Actually, ETH Scaling is a Major Boon for L2s

marsbitPublicado a 2026-03-15Actualizado a 2026-03-15

Resumen

Vitalik Buterin's recent comments on Ethereum scaling have been misinterpreted. He did not declare Layer 2s (L2s) a failure but rather signaled a strategic shift: Ethereum is moving from a "rollup-centric" scaling model, where L2s were seen as simple replicas of the base layer, to one where the L1 itself undergoes aggressive scaling. L2s remain crucial, but their primary value proposition has evolved to be customization, not just cheap transactions. Two key developments drove this change. First, Ethereum's base layer is scaling faster than anticipated. After years of cautious progress to preserve decentralization, an ambitious new roadmap aims to drastically increase L1 throughput through a series of upgrades, including a higher gas limit, faster block times, parallel transaction processing, and a fundamental transition to a native zero-knowledge (zkEVM) architecture. This allows Ethereum to scale while maintaining its superior decentralization. Second, L2s have found product-market fit with institutions. Companies like Robinhood, Coinbase, and Kraken are building their own L2s because they need Ethereum's security and access to its liquidity, but also require control for regulatory compliance, custom fee structures, and operational flexibility. This creates a spectrum of L2s, from highly decentralized ones to more controlled, institutionally-focused chains—a reality Vitalik acknowledges is valid as long as marketing is honest. Crucially, scaling the L1 does not compete wi...

Original Title: Why Scaling Ethereum is Bullish for L2s

Original Author: Etherealize

Original Compilation: Ken, ChainCatcher

On February 3rd, Vitalik Buterin made a post on X that garnered over 6 million views. "The original vision of L2s and their role in ETH no longer tenable," he wrote. "We need a new path."

Stakeholders of competing blockchains were quick to portray this as an admission of failure. Cryptocurrency news media called it a "major reversal." The narrative that formed was that ETH had finally admitted defeat—the rollup-centric roadmap wasn't working, and the monolithic scaling approach adopted by blockchains like Solana had proven correct.

This narrative is wrong. If you base your investment decisions on it, you risk being on the wrong side and missing the most important infrastructure transformation currently happening in the cryptocurrency space.

What Vitalik Actually Said

If you read the full text instead of just the headline, the message is clear. ETH is not abandoning Layer 2 (L2). It is shifting from a "rollup-centric" scaling approach (which expected L2s to be replicas of the base layer) to a model where L1 (Layer 1) itself scales radically. L2s are still important, but the reason has changed: customization.

The original vision saw L2 rollups as replicas—simple copies of the Ethereum Virtual Machine, free from the burden of base layer consensus. The idea was that these rollups would eventually decentralize to "Stage 2," inheriting ETH's full security guarantees while providing cheaper transactions. In exchange, they would contribute to ETH's liquidity network effects and security budget.

But this didn't happen. As Vitalik acknowledged: "The progression of L2s towards Stage 2 (and subsequently, progress in interoperability) has been much slower and more difficult than initially expected." Many chains calling themselves L2s are, in practice, centralized blockchains with ETH bridges. They can unilaterally change rules, censor transactions, migrate entirely, while contributing little to ETH's network effects.

Two things then happened that made the original vision obsolete. Both are positive developments.

The Base Layer is Scaling Rapidly

After the London hard fork in August 2021, ETH's gas limit was set at 30 million gas per block. This level was maintained for over three years. The ETH community has been cautious about increasing throughput because there is a real trade-off at the core of blockchain design: pushing too much computation on-chain raises the hardware requirements for validators, leading to network concentration in the hands of a few and weakening the decentralization that gives the system its value.

Largely, this is the trade-off that ETH's competitors chose to ignore. For example, a Solana validator today requires enterprise-grade hardware: 24+ physical CPU cores, 256 GB of RAM, multiple enterprise NVMe SSDs, and a 10Gbps network connection. The monthly hosting cost for a competitive validator can exceed $1,000. In contrast, an ETH validator can run on a $1,100 mini-computer under your desk. This is not a trivial difference. It is why ETH can have about 1 million active validators while maintaining a level of decentralization that other smart contract platforms struggle to match. As of early 2026, the Solana network had roughly 800 active validators.

