Buy Aleo Miners — zkSNARK Proof-of-Work ASIC Hardware

Aleo runs the AleoBFT consensus mechanism, a proof-of-work design built around zero-knowledge proof computation rather than traditional hashing. The chain launched its mainnet in 2025 and is one of the youngest ASIC-mineable networks in production. The MillionMiner catalog covers 14 dedicated Aleo miners including the IceRiver AE1 Lite, AE2, AE3, and the Goldshell AE Max. Early ASIC adopters in new proof-of-work networks face less competition than miners entering after network difficulty has climbed. The IceRiver AE1 Lite (300 MH/s at 500W) is a compact entry point for home miners and small operators. The Goldshell AE Max (360 MH/s at 9.17 J/MH) is built for professional deployments where efficiency at scale matters more than upfront cost. Hardware selection is currently limited to 14 models because manufacturers are still ramping production. Specifications and pricing on Aleo equipment update more frequently than mature categories, so the catalog reflects the most recent confirmed availability from each supplier. Every miner ships DDP and qualifies for hosting at MillionMiner's US facilities.

5.0
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4.97
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4.5
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Buy Aleo Miners — zkSNARK Proof-of-Work ASIC Hardware
شبكة خلايا العسل شبكة خلايا العسل
تصفية وفرز

مخزون موثوق

كل وحدة تم اختبارها قبل الشحن

إرسال سريع

السفن خلال 1-3 أيام عمل

العملات الرقمية مقبولة

ادفع بواسطة BTC، ETH، USDT والمزيد

الدعم الفني

اختصاصيو التعدين جاهزون للمساعدة

عن التعدين في أليو

أول سلسلة كتلة قابلة للتحقق بواسطة تقنية ZK في العالم — الآن قابلة للتعدين بواسطة أجهزة ASIC

أليو تختلف عن أي سلسلة كتل قابلة للتعدين أخرى. تم بناء أليو من الأساس حول إثباتات المعرفة الصفرية، وتستخدم إجماع إثبات العمل الخاص بها ليس فقط لتأمين الشبكة — بل لتوليد الأدلة التشفيرية التي تدعم العقود الذكية الخاصة والقابلة للبرمجة. عمال المناجم على أليو لا يقتصر دورهم على التشفير العشوائي للبيانات: بل يؤدون العمل الحسابي المكثف لإنشاء إثباتات zk-SNARK التي تجعل تطبيقات أليو الحافظة للخصوصية ممكنة. هذه فئة جديدة تمامًا من التعدين مع طلب هيكلي طويل الأمد يقوده حساب حقيقي.

إجماع

AleoBFT

هايبرد PoW + BFT

مكافأة الكتلة

~80.6702 ALEO

نظام الإثبات

zkSNARK

إثبات العمل المستند إلى zk-SNARK

الوقت المخصص للمجموعات

~6 sec


الجدول الزمني لأولو

من بحوث المعرفة الصفرية إلى الشبكة الرئيسية القابلة للتعدين

2019 أليو تأسست

وجد هوارد وو وفريقه شركة أليو سيستمز. تبدأ الأبحاث في تطبيق zk-SNARKs على بلوكتشين قابل للبرمجة بالكامل — وليس تطبيق واحد فقط.

2020 ورقة العمل و ليون

أليا تنشر رؤيتها التقنية. يبدأ تطوير ليُو — لغة برمجة عالية المستوى لكتابة تطبيقات ZK — علنًا.

2021 اختبار الشبكة 1 و 2

إطلاق الشبكات التجريبية العامة. يشارك الآلاف من miners في اختبار آلية التعدين PoSW (إثبات العمل المختصر) باستخدام أجهزة GPU.

2022 تمويل الجولة الثانية

أليه تجمع 200 مليون دولار في الجولة B. الاستثمار يثبت صحة فرضية طبقة تطبيقات إثبات ZK على نطاق مؤسسي.

2023 Testnet III و دفع ASIC

مرحلة اختبار الشبكة الممتدة. يبدأ أول مصنعين لـ ASIC في تطوير أجهزة مخصصة لـ PoSW تستهدف عبء عمل حساب zk-proof الخاص بـ Aleo.

2024 إطلاق الشبكة الرئيسية

شبكة أليو الرئيسية تبدأ العمل مباشرةً. عمال مناجم ASIC من بيتمان وغيرها من الشركات المصنعة تبدأ في نشر الإنتاج على الشبكة الحية.

التكنولوجيا والرؤية

لماذا تمثل أليو نموذجًا جديدًا في تعدين إثبات العمل

كل بلوكتشين يعتمد على إثبات العمل يستخدم التعدين كآلية أمان — حيث يتنافس المعدّنون على إيجاد حل هاش يلبي هدف صعوبة الشبكة، والعمل هو عمل عشوائي، والإخراج الوحيد هو أمان الكتلة. أليو تختلف بشكل قاطع. على أليو، "العمل" في إثبات العمل هو توليد حجج معرفة موجزة غير تفاعلّيّة من نوع zk-SNARKs — التي يستهلكها الشبكة فعليًا لتمكين العقود الذكية الخاصة والقابلة للبرمجة.

