In an email sent to their subscribers, Block.one, the developer of EOS.io, announced the release of the Dawn 3.0 Alpha version. Here are the most important things (wether or not you're interested, as a developer, in this product):
- unified codebase (the former 2.0 version is now obsoleted by the current one) - which means development is still at a steady pace
- no testnet available for 3.0 until the team will "have high confidence that it will work as expected" - expected date for this new version testnet is the end of A1
- 2.0 smart contracts already deployed will still be available at https://testnet1.eos.io
There are a few other technical improvements, please check the releases page on Github for further details.
For those not knowing, EOS is an alternative to Ethereum (as a general smart contract platform) but with significant improvements in speed and scalability. The technical team is led by @dan, one of the co-founder of Steemit and the co-founder of BitShares.
Recently, EOS broke into top 10 crypto, although, as you already learned, it doesn't yet have a mainnet (and the testnet is running on an obsolete version).
I'm closely watching this project and I'm really curious to take it out for a spin, once the codebase is a bit more stable.
I'm a serial entrepreneur, blogger and ultrarunner. You can find me mainly on my blog at Dragos Roua where I write about productivity, business, relationships and running. Here on Steemit you may stay updated by following me @dragosroua.
Wanna know when you're getting paid?
I know the feeling. That's why I created steem.supply, an easy to use and accurate tool for calculating your Steemit rewards | |
I just want a time machine set to the date of June 1st so I can wake up to EOS taking over the world. Anyone have a time machine?
thx, I installed a public testnode 2.x yesterday. I made a post about it..
what's your overall impression?
I just did the install, it's running.. i didn't do any other things yet.. I am not a developer so I have to read into all these things.. but I am learning each day..
Thanks :)
@dragosroua I think if people like they should have some EOS (Ethereum on Steroids) in their portfolio. @dan has not let us down yet. This could be the BIGGEST Thing he has ever done. I love STEEMIT and the things that we can Learn from each other...............
I have eos :>
Hi @dragonroua, maybe you can help me answer this question about EOS... I have been asking it on several places but have not received any answer that's very helpful..
Very recently EOS announced it's DPOS+BFT consensus mechanism. As far as I'm aware, EOS is supposed to be generation 3 as opposed to generation 2 (which is ETH, maybe NEO).
However my question is this: What makes DPOS+BFT different from the dBFT consensus mechanism NEO already has?
It doesn't sound too revolutionairy if the underlying mechanic is identical to an already existing blockchain, after all.
Maybe you can help me figure this out!
The consensus mechanism used for EOS (DPOS) is not a recent announcement. From the very start Dan mentioned that EOS was going to use it. DPOS is a BFT consensus algorithm the same way that POW is BFT. I did point out in a reply on another post that NEO was using DPOS but call it dBFT (it's not like their inventing the wheel). The fact that NEO uses DPOS (or dBFT as they call it) is a testament to how good it is to reach consensus on block production.
The NEO white paper also mentions the use of the "Distributed Storage Protocol: NeoFS":
If this sounds familiar it is because it's also known as IPFS. This is another case of the NEO team taking an existing solution and renaming it instead of just mentioning where it originated.
Don't get me wrong, I think NEO is a great project but they just failed to mention where the original ideas came from.
What they are implementing that is innovative is the "Anti-quantum cryptography mechanism: NeoQS" (although here they are also renaming an existing solution I haven't seen any other blockchain project preparing for quantum computing so kudos to them for the long term thinking).
Thanks for this thorough reply! It's finally a real answer that I can work with! Too bad I just posted an article asking for this information and getting a discussion going which may now be redundant.
I always knew NEO was 'like DPOS' but thought they had their own angle on it with the BFT stuff. I guess I saw this as experimental within the blockchain space. I always thought that EOS would simply use DPOS, like Bitshares and STEEM.
I know that NEO didn't come up with the BFT solution, nor the DPoS part of it, that's for sure. I just thought they were the first/only blockchain to implement these solutions. Now that EOS is doing it too I feel like EOS is 'like NEO' now.
Maybe the biggest difference between neo and eos is that eos support smart contracts compiled in webassembly, while neo has a non standard binary format (so less programming languages available)
Thanks for responding!
I'm not a programmer myself and am not fully aware of everything going on with EOS, but I do know that NEO supports a wide range of common programming languages such as C#, .NET and Python.
As far as I know EOS supports C++, which is supposedly a lot harder and rigid to program on. Is my understanding correct, or am I missing something still?
The difference between EOS and NEO is the use of parallel processing which allows for exponential scaling. Actually that is the difference between EOS and any other blockchain. The only other blockchain that is moving to parallel processing that I know of is STEEM with AppBase and ChainBase see page 3 of the Blue Paper.
Parallel processing, I haven't heard of this term yet but it sounds a little bit like side-chains at first glance. I'll take a look at the link later.. have to get going..! thanks!
I recommend to read the following articles:
https://steemit.com/steem/@dantheman/the-real-blockchain-scalability-challenge
https://steemit.com/blockchain/@dantheman/how-to-process-100m-transfers-second-on-a-single-blockchain
Yes, but the c++ code will be compiled in webassembly before be pushed online, so many languages could be compiled to wasm because it's standard for the web
I have limited knowledge of NEO's mechanism, but I am familiar with DPoS/BFT. So while I am confident DPoS/BFT (which is also used in other blockchains, like Cosmos/Tendermint) is a reliable governance mechanism, I have no idea how it compares with NEO's... If they are the same thing, then... they are the same thing :)
I'm pretty sure they are the same thing...
This would mean the only difference between EOS and NEO is that EOS has higher hardware spec for nodes than NEO does (which leads to the higher tps, but possibly more centralization much in the same way big blocks do in bitcoin). And, of course, NEO is here already while EOS isn't yet.
we are trying to learn everything from each post.....i'm new to steemit....plz help me..........thanks for share.... i waiting your next pos thanks sir...$$$$......@dragosroua
indeed whatever the name of his blog brother, let me always follow the brother
Will this potentially increase the price of EOS?
Do you know of they have any kind of timeframe to get their mainnet running, or do you think it's dead in the water as some people starting to believe
Hope this will have a positive impact on it
-cheers-
I'm still hoping for a dip, but afraid I might fomo and end up buying in soon.
Must start investing in EOS before it truly moons on me.
I have been thinking 💭 a lot about EOS as I am following closely on Cardano. I discarded NEO on the following reasons :
Regarding EOS I only arrived to a horrible conclusion, based on noise about previous launchs by Dan Larimer: Either EOS will compete with Cardano, NEO & Ethereum in a fight for supremacy for the Iron Throne or results in a total failure heavily impacting the billions invested in the project. If that happens, I see Steem going to Zero Value. So better EOS doesn't fail.
In that scenario of EOS failing and Steem going to Zero would be the consequence of the market loosing confidence on the creator.
Ethereum, NEO and EOS is a One Show Man. Cardano a a huge team with strong academic background and a lot of cloud..
Not idea how powerful Haskell language is compared to the competing blockchain 🔗