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Paladin Mining Redefines Cloud Mining With 24/7 Support and Green Technology
Paladin Mining Redefines Cloud Mining With 24/7 Support and Green Technology

Reuters

time02-06-2025

  • Business
  • Reuters

Paladin Mining Redefines Cloud Mining With 24/7 Support and Green Technology

COPPELL, TX, June 2, 2025 (EZ Newswire) -- Traditional cryptocurrency mining typically requires individuals to invest heavily in specialized hardware and develop technical expertise. This creates a barrier for beginners and adds ongoing costs like electricity and maintenance. Novice miners often lack access to real-time support, making the process even more daunting. For high-net-worth individuals and serious investors, Paladin Mining, opens new tab offers a more streamlined solution: cloud mining with 24/7 live support from top analysts and IT professionals. Investors can begin mining immediately without purchasing physical equipment or navigating complex technical setups. What Is Traditional Hardware Mining? Participants must purchase dedicated mining equipment—such as ASICs or graphics cards—and maintain it themselves. This method requires a significant upfront investment and recurring electricity and maintenance costs. Technical knowledge is also necessary for configuration, software installation, and performance optimization. Profits depend directly on each user's equipment performance and operational costs. What Is Cloud Mining? Cloud mining allows users to lease computing power from remote servers. There is no need to buy or maintain hardware. Instead, users pay a rental fee and receive passive income based on the computing power purchased. The platform handles all technical aspects, making it accessible for newcomers. Revenue is distributed proportionally to the user's mining power share. Cloud mining is an ideal option for those who want exposure to crypto mining without the expense or risk of maintaining hardware. As blockchain technology evolves, cloud mining is expected to play a growing role in the digital asset ecosystem. About Paladin Mining Paladin Mining is a global leader in cryptocurrency mining. The company converts clean, idle, or underutilized energy into economic value, supporting blockchain operations with a sustainable energy model. Committed to environmental responsibility, Paladin Mining operates under the mission of building a "Green Earth." Key Features of Paladin Mining Services How to Start Cloud Mining With Paladin Mining Paladin Mining offers a variety of contracts, including the 'New User Experience' plan ($100 investment with $7 net profit) and higher-yield options like the Bitcoin Miner S21 XP ($12,000 investment, $7,560 net profit) and Avalon Air Box ($28,000 investment, $22,400 net profit over 50 days). Users can earn passive daily income—e.g., $448 per day with the Avalon contract. Security and Sustainability Paladin Mining prioritizes user trust through transparency and legality. All mining operations use renewable energy sources, aligning with global carbon-neutral goals. By leveraging clean energy, the platform provides both strong financial returns and environmental benefits. For more information, visit opens new tab or email info@ opens new tab. About Paladin Mining Paladin Mining is a cloud mining provider with a clear mission: to make cryptocurrency mining accessible and efficient through remote mining solutions. In partnership with Bitmain, the world's leading manufacturer of Bitcoin mining hardware, we leverage advanced cloud computing technology and robust mining infrastructure. From Bitcoin to Dogecoin and beyond, our platform offers a diverse range of cloud mining options tailored to meet users' needs. To learn more, visit The information provided in this press release is not a solicitation for investment, nor is it intended as investment advice, financial advice, or trading advice. Cryptocurrency mining and staking involve risk. There is potential for loss of funds. It is strongly recommended you practice due diligence, including consultation with a professional financial advisor, before investing in or trading cryptocurrency and securities. Media Contact Marian Smithinfo@ ### SOURCE: Paladin Mining Copyright 2025 EZ Newswire See release on EZ Newswire

Reading legend calls on Rob Couhig to 'build on foundations' for the future
Reading legend calls on Rob Couhig to 'build on foundations' for the future

Yahoo

time07-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Reading legend calls on Rob Couhig to 'build on foundations' for the future