هذا يعني أن عمال مناجم Aleo لا يحرقون الكهرباء على حسابات تجزئة لا معنى لها. إنهم يؤدون عملية حسابية تشفيرية حقيقية لها فائدة حقيقية: إثبات أن المعاملات الخاصة وتحولات حالة التطبيقات صحيحة دون الكشف عن محتوياتها. مع نمو منظومة Aleo ونشر المزيد من التطبيقات، يتجه الطلب إلى إنتاج الإثبات — وبالتالي إلى أجهزة التعدين — نحو زخم هيكلي لا يتوفر بشكل أساسي في تعدين البيتكوين.

بالنسبة للعمال المناجم، فإن هذا الأطروحة مقنعة: أنت لا تقتصر على مجرد المضاربة على سعر العملة، بل تشارك في الطبقة التحتية لبلوكتشين قابل للبرمجة ويحافظ على الخصوصية، والذي جمع أكثر من ٢٠٠ مليون دولار من المستثمرين المؤسساتيين ويضم من بين داعميه شركات استثمار رأس المال المغامر الكبرى.


آلية التعدين

دليل العمل المختصر (PoSW): التعدين الذي يؤدي عملاً حقيقياً

آليو's PoSW هو الأكثر ابتكارًا تقنيًا في آلية التعدين الحالية. إليك كيف يعمل — ولماذا يهم لفرضيتك الاستثمارية.

ما هو zk-SNARK؟

حجة معرفية موجزة غير تفاعلية بدون معرفة (Zero-Knowledge Succinct Non-Interactive Argument of Knowledge) هي دليل تشفيري يسمح لطرف (المثبت) بإقناع طرف آخر (المصدق) بأن بيانًا ما صحيح — بدون كشف أي معلومات عن سبب صحته. بكلمات بسيطة: يمكنك إثبات أنك تعرف سرا، أو أن معاملة ما صحيحة، بدون الكشف عن السر أو تفاصيل المعاملة. هذا هو الأساس الرياضي الذي يجعل العقود الذكية الخاصة بـ Aleo ممكنة.

كيف يستخدم PoSW تقنيات zk-SNARKs للتعدين

في دليل أليو على العمل المختصر، يتنافس المعدنون على توليد دليل zk-SNARK صحيح للغز الكتلة الحالي. اللغز هو مشكلة حسابية يتطلب حلها عملًا حقيقيًا لتوليد الإثبات — وليس مجرد تجزئة SHA عشوائية. أول معدّن يُنتج دليلًا صحيحًا يلبي هدف صعوبة الشبكة يفوز بجائزة الكتلة. ثم يتم تخزين الإثبات على السلسلة ويمكن لأي عقدة التحقق منه خلال مليثانية واحدة.

AleoBFT: طبقة الاتفاقية الهجينة

يستخدم أليه توافقاً هجيناً يُدعى AleoBFT، يجمع بين تعدين PoSW وطبقة نهائية مقاومة لأخطاء بليتزية ( Byzantine Fault Tolerant). يقوم المعدنون بإنتاج الكتل من خلال توليد إثبات PoSW. ثم يقوم المدققون (دور منفصل) بإتمام هذه الكتل باستخدام توافق BFT، مقدمين نهائية سريعة وحتمية بدون التضحية بنموذج الأمان اللامركزية لإثبات العمل. هذا التصميم الهجين هو ما يُمكّن أليه من تحقيق أوقات كتل تقارب 10 ثوانٍ بجانب النهائي التشفيري.

كيف تعمل عملية تعدين Aleo PoSW — خطوة بخطوة

01

البث اللغزي

يفرز الشبكة لغز الكتلة الحالي — مشكلة إنشاء إثبات zk-SNARK مستمدة من رأس الكتلة السابق ومعلمات الحقبة الحالية. يتلقى جميع المعدنين نفس اللغز في الوقت ذاته.

02

سباق توليد الإثبات

يقوم جهاز ASIC الخاص بك بأداء العمل الحاسوبي المكثف المتعلق بتوليد أدلة zk-SNARK المرشحة. هذا ليس مجرد تجزئة لبيانات عشوائية — إنه حساب دليلي تشفير حقيقي. يمكن للأجهزة المُحسَّنة لهذا الحمل (ASICs PoSW) أن تولد الأدلة بسرعات عديدة تفوق وحدات المعالجة المركزية أو وحدات معالجة الرسومات.

