HashCore Docs
What'S New

Latest Release

The first release of the new 1.0.0 branch. This update is built around a single idea — less manual work on large device fleets and more control where you previously had to guess.

The device list finally thinks like a farm operator, not a spreadsheet Previously, to check which pools were configured on a thousand miners, you had

to open each device's card one by one. Now, the entire fleet can be seen in pool mode at a single glance — which pool is active, how many shares are accepted, and what the latency is. Switching between device metrics and its network configuration is just one click away, without losing context.

Sorting has also become smarter: instead of a flat list of twenty unrelated fields, there are now logical groups by meaning. If you want to find overheated machines, you open "temperatures" and sort, without having to remember the exact name of the column.

And if a device is locked, you no longer need to search for the scan task it is registered in. A single click on the lock status immediately opens the correct unlock settings.

Equipment maintenance no longer looks like a system error This is perhaps the most anticipated feature of this release. Previously, when a technician

removed a miner from the rack for repair, Pulse displayed it as Offline — indistinguishable from a real breakdown. Alerts would trigger on your own scheduled maintenance, creating noise and cluttering reports.

Now maintenance has its own status. Place a device in service mode, specify the reason — and Pulse understands that this is not an incident, but planned work. The entire maintenance history is saved for each device: what was repaired, how long it took, and who worked on it. This is especially valuable for hosting operators — now you can show clients a transparent maintenance history of their hardware, instead of just red dots in the log.

It also works in bulk — if an entire rack goes down for maintenance, you can move all miners to service mode in a single operation, rather than one by one.

Profitability now speaks the operator's language, not just the exchange's Coin rates are right on the dashboard — no more opening a separate

tab with exchange rates to see how Bitcoin or Litecoin is doing today. And profitability is now calculated not only in dollars, but also in the mined coin itself — because for many operators it is more important to see how much BTC they earned, rather than how it converted to fiat today.

Site finances — in the native currency For operators from Russia, Europe, China, and Kazakhstan, there is no longer a need

to manually recalculate income and expenses from dollars to local currency every day. The site can be configured so that all financial indicators — income, electricity costs, analytics — are immediately displayed in rubles, euros, yuan, or tenge.

Less noise, more confidence in the numbers It is now possible to compare a device's current hashrate with its factory default —

you can see not just whether it is "working or not," but the actual percentage of its nominal performance. This is useful when you need to prove to an equipment supplier that a batch of machines is underperforming.

And another quiet but important fix: when you delete an entire scan task, all associated devices are now completely removed from the system — previously, they would hang in the Offline status, cluttering the list and skewing statistics.

And it simply became more convenient to work from a phone

The interface is adapted for tablets and mobile screens — if you need to quickly check the status of the fleet when away from the computer, this is now not a problem.

© 2026 HashCore. All rights reserved.