Reading FC v Barnsley. Sky Bet League One 24/25. (Image: ©Jason Dawson) Legendary former Reading boss Steve Coppell has called for soon-to-be new owner Rob Couhig to 'build on the foundations' laid by Noel Hunt. 'Sir' Steve, a Manchester United and England legend in his playing days, famously took the Royals to the top-flight for the first time in it's history 20 years ago, in record-breaking fashion too. Departing in 2009 and having not managed in England for over a decade, the former skilful winger returned to the SCL Stadium on Saturday for the final day defeat to Barnsley. Few of the 21,500 supporters in attendance cared, however, as news broke earlier in the day that Couhig's takeover had been agreed pending 'legal technicalities.' We were joined by two members of Reading royalty on Saturday when Steve Coppell and Brian McDermott took part in a special Q&A in our Royals hospitality suite. You can watch the Q&A in full now on Royals TV 👇 — Reading FC (@ReadingFC) May 7, 2025 Speaking to supporters alongside fellow Championship-winning manager Brian McDermott, Coppell spoke of Hunt and the job he has done with the club, leading them to seventh in League One. Coppell signed Hunt back in 2008 but it was under McDermott that the Irishman won a Championship title, coming in 2012. "Brian brought Noel in. When he brought him in, I wasn't sure about him at first, but the warmth of his personality won everyone over, and he could play too. Two boxes were ticked. It's great to see him now with Gibbo, who worked with both of us, a solid football person. "The foundations are there. Let's hope the takeover happens and the foundations aren't thrown out but built upon for the future success of this very special football club." It has now been two decades since the Royals roared into the Premier League with 106 points, a Championship record. Only losing its status as an EFL record last month as Birmingham City won League One with 111, Coppell spoke of the 'season sent from heaven.' "For a moment in time, there was something very special. The season in which we got the record number of points was the season sent from heaven. After the first game at Plymouth when I drove home and thought 'not again'- 45 games later we were only beaten one more time. That will live with me for a long long time, until my dying day. "I look back on certain games and certain occasions- times where it looked like we were going to lose games- Derby away and Shane Long jumped higher than the crossbar to head an equaliser in the last couple of minutes, so many special occasions in that year and the next year, to a lesser extent. It was a culmination of a couple of years hard work from everybody and everything aligned. We had hungry players who had never played in the Premiership before, and they created a very special atmosphere. "If that atmosphere becomes a template for future teams at this club, then that is a legacy."

Te Teko burglary: Man pleads for return of father's World War II medals, other family heirlooms
Te Teko burglary: Man pleads for return of father's World War II medals, other family heirlooms

NZ Herald

time29-04-2025

  • NZ Herald

Te Teko burglary: Man pleads for return of father's World War II medals, other family heirlooms

Coppell said the medals were a taonga treasured by his family. They were meant to go to his niece one day. 'Now I've got to tell her 'sorry, someone's taken them'. 'I don't even know what to say.' His father enlisted in the artillery regiment of the army and served in World War II before being discharged in 1945 at the rank of lance bombardier. He was awarded the Defence Medal, the War Medal 1939-1945 and the New Zealand War Service Medal. 'He was awarded those for his service to this country, and this is how people treat him.' Coppell said owing to his young age at the time of his father's death, he did not know much about him, but the medals served as a connection to him. They were worn annually by Coppell, who himself served briefly in the Territorial Forces, and by his daughter on the 100th anniversary of the Gallipoli campaign. He'd had the medals restored and mounted by another World War II veteran in Christchurch, and had replicas mounted for all his nieces. The original set and one set of replicas were in a box stolen in Coppell's absence. There was a delay of about three weeks before he arrived in the Eastern Bay after his belongings were moved to the property near Te Teko. He thought it was possible the thieves did not know what they were stealing, given they were boxed up, but he hoped they would be inclined to return his belongings once they realised they had little monetary value. Other stolen items that were precious to Coppell include a clay dragon handcrafted and gifted by his ex-wife, a marble chess set, family photos and a large number of tools and electronics he used for his model railway hobby. He has now lost baby photos of his children – one in particular was framed with a ballet slipper alongside an image of the daughter who grew up to be a ballerina – and his grandparents. 'You could rip the photo out and keep the frame, but why? Imagine if I went through their home and did that,' he said. 'Oh, there's a photo of your great-grandmother. I want that, I'll take it. 'Your grandfather's service medals? I'll take those. You've got clothes? I've got none, I'll take them for myself. 'It's just totally violating. That's a mild word.' He said he was unemployed despite his efforts to find work, and he did not have the means to recover from the burglary. Advertisement Advertise with NZME. 'They have destroyed my life. They have taken away all my memories of my childhood, of my daughters' childhoods.' Coppell said the thieves had rifled through a toy box he used to store his precious items. The box had survived the Christchurch earthquakes and Coppell had dug through liquefaction to save it. Now he estimated that everything he owned could fit in the box with room to spare. Coppell said he would like his belongings returned, anonymously if that was what it took, but he was not concerned about prosecution. He urged anyone who knew where his belongings were to contact him anonymously on Facebook or drop them off somewhere such as the Te Teko dairy, where he could collect them. If he had one message to the people who stole his belongings, he said it would be to man up, have some decency and return his taonga. 'It's a cliche, isn't it, but they've ripped my heart out. Actually, they've done more than that, they've taken my soul. 'They have robbed a whole family of our history. 'My father served his country; have some decency and return his medals. They're worth nothing to you.'