03

تم تحقيق هدف الصعوبة

عندما يلتقي الدليل الذي أنشأته بمستهدف صعوبة الشبكة الحالي — مما يعني أنه يمتلك الخصائص المطلوبة المعرفة من قبل اللغز — يكون المعدّن الخاص بك قد وجد حلاً صالحًا للكتلة. يتم تقديم الدليل إلى الشبكة على الفور.

04

النهائية BFT والمكافأة

المدققون يتحققون من إثبات الحالة المقدم (التحقق يكون فوريًا تقريبًا لـ zk-SNARKs) ويؤكدون الكتلة عبر AleoBFT. يتم توزيع مكافأة الكتلة على المعدن الفائز. تصل رموز ALEO إلى محفظتك الشخصية المخزنة بنفسك وفقًا لجدول دفع تجمعك.


النظام البيئي

ليو، دي فاي الخاص، ولماذا أهمية طلب التطبيقات للعمال المناجم

لغة البرمجة ليون من أليو هي لغة عالية المستوى مستوحاة من Rust، مصممة خصيصًا لكتابة تطبيقات المعرفة الصفرية. يقوم المطورون بكتابة برامج ليون التي تُترجم إلى دوائر zk-SNARK، مما يتيح إنشاء عقود ذكية خاصة تمامًا حيث يمكن الحفاظ على سرية كل من المدخلات والمخرجات للحساب - وهو شيء مستحيل على إيثريوم أو أي بلوكتشين شفاف آخر.

بالنسبة للعمال المناجم، يهم نظام التطبيقات لأنه يخلق طلبًا مستدامًا على إثبات الأداء يتجاوز مجرد مكافآت الكتل. مع إطلاق المزيد من تطبيقات ليوا — بروتوكولات التمويل اللامركزي الخاصة، أنظمة التصويت السرية، أدوات التحقق من الهوية، والبنية التحتية المالية التي تحافظ على الامتثال — ينمو حاجة الشبكة إلى حساب الإثبات. هذا يختلف هيكلًا عن تعدين البيتكوين، حيث الدافع الوحيد لدخل العامل منجمًا على المدى الطويل هو مكافأة الكتلة ورسوم المعاملات.

رؤية أنيلوه لـ"الخصوصية القابلة للبرمجة" — حيث يمكن لأي تطبيق العمل بضمانات عدم الكشف — تضعها كمكون أساسي للبنية التحتية للمرحلة القادمة من اعتماد blockchain في الصناعات المنظمة: المالية، الرعاية الصحية، الحكومات، والهوية. هذه فرضية الطلب المؤسسي هي السبب في جذب أنيلوه أكثر من 200 مليون دولار من التمويل قبل الشبكة الرئيسية.

ما يُبنى على أليو

التمويل اللامركزي الخاص

AMMs وبروتوكولات الإقراض حيث تظل أحجام التداول وميزانيات المحافظ سرية. تمنع التخطي الأمامي واستغلال MEV على مستوى البروتوكول.

تصويت سري

الحوكمة والانتخابات على السلسلة حيث تكون الأصوات الفردية خاصة لكن النتيجة الإجمالية قابلة للتحقق علنًا — بضمان رياضي.

هوية ZK ومعرفة عميلك

أثبت أنك تستوفي متطلبات الامتثال (العمر، الولاية القضائية، الاعتماد) دون الكشف عن وثائق هويتك للطرف المقابل أو نحو البلوكشين.

الرموز غير القابلة للاستخدام الخاصة والألعاب

الأصول القابلة للجمع داخل اللعبة والمقتنيات التي يمكن إثبات ملكيتها ولكن لا تظهر علنًا — مما يتيح آليات الألعاب ذات المعلومات المخفية على السلسلة.

التمويل الذي يحافظ على الامتثال

يمكن للمؤسسات إثبات التزام المعاملات للجهات التنظيمية دون كشف بيانات العملاء الحساسة على سجل عام — وهو إنجاز رئيسي لاعتماد تقنية البلوكتشين المؤسسية.


الإمداد والانبعاث

اقتصاد رموز ألو: العرض، التوزيع و حصة المعدنين

يملك Aleo إجمالي عرض قدره 1.5 مليار رمز ALEO. تم تصميم نموذج الإصدار ليكافئ المعدنين بشكل كبير في السنوات الأولى من الشبكة — عندما يكون تأمين الشبكة في أوج الحاجة — مع تقليل تدريجي مع مرور الوقت. بدأ مكافأة الكتلة بأعلى مستوى عند إطلاق الشبكة الرئيسية وتتناقص وفقًا لجدول زمني، مشابهًا من حيث المبدأ لمنحنى الانقسام إلى نصفين ولكنه يُطبّق بشكل أكثر سلاسة.

