Project Updates

Tracks blockchain projects from inception to their latest updates and major milestones. By covering project financing, partnerships, and product upgrades, it helps investors stay informed about the latest industry trends and developments.

What Are the Highlights of Ethereum's Most Important Glamsterdam Upgrade This Year?

Ethereum's upcoming Glamsterdam upgrade, a major mid-year update, focuses on execution-layer improvements, building upon the data-layer enhancements of the previous Fusaka upgrade. The core features include ePBS (enshrined Proposer-Builder Separation) and BAL (Block Access List). ePBS (EIP-7732) formally bakes the separation of block building and validation roles into the protocol, moving away from reliance on third-party relays. This aims to reduce trust assumptions, prevent centralization at the validator level, and improve network efficiency. BAL allows block builders to pre-declare which accounts and storage locations a block's transactions will access, enabling validators to prepare data and verify transactions in parallel, significantly boosting throughput. Additional changes include gas fee re-pricing and multi-dimensional gas, which are expected to lower costs for average users while increasing overall network capacity (though potentially raising costs for some developers). For stakers, the upgrade promises a clearer income model and greater block selection power, smoothing out MEV rewards. However, the full potential of ePBS is dependent on a future upgrade (Hegotá) to implement FOCIL (Fork Choice-Enforced Inclusion Lists), which would give validators a final tool to combat transaction censorship. Potential challenges include the upgrade's high complexity, the risk of new forms of validator centralization, and the fact that toxic MEV (e.g., front-running) may persist, merely shifting elsewhere. Ultimately, Glamsterdam represents a significant step in Ethereum's commitment to decentralization, potentially increasing its trust and adoption.

marsbit03/06 01:12

What Are the Highlights of Ethereum's Most Important Glamsterdam Upgrade This Year?

marsbit03/06 01:12

Ripple's 'Backdoor' Access to the Heart of Wall Street: Is XRP's Spring Coming?

Ripple, through its institutional platform Ripple Prime (formerly Hidden Road), has been added to the participant list of the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC), a subsidiary of the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC). This grants Ripple direct access to the core clearing and settlement infrastructure of Wall Street, marking a significant step toward mainstream financial integration. The move allows Ripple Prime to clear over-the-counter (OTC) trades for institutional clients through the NSCC’s central counterparty system, reducing counterparty risk and improving efficiency. Ripple acquired Hidden Road in 2025, gaining an established pipeline serving over 300 institutional clients with approximately $3 trillion in annual trading volume. The development has sparked speculation within the XRP community about the potential use of the XRP Ledger (XRPL) for settling institutional transactions. If even a fraction of the cleared assets were settled on XRPL, it could significantly increase network activity and demand for XRP, building on Ripple’s existing On-Demand Liquidity (ODL) solution. However, challenges remain, including regulatory hurdles, the need to build trust among traditional financial institutions, and competition from other blockchain projects. While this infrastructure upgrade may not cause immediate price movements, it positions XRP as a potential settlement layer for institutional assets, shifting its value proposition from a payment token to a foundational component in the convergence of crypto and traditional finance.

marsbit03/06 01:10

Ripple's 'Backdoor' Access to the Heart of Wall Street: Is XRP's Spring Coming?

marsbit03/06 01:10

Interview with Sui Founder: Leaving Meta at 50 to Start a Business, How to Rebuild the 'Foundation' for the Internet

Evan Cheng, co-founder and CEO of Mysten Labs (the core developer behind the Sui blockchain), shares his journey from working at Apple and Meta to starting his own venture in his 50s. He left Meta’s Libra (Diem) project due to creative constraints and a desire to build foundational internet infrastructure tailored for automation and AI agents. Cheng believes current web architecture is ill-suited for automation and aims to create a unified, efficient, and secure blockchain layer to support future automated interactions between humans, machines, and agents. He addresses key industry challenges, including misconceptions about blockchain (e.g., the "blockchain trilemma"), technical immaturity, and fragmented privacy and security models. Sui tackles these with its object-centric architecture, integrated privacy features, and a full-stack approach that offers iOS-like developer convenience. Sui has attracted major partners like CCP Games, who are building persistent, automated game economies on the network. Cheng also highlights DeepBook, Sui's native central limit order book, which acts as a shared liquidity hub to improve capital efficiency across DeFi applications. Despite market’s volatility, Cheng remains focused on long-term goals, emphasizing real-world adoption and the need for robust, scalable infrastructure beyond short-term speculation.

marsbit03/05 02:59

Interview with Sui Founder: Leaving Meta at 50 to Start a Business, How to Rebuild the 'Foundation' for the Internet

marsbit03/05 02:59

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