Metis: The strongest dark horse in the Layer 2 competition?
Can Metis stand out among the many Layer 2 projects by taking advantage of other Rollups’ lack of centralized orderers and its own powerful economic model?
JinseFinanceCan Metis stand out among the many Layer 2 projects by taking advantage of other Rollups’ lack of centralized orderers and its own powerful economic model?
JinseFinanceHow should we identify this kind of behavior that "plays on the Rollup concept"?
JinseFinanceRollup, BTC, Layer 2, technical complexity and challenges. Explore the Bitcoin Layer 2 Rollup solution. Golden Finance explores the differences and complexity of Bitcoin Layer 2.
JinseFinanceThe launch of Bitcoin Layer 2 will provide faster transaction speeds, allowing for higher transaction throughput, which is crucial for the widespread adoption of the Bitcoin network.
JinseFinanceThere are also obvious dependencies between different components in the Bitcoin/Ethereum Layer 2 security model. In other words, the security of some components is more basic and important than the security of other components, which is the so-called "shorter".
JinseFinanceThe main goal of this design is to build a specially customized Layer 2 network for the Bitcoin blockchain.
JinseFinanceIn my opinion, parallel EVM is just a highly "modular" manifestation of Rollup. After DA was invaded by a third party, the VM execution layer fell again, and layer 2 will be redefined in the future.
JinseFinanceIn the past three months, the first batch of inscription projects such as Ordinals have set the entire track on fire, and the growth rate of inscription-related star tokens has also been setting new records. This has also given rise to SATS, RATS and even other public chain inscription concepts. hot.
JinseFinanceHow do you improve on something that most people think is already perfect? DogeLayer's co-founder, Wind, says he has the answer.
Hui XinDevelopers behind the Bitcoin Ordinals protocol have rolled out a new upgrade that aims to cure over 71,000 invalid or “cursed” inscriptions — allowing them to be traded.
The Bit Times