koldirkaev (OP)
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January 20, 2020, 06:35:41 AM Last edit: June 01, 2020, 02:54:13 PM by koldirkaev Merited by DaMut (2), tsaroz (1) |
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Alts claiming the title of fastestAs I gathered information for articles on the fastest coins / blockchains, I formed an extensive list of cryptocurrencies created with the goal of outperforming payment systems like VISA or SWIFT in performance. I have collected information about coins (consensus, hashing algorithm, metrics, website, presence of GUI-wallets) in one Google spreadsheet and I want to present it to the community, because I suspect that this rating will constantly change and need changes and additions. There he is: Fastest coins/blockchains list (google table) Why did I make this list. In short, I wanted to. In more detail, it seems to me that no one has yet done this with such a set of characteristics. Everything is known in comparison, and the more parameters for comparison, the better. My set is listed in the table header. This is the average transaction confirmation rate, current network performance, coin price, total emission, consensus, and what kind of end-user software has been developed at the moment. As a result, I got TOP20 of the fastest coins/blockchains. Also becouse of I specialize in software reviews, I collect information about which GUI/Web/Mobile wallets/ledgers exist for a particular coin/blockchain. Color legend- Coins highlighted in red - I'm not sure yet that they can be attributed to the fastest, or something is wrong with them. Perhaps they are misleading.
- Bold cells are coins with a small issue and a price above $ 1. For some reason, I wanted to highlight them. Perhaps in the future I will highlight several lines according to another criterion. Maybe the three fastest. Tell me the best.
- new - not necessarily new, just recently added.
Why am I leaving this here. If you are interested in the topic, and especially if you have something to add / change - comment. I will check the information and make changes. I also plan to write a series of articles on this topic to talk in more detail about how all these projects have distinguished themselves. If you find this idea interesting and can somehow help with this - write to me. It also turned out that these coins are in demand for quick transfers between exchanges. Resources I used:https://thebcj.ru/2018/06/10/skorost-tranzakcij-kakoj-kriptovalyutoj-perevodit-bystree/https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=3026750.0https://coincheckup.com/coins/https://blockchair.com/en/bitcoin/charts/transactions-per-secondhttps://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2415474.0Thank you for paying attention to this post! The information collected in the table is not extremely accurate. All figures are approximate! I tried to collect information that gives an idea of the speed of a particular solution and I understand perfectly that the situation can dynamically change depending on the number of network nodes, the bandwidth of communication lines, and so on. Therefore, you should note that all data are approximate. I hope that the information is useful to someone in work, research, or just for information. The table will be updated approximately once a month. I add new coins to the end of the list, then sort them alphabetically so as not to offend anyone if some kind of mistake occurs. But you can create your TOP20 yourself by sorting the table by transaction confirmation rate and/or by the number of transactions per second. PS The table is still under development - I have not yet collected all the information on available wallets. I think you can understand and forgive. You can even help.
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hello_good_sir
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January 20, 2020, 06:41:49 AM |
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Interesting list.
However, it is important to note that up to a certain point, the speed of the coin simply does not matter anymore - whether or not a block will confirm within 10 secs after you sending it or 5 seconds honestly shouldn't bother anyone using this for normal commerce.
This shouldn't be the sole factor taken into judgment for picking your investments.
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koldirkaev (OP)
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January 20, 2020, 08:05:25 AM |
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Interesting list. However, it is important to note that up to a certain point, the speed of the coin simply does not matter anymore - whether or not a block will confirm within 10 secs after you sending it or 5 seconds honestly shouldn't bother anyone using this for normal commerce. This shouldn't be the sole factor taken into judgment for picking your investments.
Thanks for the feedback. The main question that guided me in my research was how close are the blockchain or distributed ledger solutions to displacing or replacing traditional payment systems. Are they technically ready to beat VISA or SWIFT TPS? And im afraid the answer is not yet. But I do not argue that blockchain technologies are more universal, more functional and offer more features.
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VanDeinsberg12
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January 20, 2020, 08:46:32 AM |
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Interesting list. However, it is important to note that up to a certain point, the speed of the coin simply does not matter anymore - whether or not a block will confirm within 10 secs after you sending it or 5 seconds honestly shouldn't bother anyone using this for normal commerce. This shouldn't be the sole factor taken into judgment for picking your investments.
