monero-gui/installers/windows/ReadMe.htm

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<title>Monero GUI Wallet Beta 2</title>
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<h1>Monero GUI Wallet Beta 2</h1>
<p>Copyright (c) 2014-2017, The Monero Project<br>
Date: June 28, 2017</p>
<h2>Preface</h2>
<p>This ReadMe does not aim to be a complete introduction to Monero. If you are new to Monero or even to
cryptocurrencies in general you find a good introduction on reddit at
<a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/Monero/comments/5zgail/rmonero_newcomers_please_read_everything_you_need/">Newcomers Please Read. Everything You Need To Know</a>.
You also find a lot of good tutorials on <a href="https://www.monero.how/">Monero.How</a>.
</p>
<p>Please note that Monero and its software are constantly evolving and progressing; it probably won't take
long for some of the information here to become outdated.
</p>
<h2>Content of the Package</h2>
<p>You just installed the Beta 2 of the <i>Monero GUI Wallet</i> for Windows, more exact version 0.10.3.1. The wallet
enables you to send and receive moneroj in a secure and very private way.
</p>
<p>Also included is the <i>Monero daemon</i>, so you have everything now to run a so-called <i>full node</i>
and become part of the network of nodes that manages the Monero blockchain; you don't need to install additional
packages in order to start.</p>
<p>For checking whether there are already newer versions of this package you can go to the
<a href="https://getmonero.org/downloads/">Downloads</a> page on <a href="https://getmonero.org/home">getmonero.org</a>,
the official Monero site.</p>
<h2>Access to the Blockchain</h2>
<p>Any Monero wallet needs access to the <i>blockchain</i>, the ongoing ledger of all Monero transactions. For the
GUI wallet there are two principal ways to get that access: You can let Monero sync with the network
i.e. let it download the blockchain and store it locally on your computer, or you can configure your wallet to
access a remote <i>open node</i> to get indirect access to the blockchain.</p>
<p>Working with your own copy of the blockchain is <b>preferred</b>: It strengthens the Monero network, and it
provides the most security and privacy possible for you.</p>
<p>However if your Internet access makes it difficult to run a full node, or if you have simply no room to store
the blockchain locally (over 17 GB in summer 2017, and of course growing), you can compromise and try to connect
to a remote node. One way of finding such a node is checking
<a href="https://moneroworld.com/pages/nodes.html">this page</a>.
</p>
<h2>Initial Blockchain Download</h2>
<p>Please do read the following <b>before</b> jumping right in and starting the GUI wallet:</p>
<p>If you decide to work with your own copy of the blockchain, which you should whenever possible, you have to
download it first; it's not part of the installed package.
Beside the GUI wallet there is second program, the so-called <i>Monero daemon</i>, which will carry out that download.
You find it in the <i>Utilities</i> sub-folder of the program group.</p>
<p>Depending on your Internet access and the speed of your computer this can take
<b>several hours</b>, in some cases <b>more than a day</b>. Furthermore there are unfortunate cases where the
download gets stuck somehow or doesn't work at all, e.g. because a firewall prevents access to other nodes of the
Monero network.</p>
<p>The GUI wallet can start the daemon for you, but that way you will not see much during initial blockchain
download, especially you probably won't see any error messages in case something goes wrong. By starting the
daemon yourself "by hand" using the <i>Monero Daemon</i> icon in the <i>Utilities</i> sub-folder of the
Monero program group you will see it running and displaying messages in a separate window.</p>
<p>If all goes well the daemon will finally display a message like this:
<i>You are now synchronized with the network.</i></p>
<p><b>Then</b> you are ready for sure to start your Monero adventures by starting the GUI wallet.</p>
<h2>Allowing Other Nodes to Connect to Your Node</h2>
<p>When the Monero daemon downloads the blockchain it does so by connecting to other nodes of the network.</p>
<p>If you allow incoming TCP/IP connections to port 18080 on your computer and let your daemon run for extended
periods of time you can "return the favor" and help others in turn to get access to Monero. However, depending on
your Internet connection, firewall, modem, router, ISP etc. this might not be possible, and opening a port in such
a way usually requires some technical knowledge.</p>
<p>If you want to try you may start e.g. with
<a href="https://monero.stackexchange.com/questions/2479/how-do-i-enable-incoming-connections-eli5">this Monero Stack Exchange</a>
question.</p>
<h2>Troubleshooting</h2>
<p>The Monero software and especially the GUI wallet are "work in progress", as you can expect seeing the word
<i>Beta</i> in the name of the package, and sometimes things go wrong.</p>
<p>Please note that despite any technical problems that you may encounter your moneroj are almost always safe: You may
not be able to move them or you even may not see how many you currently have, but you most probably won't loose any.
But do remember that the seed needed to re-create the wallet <b>is</b> critical, however: <b>Never loose your
seed!</b></p>
<p>There is a <b>bug</b> in this beta of the GUI wallet that triggers if it is installed in a path that contains spaces /
blank characters, like the default location for Windows programs <i>C:\Program Files</i> unfortunately does.
Symptoms are problems in the communication between the wallet and the daemon, e.g. the wallet not "seeing" the
daemon and then not knowing whether it is "synchronized" with the network and thus ready to work or not. You can
avoid these problems by starting the daemon yourself, with the help of the <i>Monero Daemon</i> icon in the
<i>Utilities</i> sub-folder of the Monero program group.</p>
<p>In the <i>Utilities</i> sub-folder there are several more icons that may help you to solve problems.
These are the icons with a <i>x</i> in front and the name <i>(in parenthesis)</i> to make them visually stand
apart from the "normal" ones because you will probably only need them in case of trouble, but not during normal
usage of Monero.</p>
<p>Here an overview and short info what each icon does:</p>
<table cellpadding="3" border="1">
<tr>
<td><i>x (Try GUI Wallet Low Graphics Mode)</i></td>
<td>Run the GUI wallet in a mode that allows for low-graphics
environments, e.g. systems with very simple non-hardware-accelerated or emulated / virtualized video cards;
also try if the display is simply slow or lags
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><i>x (Try Daemon, Exit Confirm)</i></td>
<td>
Run the Monero daemon in a window that does not automatically close if
the daemon should exit because of a fatal error; useful in cases where the normal daemon icon
just leads to a window that closes right away
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><i>x (Try Kill Daemon)</i></td>
<td>
Kill any running daemon (technically, any process called <i>monerod.exe</i>), whether
with or without any visible window, for starting "with a clean slate"; easier than
killing such tasks with the help of the Windows Task Manager
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><i>x (Check GUI Wallet Log)</i></td>
<td>Open the log with status and error messages of the GUI wallet program in Notepad;
experienced people have a chance to diagnose technical problems with the wallet by looking at the last few lines
of this log</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><i>x (Check Daemon Log)</i></td>
<td>
Open the log with status and error messages of the daemon in Notepad; again, the last few
lines of this (possible very long) log are the most important for troubleshooting
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><i>x (Check Default Wallet Folder)</i></td>
<td>
Open the standard wallet folder in Windows Explorer; useful e.g. if you want to backup
your wallets
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><i>x (Check Blockchain Folder)</i></td>
<td>
Open the folder containing the blockchain in Windows Explorer
</td>
</tr>
</table>
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