But blockchains do need to scale. High-performance competitors have proven there is massive demand for cheap, fast L1 transactions. ETH's response has been a broader cultural shift—from "long-term research" to "short-term execution"—and the results are showing.

In 2025, through coordinated validator action, the gas limit doubled from 30 million to 60 million, while the Pectra and Fusaka upgrades expanded blob capacity and added other protocol improvements. The Ethereum Foundation has also committed to an aggressive roadmap aiming to roughly triple L1 throughput annually for the foreseeable future.

<极简雅黑span style="font-size: inherit; font-family: PingFang SC,Helvetica Neue,Helvetica,Arial,Hiragino Sans GB,Heiti SC,Microsoft YaHei,WenQuanYi Micro Hei,sans-serif;">By the end of 2026, the goal is to push the gas limit above 100 million. In 2027, block time is expected to halve from 12 seconds to 6 seconds (potentially even 4 seconds), effectively doubling throughput again without changing block size. That same year, block-level access lists will allow nodes to process transactions in parallel, removing a major computational bottleneck. In 2028, migrating to a binary tree state structure will allow for higher gas limits by eliminating the need for validators to store the entire state on disk. By 2029, the network will begin transitioning to a native zero-knowledge architecture—a fundamental architectural change that will revolutionize scaling mathematics.

The key breakthrough enabling this long-term vision is zkEVM. Currently, every node in an L1 blockchain must re-execute every transaction to verify the state. zkEVM compresses the verification process into a constant-sized cryptographic proof that can be checked with minimal computational resources. When combined with Ethereum's data availability sampling—which will allow validators to verify data existence without downloading it all—it creates a path to throughput rivaling high-performance chains while preserving the decentralization that makes ETH block space uniquely valuable.

This is about five years ahead of most observers' expected timelines. It is "spectacular" enough that Ben Edgington, a leader during ETH's transition to proof-of-stake, announced he was ending his retirement to rejoin the project.

Ethereum Foundation researcher Justin Drake outlined the technical North Star goals: a "fast L1" with second-level finality; a "giga-gas L1" with real-time zkEVM proofs achieving 10,000 transactions per second; and a "tera-gas L2" with data availability sampling achieving 10 million transactions per second. The roadmap also prioritizes post-quantum cryptography and native privacy features at the base layer.

The New Value Proposition for Layer 2

So, if L1 is scaling, what is the point of L2?

L2s have found their product-market fit: serving institutions that want both the security of ETH and the liquidity of the ETH ecosystem, but also need the ability to customize their chain to better serve their customers and comply with regulator requirements.

This ultimately leads to the "Stage 2" problem. For an L2 to achieve Stage 2 decentralization, it must give up the ability to unilaterally upgrade its governing bridge and proof system contracts—including the ability to respond quickly to regulatory demands or patch critical vulnerabilities. For institutions onboarding millions of users to the ETH ecosystem, this is a real operational constraint.

This is the tension at the core of today's L2 ecosystem. Users can still withdraw their assets back to ETH's L1, which is the most important security guarantee a rollup provides. But without achieving Stage 2, operators can still upgrade bridge contracts, censor transactions, or change rules. And, due to a lack of interoperability, each L2 fragments liquidity and competes with other L2s in ways not fundamentally different from alternative L1s.

Vitalik's article resolves this tension by acknowledging reality: L2s exist on a spectrum, and that's okay. Some L2s will pursue full Stage 2 decentralization and function as true extensions of ETH block space. Others will maintain more centralized control in exchange for customization, which is also a valid use case, as long as the trade-offs are honestly communicated in marketing.

The demand from institutions for the second type of L2 is huge and growing, with Robinhood's decision to build an ETH L2 being the clearest illustration.

In June 2025, Robinhood announced at EthCC (Ethereum Community Conference) that it would build its own Ethereum Layer 2 using the Arbitrum tech stack, rather than launching a new L1 blockchain. This surprised many in the crypto industry. Robinhood is one of the world's largest retail brokers. It has the resources and user base to launch its own chain. It had actively discussed doing so. But it ultimately chose not to.

