However exciting the development of a blockchain mainnet sounds, it is a bold and time-consuming journey.
18 Jul 2023, 10:09
However exciting the development of a blockchain mainnet sounds, it is a bold and time-consuming journey.
To sweeten up the anticipation pill 💊, Locus Chain is starting up a #LocusExplains series dedicated to untangling the intricate web of blockchain and Web3 tech concepts.
We talk nodes, layers, pruning, sharding, privacy, standards, etc.
No fussing around, just pure enlightenment🤓
Same news in other sources
2Locus ChainLOCUS #448
18 Jul 2023, 11:16
We start off with the most fundamental question ever occurred to a toddler haphazardly mingling with blockchains while their parents are not looking:
Why blocks? And why do they have to follow each other? 🧐
It turns out not all blockchains are represented as block sequences. Some work as graphs, or DAGs (direct acrylic graphs) that process transactions block-free.
Locus Chain is a DAG blockchain. Here we draw the line between the two models and show why DAGs could be a better alternative.
We start off with the most fundamental question ever occurred to a toddler haphazardly mingling with blockchains while their par
We start off with the most fundamental question ever occurred to a toddler haphazardly mingling with blockchains while their parents are not looking:
Why blocks? And why do they have to follow each other? 🧐
It turns out not all blockchains are represented as block sequences. Some work as graphs, or DAGs (direct acrylic graphs) that process transactions block-free.
Locus Chain is a DAG blockchain. Here we draw the line between the two models and show why DAGs could be a better alternative.
Locus ChainLOCUS #448
18 Jul 2023, 10:11
We start off with the most fundamental question ever occurred to a toddler haphazardly mingling with blockchains while their parents are not looking:
Why blocks? And why do they have to follow each other? 🧐
It turns out not all blockchains are represented as block sequences. Some work as graphs, or DAGs (direct acrylic graphs) that process transactions block-free.
Locus Chain is a DAG blockchain. Here we draw the line between the two models and show why DAGs could be a better alternative.
We start off with the most fundamental question ever occurred to a toddler haphazardly mingling with blockchains while their par
We start off with the most fundamental question ever occurred to a toddler haphazardly mingling with blockchains while their parents are not looking:
Why blocks? And why do they have to follow each other? 🧐
It turns out not all blockchains are represented as block sequences. Some work as graphs, or DAGs (direct acrylic graphs) that process transactions block-free.
Locus Chain is a DAG blockchain. Here we draw the line between the two models and show why DAGs could be a better alternative.