My GPUs
View and manage all your owned GPUs, monitor individual performance, handle agreements, and manage GPU sales.
Filtering and Search
- Click provider names to filter by datacenter (Pantheon Compute, FarmGPU, etc.)—you can select multiple providers and see active filter chips.
- Filter by GPU type (4090, 5090, H200) to narrow down to specific models, or search by GPU ID to find specific units quickly.
- Use Filter for advanced options and Select to multi-select GPUs for bulk actions.
GPU States
Your GPUs can be in one of four states:
Agreement Required: The card shows a blurred GPU image with a document icon and warning. Your provider requires a signed agreement before earnings can begin. Click "Review agreement" to read the terms and sign electronically—confirmation is usually instant. Sign these immediately after purchase.
Active and Earning: Clear GPU image with green indicators showing total earnings, "Live since" date, GPU ID, provider, and type badge. No action needed—your GPU is operational, being rented to compute customers, and generating earnings normally. Monitor earnings regularly and compare to similar GPUs on the Network page.
Claim Ticket: Shows a GPU image with "Claim ticket" indicator and "Live by" date. You own the NFT but the physical GPU hasn't been delivered or paired yet. Monitor the expected delivery date and contact your provider if it passes. No action needed before delivery.
Listed for Sale: Displays list price and "Listed on" date. Your GPU is actively listed on the marketplace and still generating earnings while listed. Monitor for sale completion, update the listing price if needed, or remove the listing if you change your mind.
GPUs cannot generate earnings until provider agreements are signed. Sign agreements immediately after purchase to start earning.
Troubleshooting a Non-Earning GPU
If GPU stops earning:
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Check agreement status
- Look for agreement warning
- Sign if required
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Verify GPU is live
- Check "Live since" date exists
- Not a claim ticket
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Contact provider
- If issue persists for more a majority of a billing period, contact your provider
- Provide GPU ID
- Request status check
For Sale Tab
Currently Listed GPUs
Information Displayed:
- GPU image and specifications
- List price
- Time on market
Actions:
- Manage: Edit listing, change price, or delist
- View: See marketplace listing page
Sales Best Practices
Price strategically: Check the Network page for comparable sales, factor in remaining GPU lifespan and total earnings to date, then price competitively for faster sales.
While listed, your GPU continues earning and you keep those earnings until the sale completes.
Bulk Actions
Selecting Multiple GPUs
- Click "Select" button
- Checkboxes appear on GPU cards
- Select desired GPUs
- Choose bulk action
Available Bulk Actions:
- List GPUs for sale
GPU Performance Comparison
Comparing Your GPUs
Within My GPUs:
- Sort by "Total earnings"
- Identify top and bottom performers
- Check "Live since" dates (newer = less total earnings)
- Calculate daily average for fair comparison
Against Network:
- Note your GPU type and provider
- Go to Network > Earnings
- Find comparable GPUs
- Compare your earnings to network average
Understanding GPU Identifiers
GPU IDs like #274-ffe9 or #02 consist of a sequential number from your provider and sometimes a hash fragment for unique identification. These IDs provide traceability to specific hardware.
Use your GPU ID to reference units in support requests, compare performance over time, identify specific GPUs in financial reports, and match to provider systems. IDs also help you confirm ownership, verify earnings attribution, match to NFT metadata, and maintain an audit trail.
Provider Information
Your provider is the datacenter operator who hosts your physical GPU, manages hardware operations, facilitates compute rentals, processes earnings, and maintains uptime.
Providers handle hardware deployment and maintenance, ensure uptime and connectivity, manage hardware failures and replacements, track GPU utilization, calculate and process earnings, provide reporting, define operational terms, and handle legal compliance.
Troubleshooting
GPU not showing? Verify the correct wallet is connected, the NFT transfer completed, page data is refreshed, and the GPU isn't filtered out. Try disconnecting and reconnecting your wallet, refreshing the page, and clearing filters.
Can't sign agreement? Check your wallet connection, ensure you're on the correct network (Base or Chia per provider), enable browser pop-ups, and confirm you have sufficient gas for the transaction. Switch networks or add gas funds if needed.
Earnings not matching expected? Check the "Live since" date (GPU may be recently deployed), compare to Network averages, verify your agreement is signed, and look for provider issues. Calculate your daily average, compare to benchmarks, and contact your provider if significantly low.
Claim ticket overdue? If the "Live by" date has passed, check for provider updates, review purchase communications, contact your provider for status, and document the delay. Request an ETA, understand the reason, and consider remedies if the delay is excessive.
Tips for Success
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Sign agreements immediately after purchase. Keep records of signed agreements and always review terms before signing.
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When monitoring performance, compare apples to apples—same GPU type and similar timeframes. Account for seasonality since compute demand varies, check the Network page to understand market-wide trends, and track daily averages rather than total earnings for more reliable metrics.
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Keep your portfolio healthy. Diversify across providers with different specialties, mix GPU types for different workloads, monitor utilization (GPUs should earn most days), and plan for the hardware lifecycle since GPUs depreciate over time.
GPU performance varies based on market demand for compute. Consistent monitoring helps identify issues early and optimize your portfolio.