The reasoning articulated by Robinhood Crypto head Johann Kerbrat gets to the heart of why L2s matter: "Ensuring the security of a truly and highly decentralized chain is extremely difficult, and we can basically get that for free from Ethereum. When you look at newly created L1s, they are not really decentralized or secure, so ultimately, what you have is a fancy database that might be slower than a real database."

The second factor is liquidity. Robinhood's goal is to tokenize all assets—starting with public stocks and expanding to private equity, real estate, and other real-world assets. This requires access to Ethereum's existing liquidity network. As Kerbrat said: "We need this liquidity... If you are alone on your private island, no one can come and go freely. I believe we can get customers because Robinhood is a large platform, but we want to rebuild the entire financial system on-chain, and we need everyone to be able to come to our island."

Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev compared the customizability of L2s to building on alternative L1s like Solana, framing it as a trade-off between short-term and long-term value: "In the long run, control is more important; it allows us to build better products. Plus, the technology behind these rollups has become so excellent that you're not really missing out on much." As an L2, Robinhood retains full control over sequencer revenue, gas fees, regulatory customization, and product roadmap—while inheriting ETH's security and settlement guarantees. It can call it 'Robinhood Chain' while letting Ethereum handle the hardest parts.

Robinhood is not alone. Coinbase (Base), Kraken (Ink), and OKX (X Layer) have all launched their own ETH L2s. But the more telling signal is who is choosing to build with them. Just this month, Nasdaq partnered with Kraken to build a tokenized stock gateway, and the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), parent company of the New York Stock Exchange, invested $200 million in OKX with plans to put NYSE-listed stocks on-chain.

These institutions need the security of ETH and the liquidity of its ecosystem. But they also need regulatory compliance, privacy controls, custom fee structures, and operational control. A permissionless, fully transparent base layer cannot meet all these needs for them. But a Layer 2 built on top of it can.

As Vitalik wrote a few days later in a follow-up clarification, L2s should "do something that actually brings something new" (e.g., privacy, app-specific efficiency, ultra-low latency, institutional compliance, etc.). Most critically: "The vibe should match the substance." The degree to which an L2 is connected to ETH in its public image should match the degree of connection in reality. A sidechain with a bridge is not the same as a Stage 2 rollup that cannot survive离开 ETH. Calling oneself an "ETH L2" should imply specific things about its security guarantees.

This is about protecting the integrity of the ETH brand, which in turn protects the trust that is beginning to be placed in ETH by institutions.

Layer 2 remains the best business model in crypto. You don't need to spend millions per year on validator infrastructure or inflate a token to pay for security. You inherit ETH's security and pay for it as you use block space.

The Flywheel Effect: Why Scaling L1 Makes L2s More Useful

This is the part those touting "ETH is abandoning L2s" completely miss: scaling the base layer doesn't compete with L2s. It makes them vastly more useful.

To understand why, you need to understand what ETH is at the protocol level. It operates as a globally replicated ledger. Every full node independently verifies every transaction to ensure the ledger is correct. Protocol parameters like the gas limit and block time must be kept conservative enough for ordinary machines to keep up, otherwise you end up requiring data-center-grade hardware to participate, recreating the centralized infrastructure you were trying to escape.

This means raw L1 throughput is inherently scarce, which is what makes ETH block space valuable. This is precisely why a transaction settled on ETH has stronger guarantees than one settled on a chain with only a few hundred validators running in three data centers.

Rollups solve this limitation through a clever division of labor. They move most user transactions off-chain to the L2, where it's fast and cheap, while primarily using ETH for two things: data availability (publishing compressed transaction data from which anyone can reconstruct the L2's state) and final settlement (anchoring the L2's state transitions to L1 consensus). By batching many off-chain transactions together, rollups allow many users to share the cost of a single L1 transaction.

When ETH scales its L1, it directly reduces the cost of these two functions. More gas per block means cheaper settlement costs. More blob capacity means more L2s can publish data simultaneously without competing for scarce data availability. Faster block times mean L2 withdrawals and cross-chain operations become faster. Faster finality means L2s can confirm transactions with higher certainty in less time.

The result is a system where each does what it does best: L1 handles what it's best at (low-risk DeFi, high-value settlement, and serving as the canonical data source), while L2s compete on specialized use cases. This competitive dynamic is much healthier than the current situation—where the primary reason for L2s' existence is simply that L1 is too slow and expensive for everyday transactions.

