World Computer Doesn’t Mean Good Computer…
According to Haseeb Qureshi, a managing partner at Dragonfly Capital, the Ethereum network is a pretty lousy “world computer”. Qureshi took to Twitter earlier today to demonstrate that the network is actually slower than a 30-year-old calculator.
“Ethereum can increment a counter in memory for 2 gas. If all of mainnet was filled with a single transaction incrementing a counter over an over, it’d be able to do about 360K operations/sec.”
Reality check: Ethereum is slower at computing than a TI-81 calculator, which was released in—wait for it—1990. (Stop calling it a world computer! Bad analogy!) — Haseeb >|< (@hosseeb)
“To me “world computer” always referred to shared global state, not to speed. Yes a TI-81 may be faster than Ethereum, but a calculator does not give you access to a secure, public database and shared execution environment.”
Will Ethereum 2.0 Power Up the “World Computer”?
Possessing less power than a 1990s calculator, clearly Ethereum in its current version will struggle to transform the world as many believe it will. However, Ethereum developers are busy working to change that.
As NewsBTC has reported on previously, a major upgrade to the Ethereum network is under development. The upgrade, known as , will introduce proof-of-stake, sharding, and other advances aimed at improving the network’s performance.
Replying to someone’s concerns about Ethereum’s future in the above tweet’s comments, Nick D Johnson explained how improvements in Ethereum 2.0 would ramp up the network’s speed. He reasoned that any reduction of a node’s verification requirements that doesn’t reduce security will increase its speed.Related Reading: This Simple Pattern Suggests the Recent Crypto Rally is Far from Over
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