in

Radix Launches Betanet to Test Its Composable DeFi Solution

The project recently launched its Olympia Betanet composed of a single shard ledger verified by 100 validator nodes. The Betanet is a developer-controlled public sandbox that will support both full and validator nodes, desktop wallets, and an explorer website. To understand why this is a big deal for Radix – and for DeFi in general – first we need to consider the problems that Radix is addressing.

Inferior scalability is a symptom of blockchains lacking foresight and preparation prior to their network going live. The overhaul of their foundational principles sacrifices composability in attempts to promote usage.

Cerberus is built upon the concept of “pre-sharding,” making it the first layer-one protocol built to serve DeFi. Cerberus possesses omnipotence to identify and use relevant shards employing a new form of BFT (Byzantine Fault Tolerant) consensus. This approach uses partial transaction ordering rather than the universally accepted global ordering system. Its consensus processes operate in parallel, authorizing each shard to reach consensus independently as needed. Components are executed within the Radix VM, providing partial ordering that Cerberus needs to braid consensus on a per-transaction basis.

Radix’s Olympia Betanet is now live, signaling the conclusion of an arduous development period and initiating the experimentation phase of the roadmap. The Olympia Mainnet will be released towards the end of Q2 after a satisfactory QA and testing period.

To get started, users need a desktop wallet, which can be installed simply by downloading a Mac, Windows, or Linux app. The wallet includes a faucet which functions to distribute spoof XRD tokens for free. The tokens give users a blank check to use however they wish. The wallet, funded by the faucet, will enable users to store, stake and transact their tokens. Tokens can then be delegated towards nodes.

Node operators are the backbone of any network and Radix’s public network is no different. To participate in Olympia Betanet as a node operator, download the node. The node will be delivered as a Docker image. There are two common types of nodes, full nodes and archive nodes, both of which can be registered as a validator. Validators maintain copies of the ledger, respond to queries, forward transactions to other nodes, and participate in consensus. A validator is essentially a full node where the operator is “registered” with the Radix network operating in consensus. Full nodes have no restrictions on participation, but cannot participate in consensus like validators.

Putting it all together, the explorer website will present the amount of stake against each validator node, drilling down the extent of which validator nodes are staked themselves, as well as the stake delegated to the node by holders. It’s critical for stakers to use the explorer website effectively to prevent any validator from gaining too much stake and creating a point of failure of centralization. In turn, this will assist token holders with assessing the credibility of nodes by displaying the percentage of consensus rounds they have participated in.

As a Delegated Proof of Stake (DPoS) chain, Radix guarantees network security backed by a community of token holders delegating their stake to nodes included in the validator set.

During the Betanet, the 100 validator nodes will have control over who can run a validator. The hardware requirements for validators are considered standard and can be run on any normal computer with enough over capacity to ensure node performance is not jeopardized.

Radix’s network incentivizes its proof of stake as a form of security. Token-holders can delegate their tokens (or stake) to validator nodes and receive a portion of tokens released by the protocol. The network emissions include node operators delegating stake to their own node. Rewards to token holders and validator nodes will be dispersed at the end of every epoch.

In addition to economic incentives for validator nodes, full nodes are useful for those requiring their own trusted node as a transaction endpoint for a specific application. For example, a Decentralized Exchange (DEX) would likely want its own nodes to support token transfer requests and queries. Full nodes, which are backed by Radix, will also be running support for the Explorer Website and Desktop Wallet.

The Olympia Mainnet will allow the network to bolster itself with token holders transacting and staking onto other nodes for network security. In Q4 2021, Radix plans to release Alexandria.

This will kick off a new DeFi development experience, using Scrypto language and Radix Engine v2. Alexandria will facilitate private environments for early builds and testing, allowing developers to experiment with components and reusable features.

Over 300 test validator applications were sent to the Radix team for the Betanet, signaling the level of curiosity within the Radix ecosystem. Those who participate in the Betanet and migrate to the Mainnet will reap the rewards of a DeFi platform that has truly conquered the blockchain trilemma.

Continue reading on BTC Peers


Source: Cryptocurrency - investing.com

Retail stocks surge as Florida and New York announce plans to lift Covid restrictions

CME Group introduces micro Bitcoin futures