The Unresolved Issue: Liquidity Fragmentation

Layer 2 does not solve everything. With current technology, every new L2 is a separate island of assets and users. Without seamless interoperability, the ETH ecosystem functions less like a complete network and more like a dozen competing networks. This is the most valid criticism of the ETH L2 ecosystem.

The original rollup-centric roadmap assumed L2s would converge on interoperability standards, and liquidity would flow freely throughout the ecosystem. This didn't happen. Instead, liquidity became fragmented, and for most users, the experience of bridging assets between different L2s remains slow, expensive, and risky.

The Ethereum Foundation has made this a top priority for 2026. Central to the plan is an "open intent framework" where users simply state what they want to do—swap, bridge, pay—and the system automatically routes the optimal path across different L2s. Behind the scenes, a new Ethereum interoperability layer aims to make transactions across L2s feel indistinguishable from transactions on a single chain. Vitalik has also pushed for the development of native rollup precompiles, which would verify zkEVM proofs directly on L1, improving trustless composability between the base layer and rollups.

This is the next problem to solve. If ETH can get it right, making moving assets between different L2s feel like using one chain, then every new L2 strengthens the entire network instead of fragmenting it.

What This Means

As of this writing, ETH's market capitalization is approximately $240 billion. It is the world's most valuable blockchain after Bitcoin, and by a significant margin. The "ETH is dying" narrative simply doesn't match what the market is actually telling you.

Robinhood is tokenizing thousands of stocks on an ETH L2. The gas limit has doubled and has a credible roadmap to increase 10x from current levels within four years. Institutional adoption of ETH-based L2s is accelerating, not slowing down. And the engineering community's excitement is at its highest in years—not just about the roadmap itself, but about the quality of talent it is attracting back into the fold of active contributors.

What is happening is a maturation of strategy. The original rollup-centric roadmap was a pragmatic response to an emergency: in 2020, ETH could not quickly scale its L1 without sacrificing decentralization, and competitors were gaining market share. That emergency is over. But the engineering talent and infrastructure ETH invested in during that period—blobs, data availability sampling, zkEVM research, rollup frameworks—was not wasted. It laid the foundation for the next phase: a radically scaling L1 surrounded by an ecosystem of customizable L2s serving institutions and specific needs that a general-purpose blockchain could never meet.

The correct read of Vitalik's article is not that L2s failed. It's that the initial framework, which positioned L2s as brand shards bearing the full social responsibility of scaling ETH, was the wrong framing. The new framework is simpler and more honest: L2s exist on a spectrum of decentralization, serving different customer needs. Those closest to ETH inherit its security and contribute to its network effects. Those further away serve legitimate purposes but should not pretend to be what they are not. And the ETH L1 that gives all of this value is about to become much more powerful.

ETH is not abandoning L2s. It is just giving them a more lasting reason to exist than "L1 is too slow." And that should make you more bullish on ETH, not less.

Preguntas relacionadas

QWhat was the initial vision for Layer 2s (L2s) in the Ethereum ecosystem, and why did it become outdated according to the article?

AThe initial vision saw L2 Rollups as simple replicas of the Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM), designed to scale Ethereum by handling transactions off-chain while contributing to Ethereum's security and liquidity. This vision became outdated because the transition to 'Stage 2' decentralization (where L2s would be fully trust-minimized and inherit Ethereum's security) progressed much slower and was more difficult than expected. Additionally, many so-called L2s operated as centralized chains with bridges, offering minimal contributions to Ethereum's network effects. The rapid scaling of Ethereum's base layer (L1) and the emergence of L2s focused on customization for institutional needs further rendered the old vision obsolete.

QHow is Ethereum's base layer (L1) scaling, and what technological breakthroughs are enabling this without sacrificing decentralization?

AEthereum's base layer is scaling through a series of protocol upgrades. The Gas limit was already increased from 30 million to 60 million, with a roadmap to push it above 100 million by the end of 2026. Future plans include halving block times from 12 seconds to 6 seconds (or even 4 seconds) in 2027, implementing block-level access lists for parallel transaction processing, migrating to a binary tree state structure, and transitioning to a native zero-knowledge (zk) architecture. The key technological breakthrough is the zkEVM, which compresses transaction verification into a small cryptographic proof, drastically reducing the computational resources needed for validation. This, combined with Data Availability Sampling (DAS), allows for high throughput while maintaining the low hardware requirements that ensure Ethereum's decentralization.

