Glue Finance Founder: ETH Has Entered a Phase of Non-Consensus, an Inflection Point Is Coming

marsbit發佈於 2026-06-26更新於 2026-06-26

文章摘要

"Glue Finance founder argues Ethereum's current price underperformance stems from its 'unfinished machine' status. Despite record usage and settlement value in 2026, ETH remains below its 2021 peak because the protocol's continued development creates a dependency on the Ethereum Foundation for guidance and fixes. Key issues include centralized L2 sequencers, governance-based freezes (as seen with Arbitrum), state bloat, a vulnerable public mempool, and looming quantum computing threats. This 'dependency discount' prevents ETH from accruing the 'ossification premium' that markets award to immutable, trustless systems like Bitcoin. The author, a self-described Ethereum maximalist, rejects two flawed escape paths: a 'war mode' shift towards centralization for speed (which would sacrifice Ethereum's core value), or simply replacing the EF with another governing body. The only solution is the 'Manhattan Plan' or 'Lean Ethereum': a concerted, accelerated effort to complete and then *freeze* the protocol's neutral core. This involves finalizing critical upgrades in consensus (Lean Consensus), scaling (targeting 1 trillion gas/sec), quantum resistance (leanXMSS signatures), and full ZK-provable execution. The goal is to pass the 'walk-away test'—where Ethereum could run forever, neutrally, without the EF. Success would transform Ethereum into the first programmable, quantum-resistant, immutable global settlement layer, flipping its current discount into a unique 'eternity premium' ...

Author:@LaLiLuLeL0x

Compiled by: Jiahuan, ChainCatcher

The debate about the stewards is just a distraction. Ethereum truly wins when it no longer needs any stewards, when its core is frozen and beyond the reach of the EF, Ethlabs, or any future successors. This is its "Manhattan Project," and it's progressing quite well.

It's mid-2026, and the data doesn't add up. Ethereum is settling more value than ever, hosting the vast majority of stablecoins, tokenized funds, and DeFi. Yet ETH trades around $1,750, down about 57% from the 2025 highs and still below the peak set in 2021.

Five years have passed, a full technical transformation is complete, yet the asset price lags behind its past. Something must be wrong, and the comforting explanations about macroeconomics, the Fed, and capital rotation to Bitcoin don't get to the root of it.

The real explanation is more brutal, and that's the whole reason I'm writing this. Ethereum is a running but unfinished machine. It runs, it's decentralized, it never goes down. But it's full of half-built, in-progress, promised-not-delivered features.

Especially after the Merge and the rollup-centric roadmap, it feels less like a finished network and more like a long-term promise, credibly neutral and decentralized on paper, but every upgrade quietly adds a new pile of problems that must be solved for that promise to fully materialize, and each pile ultimately lands on the same small group of people to clean up.

An unfinished machine needs mechanics. So, while Ethereum is formally independent, with no single entity in control, in practice it still indirectly depends on the goodwill of the Ethereum Foundation to keep building and steering.

The market isn't mispricing Ethereum's usage. The market is pricing this dependency. And the project to finally fix this has a name: Lean Ethereum, also known as Ethereum's Manhattan Project.

Let me break this down step by step, because I know it will make many people angry. But I believe this hits exactly on the reality, the real challenge Ethereum faces today in leadership and at the protocol level. Remember, I'm an Ethereum maximalist. I'm not here to spread FUD, I'm here to keep the conversation pointed in the right direction. I have my view. Let me have the chance to make it clear.

1. The State of the Machine

Look honestly at where Ethereum is.

The L2 bet has lost half of what matters. The rollup-centric roadmap was supposed to scale without losing decentralization. Years later, every major L2 still runs a centralized sequencer—a single operator ordering transactions, which can censor, extract value, or simply go down, like Linea pausing in 2024 or Base going offline in 2025.

Out of dozens of rollups, almost none have passed the first stage of maturity according to L2Beat's own metrics, let alone the second stage of full trustlessness.

We did this to ourselves.

The only viable defense for centralized sequencers was always the escape hatch. Even if the operator censors you or shuts down entirely, the rollup should let you force your transaction from L1 and withdraw your assets back to Ethereum without anyone's permission.

This guarantee is why centralized sequencers were tolerated in the first place: the keys to the chain are never in your hands, but the exit always is.

