正在加载视频...

视频加载失败

Polkadot’s modular design gave us world-class components, but they lived on different system chains. Contracts here, governance there, assets elsewhere, all stitched together with async XCM. That fragmentation made onboarding harder than it needed to be. The Polkadot Hub is the solution we’re building: A unified execution environment that...

14,506 次观看 • 7 个月前 •via X (Twitter)

0 条评论

暂无评论

原始帖子的评论将显示在这里

相关视频

Polkadot ran a major stress test, Spammening, in December 2024 to prove its infra can handle extreme txn loads in a live environment with real economic stakes. The result was 143K TPS, using just 23% of the network’s capacity. But the elephant in the room—does anyone outside of Polkadot even care. TPS is a tricky metric, especially today. Polkadot is a heterogeneous sharded blockchain and was used to be referred as layer 0. Essentially designed to orchestrate multiple chains in parallel, not maximize base layer txns. Therefore fundamentally it isn’t built for single-chain TPS races, but for very high throughput across multiple chains. So Polkadot’s TPS doesn’t compare neatly to monolithic chains, and that led to it staying out of TPS-focused optics in the past. As a result, it’s often misunderstood or seen as slow by this metric. And today, Polkadot has shifted from a chain-centric approach to a blockspace-centric one. It’s no longer about chains but about blockspace and cores—operating much like your multi-core computer. Aka, a chain can eat multiple cores if it needs more throughput. This is called Elastic scaling. With JAM and Elastic scaling, blocks can actually be split into chunks and validated in parallel, allowing the network’s parallel processing to directly impact single-state throughput. Reminder that this Elastic scaling is already live on Kusama and will be coming to Polkadot next quarter. Now, Justin Bons and @0xBreadguy argue that any sharded system can claim millions of TPS, but that doesn’t mean anything as it doesn’t happen within a single state—not equivalent to atomic composability. So, for this time, I’m tossing it to the gigabrains. Do they have a point, or is there more to consider. Shawn Tabrizi Gavin Wood rphmeier

goku

16,687 次观看 • 1 年前

"If you look at what has happened in Eastern Congo, and everything we have gone through over the past four or five years, and you look at what we have left behind, there is evidence. There are facts that speak for themselves. In Eastern Congo, in Goma and elsewhere, the whole world came together against Rwanda. The whole world lined up against Rwanda: the FDLR and all the groups associated with it that have been mentioned, the Wazalendo, the Burundian forces, the FARDC, the South Africans, and many others. I would rather not spend time naming them all; there were so many. When you look at the scale of what they had assembled there and what they were up against, it is clear that what they were trying to do was wage war against Rwanda, destabilize our country, and reshape it the way they wanted. In fact, they said so themselves. Ordinarily, if someone were to say these things without evidence, you might think they were simply trying to frighten people, to intimidate them. To convince themselves that what they wanted was within reach and that they were going to achieve it, they even brought in mercenaries. You know that many of them passed through here. We gave free passage to our enemies, allowing them to leave a war they waged against us, a war that was never theirs to begin with. That alone tells you something. And it is also something for which our forces, together with others who stood with them, deserve recognition. As for Rwanda, we will always be in a struggle for our very existence. Regardless of those who wish us harm, surrounding us from many sides, one thing remains true: we should and will always be a step ahead of them. It is our right. It is our will. And our history has taught us that we have within ourselves the capacity to defend and protect ourselves whenever necessary. And that is exactly what we will continue to do." President Kagame | Unity Club Meeting

Presidency | Rwanda

79,403 次观看 • 19 天前

Avichal Garg on why he’s bullish ETH “What ETH has that is very difficult to reproduce is credible neutrality. And if you think there’s going to be a global financial system settlement layer, I think that is the critical thing — that trust and neutrality is basically irreproducible… ETH has that.” “For me the turning point for ETH was when the United States decided to seize Russian assets and weaponize the dollar… If you’re Germany, France, India, Turkey, Brazil, or most of the world, you’re looking at the world and saying, I don’t think I want to be allied with the Chinese — India certainly doesn’t — but now I’m worried that if I ally with the US and then they want me to do something and I don’t do it, they’re just going to take all my money? What you want is a US dollar denominated system that the US cannot single-handedly decide to boot you from and where the United States cannot just take all your assets. That’s literally what Ethereum is.” “[Ethereum is] a US dollar denominated system, that nobody in the world controls, that anybody can mutually agree to transact upon, where the United States can’t steal your assets — and there are ways to structure synthetic dollar assets that are not sitting in US banks, just like the Eurodollar system. What is that worth? I think that’s worth a lot of money.” “If you’re any bank, country, or central bank, [Ethereum] is the only place you can do that. Now how does that get valued? Does that mean ETH becomes a store of value as the endogenous backing asset for the thing which can be used as collateral? We tend to think that those things are true, and we’ve written about this.” “You can go talk to anybody on Wall Street. Where are they building? Everybody’s trying to build on ETH. Where’s Coinbase building? Where’s Robinhood building? Where’s SoFi building? Underneath it all, all of the activity for that sort of behavior — geopolitically, central bank level, important behavior — is happening right now in this space [on Ethereum], and I think it will take some time for people to appreciate and underwrite that.” “In 10 years people will look around and be like, ‘Oh wow, that’s really important, and I should own a piece of that.’ I don’t know when it rerates, but I think at some point people will get their heads around that there is something unique to this thing that nobody else will be able to reproduce, and that thing is valuable.” Source: Empire 🟪 (Jun 2026) Read our report "Why Permissionless Infrastructure Wins" below 👇

Etherealize

41,111 次观看 • 26 天前

Wall Street Crime Market Micro-Mechanics: Deep Dive The whole financial system end-to-end has been captured for some time. It is broken on purpose, and it is the everyday people busy working hard that suffer because of it. Not only are their retirement funds at stake, but their job and the infrastructure of the whole country. Counterfeiting is rampant, and the problem is so bad that the few people that know what is going on are either the ones exploiting it, or don’t want to be the one to knock down the house of cards that our financial system is. There have been different global financial heists every decade or so: 1987, 2001, 2008, and now 2017-2024. In this latest iteration, because of mechanisms allowing for shorting a company more than a hundred percent, and essentially unlimited insurance contracts that can be used on stocks, most companies are worth more dead than alive. $50 billion dollars was made shorting Washington Mutual Bank for instance and much more was made against it with total return swaps which profited from its demise. People lost their jobs, value was lost, and taxpayers had to pick up the bill. That model was then used on all of the companies that Amazon would have to compete with, and they were systematically targeted, along with any other company that could be infiltrated and destroyed from the inside out. There are a lot of aspects to this iteration of the global financial system heist, but it all revolved around counterfeit shares. The exact mechanism will only be known through a RICO investigation, but the possible mechanisms they are using have been outlined, and the evidence that it is happening has been piling up. This is something worth digging into whether you are a legislator, regulator, or citizen. This conversation with Onehundredmph is a little bit of a chaotic mix of a broad overview and in depth specifics. The crime is a difficult topic because it involves the whole financial system from the hedge funds and the money that ends up in politicians pockets to the bankers, consultants, and regulators. There are many companies that have been attacked and shareholders of those communities have stepped up. I am optimistic of the changes that are coming, but everyone needs to be aware of the changes that need to be made and the importance of them. Notable shareholder groups that have stepped up are: $GME, $DJT, $AMC, $IEP, #BBBY, and #MMTLP

Michael A.M.E.

21,865 次观看 • 1 年前