# Upgrade Related Articles

HTX News Center provides the latest articles and in-depth analysis on "Upgrade", covering market trends, project updates, tech developments, and regulatory policies in the crypto industry.

Solana Ecosystem Shows Signs of Recovery: On-Chain Governance Upgrade, Tokenized Stocks and Meme Coins Heat Up

Solana Ecosystem Shows Signs of Revival: Governance Upgrades, Tokenized Stocks, and Memecoins Heat Up While the broader crypto market faces a downturn, Solana has shown relative strength with its price rising nearly 15% recently. This resilience is attributed to warming ecosystem activity, particularly in tokenized stocks and memecoins, coupled with a major upgrade to its on-chain governance. In the Real World Assets (RWA) sector, Solana now leads all public chains in both the number of unique holder wallets and the quantity of RWA assets. Its tokenized stock weekly trading volume has surged to a record $1.42 billion, capturing about 96% of the market share, largely driven by the Backpack exchange. Simultaneously, the Solana memecoin sector has reignited, fueled by the rapid ascent of the ANSEM token following endorsements from a prominent crypto influencer. This has boosted activity across platforms like Pump.fun and increased fee revenue for several Solana-based exchanges. A key development is the launch of Solana Governance Proposals (SGP), a new on-chain mechanism. It allows validators with at least 100,000 SOL delegated to submit proposals for community vote, enhancing decentralized decision-making. SGP will operate alongside the existing technical proposal process (SIMD), focusing on broader ecosystem governance. Despite these positive signals in specific areas, overall on-chain activity and transaction volumes still lag behind previous bull market peaks, indicating the recovery remains partial rather than ecosystem-wide.

marsbit16h ago

Solana Ecosystem Shows Signs of Recovery: On-Chain Governance Upgrade, Tokenized Stocks and Meme Coins Heat Up

marsbit16h ago

The Largest Upgrade Since The Merge? How Glamsterdam Will Affect Ethereum?

Ethereum's next major upgrade, Glamsterdam (combining consensus layer "Gloas" and execution layer "Amsterdam"), is scheduled for late 2026 and considered the most significant overhaul since The Merge. It aims to fundamentally enhance L1 performance and architecture to prepare for substantial capacity increases. The upgrade centers on three core changes: 1. **Enshrined PBS (ePBS - EIP-7732):** Integrates the Proposer-Builder Separation directly into the protocol, eliminating reliance on external relays. This extends the window for processing execution payloads, allowing nodes more time to handle larger blocks and more data, paving the way for a higher Gas Limit. 2. **Block-Level Access Lists (BALs - EIP-7928):** Provides a pre-declared "map" in the block header of all state data (accounts, storage) that transactions will access and modify. This enables potential parallel transaction processing and faster state synchronization for nodes. 3. **Gas Repricing (EIP-8037):** Overhauls the gas model to more accurately reflect the real resource costs for nodes. It separates computation costs from state storage costs, making operations that create permanent state data (like new accounts) more expensive, while computation-heavy operations become relatively cheaper. These changes work together to solve the trilemma of scaling: giving nodes more time to process larger blocks (ePBS), reducing execution bottlenecks (BALs), and controlling unsustainable state growth (Gas Repricing). The goal is a credible path to a higher Gas Limit (e.g., 200M gas) without compromising decentralization by overburdening node hardware. For users: * Transaction fees for simple transfers may decrease and become more stable due to increased block space, but state-intensive operations (contract deployment) may cost more. * Gas estimation by wallets will improve in accuracy. * L2 data posting costs could become more stable long-term due to increased Blob capacity. * EIP-7708 will standardize logs for ETH transfers, improving tracking for wallets and exchanges. Node operators must upgrade clients, but ETH holders need take no action. In essence, Glamsterdam doesn't just raise the block size limit; it re-engineers Ethereum's core block production, execution, and economic models to enable sustainable, decentralized scaling.

marsbitYesterday 05:17

The Largest Upgrade Since The Merge? How Glamsterdam Will Affect Ethereum?

marsbitYesterday 05:17

A Threefold Performance Leap! NEAR Achieves 200ms Physical Block Time Limit with SPICE

NEAR's core development team, Near One, has announced its next major protocol evolution: SPICE (Separation of Consensus and Execution). Currently in development, SPICE represents the most significant upgrade before the full implementation of Nightshade 3.0. Its core innovation is decoupling the consensus layer, responsible for ordering transactions, from the execution layer, which processes them. This allows the consensus layer to run at full speed without waiting for transaction execution to complete. Once deployed, SPICE is projected to triple NEAR's block production speed, achieving a 200ms block time, which is considered the physical limit due to the speed of light and network latency. This leap will dramatically reduce transaction latency and finality, with transactions confirming in roughly 0.4 seconds—faster than a typical card payment. The upgrade also enables more complex, long-running transactions and significantly improves user experience for applications like NEAR Intents and near.com. Beyond raw speed, SPICE enhances network scalability and security. It enables deeper parallelism, efficiently distributing workload across shards and improving resource utilization. The simpler block structure and lighter contracts also facilitate formal verification and security auditing. Furthermore, SPICE lays the critical groundwork for future Nightshade 3.0 features, most notably atomic cross-shard transactions, which would simplify complex contract logic and eliminate development hurdles caused by asynchronous execution. The Near One team is actively developing SPICE, targeting deployment in the coming months.

Foresight News06/23 11:05

A Threefold Performance Leap! NEAR Achieves 200ms Physical Block Time Limit with SPICE

Foresight News06/23 11:05

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