Yet, the exit proved conditional. In April 2026, after the Kelp DAO bridge was drained of roughly $292 million, Arbitrum's Security Council—twelve elected members—used emergency powers to step in and forcibly move 30,766 ETH (about $71 million) from the attacker's address into a governance-controlled wallet.

Freezing a thief's loot might sound like the system working, and perhaps it is. But see what this proves. A small council can proactively seize and freeze funds on Arbitrum, meaning your assets there are at their discretion. If a power can stop a hacker, it can stop anyone, including under a subpoena or government pressure.

The escape hatch saves you only if no one holding privileged keys decides otherwise. The irony writes itself: the moment the on-chain freeze went into effect, a U.S. court pierced straight through Arbitrum's supposedly "decentralized" governance, ordering the DAO not to move the funds at all. So much for unstoppable.

The base layer itself carries open wounds that may never heal. State bloat keeps increasing the data every node must store. The mempool is worse.

Because pending transactions are stored publicly, using the public mempool has become a frontrunning death spiral: the moment you broadcast a transaction, it's seen, sandwiched, tailgated before it confirms, a permanent tax where bots extract value from regular users simply for seeing order flow first.

The fix, encrypted mempools, has been discussed and drafted for years, still not live. These aren't rare edge cases. They are core properties for anything claiming to be a neutral settlement layer, and they remain tagged as "under construction."

Quantum computing is no longer sci-fi without a date. Vitalik's 2026 cryptography roadmap names four parts of Ethereum that could be broken by a quantum computer, with the threat model including "record now, decrypt later"—an adversary records encrypted data today to decrypt it when the hardware arrives.

This is a countdown, and the clock is ticking.

Against this backdrop, one faction wants Ethereum to respond by going into war mode. Get aggressive, play nice with institutions on their terms, relax the decentralization standards that slow everything down, get faster, more centralized, to compete on throughput with Solana and pump the price.

This sounds ambitious. It's actually surrender.

Because if Ethereum trades away the neutrality that makes it different, it doesn't beat Solana, it just becomes a slower Solana.

The best outcome for the war-mode route is Ethereum falling to Solana's valuation, because that's what the market pays for a fast chain that gave up credible neutrality. You cannot win the monetary premium by becoming something that never had one.

2. Why ETH Isn't at $10K

So here's the answer to the question every ETH holder has been agonizing over.

The reason ETH isn't at five figures, or even holding its old highs while the underlying network keeps growing, isn't a lack of usage. Its usage is overwhelming. The reason is the machine isn't finished, and an unfinished machine is unreliable, can't be counted on to stand alone.

Think about what a global settlement layer really needs to promise. Not speed. Not features. It must promise the ground won't move under you, that you can settle a billion dollars on it today, and tomorrow the rules are the same, and no one can unilaterally change them.

Ethereum can't make that promise yet, because Ethereum is still under construction, and the act of construction is the act of change. Scaling isn't done. L2 decentralization isn't done. The consensus layer is a five-year-old design waiting to be replaced.

Quantum resistance is a roadmap, not delivered fact. Every unfinished gap is a place where the protocol still needs to change, and every change must be decided by someone.

That someone is the Ethereum Foundation. It's not a conspiracy; it's because they're the ones who can finish the unfinished machine.

The market sees this clearly. The market will not pay an eternal premium to a chain that obviously still needs its founders to complete and steer it. A settlement layer dependent on mechanics is not a settlement layer. It's just a nice machine with a service contract. That's what $1,750 is pricing. Dependency.

I argued the bullish side in "The Rigidity Premium": the market pays for eternity, and the chain that becomes most immutable wins the monetary prize. This is the other side of the same coin. Ethereum hasn't earned that premium because it hasn't become immutable. It's not set; not set needs management, and needing management gets a discount.

3. Everyone Is Exhausted

An unfinished machine has a cost, one that never shows up in price, only felt by the people building here themselves. Everyone building on Ethereum is exhausted, and the exhaustion at every layer is the same: the ground keeps moving under them, so you can't build anything lasting on top of it.

Start with L2s. They can't fully decentralize because they're stuck waiting for the next standard, the next blob upgrade, the next interoperability layer, the next account abstraction model, and the next thing the base layer is about to change. So they keep the keys.