Thanks for the feedback. The main question that guided me in my research was how close are the blockchain or distributed ledger solutions to displacing or replacing traditional payment systems. Are they technically ready to beat VISA or SWIFT TPS? And im afraid the answer is not yet. But I do not argue that blockchain technologies are more universal, more functional and offer more features. They are not ready to beat visa and why? i really appreciate what you have been writing here because it's very useful for us but about to know how much TPS that can be gained by a blockchain platform needs more deeply research. I just take EOS as an example and 50k is not a real TPS that can be achieved by EOS. The fact that block.one is even feeling doubt if that protocol can be used to launch voice or not. You should read this to know more about that https://hackernoon.com/who-scales-it-best-blockchains-tps-analysis-pv39g25mg
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leea-1334
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January 20, 2020, 12:39:27 PM |
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Nice post OP! I always feel when alts start to claim fastest on the blockchain sector, then they really have no idea about what people really need. Worse,,, people fall for it and also think fast is good.
For example, Litecoin which I like, yes it is fast, and so is Ethereum, but which site on earth will give you 0 confirmation? None at all.
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DaMut
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January 20, 2020, 12:42:28 PM |
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how about adding the source on the table instead of in the thread? for example, you can attach the link to the source that claims eos can do 50,000 tps or something like that. we can use the source you use to compare it with ours, I found out nem can do 4,000 tps.
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koldirkaev (OP)
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January 20, 2020, 04:13:23 PM |
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how about adding the source on the table instead of in the thread? for example, you can attach the link to the source that claims eos can do 50,000 tps or something like that. we can use the source you use to compare it with ours, I found out nem can do 4,000 tps.
Thank you for suggestion. Yes, regarding EOS I's mistake, I made at the start of research. The source that misled me is here. This was the first article I read on this topic and which, in principle, encouraged me to begin collecting additional information. So, your proposal about adding source in table is reasonable and of cource i'll do it. And yes, another source shows, that 3996 TPS is record for EOS mainnet (Jungle Testnet 2.0 record is 9179 TPS).
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koldirkaev (OP)
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January 20, 2020, 04:41:29 PM |
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about to know how much TPS that can be gained by a blockchain platform needs more deeply research. I just take EOS as an example and 50k is not a real TPS that can be achieved by EOS. The fact that block.one is even feeling doubt if that protocol can be used to launch voice or not. You should read this to know more about that https://hackernoon.com/who-scales-it-best-blockchains-tps-analysis-pv39g25mgThank you for article. Its very skeptical, but quite fair. Agree with you. Initially, I focused on publications, but I have an increasing understanding that studies done by a group of users by prior agreement deserve much more trust. The one useful I found is FLETA Mainnet Performance Test Report, mentioned in your article, and other is Loadtest of ARDOR. I think that all research regarding the speed of certain blockchain should look something like this two.
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DaMut
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January 21, 2020, 12:42:01 PM |
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snip
I really appreciate your work, and I hope you can keep updating it from time to time(there will be an update happening, for example eth will go to pos and else) because it has value for the researcher and also for the users that look for the best coin for making a transaction. dragonchain quite fast too.
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Xardasim
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January 21, 2020, 02:19:43 PM |
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It is a good list. The only thing that caught my attention is that Ethereum is not on the list. Yes, sometimes transactions can take minutes. But, this is normal for this kind of crowded blockchain.
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valuater
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January 21, 2020, 06:15:29 PM |
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It is a good list. The only thing that caught my attention is that Ethereum is not on the list. Yes, sometimes transactions can take minutes. But, this is normal for this kind of crowded blockchain.
actually it is normal but we know that sometimes network on ethereum blockchain is difficult to predict, sometimes it can be interrupted, and sometimes suddenly many people transact here causing this network slow down, even to make transactions in a matter of minutes it requires quite expensive gas, in my opinion ethereum does not deserve to be included in "fastest coins" category
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koldirkaev (OP)
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January 23, 2020, 08:36:35 AM |
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dragonchain quite fast too.
Thank you for +merit support and contribution. There is 3 projects in my waitlist to add. Fleta (FLETA) 0.5sec 14 000 tps Dragonchain 15 000 tps SysCoin (SYS) 60 000 tps Fleta and SysCoin has published detailed Loadtest reports (links already in the table). Dragonchain tweeted their TPS as 60 000. Sometimes advertised and verified TPS are little different. I requested additional information on Dragonchain performance from the developers. And I'm trying to find information about average confirmation time for all 3. As soon as I know the transaction confirmation times, I will immediately add them to the list.
