Bitshares is superior to any other crypto and therefore so is Steem

in #bitshares7 years ago (edited)

While the realm of Bitcoin got even more divided, Ethereum and Monero got trade hyped, while Dash went off a slope, Bitshares went through a test that should attract some attention. And therefore so should Steem. You know why? Because it is going to be all about transaction speed, cost and the ability to scale fast, not tomorrow, but now! One block every ten minutes, or one every 60 seconds, or the slowed down complex ethereum one? Forget it, they cannot do it! Countdown like this: "3-2-1" and you know how fast block times are for Bitshares and Steem... Yes, former Bitshares and Steem developer Daniel Larimer is moving on to new (blockchain) adventures, but he can do so, because he left behind something that can be build further upon.

Currently there is no known blockchain technology out there that is able to even get close to the transaction speed and the amount of transactions per second of Bitshares and Steem. To make it very clear here, mister Vays is a very bad advisor when it comes to Bitshares and Steem. He did hurt these platforms systematically, even when he admited that he does not understand the blockchain technology, at all. So please do distinguish facts from 'Vaysction'...

Now I almost lost my cool there. Some curse words came to mind, yet I managed to keep them inside.

The stresstest proves it

At a good day Bitcoin can do about 160 Transactions Per Second {TXS}. If it scales to 4MB per block that would go up to about 640 TXS. Most of the other cryptocoins work the same way. Now, let's give Dash some thumbs up for maybe being able to hit 1600 TXS. It is mainly future talk by the way. Just like decentralized exchanges for these coins and things like that. And smart contracts on Ethereum, might be clever, yet extremely slow. Not even brought up the thing that lead to a blockchain split. Bitcoin seems to be going the same way, due to a dispute between developement teams. Monero, is mainly a mix and match technique, to try and hide transactions. How fast is it, and how well does it scale? Yes, the market, well, that is mostly about speculation, not about knowledge.

Recently the Bitshares testnetwork did a stresstest. And this is in the here and now, mind you. Right now that network can do 3300 transactions per second. That means 198000(!) transactions per minute. Being able to do 14000 Operations Per Second {OPS}, a bit more than 4 operations per transaction. That is now, not in the future, not over a month, or a next fork that still needs to be accepted by a network of miners. No, this is NOW! You want to see a superior blockchain technology at work? Well, if you are on Steem, you are part of it already. Bitshares and Steem did basicaly come from the same technology base, both originally created by Daniel Larimer and now continued by other enthousiastic and talented developers. And you need proof of this incredible superior blockchain technology?

You can see it for yourself

There is a site that shows life statistics for Bitshares, Bitshares testnet and Steem(!). Just CLICK HERE to pay it a visit. There is a dropdown menu that lets you select which network you want to watch. The main reason Bitshares and its code cousin Steem work at such great speeds is because they do their blocks on the count of three. So, what discussion about scaling? Or User Issued Assets, you may call them coins too if you want too. And confirmation times? Where? Not at Bitshares, not at Steem. Where is that decentralized exchange for all these other slow blockchaines? Not even to start about the costs of transactions. And if you have an account at Steem, you know how fun it is to give Steem Power, Steem Backed Dollar or Steem to any other account. With a message it is even more fun, as cheap as 0.001 STEEM, such fun, now can your DOGE do that?

In my opinion Steem and Bitshares are extremely under valued. But that is due to the capital locked into the classic blokchains and the way they have been hyped for a long time. At some point though the more smart investors will move to the superior blockchain technology. Especialy because it has a lot of growth potential, not to be found anywhere else currently. And it can do so much more than just move value around, yet even at that Bitshares and Steem excell!

The future is already here

Bitshares is going to add private transactions as part of the developement and Steem has only just begun to evolve, still in beta (experimental) fase. Exciting times, they are, more to come, but for us the future is already where we are at. Just realize how that works, 3-2-1 and another block added. Now compare that to 10 minutes, taking sometimes more than an hour to confirm, that's Bitcoin. And Dash makes that 6 times faster, true, but it still is not near 3-2-1. If you are using Bitshares and/ or Steem, you are in that high speed realm, there you go, another one, 3-2-1...

Maybe you did not grasp the extreme speed and the sheer power of the Bitshares and Steem blockchain networks. Hopefully you do now, or a bit more, at least. And even though Daniel Larimer might have moved on to new and exciting future developements, he did create it. Were now other clever developers can take the solid working foundation and move it forward into the future even more.