As of 2026, no major rollup has reached Stage 2 on L2Beat's scale; Arbitrum and Optimism are both stuck at Stage 1, meaning a Security Council holding upgrade keys remains a core trust point, a multisig that can rewrite bridges or shut down proofs.

Everyone says it's the price of early days. But early days never end because the base is unpredictable, so centralization never leaves.

One layer up, Dapps have the same exhaustion. They're forced to deploy on every L2 simultaneously—Arbitrum, Optimism, Base, ZK-chains, etc.—maintaining a dozen deployment instances, fragmenting liquidity, and trusting cross-chain bridges that are themselves attack surfaces.

Because the base is uncertain, they keep their contracts upgradeable, holding admin keys, proxies, and pause switches, the very escape hatches that rob contracts of credible neutrality.

The dream was to write immutable code that no one, not even the author, could change. The reality is uncertainty forces every serious team to set an upgrade key, because releasing something truly frozen on an unfrozen base is a bet most developers can't afford.

Client teams aren't having it any better.

Browser vendors, which ultimately compete on performance and features, spend their time rewriting the deepest internals of the protocol to digest the next hard fork, with two major upgrades per year now and a full consensus layer rewrite queued up. They're not maintaining a set standard; they're stuck in migration mode, rewriting the base over and over instead of building on top of it.

The Foundation sees the symptom and wants to fix it with a schedule: set a predictable cadence of two forks per year, advertise it like iOS or Android release cycles, clearly aimed at reducing developer uncertainty. It helps you plan, but it doesn't cure. Predictable churn is still churn.

And this is the part that should unsettle you more: it's the people who came for the promise who should be most alarmed.

This endless, "always under construction" state quietly kills the decentralization dream from the top down. You cannot build a credibly neutral, immutable, and hands-off application on a base that is neither immutable nor hands-off itself.

Mutability at the base forces mutability from the bottom up: upgrade keys on rollups, admin keys on Dapps, migration mode on clients. The unfinished machine forces everyone building on it to keep a mechanic too. And a mechanic is a master key, the absolute opposite of what we all came here to build.

4. Two Wrong Escape Routes

There are two tempting ways out here, and both are traps.

The first is the war mode mentioned above. Going centralized to compete is to erase the only trait worth paying for. Dead end.

The second route is subtler and more tempting for those who care: decide the problem is the Foundation, and either replace it with a better one or go to war with Vitalik.

This is also wrong, it misreads the situation completely. The Ethereum Foundation and Vitalik today are a gift. For a decade, they have stewarded Ethereum, staying neutral when they didn't have to. I'm not writing this against them. I'm grateful they exist.

But some things gratitude can't fix. Relying on good stewards is not the same as needing no stewards. Even a perfect Foundation is a single point of trust, it won't last forever, it's made of people, and people change.

The EF of 2035 will not be the EF of 2025. A Foundation that stays neutral today could be captured, pressured, bought, or simply succeeded by worse people tomorrow.

Nobody wants the credible neutrality of a global settlement layer dependent on the continued goodwill of the EF, Ethlabs, or whoever holds the wheel next.

The whole point of crypto is not having to trust the people in charge.

Ethereum needs about $30 million a year to keep its client teams and researchers running. These researchers are underpaid relative to their market value, something the ecosystem itself acknowledges, making their teams more vulnerable to being scooped up.

New funders are crowding into the vacuum. Ethlabs launched in June 2026, founded by five former EF researchers, backed by BitMine, SharpLink, and Joe Lubin, with a public mission to make Ethereum the settlement layer of the global economy. They may be entirely well-intentioned and specifically channel funds through an independent manager to protect neutrality. But that's not the point.

The point is structural: when neutral stewards exit and capital fills the void, neutrality is no longer anchored in an institution that wants nothing; it starts relying on actors who inherently want something.

The sharper conflict is already visible, like a live proposal to let 51% of stake weight vote to reallocate validator rewards, with critics calling it a governance capture machine outright, because the people who would receive that money are the ones designing the system.

Replacing one steward with another doesn't solve anything. It just renames the single point of trust.

5. The Hands-Off Test

There is a clear way to see through the whole problem, and this is the core test of the entire argument.

Ask a question. If the Ethereum Foundation and Vitalik collectively walked away tomorrow, could Ethereum keep running, unchanged and credibly neutral, forever?