QWhat is the new value proposition for Layer 2s (L2s) in the context of a scaling Ethereum L1?

AThe new value proposition for L2s is customization. Instead of existing primarily because L1 is slow and expensive, L2s now serve institutions and users who require specific features that a permissionless base layer cannot provide. This includes regulatory compliance, privacy controls, custom fee structures, and operational control over the chain (e.g., the ability to quickly patch bugs or respond to regulators). L2s allow these entities to leverage Ethereum's security and tap into its vast liquidity ecosystem while building tailored products. Examples include Robinhood, Coinbase (Base), and Kraken (Ink) building their own L2s to tokenize assets and offer customized financial services.

QAccording to the article, why does scaling Ethereum's L1 actually benefit Layer 2s (L2s) instead of competing with them?

AScaling Ethereum's L1 benefits L2s by directly reducing their operational costs and improving their performance. A higher L1 Gas limit means cheaper settlement costs for L2s. Increased data availability (blob) capacity allows more L2s to publish their data simultaneously without competing for scarce block space. Faster block times on L1 lead to quicker withdrawals and cross-chain operations for L2 users. Faster finality on L1 allows L2s to confirm transactions with higher certainty more quickly. This creates a synergistic relationship where L1 handles what it does best (decentralized security, high-value settlement) and L2s can compete on specialized use cases without being burdened by a slow and expensive base layer.

QWhat is identified as the main current problem with the L2 ecosystem, and what is being proposed to solve it?

AThe main current problem is liquidity fragmentation. Each L2 operates as a separate silo for assets and users, making the ecosystem feel like competing networks rather than a unified one. Bridging assets between L2s is often slow, expensive, and risky. To solve this, the Ethereum Foundation has prioritized interoperability for 2026. The proposed solution is an 'open intent framework' where users simply state what they want to do (e.g., swap, bridge, pay), and the system automatically finds the best path across different L2s. A new Ethereum interoperability layer aims to make cross-L2 transactions feel seamless, like using a single chain. Additionally, native rollup precompiles are being developed to allow for trustless verification of zkEVM proofs directly on L1, improving composability.

