Operational Update: Dashboard Visibility, Granularity, and Exports

DMND development team has pushed a coordinated set of changes throughout the dashboard. The theme is the same one we've been compounding on since the v1.2 onboarding release: institutional-grade visibility into hashrate, rejection behavior, payout structure, and revenue accounting, with the time-resolution and export tooling to back it up.
Hashrate granularity — The home chart picked up a 1H selector and a full 1H/1D/7D/30D date picker, closing the gap between the live dashboard and what most operators actually monitor during fleet-state checks. The Miners page added an Avg 24h column so per-machine performance is comparable on the same window the rest of the industry quotes against.
Overall HR v1 — Total account hashrate is now surfaced as a sum across all subaccounts. Multi-site operators no longer have to add columns by hand to get a fleet number; the aggregate matches the per-subaccount breakdown by construction.
Workers table — method + precision — Workers now carry a Mining Method column (FPPS / PPLNS) so per-worker routing is transparent at a glance. Rejection rate is shown to decimal precision in the user dashboard worker table, which matters for anyone diagnosing firmware regressions or stratum issues where the signal lives in fractions of a percent.
Subaccounts — distinct payout addresses— Each subaccount can now carry its own payout address. This was a frequent request from operators running segregated sites or treating subaccounts as accounting boundaries for different capital providers; payouts now follow the same per-subaccount isolation model as the API and Watcher Links.
CSV exports — Mining method is now exportable from the workers table. Generated BTC is exportable across 7D, 30D, and arbitrary custom date ranges, with per-subaccount scoping preserved. Both feed downstream accounting and treasury workflows without screen-scraping.
Miners pages — A dedicated Miners index and per-miner detail pages are live, consolidating per-machine state, hashrate history, and rejection behavior into a single surface rather than threading it through the workers table.

More updates to follow. Join the new, most advanced bitcoin mining pool DMND.

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