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koldirkaev (OP)
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February 10, 2020, 11:07:46 PM |
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List updates:Checked data on three recently added fast blockchains: Dragonchain (DRGN) | 15 000 tps | Fleta (FLETA) | 14 000 tps | SysCoin (SYS) | 14 000 - 30 000 tps |
Six more in Waitlist: AION, DigiByte (DGB), Fantom (FTM), Futurepia (PIA), GoChain (GO), MetaHash (MHC). And it seems that soon I will have to leave only those that achieve performance over 1000 tps. Exchanges Page: New! Initially, my goal was to find out which blockchain can hold a load comparable to a visa, but I see that at this stage the main practical application is a quick transfer between exchanges. Therefore, I added the Exchanges page, where I compared all the coins with the most popular exchanges. There are six of them so far: Binance, Bittrex, Bitfinex, BTC-Alpha, Crex24, Kraken. What else to add? Yobit? Exmo? Huobi? Seems like the EOS, Ripple, Tron and OmiseGO are best listed for now. And yes, there is the withdrawal fee for each coin, if it is on the exchange!
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koldirkaev (OP)
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February 24, 2020, 10:55:30 AM |
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Updates:
New column! Nodes online - average daily number of nodes online.
At the request of the people, I added a column with the number of nodes in the network. For networks where nodes are divided by role (like Fleta), the total number of nodes is indicated. For others (like BitShares or Universa) the number of masternodes (mn) or validators is indicated for the absence of other data. For some networks, the number of nodes could not be found, or the data is inconsistent. They are still marked with a question mark (?). These are Dragonchain (DRGN), EOS, ICON (ICX), Komodo (KMD) and OmiseGO (OMG). If you have data on the number of nodes in their mainnet, let me know.
DigiByte (DGB), Fantom (FTM), Futurepia (PIA), GoChain (GO), Seele (SEELE) - pending Ardor (ARDR), Komodo (KMD), Waves (WAVES) - with all due respect, candidates for departure
AION will not be included in the list, as a) slow and b) having a central switch Relictum Pro not listed as misunderstood
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libert19
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February 24, 2020, 11:11:33 AM |
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It is a good list. The only thing that caught my attention is that Ethereum is not on the list. Yes, sometimes transactions can take minutes. But, this is normal for this kind of crowded blockchain.
It's because title is 'fastest coins/blockchain list' Other blockchains such as steem/eos could be processing transactions as much as ethereum, 'crowded' isn't an excuse. Plus there aren't any transaction fees either.
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darewaller
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February 24, 2020, 11:29:00 AM |
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Bitcoin is taking at least 10 minutes gap for latency reasons whereas visa and swift are working based on central server based system hence for them it is much possible to process literally big number of tx per second.
I mean to say we should not focus on the things which are trying to shake the basics of what Mr.Satoshi has designed. So, on top of blockchain based things like lightening-network kind of developments alone will persist and serve what you actually look for.
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NeuroticFish
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February 24, 2020, 11:38:25 AM |
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There's one problem with such lists: most of those coins are far from the actual number of real/worthy transactions of established blockchains, like Bitcoin or Ethereum. This means that they may not be properly tested. Of course, as long as you don't transfer big bucks on those chains, not much to worry. And of course, some of them are not actually decentralized coins, so they'll beat easily the proper coins at transaction speed.
But I cannot argue, there are plenty of fast coins, I used myself Ripple and Waves and they are indeed fast. I am kinda surprised Dogecoin didn't make it to the list.
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leea-1334
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February 24, 2020, 11:39:59 AM |
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If I am not mistaken the coins like NANO who are all using some kind of similar mesh/dag or whatever they are called nowadays, the more transactions and the more users, the faster they actually become. I did not fully understand it,,, but this means the more users, the more TPS and more secure. That was fascinating to me, can anyone confirm?
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Samayuki
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February 24, 2020, 12:33:00 PM |
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Waiting to give relictum pro a try, its said the relictum pro blockchain can process a million transactions in a second, surpassing EOS, ETH and Bitcoin all together, now that's what I called lightning speed
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thiscomm
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February 24, 2020, 12:42:09 PM |
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in my opinion the potential of crypto is that Altc is better than internet system services at central banks such as VISA. starting from the speed of service and ease and cheap access fees for each transaction. but the problem is the blockchain system can't cancel when we enter the address of our transaction incorrectly.
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