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Qué es ETH 3.0

ETH3.0 y $eth 3.0: Un Examen Profundo del Futuro de Ethereum Introducción En el paisaje en rápida evolución de las criptomonedas y la tecnología blockchain, ETH3.0, a menudo denotado como $eth 3.0, ha surgido como un tema de considerable interés y especulación. El término abarca dos conceptos principales que merecen aclaración: Ethereum 3.0: Esto representa una posible actualización futura destinada a aumentar las capacidades de la blockchain existente de Ethereum, enfocándose particularmente en mejorar la escalabilidad y el rendimiento. ETH3.0 Meme Token: Este proyecto de criptomoneda distinto busca aprovechar la blockchain de Ethereum para crear un ecosistema centrado en memes, promoviendo la participación dentro de la comunidad de criptomonedas. Comprender estos aspectos de ETH3.0 es esencial no solo para los entusiastas de las criptomonedas, sino también para aquellos que observan tendencias tecnológicas más amplias en el espacio digital. ¿Qué es ETH3.0? Ethereum 3.0 Ethereum 3.0 se presenta como una actualización propuesta para la red de Ethereum ya establecida, que ha sido la columna vertebral de muchas aplicaciones descentralizadas (dApps) y contratos inteligentes desde su inicio. Las mejoras previstas se concentran principalmente en la escalabilidad, integrando tecnologías avanzadas como sharding y pruebas de conocimiento cero (zk-proofs). Estas innovaciones tecnológicas tienen como objetivo facilitar un número sin precedentes de transacciones por segundo (TPS), potencialmente alcanzando millones, abordando así una de las limitaciones más significativas que enfrenta la tecnología blockchain actual. La mejora no es meramente técnica, sino también estratégica; está destinada a preparar la red de Ethereum para su adopción generalizada y utilidad en un futuro marcado por una mayor demanda de soluciones descentralizadas. ETH3.0 Meme Token En contraste con Ethereum 3.0, el ETH3.0 Meme Token se aventura en un ámbito más ligero y juguetón al combinar la cultura de memes de internet con la dinámica de las criptomonedas. Este proyecto permite a los usuarios comprar, vender e intercambiar memes en la blockchain de Ethereum, proporcionando una plataforma que fomenta la participación comunitaria a través de la creatividad y los intereses compartidos. El ETH3.0 Meme Token tiene como objetivo demostrar cómo la tecnología blockchain puede intersectarse con la cultura digital, creando casos de uso que son tanto entretenidos como financieramente viables. ¿Quién es el Creador de ETH3.0? Ethereum 3.0 La iniciativa hacia Ethereum 3.0 es impulsada principalmente por un consorcio de desarrolladores e investigadores dentro de la comunidad de Ethereum, incluyendo notablemente a Justin Drake. Conocido por sus ideas y contribuciones a la evolución de Ethereum, Drake ha sido una figura prominente en las discusiones sobre la transición de Ethereum a una nueva capa de consenso, denominada “Beam Chain.” Este enfoque colaborativo para el desarrollo significa que Ethereum 3.0 no es el producto de un creador singular, sino más bien una manifestación de ingenio colectivo centrado en avanzar la tecnología blockchain. ETH3.0 Meme Token Los detalles sobre el creador del ETH3.0 Meme Token son actualmente inidentificables. La naturaleza de los tokens de memes a menudo conduce a una estructura más descentralizada y dirigida por la comunidad, lo que podría explicar la falta de atribución específica. Esto se alinea con la ética de la comunidad cripto más amplia, donde la innovación a menudo surge de esfuerzos colaborativos en lugar de individuales. ¿Quiénes son los Inversores de ETH3.0? Ethereum 3.0 El apoyo a Ethereum 3.0 proviene principalmente de la Fundación Ethereum junto con una entusiasta comunidad de desarrolladores e inversores. Esta asociación fundamental proporciona un grado significativo de legitimidad y mejora la perspectiva de una implementación exitosa, ya que aprovecha la confianza y credibilidad construidas a lo largo de años de operaciones en la red. En el clima cambiando rápidamente de las criptomonedas, el apoyo de la comunidad juega un papel crucial en impulsar el desarrollo y la adopción, posicionando a Ethereum 3.0 como un contendiente serio para futuros avances en blockchain. ETH3.0 Meme Token Si bien las fuentes actualmente disponibles no proporcionan información explícita sobre las fundaciones o organizaciones de inversión que respaldan el ETH3.0 Meme Token, es indicativo del modelo de financiamiento típico para tokens de memes, que a menudo depende del apoyo de base y la participación comunitaria. Los inversores en tales proyectos suelen consistir en individuos motivados por el potencial de innovación impulsada por la comunidad y el espíritu de cooperación que se encuentra dentro de la comunidad cripto. ¿Cómo Funciona ETH3.0? Ethereum 3.0 Las características distintivas de Ethereum 3.0 radican en su implementación propuesta de sharding y tecnología zk-proof. Sharding es un método de particionamiento de la blockchain en piezas más pequeñas y manejables o “shards,” que pueden procesar transacciones de manera concurrente en lugar de secuencial. Esta descentralización del procesamiento ayuda a prevenir la congestión y asegura que la red permanezca receptiva incluso bajo una carga pesada. La tecnología de prueba de conocimiento cero (zk-proof) contribuye con otra capa de sofisticación al permitir la validación de transacciones sin revelar los datos subyacentes involucrados. Este aspecto no solo mejora la privacidad, sino que también aumenta la eficiencia general de la red. También se habla de incorporar una Máquina Virtual de Ethereum de conocimiento cero (zkEVM) en esta actualización, amplificando aún más las capacidades y utilidad de la red. ETH3.0 Meme Token El ETH3.0 Meme Token se distingue al capitalizar la popularidad de la cultura de memes. Establece un mercado para que los usuarios participen en el comercio de memes, no solo por entretenimiento sino también por el posible beneficio económico. Al integrar características como staking, provisión de liquidez y mecanismos de gobernanza, el proyecto fomenta un entorno que incentiva la interacción y participación de la comunidad. Al ofrecer una mezcla única de entretenimiento y oportunidad económica, el ETH3.0 Meme Token tiene como objetivo atraer a una audiencia diversa, que abarca desde entusiastas de las criptomonedas hasta conocedores casuales de memes. Línea de Tiempo de ETH3.0 Ethereum 3.0 11 de noviembre de 2024: Justin Drake insinúa la próxima actualización de ETH 3.0, centrada en mejoras de escalabilidad. Este anuncio significa el comienzo de las discusiones formales sobre la futura arquitectura de Ethereum. 12 de noviembre de 2024: Se espera que la propuesta anticipada para Ethereum 3.0 se desvele en Devcon en Bangkok, preparando el escenario para una mayor retroalimentación de la comunidad y posibles próximos pasos en el desarrollo. ETH3.0 Meme Token 21 de marzo de 2024: El ETH3.0 Meme Token se lista oficialmente en CoinMarketCap, marcando su incursión en el dominio público de las criptomonedas y mejorando la visibilidad de su ecosistema basado en memes. Puntos Clave En conclusión, Ethereum 3.0 representa una evolución significativa dentro de la red de Ethereum, enfocándose en superar las limitaciones en términos de escalabilidad y rendimiento a través de tecnologías avanzadas. Sus actualizaciones propuestas reflejan un enfoque proactivo hacia las demandas y la usabilidad futura. Por otro lado, el ETH3.0 Meme Token encapsula la esencia de la cultura impulsada por la comunidad en el espacio de las criptomonedas, aprovechando la cultura de memes para crear plataformas atractivas que fomentan la creatividad y participación del usuario. Comprender los distintos propósitos y funcionalidades de ETH3.0 y $eth 3.0 es fundamental para cualquiera interesado en los desarrollos en curso dentro del espacio cripto. Con ambas iniciativas abriendo caminos únicos, subrayan colectivamente la naturaleza dinámica y multifacética de la innovación en blockchain.