‘Pat on the back' for repurposed posts
‘Pat on the back' for repurposed posts

Otago Daily Times

time29-04-2025

  • Business
  • Otago Daily Times

‘Pat on the back' for repurposed posts

Marlborough's Repost is shaving costly time turning old treated vineyard posts into good-as-new farming posts with their own machinery. Owners Greg and Dansy Coppell recycle broken posts, saving thousands of tonnes of timber from landfills. Over the five years since they started the business they have streamlined this process, in between running a 500-hectare sheep and beef farm near St Arnaud. The couple won the Agri-Innovations Awards with their portable hydraulic nail puller at the South Island Agricultural Field Days at Canterbury's Kirwee. Broken pine posts treated with a mixture of copper, chromium and arsenic (CCA) to prevent fungal rot and insect damage are costly to dump and unable to be burned. Mr Coppell said his wife entered their innovation in the awards and they were happy to get a "pat on the back" from the panel of three judges placing them ahead of 17 entries. He said they were up against many tech companies and it was good to see a simple solution being recognised. Their first machine to remove nails was built from an old silage wagon and bale feeder hooked up to a tractor. "Now we have a really sleek, efficient machine that costs very little to run and produces a post about every 14 seconds. It's completely mobile and we go to the source and that just takes a heap of logistics and cost out of double-handling stuff." Mr Coppell said the time-consuming part of re-purposing posts was removing nails, plastic clips, tek screws and staples. The mechanised operation has taken a lot of the work out of this laborious task which used to be done by hammers, grinders and crowbars. "You lose enthusiasm pretty quickly because time is money and especially when you have another 30 kilometres to go pulling these nails out so we streamlined the system. Farmers have known about this for a long time, but it's just time is the enemy." A hydraulic cramp with two jaws has a pushing and grabbing mechanism which bites and holds nails with two rams pushing posts away. Alongside the nail puller are drop saws designed to operate hydraulically after burning out commercial models, while a pointer puts new points on posts next to the mobile system. Mr Coppell said he and his father pushed around a few ideas before settling on a hydraulic design to remove as much manual labour as possible. A multi-ripsaw they also built turns half rounds into fence battens or droppers for lifestyle block owners and walkway decking. In their next venture the Coppells are looking at machinery to extract deeper nails from construction framing and other timber and transforming pallets into wood shavings for livestock. They first need to solve a supply issue as vineyards are in a downturn and there is a waiting list from sheep, beef and dairy farmers for their posts. Part of a pivot will be supplying new trellis posts in a partnership with a Marlborough company and offering a trade-in scheme for old CCA posts they can on-sell. Mr Coppell was brought up on a high country station at the back of Ward and his father was putting in old vineyard fence posts when viticulture was in its infancy in Marlborough. He became a builder for 20 years, eventually buying their St Arnaud farm to find they would need to put in about 30 kilometres of fencing. The alternative to costly new posts was recycling vineyard posts, free at the time. He would spend a day loading a truck by hand and then had to pull the nails out, cut them off or leave them in. "I realised after poking around the vineyards doing this how big a volume it all was. You pick up 1000-odd posts and there's another 90,000 there so I pitched the idea to some of the vineyards." Initially, he put this in the too hard basket after doing the numbers until realising he needed to charge vineyards a fee for their removal which was much less than landfill costs. Mr Coppell said the re-purposed posts gave farmers another option and kept new round wood operators honest. "This is one thing in my life that has got bigger picture purpose than anything else. Marlborough's landfills have probably only got half the lifespan what they plan to and are making changes there to say we are not going to accept this waste. "That's where we hopefully come in to get the product to farmers at a good price to get them productive as well."

Former Reading manager Steve Coppell named BBC awards judge
Former Reading manager Steve Coppell named BBC awards judge

BBC News

time14-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • BBC News

Former Reading manager Steve Coppell named BBC awards judge

Reading's record-breaking manager Steve Coppell has joined BBC Radio Berkshire's Make a Difference Awards as a the Royals' manager between 2003 and 2009, said he looks back fondly on his time in Berkshire and said the club's current performance was "phenomenal" given its off-field said he wanted nominations in his Active category from people and groups that are making an impact across all of judges include Basingstoke actor James Bye, perhaps better known as Eastenders' Martin Fowler, who will look after the Fundraiser category. "Sport and movement and mobility is so important these days, not only for physical help but also for mental health," Coppell said."[The awards] will be looking for groups of people who are doing things to involve the local community." Nominations close on 31 March and can be submitted online."I want [them] to be as age-resistant as possible because as you get older, you get a bit stiffer, you might need a bit of encouragement to get out there and move those limbs," Coppell, who led Reading to a still-record 106 points in the Championship in 2006, added."So I hope that the nominees will come in a broad age spectrum." Reading currently sit eighth in League One and are exceeding expectations as the club's ownership issues drag manager Noel Hunt was signed by Coppell in 2008 and joined his brother Stephen at the club."You look at what's happening off the pitch and you think 'how on earth can it be continuing and [Reading] be as successful on the pitch?' It's because of personalities," Coppell added."I signed him because of Stephen to be absolutely honest, Stephen pestered me to death to sign him."[Noel] knew what he wanted and was determined to be successful and worked very hard."I'm sure those are the qualities that he's bringing to the team. It's not an easy job to slip into, mid-way through the season when the previous manager has made an impact but he's come in and has done a tremendous job." You can follow BBC Berkshire on Facebook, X, or Instagram.

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