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The Geography of Solo Mining

Summay:Bitcoin mining is often framed as a story of industrial scale—vast warehouses in Texas, hydro dams in Sichuan, volcanic geothermal plants in Iceland. But Solo mining has its own geography, and it’s far more intimate. It’s a balcony in São Paulo. A basement in Oslo. A bookshelf in Seoul. This is a journey through the surprising places where people are running tiny open-source miners—and the very human reasons why.

The Map Nobody Drew

When we talk about Bitcoin mining geography, the image is always industrial. Massive hangars. Containers stacked like Lego blocks. Cooling fans the size of jet engines. The sound alone is a wall of noise. The scale is inhuman by design. But there’s another map—one nobody draws—of kitchens, dorm rooms, attic corners, and balcony ledges where Solo miners hum quietly.

The Two Maps of MiningIndustrial MiningSolo Mining
Typical LocationRemote warehouse or hydro damSpare bedroom or home office
ScaleThousands of ASICs in racksOne or two palm-sized devices
Sound LevelDeafening roarQuieter than a laptop
Human PresenceTechnicians on shiftsOne person, often in pajamas
Ambient Temperature35-40°C in the aislesWhatever the thermostat says

This second map is what fascinates me. It doesn’t cluster around cheap energy. It clusters around curiosity. Around obsession. Around the quiet conviction that participating in consensus shouldn’t require a million-dollar power bill or a warehouse lease.

São Paulo, Brazil: The Balcony Miner 🇧🇷

Lucas lives on the 14th floor of an apartment building in São Paulo. His Bitaxe sits on the balcony—not for cooling, though that’s a bonus. He put it there because it’s the only spot in his apartment where the WiFi reaches and his cat won’t knock it over.

“I bought it after the third time the Brazilian real crashed against the dollar,” he told me. “Everyone here is obsessed with the exchange rate. Every morning, checking how much poorer we got overnight. I was tired of being a victim of macroeconomics I can’t control. This little machine? It doesn’t care about the real. It doesn’t care about inflation. It just hashes. That’s a kind of freedom.”

His balcony overlooks a sprawling cityscape—concrete towers fading into smoggy horizon. The miner sits on an old wooden stool, wrapped in a homemade dust filter made from pantyhose. It’s been running for eight months. No block yet. But Lucas says he’s never slept better. The sound of the fan, he says, drowns out the traffic noise below.

São Paulo Miner ProfileDetails
MinerLucas, graphic designer
Location14th-floor balcony
Power Cost~$0.12/kWh (Brazilian grid)
Homemade ModCat curiosity
Main RiskCat curiosity
MotivationEscape from currency anxiety

Oslo, Norway: The Basement Philosopher 🇳🇴

Ingrid lives in Oslo. Her Bitaxe is in the basement, next to the laundry machine. In winter, the basement stays around 5°C. “Perfect for cooling,” she said. “Terrible for folding laundry.”

Oslo Miner ProfileDetails
MinerIngrid, university librarian
LocationBasement, beside laundry
Ambient Temp5-15°C year-round (natural cooling )
Power Cost~$0.05/kWh (Norwegian hydro)
SetupStock Bitaxe Gamma, no mods
MotivationPhilosophical curiosity about PoW

Norway has some of the cheapest renewable electricity on Earth. But Ingrid didn’t start mining for profit. She started because she’s a librarian, and librarians are trained to understand how systems of verification work. “Proof of Work is just a verification system,” she said, matter-of-factly. “I wanted to see it with my own eyes. Reading about it wasn’t enough.”

She’s been running her Bitaxe for over a year. She has a small notebook where she records the Best Difficulty every Sunday evening. No block. “I don’t expect one,” she said. “For me, the reward is understanding something deeply that most people only understand shallowly. That’s worth more than 3 BTC to me.” She paused, then laughed. “Okay, maybe not more. But it’s worth something.” 📚

Seoul, South Korea: The Rooftop Community 🇰🇷

Jin-soo lives in Seoul and runs his Bitaxe on the rooftop of his officetel—a Korean mixed-use building. But his story is different. He’s not mining alone.

Seoul Miner ProfileDetails
MinerJin-soo, software engineer
LocationOfficetel rooftop
Community7 other miners in same building
CoordinationKakaoTalk group chat
Special ChallengeSummer monsoons (humidity >90%)
MotivationCollective action and friendship

Through a KakaoTalk group, he discovered that seven other people in his building were also running Bitaxes. They now have a rooftop “mining garden”—a small weatherproof cabinet with four devices running 24/7. They share tips, swap thermal paste, and take turns checking the setup during monsoon season.

“People think Koreans only care about trading altcoins,” he said. “But there’s a small, growing community of people who want the real thing. The physical thing. Not a number on Bithumb. A machine. A fan. A chance.” Each month they pool a tiny fraction of their electricity savings and buy snacks for the building security guard, who keeps an eye on the cabinet during his night shifts. It’s the smallest mining cooperative in the world, possibly. And definitely one of the most charming.

The Common Thread

I’ve now spoken to Solo miners in 14 countries across 5 continents. They live in different climates, speak different languages, and pay wildly different electricity rates. Some run their miners in freezing basements. Others battle tropical humidity and monsoon rains. Their motivations are as varied as their locations.

What Unites ThemWhat Divides Them
Open-source ethosElectricity costs (from 0.02to0.02to0.40/kWh)
Distrust of centralized miningClimate challenges (freezing to tropical)
Curiosity > Profit motiveLocal regulations and legal grey zones
Small-scale, personal operationLanguage and access to information
Emotional attachment to their deviceCultural attitudes toward “gambling”

But the common thread is unmistakable. Every single one of them, from Lucas in São Paulo to Ingrid in Oslo to Jin-soo in Seoul, spoke the same sentence in different words: “I wanted to be part of it. Not just an investor. A participant.”

That’s the geography that matters. Not latitude and longitude. Not kilowatt-hours and cents. But the invisible map of people who decided that Bitcoin was too important to leave to the professionals. Who wanted their own hands on the wheel of consensus, even if their grip was impossibly small.

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