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Dashboard Explanation

Updated over 3 months ago

Video Transcript

In this new video, we will explain the dashboard. We’ll go part by part to understand how it works.

At the top of the page, you have the menu: the profile where you can change your name, last name, phone number, password; Wallet, where you’ll enter your addresses to receive cryptocurrency payments; Satellites, which refers to the affiliate program; the marketplace, where you can buy machines, which we’ll also cover later; and the roadmap, which shows upcoming updates to the site over time.

We’ll focus on the second part, the upper blocks. The first three correspond to the cryptocurrencies you are mining.

You have the current price of the currency right above. We also have the total acquired, which refers to the payments made by the mining pool, shown in the total acquired section here. In this example, it shows a payment of 0.170 bitcoins and 47,000 signatures, and 147 Kaspa. The value in dollars of the acquired amount is displayed here, and just below, we find the unpaid balance, which is the balance that the mining pool owes you for the next payment.

For Bitcoin, we have a monthly payment, and for Kaspa or Alephium, the payment is made weekly. On the right side, there’s the energy block. In this example, the total machine park is 30.15 kilowatts, costing 1.50 dollars per day for all machines.

The client has chosen to pay for electricity monthly via bank transfer or cryptocurrency, so there is a negative part for the energy consumption of the machines. Here, the client has a -587 dollars balance compared to the energy consumption of the machines, with a total of 2682 hours for this month for all of their machines.

Next, we have the Last Payments section, which shows all payments made from the mining pool to the client’s personal wallet. If you click on the small link, it copies the link, and you can verify the transaction ID online: this is the proof of payment that has been sent directly.

Then, there's the Last Rewards block, which corresponds to the production of your machines hour by hour, based on the serial number of your machine. For example, here, machine R357878 produced 4.4247 Kaspa in the last hour, and this one on Bitcoin produced 0.0004 Bitcoin between 8 and 9 AM GMT on December 13th.

On the right, you can access production summaries in PDF form. You just need to click here, and it will download a PDF summary that covers the daily production of your machine, as well as the total produced for the month by all your machines. It also includes the energy cost associated with your machines.

The most interesting part, which is easiest to understand, is that you have remote access to all these machines to visualize them. You’ll see a graph representing the computational power of your machine, available for all machines. You also have the date when the machine was connected. In this case, it’s a machine that was connected on November 13th. It shows the energy cost associated and the computational power of your machine, and this is available for all machines in your park directly on the dashboard.

Each machine has a serial number integrated here, and you can track the total revenue from your machines over time.

We’ll also look at other services available for tracking your machines. You have "Add a new service," which corresponds to adding a new machine to your cryptocurrency park. You can choose several available machines. Based on the logo, you choose the cryptocurrency you want to mine. Click on "Add this miner" and continue. In another video, we’ll show how to buy a machine and connect it to your profile in under 7 days.

To summarize quickly, the top part corresponds to the production block of your machines. You have the total net amount received in the entire column displayed here. The energy block is on the right of your screen, followed by the last payments, the last rewards, and the monthly production PDFs. Finally, all information on the machines is displayed just below.

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