Now is it not exciting, can you feel the vibe?

Steem 'n Roll and have a splendid weekend!



License: cc0/public domain. Image by @oaldamster,
background 'bitcoin' photo by Benjamin Nelan at Pixabay

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Hi @oaldamster Im new to Steem and just learned about Bitshares last month when I got to meet @stan. Bitshares is so far ahead of the pack and is virtually unknown. Why do you think everyone is going googoo ga-ga over Ethereum when the Bitshares platform is so much more superior??

Thanks for the post!!!

Hi @tyty24,
Technology like Steem and Bitshares are undervalued a lot indeed. For a part that is because of the hyping machine that has been pushing Ethereum for instance.

Now Ethereum (Classic) does have a programming language that can do smart contracts. In that way it does differ from Steem, Bitshares and Peerplays, but the next family member EOS will be a game changer. And the great thing is that EOS code could be used for Steem and Bitshares.

The decentralized exchange that is planned to work on Ethereum can never compete with Bitshares. But Bitshares and Steem have no scripting language like Ethereum yet, as far as I know. It will be within reach thanks to EOS though.

Bitshares made it to the top ten again though with a huge gain above 30 cents. And it seems the 3-2-1-DONE block technology is really on the verge of a definite breaktrough. More will learn about it, and once they tried it and have enjoyed the speed and power they will stay and get more in!

Also EOS will give the 3-2-1-DONE blockfamily members like Steem and Bitshares a big boost. These platforms could well be the next top ones in the cryptocurrency top ten... But that is me being a bit biased. ;-)

It is my pleasure to post, thank you for reading!

YOU NAILED IT

Nothing to add

Thank you! :-)

I guess Bitcoin will be up again during ETF talk in next 12 days

Hahaha, absolutely!

Thanks for the resteem, appreciate it.

Have a good weekend!

Don't know, would be strange if it got accepted all of a sudden.

And it looks like the Bitcoin realm has a blockchain split challenge on their hands.

Not sure how that will be reflected in the price developement.

So far it does look a bit grim, I'm afraid.

I love Steem and it fills a function but as for Bitshare i can agree that the technology is great but then again Dan left it for some reason.
Also if Bitshare wants to be recognized and succeed it has to do much more promotion and start working with companies and things like that. I never hear about it in any news while there are news about BTC, ETH, NEO, NEM and even Ripple.
I want Bitshare to be success full and have myself bought some but it feels like there is nothing happening right now when it comes to making it useful.

There is a Point Of Sale system for Bitshares, for instance. (Forgot the name.)

Dan moved on with Steem and now with EOS. He is a developer, when his creations can function on their own he moves on to a challenge. Recently he helped the Bitshares team with fixing a hickup.

There are several developements for Bitshares, like the Hero project and Bitcoin United. Things are moving there.

It could get more attention, it deserves it, just like Steem. But maybe is grows steady and slowly.

Developement on the wallet front is moving too. But it could use more exposure. As for holding Bitshares, guess the coming time will be good for that.

Would like to see Bitshares, Steem and EOS in the cryptos market top 10.

I hope so, i really like STEEM but to be honest i dont like the whole hype train for EOS. I was going to invest in it now during the ICO thing but reading the agreement gave me a bad feeling. The agreement is really shitty and the funny thing is the EOS tokens are ETH based while EOS platform is based on a totally different chainblock so what these EOS tokens will be worth in the future when the EOS platform comes to life (if it even does that) is a questions mark no one has answered me.

For me EOS is a logical blockchain evolution and I did invest in the Token.

The reasoning behind it is, as far as I came to understood, the question how to spread EOS if the system itself does not do so. No Proof Of Work mining. And it could be done through 3 DPOS blocks. But how to finance the initial start. How to get it started if it would take a lot of DPOS blocks to create and spread EOS and how?

So, that is why there is a private key for the EOS tokens to be released on its platform when buying the Token on Ethereum. The platform was chosen because it is widely supported and is quite well known, I think. But it is a kind of ironic for me too. When #EOS goes live, if all goes well, I can claim mine by the private key I have. With trading EOS that is not the case, I believe. That is about speculation.

And yes, EOS had to make it hard for United States citizens to get in. Because of all the regulations in the land of the free, that is a bit ironical too... But besides the point, there is a risk involved, there is not guarantee for EOS to become real, to be what it is thought to become and if the market even wants it. At least they are open and honest about it. With every modern technology there are risks involved for early adaptors.

