Wednesday, 15 April 2015




Here are few ways of making some easy BTC.
You can do these while at work, earning some easy coin while giving only a fraction of your time.

If you need a wallet, you can get it at BlockChain.info

BTC Websites
EarnFreeBitcoins.com - View 2-3 min ads for small amounts of BTC. Payouts are good, considering you're not actually investing your time into it.
BitVisitor.com - Another great BTC-for-watching-ads site. Duration of ads is 5 mins, with a very good payouts.
BitCoinGet.com - Site where you can do small work for BTC. Also have video page, which is actually the only thing I do there. Not a lot of them, but it's good while I cycle other sites.

Various Bitcoin gambling sites. Some people enjoy gambling with semi-fair chances. There's a number of these gambling opportunities, with immediate payoffs. The one I'm experienced with is BitBattle.Me, so I'll be walking you through this one.
You have to register, including your bitcoin wallet details.
There are two modes, Singleplayer or Multiplayer. The difference between Singleplayer and Multiplayer is that at single you play, and get the result immediatelly. In multiplayer - until the session is over (10 mins) - you can have other people betting, and (didn't check it, but I think) the pot will be divided between the winners.
It really comes down to a roll of dice against your bet.
You get a list of bitcoin addresses you can pass money to, each tied to different win chances. The lower the chance, the higher the payoff. On the page listing the addresses and chances you can find great deal of information, as odds, win multipliers and a nice addition of effective multiplier.
Effective multiplier is the real payoff percentage, taking into account for 'fee' the house leaves for itself. You can see it in the 'House' column. Take 'Eff. Mult' as the real payoff. 
If you don't mind running a bit of math, what you will find is that ultimately you lose money when you play. But the percentage of win/loss ration is so close to real posted odds, that if you actually count on luck you can make money off of it.
I personally am sceptic about it, so I've only used it few times to check out the system. But if you feel it's your cup of tea, I recommend this site.

Mining for Home 101
Most of our home computers have a dedicated GPU. If not, you're better off doing the  Mining from behind corporate firewall approach. And you wouldn't want to mine with CPU while doing anything else on your PC.

I will be giving you an example that I particularly use.
I use a program called GUIMiner. It is very simple for begginning miner.
Register with any of the mining pools. You can use this page to see differences between pools.
I use Eligius. Enter the information with your pool's connection, or use a pre-defined set from GUIMiner drop-down menu - it is updated with any of the popular pools' connection info.
Enter login/worker/password, as needed by your pool of choice, and hit 'Start Mining'. You can tick on and off different CPU/GPU cores.
The speed at which you get your reward from GPU mining is far superior to other ways. But bear in mind, this guide was written with minimum effort/payout ratio. Even a little bit helps.

Mining from behind corporate firewall
As most of us know, you can't really mine from work, since almost all of the traffic but emails and browsing is blocked.
There are some mining pools that allow a connection through prot 80 (which doesn't supposed to be blocked). But most corporations use kind of a connection timeout/reset mechanins, so after a short while your miner program will lose connection and will not reestablish it.
This can be bypassed by BitCoinPlus.com. The site works right from your browser, using Java.
Register, allow to run Java and leave the browser window open. You can use as many computers as you want. I use 5-6 computers running constantly.
The downside is that this is CPU mining, which is considerately slower than GPU mining. But then again, this will get you bit more coins than sitting and watching videos/ads with no effort at all.

NEXT PLANNED UPDATE: devise a complete how-to with step-by-step instructions.

I will try and keep this guide updated with additional information.

I will not add any information I won't use myself!
All of the above information is tested and practiced everyday by me.

I am not native English speaker. I will be very thankful if you'll find grammar mistakes and notify me about them. I'm a bit particular about mistakes. Thank you in advance.