
Local Mining Farms account for such a large proportion of global daily output, the ability to attract capital is outrageous.
---
Mining is a money-burning game, and very few can play at this scale.
---
Texas power is cheap and they want to monopolize? The crypto world is too deep.
---
The cost control in liquid cooling technology is indeed a skill, but what about the energy consumption pressure?
---
Family business crossing into Mining, the joy of resource integration is something others can't experience.
---
I just want to know how the ROI cycle of this Mining Farm is calculated.
---
35,000 units? Big scale is one thing, how is risk management handled?
---
The local energy narrative in the US sounds smooth, but how's the actual competitiveness?
View OriginalReply0
MEVHunterNoLoss
· 17h ago
Electricity is cheap over there in Texas, I've already seen through this game.
---
35,000 machines, how much electricity does that cost... this is the real money.
---
Liquid cooling technology reduces costs, the Trump family really has something with this hand.
---
A certain percentage of global daily production? This data seems a bit vague, is it true or false?
---
Domestic mining in the U.S., the backers are definitely not lacking, that's how capital works.
---
Wait, does a mining farm of this scale operate like this every day? Won't the electricity costs eat into the profits?
---
Trump is getting into mining, it really feels like U.S. policies are genuinely leaning that way.
---
Texas has abundant energy + liquid cooling technology, it's truly a perfect match, this location choice is spot on.
---
To put it bluntly, it's still about burning money, a game for the rich.
---
Computing power is all about the thickness of capital, it's easy to see.
View OriginalReply0
ForkLibertarian
· 11-30 03:32
Texas's approach is indeed fierce, the combination of liquid cooling and local energy has left me a bit stunned.
With 35,000 servers at this scale, how much would the electricity cost in a day... Just thinking about it feels like burning money.
Speaking of which, the Trump family dares to do anything, and this time they're directly entering mining, which is quite bold.
The safety maintenance aspect of the Mining Farm is somewhat interesting; is it like working for the Bitcoin network?
With so many slots available, the scale of capital behind it is evident, so ordinary people should not even think about it.
The industry knows that liquid cooling technology reduces costs, but very few truly dare to roll it out on a large scale.
They directly benchmark against global daily production, while we retail investors are digging for what...
This is the game of capital; only those with money and land can play, we can just watch the excitement.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropNinja
· 11-29 04:30
I am a master of getting things for free, and my comments are as follows:
Electricity is cheap in Texas, this business can indeed make a profit.
35,000 units? How much electricity bill would that burn? But I heard that electricity in Texas is really cheap.
Liquid cooling servers, how high must the technical costs be... Capitalists are just capitalists.
Mining in the US, is this hinting at something?
What is the global daily production share? Has anyone calculated it?
Mining is just a money-burning game, ordinary people shouldn't think about it.
This operation is a bit ruthless, directly doing it on a large scale.
View OriginalReply0
LuckyHashValue
· 11-29 04:26
The scale of the liquid-cooled Mining Farm in Texas is really something; having money is just great.
With 35,000 servers piled up, how much would the electricity bill be... can't calculate it.
Local energy combined with Trump's capital, this is what we call playing in the mining industry.
They can produce a significant share of the global market, while we poor folks can't even afford a graphics card.
With resources and capital, mining is just a money printing machine, invincible.
View OriginalReply0
FancyResearchLab
· 11-29 04:25
35,000 liquid-cooled servers, now proficient, have locked themselves into mining.
View OriginalReply0
WenMoon
· 11-29 04:25
The power advantages in Texas are indeed remarkable, and the cost control of liquid cooling is quite ruthless.
35,000 units, just how strong must the funding chain be to support this?
However, being able to play so big in Bitcoin mining is truly a game for the wealthy.
View OriginalReply0
HalfIsEmpty
· 11-29 04:21
35,000 liquid-cooled servers? How much electricity will that burn, no wonder Texas was chosen.
That being said, this scale is indeed impressive, local energy support in the U.S. ensures stability.
Another entry of privileged players into the crypto world, capital is just capital.
The daily production data seems a bit exaggerated, but the technical solution is indeed commendable.
Cost control of liquid cooling? Some small miners can just listen, we might as well just watch the fun.
This is the correct way to approach Mining, having resources and capital makes a difference.
View OriginalReply0
DuckFluff
· 11-29 04:17
The mining farm in Texas is really something, with 35,000 liquid-cooled servers. The cost must be terrifying.
BTC mining is a money-burning game; you can't play without some serious skills.
Does this scale account for a certain proportion of global daily production? I have to say, capital is ruthless.
We should learn from the advantage of cheap energy in the U.S.
The liquid cooling technology to control costs really has some merits.
By the way, can this Texas mining farm really operate stably? Has there never been any issues?
35,000 servers, the daily electricity bill is frightening.
At the end of November, Eric Trump showed a wave of hardcore content on his personal social account - the Mining Farm his American Bitcoin company set up in Texas.
This Mining Farm is not small. With 35,000 liquid-cooled servers operating around the clock to mine Bitcoin, it also provides security maintenance for the network. It uses local energy from the United States, making it truly localized operation.
According to the data they released, this Mining Farm extracts a certain proportion of the global daily Bitcoin production. The electricity resources in Texas are abundant, and with liquid cooling technology controlling costs, it seems this combination strategy is quite stable.
In mining, equipment, electricity costs, and computing power all involve money. The ability to manage funds and resources on such a large scale is evident.