Be honest, the answer today is no. The machine isn't done, it would stall if hands-off; and its current neutrality is held by social consensus, promises kept by good people, not enforced by mechanisms.

Vitalik himself defined credible neutrality as requiring transparent rules, equal application, open participation, and difficult to change. Ethereum does the first three, fails on the fourth.

Its rules are still easy to change, just via a small off-chain process: an EIP proposal, a weekly All Core Devs call, rough consensus among about 150 core devs spread across ~11 organizations, and a handful of client teams. No enforced rules.

6. The Only Solution

The fix isn't a better foundation. It's to finish the machine, then freeze the parts that make it credibly neutral, put the base layer into maintenance mode, so that Ethereum finally passes the hands-off test on its own.

Once the neutral core is frozen, the dependency dissolves. Then, the Ethereum Foundation can do the healthiest thing a steward can: become optional.

It can partner with a dozen new entities, shrink to a research lab, hand work to competing teams, even fade away, and none of it would threaten the network, because the part that defines Ethereum's neutrality can no longer be changed by anyone, captured or well-meaning. You can't manipulate what can't move. You can't capture what's done.

This makes the order non-negotiable, because the goal here isn't anti-capitalism, it's the opposite.

Private capital flooding into Ethereum research, entities like Ethlabs delivering tangible value rather than grant-driven busywork, is one of the healthiest things that can happen in this ecosystem, and I hope there is more of it.

But you can't put capitalism into a state of nature where nothing stops you from harming, stealing, or tearing up contracts. A free market without an underlying rule of law doesn't bring prosperity, it unleashes the worst of human nature tied to money.

Capitalism built on rules is a gift, unmoored it's a predator.

Protocols are the same. First freeze the parts that make Ethereum safe and credibly neutral, set the fundamental rules in stone, then open the doors to private capital, let a hundred well-funded teams compete to build everything on top of it.

If you reverse the order, invite capital in before freezing the neutral core, you just get a Solana competitor valued at one-sixth of ETH's price today.

As an ETH maximalist, I don't enjoy writing what comes next, but it's the central truth of everything. Ethereum's endgame is its own Bitcoinization. Become as immutable as Bitcoin, win the eternity premium the market will actually pay for, and do the one thing Bitcoin never can: cross the finish line with full programmability.

Bitcoin froze by accident and neglect, ending up a rock that does nothing.

Ethereum has the chance to freeze proactively, selectively, and end up the trusted neutral settlement layer for the entire tokenized economy. Same eternity. Much larger prize. That's the whole bullish case, and it demands rigidity before war mode.

7. The Manhattan Project

Lean Ethereum is the path to finishing and freezing the machine, and that's why I keep invoking that grandest historical metaphor. When a field bundles its hardest problems into a single, concentrated, deadline-driven, existential push, that's a Manhattan Project. And that's what's happening.

It bundles the protocol's four hardest problems into one decisive plan, targeting a single bound-together hard fork rather than a decade of dribbles.

Rigidity. The consensus layer is being rebuilt from the ground up as Lean Consensus, work once called Beam Chain, with 3-slot finality, ~12-second finality, and 4-second block times. Justin Drake's term for this strategy is rigidity accelerationism: bundle every difficult change into a single leap to get the layer into maintenance mode as fast as possible. Build once, then freeze.

Scaling. The target is 1 trillion gas per second on L1, ~10,000 TPS at the base layer, millions at L2, achieved through ZK verification and data availability based on blobs and PeerDAS, not scaling blocks on centralized hardware. The pace is 3x, then 10x, then 100x.

Quantum Resistance. Validator BLS signatures will be replaced with leanXMSS, a quantum-secure hash-based scheme, with a STARK aggregation engine compressing the results ~250x. User accounts get signature agility via account abstraction, so wallets can opt into post-quantum protection themselves without waiting for the whole chain. Target readiness ~2029.

ZK. Make the entire chain provable, letting anyone cheaply verify consensus with a succinct proof, while the execution layer is rebuilt around a ZK-friendly virtual machine. SNARK-friendly hash-based signatures are the key hinge merging quantum resistance and provability.

And this plan heals the two specific wounds mentioned at the start.

