The Superheat H1 matters less because it “puts a miner in a water heater” (people have experimented with heat reuse for years) and more because it tries to make mining disappear into an appliance category that already exists in millions of homes.

r/SoloSatoshi
Bitcoin Community
At Superheat’s CES booth, the water heater and the computer are the same thing. But the real opportunity for this unexpected tech combo is far beyond internet money.
A startup, Superheat, has a water heater that uses excess heat generated from bitcoin mining to heat running water in a home, offsetting up to 80% of electricity and water costs with the earnings from the process. The product can be controlled and managed with an app.

Jennifer Castenson
Contributor
The project is less about a single device and more about a shift in how designed objects might function within the networks that shape contemporary life.
Superheat unveils a $2,000 electric water heater that mines Bitcoin.
The unit uses the same energy as a standard heater but runs ASIC miners to recoup costs, offsetting water heating bills.

Bitcoin News
@BitcoinNewsCom
What if the ‘waste’ heat became a benefit?
This $2,000 Bitcoin mining water heater can pay for itself by slashing your energy bills, company claims — can rake in $1,000 a year in BTC, offset 80% of electricity and water costs
The hardware looks considered. The websites are beautiful. It's consumer electronics level of polish. It's the kind of attention to detail that signals bitcoin infrastructure is ready for the mainstream.

Jarrad Grigg
Co-founder @ Juicebox
A water heater powered by computing.
The modular aluminium construction is designed for long-term maintenance and upgradeability, with minimal plastic components and a pixel display that adds character to its technical form.

Design Burger
Industrial Design Community
The Superheat H1 matters less because it “puts a miner in a water heater” (people have experimented with heat reuse for years) and more because it tries to make mining disappear into an appliance category that already exists in millions of homes.

r/SoloSatoshi
Bitcoin Community
At Superheat’s CES booth, the water heater and the computer are the same thing. But the real opportunity for this unexpected tech combo is far beyond internet money.
A startup, Superheat, has a water heater that uses excess heat generated from bitcoin mining to heat running water in a home, offsetting up to 80% of electricity and water costs with the earnings from the process. The product can be controlled and managed with an app.

Jennifer Castenson
Contributor
The project is less about a single device and more about a shift in how designed objects might function within the networks that shape contemporary life.
Superheat unveils a $2,000 electric water heater that mines Bitcoin.
The unit uses the same energy as a standard heater but runs ASIC miners to recoup costs, offsetting water heating bills.

Bitcoin News
@BitcoinNewsCom
What if the ‘waste’ heat became a benefit?
This $2,000 Bitcoin mining water heater can pay for itself by slashing your energy bills, company claims — can rake in $1,000 a year in BTC, offset 80% of electricity and water costs
The hardware looks considered. The websites are beautiful. It's consumer electronics level of polish. It's the kind of attention to detail that signals bitcoin infrastructure is ready for the mainstream.

Jarrad Grigg
Co-founder @ Juicebox
A water heater powered by computing.
The modular aluminium construction is designed for long-term maintenance and upgradeability, with minimal plastic components and a pixel display that adds character to its technical form.

Design Burger
Industrial Design Community