
Compute HordePrice(SN12)
Details Compute Horde (SN12) Price information (USD)
The current real-time price of SN12 is $2.104232. In the past 24 hours, SN12 has traded between $2.089896 and $2.174441, showing strong market activity. The all-time high of SN12 is $9.41, and the all-time low is $0.9306.
From a short-term perspective, the price change of SN12 over the past 1 hour is
Compute Horde (SN12) Market Information
Compute Horde (SN12) Today's Price
The live price of SN12 today is $2.104232, with a current market cap of $8.119M. The 24-hour trading volume is 138K. The price of SN12 to USD is updated in real time.
Compute Horde (SN12) Price History (USD)
What is COMPUTE HORDE (SN12)?
When is the right time to buy SN12? Should I buy or sell SN12 now?
Before deciding whether to buy or sell SN12, you should first consider your own trading strategy. Long-term traders and short-term traders follow different trading approaches. LBank’s SN12 technical analysis can provide you with trading references.
Future price trend of SN12
What will the value be? You can use our price prediction tool to conduct short-term and long-term price forecasts for SN12.
How much will SN12 be worth tomorrow, next week, or next month in ? What about your SN12 assets in 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, or even 10 or 20 years from now? Check now! SN12 Price Prediction
How to buy COMPUTE HORDE (SN12)
Convert SN12 to local currency
SN12 Resources
To learn more about SN12, consider exploring other resources such as the whitepaper, official website, and other published information:
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COMPUTE HORDE (SN12) FAQ
What is the difference between the SN12 token and TAO?
TAO is the native currency of the entire Bittensor network. Following the rollout of Dynamic TAO, individual subnets like Subnet 12 now utilize their own Alpha tokens. When you stake TAO into Subnet 12, it is converted into SN12 Alpha. This token represents the specific value of the Compute Horde subnet relative to the main TAO token, allowing for specialized incentive structures within the infrastructure.
How can I participate as a miner or validator on Compute Horde?
Miners on the network provide raw GPU power by running containers called Executors that handle various computational tasks. Validators act as intermediaries that receive compute requests from users or other subnets. They distribute these tasks to the miners and verify the results using a Trusted Miner system for cross-checking, ensuring that the work performed is accurate and reliable.
What is the Horde architecture and how does it enable scaling?
While standard Bittensor subnets are restricted to 256 miner slots, Compute Horde uses a unique architecture where one registered miner can manage a large group of physical GPUs, known as a Horde of Executors. This allows the subnet to bypass the typical slot cap and scale horizontally. By allowing a single UID to control dozens of GPUs, the project creates a decentralized supercomputer capable of handling massive workloads.
What are the hardware requirements for mining on Subnet 12?
Compute Horde categorizes tasks into Hardware Classes to ensure jobs are matched with appropriate power. Currently, NVIDIA A6000 GPUs are the primary class, with planned support for A100 and H100 units. To maintain performance standards, validators use synthetic benchmarks to monitor miners. If a miner fails to provide the performance levels expected of their advertised hardware, their incentive score is lowered.
How does Compute Horde prevent cheating and weight-copying?
The project implements two major security innovations: Commit-Reveal and Executor Dancing. Commit-Reveal forces validators to hide their evaluations until a later block, making it impossible for dishonest miners to copy successful results from others. Executor Dancing requires miners to rotate their hardware across different tasks, preventing them from specializing in gaming the validation logic rather than providing genuine compute power.
What are organic jobs and why is collateral required?
Organic jobs are real-world computational tasks submitted by users, such as AI model inference or video stabilization. To guarantee that these high-priority tasks are completed successfully, miners may be required to stake TAO as collateral. If a miner fails to complete a job or provides inaccurate data, their collateral can be slashed. This ensures the network remains reliable for enterprise-level workloads and serious developers.