Statelessness. State bloat is the ever-growing full state copy each node must carry, slowly squeezing out home validators, the first wound. Statelessness cuts it: validators no longer store the whole state, they verify each block with compact proofs, turning the node-running burden from storage back into cheap compute, keeping the validator set wide and decentralized.

Native Rollups. The L2 mess is the other wound, and the EXECUTE precompile in EIP-8079 is the fix. Native rollups no longer run their own proofs, governance, security councils; they hand their blocks back to Ethereum for direct verification, inheriting L1 security, upgrades, and quantum resistance for free.

No hackable multisigs, no upgrade keys to hold. The centralization trap rollups are forced into disappears: you're not re-implementing Ethereum, you become part of Ethereum, and you rigidify the day Ethereum rigidifies.

Synchronous Composability. Better, it recaptures what fragmentation stole. With a shared execution layer and Ethereum-level ordering, rollups become atomically composable: a transaction can hit several rollups and L1 in the same block, either all succeed or all fail, just like smart contracts on a single chain.

No cross-chain bridges, no routing, no doubting which chain you're on. Liquidity merges into a whole, Ethereum feels like one computer regardless of how many rollups run on it. It needs real-time proofs, still racing to production, but that's the finish line.

The work is already moving. The Fusaka upgrade shipped with PeerDAS and the first substantive step of the scaling plan, the post-quantum effort has a public home at pq.ethereum.org with its replacement signature scheme designated, new client teams forming around Lean Consensus.

The hard, decisive parts—the consensus layer rewrite, the quantum migration, and the final freeze—lie ahead, with the next forks Glamsterdam and Hegotá scheduled in 2026, targeting full readiness by the end of the decade. That part is still counting down.

The original Manhattan Project not only ended the bloodiest war in history, it remade the world order around the nation that got there first.

Lean Ethereum aims for finality on the same scale. Not to win the blockchain race, but to end it. The day Ethereum freezes its neutral core, passes the hands-off test, and can no longer be steered by anyone, the race for the world's base layer is over.

Bitcoin has already shown what the market will pay for a rigid rock that does nothing, over a trillion dollars just for eternity.

And the world has never priced a rigid rock that's also the settlement layer for the global economy, because it's never existed.

Lean Ethereum is the plan to build exactly that. Complete it, and Ethereum not only flips Bitcoin, it hits a number no model can yet derive, and transcends Bitcoin entirely, because it finally has the one thing Bitcoin has, eternity, plus the one thing Bitcoin gave up, programmability.

That's why it can't be a decade of gentle incrementalism. It's a race between two clocks.

The first is the rigidity clock: how fast Lean Ethereum finishes the machine and freezes the neutral core. The second is the capture clock: how fast funding vacuums, corporate-stewardship-in-all-but-name filling EF's empty chairs, the war-mode faction pushing centralization, and the quantum deadline harden into actual problems. Every year Ethereum stays unfinished is another year of window to be captured, pressured, or simply left dependent on whoever happens to hold the wheel.

8. Two Endings

So, without doomsaying or blind cheering, here's where Ethereum really stands.

Complete the Manhattan Project, freeze the base, pass the hands-off test, and Ethereum becomes the world's first rigid, quantum-resistant, credibly neutral global economic settlement layer, a settlement layer that needs no foundation, no founder, no permission to stay neutral.

At that moment, the dependency discount crushing the price reverses into an eternity premium, a revaluation with no comp, no ceiling.

If it stalls, or lets the war-mode faction trade neutrality for speed, Ethereum at best becomes a slower Solana, at worst an untrustworthy, manipulable, forever-mutable chain, a thing drifting at the whim of funders, and the premium it chased evaporates forever.

I'm long because I believe it can do it. But anyone telling you the outcome is guaranteed has skipped the hardest chapter. Finish the machine, freeze it, graduate from needing anyone at the wheel. That's the whole game right now.

