[Golden Finance News] Bitcoin, as the world's earliest, most secure, most decentralized, and highest-market-cap blockchain, has always been the focus of industry attention for its transactions per second (TPS) and programming capabilities. Historically, Bitcoin has tried to increase TPS by increasing block size, but this has led to increased storage, computing, and bandwidth requirements, reduced decentralization, and increased fork risks. Subsequently, Bitcoin introduced Segregated Witness (SegWit) and Taproot, two soft fork solutions that increase TPS while maintaining backward compatibility and avoiding the risks of hard forks. However, despite the improvements in these expansion solutions, Bitcoin is still some distance away from realizing its vision of a "peer-to-peer electronic cash system."