Bitcoin Cash future buyers also have taken that risk. And we still have to see how that works out.

Steem is an amazing idea. And it is a relative of Bitshares and many of its basics is used in EOS too. For the whole developement of all these platforms EOS can become a super platform. Or some smart EOS code could be back ported into Steem and Bitshares. And I know I took a risk by going for the EOS Intitial Token Offer, but only as far as I was willing and able to do so.

Predicting the future value of EOS Tokens on the platform itself, well, I whished I was able to do that. But the only thing that I am quite sure of is that it will have to be at least number a 7 or even number 6 spot in the cryptos market.

That would mean a market cap for EOS, when it goes live, of about 1.85 billion US Dollar. But... That is my speculation. Yours might be as bad or as good as mine.

I just say, I wish us good luck. I got 200 for now but I do hope it goes live in a year or so. Also even with superior tecknology there is no guarantee that you will take the lead or even be successful. I'm pretty sure in 1-2 years time both ethereum and NEO and XEM and other platforms have come a long long way and by then it just might be too late for EOS. Just like windows mobile. There is just no chance that another OS can penetrate the market when the existing platforms have such a huge gain in adoption. But competition is always good so let's wait and see how it goes.

Best of luck to you too. We will see where it goes. There is never a guarantee. Hope for the best for EOS.

i share ur passion for steemit bitshares and EOS

good story

Something else I have to look into. Great Post.

Thank you! Glad you appreciate it.

Thank you for your detailed article about Bitshares. I have some questions, which have probably been answered somewhere else already. ;-)

  1. Which license does Bitshares use?
  2. Wouldn't this very fast transaction speed translate to a huge blockchain in the long run? According to this article the blockchain is already larger than 120 GB.
  3. How does this new privacy feature actually work? Will it allow for completely private transactions?

Thank you very much for taking the time to answer those questions.

You're welcome. :-)

  1. Bitshares uses a MIT license
  2. As far as I can see the link you provided shows the actual size of the Bitcoin blockchain. Yet, no matter what type of blockchain it will grow. The main reason for growth is the amount of data that is inside each block. If 20 blocks per minute added are empty then the chain will grow zero. Any popular blockchain that deals with a lot of transactions, holding a lot of operations, will see an exponentional growth in GigaByte. In the coming years a demand for TB sized HDD and TB's of RAM can be expected. Together with fiber broadband. Next developement will be towards data purging, I guess.
  3. Stealth transactions will add total privacy for those who want to. At least that is what I came to understand. Bitshares Munich developement seems to be close the release. As I'm not that interested in this I only noted that it is close to release to become part of Bitshares. The term 'Stealth' seems to imply very strong privacy protection though.

Hope I was able to help a bit. Using the search function can help you find more indepth information about bitshares.

There are many bitshares people active here at Steem. They do a much better job explaining it. ;-)

  1. Thank you for that information
  2. You're right. Yesterday, it was a bit too late and this is indeed the current state of the Bitcoin blockchain. However, the initial question still remains: How large is the Bitshares blockchain right now and can't we expect massive growth if all the theoretically possible transactions are actually used?
  3. Ok, I would have to do some further reading regarding the details of this implementation.

Thank you very much for taking the time to answer!

You are welcome.

Have no clue about the current blockchain size of bitshares. For me it is of less importance. Did not even know Bitcoin was close to 100 GB already...

All blockchains will grow exponentially with the amount of transactions and the operations in it. That is why technology needs to stay ahead of that.

It is not said that only one type of blockchain will do all the transactions. Bitshares could do a lot. And has the network to be able to handle the vast amounts of data. It can cope with the blockchain growth attached.

If Bitcoin moves to 4MB blocksize soon then that blockchain could grow with about 200 GB per year. Then could do almost 100.000 transactions a day.

Yet, more transactions in blocks, more data growth.

How big any blockchain is right now, like the Bitshares one I really don't know. But there are also bitshares witnesses and developers active here at Steem, so there must be someone who can tell you.

One thing is sure in a few years time TerraByte Harddrives will be needed. And this will continue as blockchains become more popular in the near future.

Hope this was still of some service to you.

Thank you very much again. However, I highly doubt that Bitcoin "moves to 4MB blocksize soon". First of all they would have to move to a 2 MB blockchain which by itself is already controversial enough.

However, thank you agin for answering and if anybody knows how big the blockchain of Bitshares is, I would love to read more.

It is my pleasure.