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什麼是 ETH 2.0

ETH 2.0:以太坊的新時代 介紹 ETH 2.0,廣為人知的以太坊 2.0,標誌著對以太坊區塊鏈的一次重大升級。這次過渡不僅僅是表面上的改造;其目標是從根本上增強網絡的可擴展性、安全性和可持續性。ETH 2.0 透過從能量密集型的工作量證明(PoW)共識機制轉向更高效的權益證明(PoS),承諾為區塊鏈生態系統帶來變革性的改變。 什麼是 ETH 2.0? ETH 2.0 是一系列獨特且相互連接的更新,專注於優化以太坊的能力和性能。這次全面改革旨在解決現有以太坊機制所面臨的主要挑戰,特別是交易速度和網絡擁堵問題。 ETH 2.0 的目標 ETH 2.0 的主要目標圍繞著改善三個核心方面: 可擴展性:旨在顯著提升網絡每秒可以處理的交易數量,ETH 2.0 希望突破目前約每秒 15 笔交易的限制,潛在地達到數千筆。 安全性:增強的安全措施是 ETH 2.0 的核心,特別是提高抵抗網絡攻擊的能力以及保護以太坊的去中心化精神。 可持續性:新的 PoS 機制旨在不僅提高效率,還大幅降低能耗,讓以太坊的運營框架與環保考量相符。 誰是 ETH 2.0 的創造者? ETH 2.0 的創建可追溯至以太坊基金會。這個非營利組織在支持以太坊發展方面發揮著關鍵作用,由著名的聯合創始人 Vitalik Buterin 主導。他對於更可擴展和更可持續以太坊的願景,是這次升級的推動力,並吸引了來自全球的開發者和愛好者的貢獻,共同致力於改善協議。 誰是 ETH 2.0 的投資者? 雖然有關 ETH 2.0 的投資者的具體信息尚未公開,但以太坊基金會已知方向來自區塊鏈及技術領域的各種組織和個人支持。這些合作夥伴包括創投公司、技術公司和慈善機構,它們共同致力於支持去中心化技術和區塊鏈基礎設施的發展。 ETH 2.0 如何運作? ETH 2.0 以引入一系列關鍵特性而著稱,使其與前身有所區別。 權益證明(PoS) 轉向 PoS 共識機制是 ETH 2.0 的標誌性變化之一。與依賴於能量密集型挖礦進行交易驗證的 PoW 不同,PoS 允許用戶根據他們在網絡中抵押的 ETH 數量來驗證交易和創建新區塊。這導致能量效率的提升,能耗降低約 99.95%,使以太坊 2.0 成為一個相當綠色的替代方案。 分片鏈 分片鏈是 ETH 2.0 的另一個關鍵創新。這些較小的鏈與主要的以太坊鏈平行運行,使得多筆交易可以同時處理。這種方法增強了網絡的整體容量,解決了困擾以太坊的可擴展性問題。 信標鏈 在 ETH 2.0 的核心是信標鏈,它協調網絡並管理 PoS 協議。它在某種程度上充當了組織者:它監督驗證者,確保各分片與網絡的連接,並監控整體區塊鏈生態系統的健康狀況。 ETH 2.0 的時間軸 ETH 2.0 的旅程標誌著幾個關鍵里程碑,描繪了這次重大升級的演變: 2020年12月:信標鏈的啟動標誌著 PoS 的引入,為 ETH 2.0 的遷移鋪平了道路。 2022年9月:“合併”的完成代表著以太坊網絡成功從 PoW 轉型為 PoS 框架,預示著以太坊的新時代。 2023年:預期分片鏈的推出旨在進一步增強以太坊網絡的可擴展性,鞏固 ETH 2.0 作為去中心化應用和服務的強大平台。 主要特性和優勢 改進的可擴展性 ETH 2.0 最重要的優勢之一是其改進的可擴展性。PoS 和分片鏈的結合使網絡能夠擴大容量,允許其處理的交易量遠超舊有系統。 能源效率 PoS 的實施對於區塊鏈技術中的能源效率來說是一個巨大的進步。通過大幅降低能源消耗,ETH 2.0 不僅減少了運營成本,還與全球可持續發展目標更加一致。 增強的安全性 ETH 2.0 的更新機制提高了網絡的安全性。PoS 的部署,加上通過分片鏈和信標鏈建立的創新控制措施,確保了對潛在威脅更高程度的保護。 降低用戶成本 隨著可擴展性的改善,交易成本也會明顯降低。預期增強的容量和減少的擁堵將轉化為用戶更低的手續費,使以太坊在日常交易中變得更可及。 結論 ETH 2.0 標誌著以太坊區塊鏈生態系統的一次重要演變。隨著其解決可擴展性、能源消耗、交易效率和整體安全性等關鍵問題,這次升級的重要性不言而喻。轉向權益證明、引入分片鏈以及信標鏈的基礎性工作,顯示出以太坊未來能夠滿足去中心化市場日益增長的需求。在一個由創新和進步推動的行業中,ETH 2.0 是區塊鏈技術在為更可持續和高效的數字經濟鋪路方面能力的見證。

