We’re Heading to Vegas, And This One’s Worth Sitting In
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If you’ve been watching your miner closely, you’ve probably had a moment where the numbers didn’t quite match what you expected.
Not drastically wrong. Just… slightly off.
It’s one of those things people notice but don’t always know how to explain right away.
That’s pretty much where mining is right now.
Everything’s still running. Rewards are still coming in. But under the surface, things are shifting — quietly.
And those shifts are starting to change how people think about running their setups.
On April 27 at 11:00 AM, during The Bitcoin Conference in Las Vegas, our CEO, Michal Beno, will be speaking on the Energy Stage.
The topic:
“Hashrate dropping — is hosted mining picking the slack?”
At first glance, it sounds like a technical discussion.
It’s not.
Because when people hear “hashrate dropping,” the immediate reaction is usually concern.
Something must be wrong.
Something must be slowing down.
But in most cases, it’s not that simple.
Hashrate moves based on a lot of factors — network difficulty, energy costs, miners entering or leaving the network. And not everyone adjusts to those changes the same way.
What’s been happening lately is more subtle.
Some miners are starting to realize that running everything on their own comes with more moving parts than expected.
Setup is one thing. Keeping everything stable over time is another.
Heat builds up.
Electricity adds up.
Downtime happens.
Individually, those are manageable. Together, they start to matter more.
That’s where hosted mining starts to come into the picture.
Not as a shortcut — but as a way to keep things consistent.
And that’s really what this session is about.
Not hype. Not theory. Just a clearer look at what’s changing and why more people are quietly shifting how they run their machines.
Michal will be joined by Charley Brady from BitFuFu and Shreyash M. from ValueHash.
Different perspectives, same space.
One focused on operations.
One on investment.
One on infrastructure.
That mix usually leads to more honest conversations — the kind that actually help you understand what’s going on.
If you’re attending, this is one of those sessions where it’s worth showing up early and just listening.
No need to overthink it.
You’ll probably walk away with a better sense of why your setup behaves the way it does — or why it sometimes doesn’t.
And if you’re not going, this is still the kind of discussion that tends to shape what people start doing next.
Not overnight. But gradually.
You’ll see it in how miners talk about costs, setups, and control.
Nothing suddenly broke.
Mining didn’t get worse.
It just got a bit more complex — and the sooner that clicks, the easier it is to move with it instead of against it.