تفصيل مهم لعيّنات Aleo: يتم تقسيم مكافأة الكتلة بين المُثبِت (المعدّن الذي يولّد الإثبات الفائز) والمُصدّق (الذي يُنهّي الكتلة عبر AleoBFT). يحصل المُثبِت على الأكثر — حوالي ثلثي مكافأة الكتلة — بينما يحصل المُصدّق على الباقي. عند التعدين من خلال تجمع، تتلقى حصة المُثبِت من المكافآت بنسبة عمل الإثبات الذي ساهمت به.

على عكس العملات التي تعتمد على إثبات العمل الخالص حيث تذهب جميع عمليات الإصدار إلى المعدنين، يقسم النموذج الهجيني لـ Aleo المكافآت بين نوعين من المشاركين. افهم هذا التقسيم قبل حساب العوائد المتوقعة — دخلك اليومي الفعلي من ALEO يعتمد على حصة المُثبت من مكافأة الكتلة، وليس على الرقم الكامل لمكافأة الكتلة.

إجمالي الإمدادات من أليون 1.5 مليار

توزيع رمز ALEO

التعدين (المبرهنات) ~500M 33%

مكافآت الكتل المدفوعة إلى عمال تعدين PoSW على مدار جدول الانبعاث. المصدر الرئيسي للدخل لمشغلي أجهزة ASIC.

المُحققون ~250M 17%

مكافآت الكتل المخصصة لمُصدِّقي AleoBFT الذين يُنهون الكتل. منفصلة عن دخل المعدنين.

النظام البيئي والمنح ~375M 25%

مخصصة لمنح المطورين، نمو النظام البيئي، وتطوير البروتوكول. مخطط لها الاستحقاق على مر الزمن.

المستثمرون والفريق ~375M 25%

تخصيصات المستثمرين الأوائل والفريق. يخضع لجدول استحقاق طويل الأمد يتماشى مع نمو الشبكة.

مفتاح للعمال المناجم

تربح أجهزة ASIC الخاصة بك فقط من حصة المُثبِتين — حوالي ثلثي مكافأة الكتلة المعروضة. استخدم هذا عند نمذجة الدخل اليومي.


كيف يقارن Aleo

أليو مقابل سلاسل الكتل القابلة للتعدين الأخرى

ألئو تحتل مكانة فريدة في مشهد التعدين. لا تقدم أي عملة قابلة للتعدين أخرى عقود ذكية خاصة أو إثبات عمل يعتمد على إثبات المعرفة الصفرية.

عامل أليو (ALEO) أليفيم (ALPH) بيتكوين (BTC)
نظام الإثبات zk-SNARK (PoSW) هاش بلاك3 (إثبات العمل) تجزئة SHA-256 (إثبات العمل)
نوع العمل البرهان الحقيقي لـ ZK حساب التجزئة حساب التجزئة
العقود الذكية نعم — خاص (ليو) نعم — عام ( Ralph) لا
نموذج الخصوصية خصوصية ZK الكاملة شفاف شفاف
إجماع PoSW + AleoBFT بلوك فلو إثبات العمل نكموتو بروتوكول إثبات العمل
الوقت المخصص للمجموعات حوالي 10 ثواني حوالي 64 ثانية حوالي 10 دقائق
الإجمالي المعروض 1.5 مليار أليو 1ب ألف 21 مليون BTC
تمويل تم جمع أكثر من 200 مليون دولار ممول ذاتيًا غير متوفر (2009)

أليو هو الوحيدة من بين سلاسل الكتل في هذا المقارنة حيث يقوم المعدنون بعمل ذو فائدة تشفيرية يدعم مباشرة المنتج الرئيسي للشبكة — الحوسبة القابلة للبرمجة الخاصة.


المنزل مقابل الصناعي

تعدين أليو من المنزل: ماذا تتوقع

تعتمد خصائص أجهزة تعدين Aleo بشكل كبير على جيل ASIC المحدد. نظرًا لأن إنشاء إثبات PoSW هو عبء عمل حسابي مختلف عن تجزئة SHA-256 أو Scrypt، فإن استهلاك الطاقة لأجهزة ASIC يختلف أكثر بين أنواع الأجهزة. تم تطوير أجهزة ASIC Aleo ذات المستوى المبتدئ المستهدفة لعمال المناجم المنزليين ضمن نطاق استهلاك طاقة بين 500 و 1200 واط — وهو أمر manageable باستخدام البنية الكهربائية المنزلية القياسية.

سوق ASIC لأليو أصغر من بيتكوين أو لايتكوين، مما يخلق فرصة وعدم اليقين للمعدنين المنزليين. يمكن للمستخدمين الأوائل الذين ينشرون الأجهزة بينما لا يزال نظام الأليو البيئي لـ ASIC قيد التأسيس الاستفادة من انخفاض الصعوبة والحصة الأكبر لكل ماكينة من الجوائز اليومية — ولكن السوق يتطور بسرعة وتتوفر أجهزة من عدة شركات مصنعة. تفقد قوائم منتجاتنا لمعرفة أجهزة ASIC لأليو المتاحة حاليًا و specifications لديها المعتمدة من حيث معدل التجزئة.