183 人學過發佈於 2024.04.04更新於 2024.12.03

什麼是 ETH 2.0

什麼是 ETH 3.0

ETH3.0 與 $eth 3.0:以深入分析以太坊的未來 介紹 在快速發展的加密貨幣和區塊鏈技術領域,ETH3.0,通常標記為 $eth 3.0,已成為一個備受關注和猜測的話題。該術語包含兩個主要概念,值得說明: 以太坊 3.0:這代表潛在的未來升級,旨在增強現有的以太坊區塊鏈的能力,特別集中於提高可擴展性和性能。ETH3.0 表情符號代幣:這個獨特的加密貨幣項目旨在利用以太坊區塊鏈創建一個以表情符號為中心的生態系統,促進加密貨幣社區的參與。 理解這些 ETH3.0 的方面不僅對加密愛好者至關重要,也對觀察數字空間中的更廣泛技術趨勢的人有所幫助。 什麼是 ETH3.0? 以太坊 3.0 以太坊 3.0 被認為是對已建立的以太坊網絡的擬議升級,自其誕生以來,它一直是許多去中心化應用程式(dApps)和智能合約的支柱。預想的增強主要集中於可擴展性——整合先進技術,如分片和零知識證明(zk-proofs)。這些技術創新旨在促進每秒交易數量的前所未有(TPS),潛在地達到數百萬筆,從而解決當前區塊鏈技術面臨的最重大限制之一。 這次改進不僅是技術性的,更是戰略性的;它旨在為以太坊網絡的普遍採用和未來的實用性做準備,因為該未來將面臨對去中心化解決方案日益增長的需求。 ETH3.0 表情符號代幣 與以太坊 3.0 不同,ETH3.0 表情符號代幣進入了一個更輕鬆和更具玩樂性的領域,通過將互聯網表情符號文化與加密貨幣動態相結合。該項目使用戶能夠在以太坊區塊鏈上購買、出售和交易表情符號,提供一個促進社區通過創造力和共同利益參與的平台。 ETH3.0 表情符號代幣旨在展示區塊鏈技術如何與數字文化交匯,創造出既有趣又具有經濟價值的使用案例。 誰是 ETH3.0 的創造者? 以太坊 3.0 對以太坊 3.0 的倡議主要由以太坊社區內的一個開發者和研究人員的聯盟推動,特別是包括 Justin Drake。他因對以太坊演變的見解和貢獻而聞名,Drake 在關於將以太坊轉變為新共識層的討論中是一個重要人物,這被稱為「Beam Chain」。 這種協作開發的方式標誌著以太坊 3.0 不是單一創造者的產品,而是集中精力促進區塊鏈技術進步的集體智慧的體現。 ETH3.0 表情符號代幣 關於 ETH3.0 表情符號代幣的創造者的詳細資料目前無法追溯。表情符號代幣的特性通常導致更分散和社區驅動的結構,這可以解釋為什麼缺乏具體的歸屬感。這與更廣泛的加密社區的精神相符,該社區的創新往往源於協作而非個人努力。 誰是 ETH3.0 的投資者? 以太坊 3.0 對以太坊 3.0 的支持主要來自以太坊基金會以及一個充滿熱情的開發者和投資者社區。這種基礎聯繫提供了相當程度的合法性,並增強了成功落實的前景,因為它利用了多年網絡運營建立的信任和可信度。 在快速變化的加密貨幣氣候中,社區支持在推動開發和採用中發揮了關鍵作用,將以太坊 3.0 置於未來區塊鏈進步的重要競爭者地位。 ETH3.0 表情符號代幣 雖然目前可用的來源並沒有明確提供支持 ETH3.0 表情符號代幣的投資機構或組織的具體信息,但這反映出表情符號代幣典型的資金模型,通常依賴於基層支持和社區參與。此類項目的投資者通常由因社區驅動的創新潛力以及在加密社區中發現的合作精神而受到激勵的個人組成。 ETH3.0 如何運作? 以太坊 3.0 以太坊 3.0 的區別特點在於其擬議的分片和零知識證明技術的實施。分片是一種將區塊鏈劃分為更小、更易管理的單元或「分片」的方法,這些分片能夠同時處理交易,而不是按序處理。這種處理的去中心化有助於避免擁堵,並確保即使在高負載下,網絡也能保持響應。 零知識證明(zk-proof)技術通過允許交易驗證而不揭示涉及的基本數據,增加了一層複雜性。這一方面不僅增強了隱私性,還提高了整個網絡的效率。還有討論將零知識以太坊虛擬機(zkEVM)納入此次升級,進一步擴大網絡的能力和實用性。 ETH3.0 表情符號代幣 ETH3.0 表情符號代幣通過利用表情符號文化的受歡迎程度而脫穎而出。它建立了一個市場,讓用戶參與表情符號交易,不僅僅是為了娛樂,也是為了潛在的經濟利益。通過整合質押、流動性供應和治理機制等特性,該項目營造了一種促進社區互動和參與的環境。 通過提供娛樂和經濟機會的獨特結合,ETH3.0 表情符號代幣旨在吸引多樣的觀眾,範圍從加密愛好者到隨便的表情符號愛好者。 ETH3.0 的時間表 以太坊 3.0 2024年11月11日:Justin Drake 暗示即將到來的 ETH 3.0 升級,重點是可擴展性改進。這一公告標誌著關於以太坊未來架構正式討論的開始。2024年11月12日:預期中的以太坊 3.0 提案將在曼谷的 Devcon 上公佈,為更廣泛的社區反饋和潛在的開發後續步驟奠定基礎。 ETH3.0 表情符號代幣 2024年3月21日:ETH3.0 表情符號代幣正式在 CoinMarketCap 上列出,標誌著其進入公眾加密領域,並增強了其基於表情符號的生態系統的可見性。 關鍵要點 總之,以太坊 3.0 代表了以太坊網絡內的重要演變,集中於通過先進技術克服可擴展性和性能的限制。其擬議的升級反映出對未來需求和可用性的主動應對。 另一方面,ETH3.0 表情符號代幣 encapsulates 加密貨幣領域中以社區為驅動文化的本質,利用表情符號文化來創建鼓勵用戶創造力和參與的平台。 理解 ETH3.0 和 $eth 3.0 的不同目的和功能對於任何對加密領域中正在進行的發展感興趣的人來說都是至關重要的。隨著這兩個倡議鋪展獨特的道路,它們共同凸顯了區塊鏈創新動態和多樣化的本質。

