# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Blockchain

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "Blockchain", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

Data Reveals: Is Solana's Slower Transfer Speed Actually Caused by Validators 'Playing Games'?

Jito Labs launched the IBRL Explorer tool to analyze Solana validator behavior in block construction, revealing widespread "timing games" that slow down the network. The tool evaluates validators based on slot time (35%), even distribution of non-vote transactions (40%), and early vote processing (25%). Many validators engage in "late packing," where non-vote transactions are delayed until the final ticks of a slot, prioritizing profit maximization through MEV extraction (e.g., backrunning or sandwich attacks) at the expense of network latency and user experience. This disrupts Solana’s intended streaming design, increases execution variance, and exacerbates negative market structure effects like wider bid-ask spreads. A debate exists between Jito and Temporal (developer of Harmonic client) over what constitutes optimal block construction. Temporal argues IBRL scores favor Jito’s approach and misclassify Harmonic’s auction-based method, which batches transactions but claims continuous execution. Harmonic outperforms in per-block revenue but faces scrutiny over potential user trade-offs. Protocol-level solutions like Multi-Concurrent Proposers (MCP) aim to eliminate single-leader monopolies by enabling parallel block building, but depend on Alpenglow’s mainnet launch (est. 2026). Meanwhile, Jito’s BAM client, now adopted by ~12% of stake, offers auditable ordering logic to mitigate MEV externalities. The competition highlights tensions between validator profitability and network health.

比推01/08 18:21

Data Reveals: Is Solana's Slower Transfer Speed Actually Caused by Validators 'Playing Games'?

比推01/08 18:21

From Intern to the Main Table: The 'Fast Lane of Life' for Early Crypto Participants

From Intern to the Main Table: The "Fast Track" of Early Crypto Participants The article chronicles the remarkable journeys of early cryptocurrency adopters who leveraged internships and entry-level roles during Bitcoin's nascent stages (2013-2017) to achieve extraordinary success. It highlights three key figures: 1. **Xiao Hong (founder of AI company Manus, acquired by Meta in 2025)**: As a sophomore intern at Chinese Bitcoin media outlet YiBit in 2013, he absorbed decentralized principles that later informed his AI work. His path exemplifies how early crypto exposure provided a "vector" for identifying future technological shifts. 2. **Ge Yuesheng (youngest billionaire in Bitmain’s founding team)**: Initially an intern at a私募 firm, he used family resources to become Bitmain’s earliest angel investor at age 21, securing 28% equity. His risk-taking during crypto’s volatility led to co-founding Matrixport. 3. **Wang Hui (OKCoin’s first employee)**: He built OKCoin’s technical infrastructure from scratch, later founding JEX (acquired by Binance). His story underscores OKCoin’s role as a "crypto黄埔军校" (Huangpu Military Academy) for talent. Common success factors include: - **Timing**: Entering during crypto’s "chaotic phase" (2013-2017) offered disproportionate growth opportunities. - **Mentorship**: Aligning with visionaries like神鱼(Shenyu), Wu Jihan, or Xu Mingxing provided access to high-value networks. - **Risk tolerance**: Embracing uncertainty during bear markets and early adoption yielded outsized returns. The piece acknowledges survivorship bias but argues that early crypto immersion cultivated a unique mindset—blending technical intuition, product agility, and long-term conviction—that enabled these individuals to thrive across subsequent tech waves (AI, Web3). In a rapidly evolving industry, today’s interns could be tomorrow’s billionaires.

比推01/08 14:29

From Intern to the Main Table: The 'Fast Lane of Life' for Early Crypto Participants

比推01/08 14:29

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