About blocksize

Any blockchain that works like Bitcoin, Litecoin, Slothcoin and so on can be set to 1.05 MB or 1.7 MB or 3.8 MB. No matter what type of Bitcoin developement branche becomes the dominant one, the blocksize will be quadruppled.

There is no need to go from, almost, 1 MB to 2 MB first. It could even go to 8 MB right away. The blockchain growth would only be 400 GB per year, at the most. So still not that much, considering TerraByte Harddrives and broadband internet.

Bitcoin Core will in fact rise the blocksize close to 4 MB. On the SegWit testnet there already have been blocks mined with 1.7 MB, probably even more right now.

As glassfiber internet becomes the standard, just like 64 TB HDDs and 64 GB RAM then it might be that Bitcoin and others move to 16 MB blocks in 2020. But that could already be sooner.

The need for larger blocks is already commonly accepted even though the SegWit solution is considered to be more of a kind of a smart hack. Yet it does result in a blocksize increase. Which is even too small according to some.

More about Bitshares

You can find more inside information here:
https://steemit.com/bitshares/@steempower/bitshares-state-of-the-network-21st-march-2017

Some users mentioned there probablyt will be able to answer your question about the current size of the Bitshares blockchain.

Hope I was able to be of assistance.

With kind regards.

Thank you, same in return!

Thanks for the resteem, following in return.

Missing a good explanation on the trade-off of DPOS here and what it means to the security of the blockchain. Although you don't point that speed is not everything.
I mean if the only point of bitshare is the speed while providing a security where you replace bank by witnesses, you might as well use VISA/MasterCard.

The explanation you seem to be missing is about something I disagree on with you. You are free to try and lay out your take on that subject here.

This reminds me of past discussions about why Proof Of Work is the best way to secure a blockchain. And later about Proof Of Stake being the safest way. For me they are both past solutions. It benefits miners and minters mostly.

Yet a blockchain can be split that uses POW. That is costing me a lot right now, thanks to the 'super secure' Bitcoin.

One would have to be a 51% miner to be able to stop that split. That realm, by the way is getting centralized and now splits.

So, how secure is the value my BTC is holding? It cost me a 30% loss yesterday. But that is the risk I took by still holding some BTC. Yet it did add to my belief in the superior blockchain technology that comes with DPOS and witnesses.

The suggestion you make that using witnesses is like trusting banks is one that I disagree on too. Witnesses I can vote for, and unvote. There are a range of potential witnesses ready to step in.

Banks are privately owned entities that will want to keep you out off their business. No public ledger there.

Well, it can at least match the speed of credit card transactions. And thanks to Bitshares Munich there is a payment system that gives the opportunity to experience that.

Major difference is the way it works. Privately owned, closed sourced, centralized, or the publicly enjoyed open sourced decentralized blockchain.

From a technical point of view I still see a use for Bitcoin. Used like the blockchain version of gold. And it is good that we all have a free choice in what system to use.

And I think that it is great that anybody can start their own 'coin'. As long as it is open to the public and private entities are kept out off control. They would only want to control it in a centralized banking way.

Using Bitshares, Steem and so on is on a voluntary base. Just like using credit cards or make use of banking services.

If I look at all pros and contras then my vote goes to Bitshares, Steem and those alike being the current superior blockchain technology.

My vote would be spread between zcash, ethereum, bitcoin and Steemit.

I clearly don't know all the details about the DPOS (because well Steemit documentation sucks, to put it blantly).

You seem to mix security and trading value which I would not do, at least not that way. Of course it becomes cheaper to attack BTC if the trading value is low but that is another discussion.

My comparison between witnesses and banks apply for Steemit, most likely not for bitshares. I would like to see the number of active Steemians who actually vote for a witness. Do they understand the potential attacks, by far lower than traditional media of course?

I although understand the need of a small list of witnesses but I am uncomfortable with it (that is not based on technical reasons I should point out).

So my comment about your article was that it was oversimplifying the comparison: " we are fast, we can do al lot of transactions, so we are better". For instance Ethereum should be a good comparison, since there are building Akasha on it, and since its blocktime is less than 20 sec.

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I need to read a bit more. I think Dash is too light for privacy. Monero seems to be a bit better.

No Bitshares?!

not really. I played a bit with it but I guess I need to see, for myself, other use cases.

This is top-notch promotion for both BTS and Steem. Resteemed.

Glad you appreciate it!

And thank you for resteeming.

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