187 人學過發佈於 2024.04.04更新於 2024.12.03

什麼是 ETH 3.0

如何購買ETH

歡迎來到HTX.com!在這裡,購買Ethereum (ETH)變得簡單而便捷。跟隨我們的逐步指南,放心開始您的加密貨幣之旅。第一步:創建您的HTX帳戶使用您的 Email、手機號碼在HTX註冊一個免費帳戶。體驗無憂的註冊過程並解鎖所有平台功能。立即註冊第二步:前往買幣頁面,選擇您的支付方式信用卡/金融卡購買:使用您的Visa或Mastercard即時購買Ethereum (ETH)。餘額購買:使用您HTX帳戶餘額中的資金進行無縫交易。第三方購買:探索諸如Google Pay或Apple Pay等流行支付方式以增加便利性。C2C購買:在HTX平台上直接與其他用戶交易。HTX 場外交易 (OTC) 購買:為大量交易者提供個性化服務和競爭性匯率。第三步:存儲您的Ethereum (ETH)購買Ethereum (ETH)後,將其存儲在您的HTX帳戶中。您也可以透過區塊鏈轉帳將其發送到其他地址或者用於交易其他加密貨幣。第四步:交易Ethereum (ETH)在HTX的現貨市場輕鬆交易Ethereum (ETH)。前往您的帳戶,選擇交易對,執行交易,並即時監控。HTX為初學者和經驗豐富的交易者提供了友好的用戶體驗。

4.2k 人學過發佈於 2024.12.10更新於 2026.06.02

如何購買ETH

相關討論

歡迎來到 HTX 社群。在這裡,您可以了解最新的平台發展動態並獲得專業的市場意見。 以下是用戶對 ETH (ETH)幣價的意見。

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