178 Vistas totalesPublicado en 2024.04.04Actualizado en 2024.12.03

Qué es ETH 3.0

Cómo comprar ETH

¡Bienvenido a HTX.com! Hemos hecho que comprar Ethereum (ETH) sea simple y conveniente. Sigue nuestra guía paso a paso para iniciar tu viaje de criptos.Paso 1: crea tu cuenta HTXUtiliza tu correo electrónico o número de teléfono para registrarte y obtener una cuenta gratuita en HTX. Experimenta un proceso de registro sin complicaciones y desbloquea todas las funciones.Obtener mi cuentaPaso 2: ve a Comprar cripto y elige tu método de pagoTarjeta de crédito/débito: usa tu Visa o Mastercard para comprar Ethereum (ETH) al instante.Saldo: utiliza fondos del saldo de tu cuenta HTX para tradear sin problemas.Terceros: hemos agregado métodos de pago populares como Google Pay y Apple Pay para mejorar la comodidad.P2P: tradear directamente con otros usuarios en HTX.Over-the-Counter (OTC): ofrecemos servicios personalizados y tipos de cambio competitivos para los traders.Paso 3: guarda tu Ethereum (ETH)Después de comprar tu Ethereum (ETH), guárdalo en tu cuenta HTX. Alternativamente, puedes enviarlo a otro lugar mediante transferencia blockchain o utilizarlo para tradear otras criptomonedas.Paso 4: tradear Ethereum (ETH)Tradear fácilmente con Ethereum (ETH) en HTX's mercado spot. Simplemente accede a tu cuenta, selecciona tu par de trading, ejecuta tus trades y monitorea en tiempo real. Ofrecemos una experiencia fácil de usar tanto para principiantes como para traders experimentados.

3.9k Vistas totalesPublicado en 2024.12.10Actualizado en 2025.03.21

Cómo comprar ETH

Discusiones

Bienvenido a la comunidad de HTX. Aquí puedes mantenerte informado sobre los últimos desarrollos de la plataforma y acceder a análisis profesionales del mercado. A continuación se presentan las opiniones de los usuarios sobre el precio de ETH (ETH).

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