Max Resnick, former Ethereum champion, specs out plan to transform Solana
Max Resnick, the one-time Ethereum
champion turned sour, said his new preferred blockchain, Solana
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, was never meant to "compete" with Ethereum. Instead, he said Solana has always had its sights much higher.
"From day one, [Solana] was designed to compete with the New York Stock Exchange, with NASDAQ, with the CME, with all these centralized venues that are getting tons and tons of volume," Resnick, now the lead economist at key Solana development group Anza, said during his keynote on the second day of Solana’s Accelerate conference in New York City.
Resnick’s 15-minute speech was about just that: turning Solana into a true "decentralized NASDAQ," a sort of rallying cry for Solana fans in the same way that Ethereans want to create "the world computer."
Today, Resnick noted, Visa achieves about 7,400 transactions per second and Nasdaq about 70,000 TPS. Solana, depending on the day, can process upwards of 4,500 TPS — good, but not quite where it should be, he added.
So, how do you create a decentralized network that competes with centralized exchanges on trading volumes, spreads, and performance metrics? On Monday, Anza researchers unveiled a plan to fundamentally overhaul the high-performance blockchain. The effort, called Alpenglow, would essentially rewrite Solana's consensus logic.
"Alpenglow is not only a new consensus protocol, but the biggest change to Solana's core protocol since, well, ever," Anza wrote. "It means Solana can compete with Web2 infrastructure in terms of responsiveness, potentially making blockchain technology viable for entirely new categories of applications that demand real-time performance."$SOL
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