مقياس صناعي

تحديد الموقع في الطابق الأرضي في شبكة مدعومة بـ 200 مليون دولار

بالنسبة للمشغلين الصناعيين، تقدم أليو فرصة نادرة: نشر قدرة تعدين كبيرة في شبكة ممولة بشكل جيد وذات مصداقية فنية بينما لا يزال نظام ASIC في مراحله الأولى. الدعم المؤسساتي (مليار دولار من سلسلة التمويل ب)، ومجتمع مطوري تطبيقات ليوا النشط، والحالة الواضحة لاستخدامات العالم الحقيقي للبنية التحتية لخصوصية ZK، كلها تشير إلى طلب هيكلي طويل الأمد على إثبات الحساب.

تستفيد عمليات التعدين واسعة النطاق لآليو من نفس اقتصاديات المزارع الأخرى التي تعتمد على أشكال التعدين باستخدام شرائح البرمجة الخاصة (ASIC) — مثل عقود الكهرباء الصناعية، وترتيبات التوطين، وشراء الأجهزة بالجملة. والمميز هو أن عبء توليد الإثباتات الخاص بآليو نشأ من عصر وحدات المعالجة الرسومية (GPU)، مما يعني أن ميزة الـASIC على أجهزة الحوسبة العادية لا تزال كبيرة جدًا، وأن المبادرين الأوائل يحصلون على حصة غير متناسبة من مكافآت الكتل.

السوق المبكر لمعالجات الدوائر المتكاملة (ASIC) أكثر من 200 مليون دولار من الدعم المؤسسي

دليل المشتري

اختيار المُعدِّن المناسب لـ أليو

يتم اختيار جهاز Aleo ASIC وفقًا لثلاثة مقاييس رئيسية — مع لمسة مهمة فريدة من نوعها على جهاز توليد إثبات PoSW.

معدل الإثبات (شهادة/ثانية أو إثبات/ثانية)

تُقاس عملية تعدين Aleo بعدد الإثباتات في الثانية (إثبات/ثانية) أو ألغاز coinbase في الثانية (c/ثانية)، وليس بـ TH/ث أو MH/ث. وذلك لأن وحدة العمل هي إثبات zk-SNARK، وليس تجزئة. يعني معدل الإثبات الأعلى حصة نسبية أكبر من مكافآت الكتلة اليومية. قارن الأجهزة بناءً على هذا المقياس بدلاً من استهلاك الواط فقط.

المزيد من الأدلة = المزيد من ALEO

كفاءة الطاقة (واط/براءة الاختراع)

بالنسبة لعيّانات Aleo، يتم التعبير عن الكفاءة بوحدة الواط لكل إثبات في الثانية (W/proof). كلما كانت القيمة أقل، كان ذلك أفضل — فهذا يعني أن كل إثبات تقوم بإنشائه يستهلك كهرباء أقل. مع تطور سوق ASIC ووصول أجيال جديدة من السيليكون، تتحسن نسب W/proof بشكل كبير. دائمًا قارن الكفاءة بين الأجهزة، وليس فقط معدلات الإثبات الخام.

أقل = أكثر ربحية

دعم البرنامج الثابت والبروتوكولات

لقد كان بروتوكول أليو يتطور بنشاط منذ إطلاق الشبكة الرئيسية. على عكس بيتكوين حيث لم يتغير مواصفات SHA-256 منذ 15 عامًا، قد يتم تحديث معايير PoSW وتركيب الأحجية الخاصة بأليو مع نضوج البروتوكول. تأكد دائمًا من أن شركة تصنيع الـ ASIC الخاصة بك توفر تحديثات نشطة للبرنامج الثابت وضمانات توافق واضحة مع الشبكة الرئيسية قبل الشراء.

الاعتمادية على توافق البروتوكول ضرورية

الأرقام

فهم ربحية تعدين Aleo

ربحية تعدين Aleo لها عدة عوامل فريدة بالمقارنة مع العملات التي تستخدم إثبات العمل — والأهم من ذلك تقسيم مكافأة المُثبت/المدقق والطبيعة المتطورة لصعوبة لغز PoSW.

