ethmerge.com-content
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ethmerge.com-content
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The Ethtrader's Guide to the Merge
You do not need to do anything to protect your funds entering The Merge. This bears repeating: As a user or holder of ETH or any other digital asset on Ethereum, as well as non-node-operating stakers, you do not need to do anything with your funds or wallet before The Merge. 1 Users will experience no change in their day-to-day experience using Ethereum. 2
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Daily General Discussion - September 7, 2022
ethmerge.com is actually a nice simple resource with basic and digestible info about the merge. Is it still maintained? I issued a pull request to update one of the FAQs :)
- can someone eli5 on what happens to eth after the merge
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Deconstructing DeFi
Staking is a term used to refer to many forms of smart contracts, ranging from core to the crypto ecosystem to mathematically suspect gambling mechanisms. The former type of staking involves running a node (a server on a decentralized network) that processes and validates transactions to a blockchain. The "stake" is a smart contract that holds the node operator's cryptocurrency. If the node successfully and accurately validates transactions, the owner will receive rewards from the protocol based on the amount they have staked. Submitting invalid transactions or any other behavior counter to the network's health results in the stake being "slashed", i.e. the owner of the node loses their crypto. This mechanism of validating transactions, called proof-of-stake, replaces the power-intensive and inefficient mechanism of proof-of-work, where a special hash value must be calculated to successfully process a block of transactions. The Ethereum core developers are working towards a move to proof-of-stake and Algorand has been proof-of-stake from its inception.
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Daily General Discussion - July 11, 2022
Newsflash: the merge doesn't lead to cheaper or faster transactions. I suggest you read this: https://ethmerge.com/
- Daily General Discussion - May 27, 2022
- Daily General Discussion - May 6, 2022
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Ethereum is the superior coin, prove me wrong.
I'm getting the amount burned from here, which I believe pulls directly from the blockchain. For the change to the issuance rate, you can see it here under the section about the "triple halvening".
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Daily General Discussion - January 15, 2022
The Merge (https://ethmerge.com/) should happen (if all goes well) approximately in June.
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It’s not still the early days of blockchain
Here's some info on it, I believe your question is answered near the top where they talk about the transition mechanism.
consensus-specs
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Daily General Discussion - May 20, 2023
I think its 1 million: https://github.com/ethereum/consensus-specs/issues/2137
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Ethereum's pending withdrawals total $1.34 billion after Shapella
how "radically decentralized" the development of the Ethereum core is. In the past half a decade only 133 devs have contributed to Ethereum source code. 2 devs have written 25% of the code. The first 10 developers have written 70% of the Ethereum code. Consensus specifications the ones that all the clients implement. Half are Consensys employees https://github.com/ethereum/consensus-specs
- Daily General Discussion - February 17, 2023
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Set your Ethereum validator withdrawal address with CLWP today
Exits are processed at 7 per epoch (currently). There is no queue for withdrawals. See https://github.com/ethereum/consensus-specs/pull/3068
- Evolution of the Ethereum Proof-of-Stake Consensus Protocol
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How to merge an Ethereum network right from the genesis block
For that, we have to take the vanilla deposit contract from the consensus specs: deposit_contract.sol, get the Solidity compiler version 0.6.11, compile the binary of the runtime part, and create an empty deposit tree.
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How would withdrawals actualy work?
It's in the consensys specs - https://github.com/ethereum/consensus-specs/issues/2758
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Daily General Discussion - November 11, 2022
However, the bulk of the withdrawal logic is defined in the CL Capella fork. There are both validator specs and beacon chain specs that define how this works. After diving into these I think this is how it will work for a solo staker following the EL and CL forks.
- Where are spec/dev discussions?
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Daily General Discussion - September 6, 2022
It's Capella, see https://github.com/ethereum/consensus-specs/blob/master/specs/capella/beacon-chain.md.
What are some alternatives?
argent-contracts-starknet - Argent accounts for Starknet
l2beat - L2BEAT is an analytics and research website about Ethereum layer two (L2) scaling solutions.
ethereum-org-website - Ethereum.org is a primary online resource for the Ethereum community.
protocols - A zkRollup DEX & Payment Protocol
eth-gasnow-extention - GasNow extension for browser
ergo - Ergo protocol description & reference client implementation
annotated-spec - Vitalik's annotated eth2 spec. Not intended to be "the" annotated spec; other documents like Ben Edgington's https://benjaminion.xyz/eth2-annotated-spec/ also exist. This one is intended to focus more on design rationale.
crypto-fees - Website for comparing total daily fees of various blockchain protocols.
scaffold-eth - 🏗 forkable Ethereum dev stack focused on fast product iterations [Moved to: https://github.com/scaffold-eth/scaffold-eth]
rust-libp2p - The Rust Implementation of the libp2p networking stack.