01

سعر ALEO (بالدولار الأمريكي)

ALEO هو رمز شبكة رئيسية تم إطلاقه مؤخرًا ويشهد تقلبات سعرية أعلى من العملات المعدنية التعدينية الأكثر استقرارًا. يمكن أن تشهد الرموز في المرحلة المبكرة تقلبات سعرية كبيرة في كلا الاتجاهين نتيجة لأحداث الإدراج، وأخبار النظام البيئي، وظروف السوق الأوسع. المعدّنون الذين يمكنهم العمل بربحية عند أسعار ALEO أقل بنسبة 50-60٪ من حساباتهم عند تاريخ الشراء هم في أقوى موقف. إن الاحتفاظ بـ ALEO المُجمّع خلال فترات انخفاض الأسعار هو استراتيجية شائعة للمعدّنين الذين يثقون على المدى الطويل في نظرة بنية الخصوصية ZK.

02

حصة المدعّي — حصتك الفعلية

على عكس العملات القائمة على إثبات العمل البحت حيث يذهب 100٪ من مكافأة الكتلة إلى المُعدّن، يقسم Aleo المكافآت بين المُحققين (المعدنين) والمدققين. حصة المُحقق تبلغ تقريبًا ثلثي مكافأة الكتلة. هذا يعني أنه إذا عرضت مكافأة الكتلة كـ ~23 ALEO، فإن أرباحك الفعلية كمعدّن تكون تقريبًا 15-16 ALEO لكل كتلة تجدها بواسطة مجمعك. استخدم دائمًا رقم حصة المُحقق — وليس إجمالي مكافأة الكتلة — عند حساب الدخل اليومي والعائد على الاستثمار.

03

صعوبة إثبات الشبكة

ت adjusts Aleo's PoSW puzzle difficulty to target consistent block times as more proof-generation hardware comes online. As the ASIC market for Aleo grows — and it is growing rapidly post-mainnet — difficulty will increase and each machine's proportional share of rewards will decrease. This is the same trajectory as every PoW network transitioning from CPU/GPU to ASIC dominance, but compressed into a shorter window because ASIC development began close to mainnet. Model difficulty conservatively.

04

تكلفة الكهرباء وكفاءة الإثبات

تتراوح استهلاك طاقة أجهزة أليو ASIC من حوالي 500 واط إلى أكثر من 3000 واط اعتمادًا على الوحدة. نظرًا لأن عبء العمل (إنتاج إثبات zk-SNARK) أكثر تعقيدًا من التجزئة SHA-256، فإن أجهزة ASIC من الجيل المبكر تميل إلى أن تكون أقل كفاءة في استهلاك الطاقة من معدّني بيتكوين من نفس الجيل. ويتقلص هذا الفارق مع كل جيل جديد من أجهزة ASIC. احسب تكلفة طاقتك اليومية الإجمالية واطرحها من إجمالي أرباح أليو الإجمالية (حصة المُثبت) للحصول على أرباحك الصافية اليومية.

05

جدول إصدار مكافأة الكتل

ينخفض مكافأة الكتلة الخاصة بأليو مع مرور الوقت وفقًا لجدول زمني محدد. تركز منحنى الانبعاث المكافآت في السنوات الأولى لبث أمن الشبكة — مما يعني أن المعدنين الذين ينشرون الآن في مرحلة المكافأة الأعلى في تاريخ انبعاث أليو. مع انخفاض المكافآت على مدى السنوات التالية، سيصبح دخل المعدنين أكثر اعتمادًا تدريجيًا على رسوم المعاملات من تطبيقات ليّو وسعر رمز أليو. يعد هذا التوجيه في الانبعاث دليلاً على أهمية النشر المبكر — وعلى فهم أن أرقام مكافأة الكتلة الحالية أعلى مما ستكون عليه في 3 إلى 5 سنوات.


اختيار المسبح

أفضل تجمعات تعدين أليو

يجب أن يدعم برنامج بركة Aleo بروتوكول تقديم إثبات PoSW — والذي يختلف هيكليًا عن نقطة نهاية Stratum القياسية المستخدمة من قبل عمال SHA-256 أو Scrypt. تحقق دائمًا من أن البركة التي اخترتها تدعم بشكل أصلي Aleo PoSW ولها تكامل نشط ومحدث مع برمجيات عقدة الشبكة الرئيسية لـ Aleo قبل توصيل الأجهزة.

نظرًا لأن شبكة Aleo الرئيسية حديثة نسبياً، فإن نظام البرك أصغر حجماً من بيتكوين أو لايتكوين ولكنه ينمو بسرعة. توفر البركات الأكبر دفعات يومية أكثر استقرارًا. توفر البركات الأصغر تباينًا أعلى لكن أحيانًا رسومًا أقل. بالنسبة لمعظم مشغلي ASIC، فإن البركة التي تحتل المركز الثالث من حيث معدل التجزئة هي الخيار الافتراضي المعقول لتحقيق استقرار الدخل.

Aleo Pool (HiveOn) 1% PPLNS

واحدة من أكبر أحواض Aleo من حيث معدل التجزئة. بنية تحتية موثوقة، دعم أصلي لـ PoSW، دفعات يومية، لوحة تحكم واضحة لأرباح المprove/المحقق.

Miningpool.center 1% PPS+

وضع PPS+ لتوزيعات ALEO ذات التفاوت الصفري. خيار ممتاز للمشغلين الذين يحتاجون إلى دخل يومي ثابت. دعم native لشبكة Aleo الرئيسية.

2Miners 1% PPLNS

مجمّع متعدد العملات تم تأسيسه مع تزايد وجود Aleo. بنية تحتية موثوقة، سجل دفع نظيف، تغطية سيرفرات أوروبية.

Flexpool 0.5% PPLNS

خيار برسوم منخفضة مع دعم أصلي لـ Aleo. فريق تطوير نشط، هيكل رسوم شفاف، سمعة جيدة في المجتمع من حقبة ETH.

Community Pool (Aleo Network) 0% PPLNS

حمام سباحة يديره المجتمع بدون رسوم. أصغر لكنه يتماشى من حيث الأفكار مع مهمة لامركزية Aleo. الأفضل للعمال من أجل دعم صحة الشبكة أيضًا.


انتبه

الأخطاء الشائعة في تعدين أليو

يخلق البنية الأصلية لأليو فخوخًا فريدة من نوعها في تعدين إثبات المعرفة الصفرية. تجنبها قبل الاستثمار.

استخدام مكافأة الكتلة كاملة في حسابات العائد على الاستثمار

الخطأ الأكثر شيوعًا في تعدين Aleo. مكافأة الكتلة المعروضة تغطي حصة المقدم (المنقب) والمحقق. جهاز ASIC الخاص بك يربح فقط جزء المقدم — حوالي ثلثي الرقم الإجمالي. استخدام مكافأة الكتلة الكاملة في حاسبة الربحية الخاصة بك سيبالغ في تقدير دخلك اليومي المتوقع بنسبة حوالي 50%. دائمًا تأكد من نسبة حصة المقدم الحالية من الوثائق الرسمية لـ Aleo قبل نمذجة العوائد.

شراء الأجهزة دون تأكيد توافق البروتوكول

مواصفة PoSW الخاصة بـ Aleo تختلف عن أي خوارزمية تعدين أخرى. أجهزة "ASIC miners" العامة التي تدعي التوافق مع Blake3 أو غيره ليست من أجهزة Aleo. فقط الأجهزة المصممة والمختبرة خصيصًا لإنتاج إثبات PoSW الخاص بـ Aleo ستولد معدل تجزئة ذات معنى على شبكة Aleo. تحقق من التوافق الصريح مع شبكة Aleo الرئيسية من قبل الشركة المصنعة قبل الشراء.

تجاهل نظام إيكولوجيا ASIC الذي ينمو بسرعة

شبكة أليو الرئيسية جديدة، وعلى السوق يظهر بسرعة أجهزة ASIC من شركة مصنعة متعددة. يزداد الصعوبة بسرعة. سيتعرض عمال المناجم الذين يعتمدون في توقعاتهم لعائد الاستثمار على صعوبة اليوم دون احتساب نمو يتراوح بين 2 إلى 3 أضعاف خلال العام القادم لخسائر كبيرة في العائدات الفعلية أقل بكثير من التوقعات. نمذج سيناريوهات صعوبة متشائمة بشكل مبالغ فيه.

الخلط بين معدل الإثبات وسعة المعالجة

يتم قياس أداء Aleo بعدد الأدلة التي يتم إنتاجها في الثانية (د/ث)، وليس بـ TH/ث أو MH/ث. هذه الوحدات غير قابلة للمقارنة مع خوارزميات التعدين الأخرى. لا تحاول مقارنة معدل التجزئة لمُعدِّن Aleo مباشرة بمُعدِّن بيتكوين أو كاسبا. استخدم حاسبات الربحية الخاصة بـ ALEO التي تأخذ معدل الأدلة وصعوبة الشبكة الحالية كمدخلات.

تجاهل مراقبة تحديث البرامج الثابتة

يتم حالياً تطوير بروتوكول أليل بعد الإطلاق الرئيسي. قد يتم تحديث معلمات PoSW وهياكل الأحاجي من خلال ترقيات الشبكة. قد ينتج عن جهاز أليل ASIC الذي يعمل ببرنامج قديم إثباتات غير صالحة، أو التعدين على فرع سلسلة خاطئ، أو فشل في الاتصال ببرنامج البركة المحدث. راقب قنوات الشركة المصنعة وطبق التحديثات بسرعة.

مُطلَّة على دور المُحقِّق مقابل المُثبِت

بعض مشاركي Aleo يعملون كمvalidators (الذين ينهون الكتل عبر AleoBFT) بدلاً من أن يكونوا provers (العمال المنقبين). هذه الأدوار تتطلب أجهزة مكونات مختلفة وهياكل مكافأة مختلفة. عمال التعدين ASIC هم provers. لا تخلط بين وثائق المجموعة حول مكافآت validator وبين دخلك الفعلي من التعدين — فهم مشاركون منفصلون في نظام AleoBFT.


الأسئلة الشائعة

أسئلة وأجوبة حول تعدين أليو

كل ما تحتاج معرفته قبل شراء جهاز تعدين ASIC الخاص بـ Aleo الأول.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

Aleo is the only production blockchain where mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. The proofs miners generate power private smart contracts, creating structural alignment between mining and network utility that no other PoW chain offers.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

PoSW requires miners to generate valid zk-SNARK proofs for block puzzles — genuinely complex cryptographic computation. Unlike SHA-256 (Bitcoin) where hash results are disposable, PoSW outputs are cryptographically useful and stored on-chain. This is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs for Aleo.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

The IceRiver AE3 (2 GH/s) is currently the most powerful Aleo miner. The Goldshell AE Max (360 MH/s) and AE Box Pro (44 MH/s) offer excellent alternatives. For home use, the compact IceRiver AE0 (50 MH/s) is ideal. All available with free DDP shipping.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

Profitability depends on ALEO price, difficulty and electricity cost. With efficient ASICs at $0.07/kWh hosting, Aleo mining can generate meaningful returns. The growing demand for privacy applications adds structural long-term value to proof generation.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

GPU mining was viable during testnets but dedicated PoSW ASICs now offer substantially higher proof rates per watt. As ASICs dominate the network, GPU mining becomes marginal. For competitive Aleo mining in 2026, purpose-built ASICs are the only viable choice.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

AleoBFT combines PoSW proof-of-work with BFT finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators finalize using BFT consensus. As a miner, you are a prover — your only job is generating proofs as fast as possible through your pool. ~10 second block times.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

Aleo splits rewards between provers (miners) and validators. Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward. Always use the prover share in profitability calculations. Check Aleo official docs for current split ratios.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

Leo is Aleo's smart contract language for zk-SNARK applications. Every Leo app deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond block rewards — meaning a thriving app ecosystem drives sustained revenue for your mining hardware.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

Yes. Purchase any Aleo miner from our shop and add hosting from $0.07/kWh. Real-time dashboard, 24/7 support, free repairs. Pool configuration included in onboarding.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

Connect power, plug in Ethernet, access the web dashboard, enter your Aleo pool PoSW stratum address and wallet. Verify proof submissions within 15-30 minutes. For hosted miners, we handle all setup.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

Major Aleo pools include HeroMiners, F2Pool and dedicated Aleo pools. Choose a pool with low latency and compatible PoSW stratum support. Most charge 1-2% fees.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

Aleo has strong credentials: $200M+ venture funding, novel privacy technology (programmable zk-SNARKs), active developer ecosystem. Higher volatility than Bitcoin mining but potentially higher upside. Many miners treat it as a growth allocation alongside BTC.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

The IceRiver AE3 uses ~1,200W, the Goldshell AE Max ~3,500W, the AE Box Pro ~700W, the IceRiver AE0 ~100W. Monthly cost at $0.07/kWh (hosting): AE3 ~$60, AE0 ~$5. Relatively low power draw.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

IceRiver: 180-365 days by model. Goldshell: 180 days. For hosted miners, we provide free on-site repairs and RMA handling. See our FAQ for details.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

Yes — all Aleo miners ship with free worldwide DDP delivery. No customs, no import taxes. 50+ countries. In-stock dispatch within 1-3 business days.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

The AE3 (2 GH/s, ~1,200W) offers superior efficiency. The AE Max (360 MH/s, ~3,500W) provides more raw hashrate but at higher power cost. The AE3 is generally recommended for its better proof-rate-per-watt ratio.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

zk-SNARK (Zero-Knowledge Succinct Non-Interactive Argument of Knowledge) allows proving something is true without revealing the underlying data. Aleo uses this for private smart contracts. Miners generate these proofs, directly powering the privacy infrastructure.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

Yes. Volume pricing and dedicated account managers for B2B orders. Contact our team with model, quantity and timeline. Combined purchase + hosting packages available.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

The IceRiver AE0 (50 MH/s, ~100W, very quiet) and Goldshell AE Box (37 MH/s, ~160W) are the most home-friendly Aleo miners. Both run from standard outlets with minimal noise and heat.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

Your pool sends ALEO directly to your wallet. MillionMiner never touches your rewards. Most pools pay out daily once minimum thresholds are reached. Block times are ~10 seconds for consistent payouts.

'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?', 'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.', ], [ 'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?', 'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.', ], [ 'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?', 'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?', 'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.', ], [ 'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?', 'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.', ], [ 'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?', 'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.', ], [ 'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?', 'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.', ], ] as $i => $faq)

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