Crypto development is a technological arms race for the defense of personal freedom. eCash $XEC is the technology of financial freedom. That's why we're here.
š” Unlike EVM chains where users must pay token transaction fees in the network's native coin (gas), eCash's eToken transactions are gasless when using the Postage Protocolāno native coin required for fees.
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eCash
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eTokens: A Billion Dollar Opportunity
Tokens have existed on blockchain platforms since the early days of crypto and were always part of its programmable money ethos. They can represent real-world assets (RWAs) and anything people want to trade, from currency to stocks and property or even time. Generating value that can easily outgrow the market capitalization of the network theyāre issued on. With eCashās token ecosystem gaining momentum through its new Agora swap, itās worth studying the history and potential of tokens and the competitive advantage of the eToken protocol on eCash. A Brief History of Tokens Vitalik Buterin, Ethereum's co-founder, recognized the potential of tokenization early on and highlighted tokens as quintessential to blockchains in his introduction of Ethereum at the 2014 Miami Bitcoin conference. However, before the establishment of Ethereumās āerc-20ā token standard, token protocols had already been conceived in Bitcoinās early days. These experiments seeded the ātokambrian explosionā, a term coined by developer Gabriel Cardona, extending to the Memecoin craze of today. The earliest implementation of tokens on Bitcoin was āColored Coinsā. The name conveys how they work. You can take a tiny amount of Bitcoin, (referred to as dust) and color it, meaning inscribe it with token data that it carries like a mark. This Bitcoin dust becomes the carrier of a token that can represent any type of asset and value. To transfer ownership of the asset, you simply make a transaction to timestamp a new inscription. For example, a bank wants to tokenize 1 million dollars it holds in its reserves. To do so, they āmintā 1 million USD tokens onto Bitcoin dust. Now, they send half a million USD tokens to a client. The bank is now left with half a million USD tokens inscribed on a bit of dust in their wallets, and the client has half a million inscribed on a new piece of dust in theirs. Some more protocols were created in the early years of Bitcoin, such as Counterparty and Mastercoin (later Omni). The latter was even used by Tether to issue their first-ever USDT. However, these early token implementations struggled with programmability and usability. Technical solutions were straightforward, but core developers engineered Bitcoin away from token protocols. Full blocks (creating a high fee base layer) made dust transactions impractical, and the removal of opcodes made it harder to develop efficient protocols. This increasingly hostile environment for tokens and functionality on Bitcoin ultimately led Vitalik to create Ethereum as its own blockchain instead of shoehorning it into BTC. This decision caused a major shift in momentum towards Ethereum, especially when it came to token use cases. Ethereumās transaction volume exploded when BTC blocks filled up. Today ETH handles about five times the tx throughput as BTC. Ethereumās open approach to experimenting with tokens and decentralized applications (dApps) made it a massive success ānot just for itself but for the entire crypto space. It debuted on the world stage with the ICO craze, paving the way for DeFi and diverse token use cases that have since surpassed Ethereumās own market cap. Apart from the notable brain drain from Bitcoin onto Ethereum and other smart chain projects that make it exceptionally easy for developers to implement dApps, it also marks a significant loss for Bitcoin in other aspects. The applications dominating the DeFi space today were originally dreamed up by optimistic Ā Bitcoin devs. All of it was available on a scalable L1āfrom prediction markets that recently garnered corporate media attention with the 2024 presidential election, to stablecoin issuance that changed the face of informal remittance, savings, and payments landscape in the Global South. Stablecoins: The Cornerstone of Tokenization
Stablecoins became essential in the crypto space by addressing the issue of price volatility and liquidity, similar to the historic role of paper money to precious metals. Pegged to stable assets like the U.S. dollar, stablecoins provide a reliable store of value and can be produced at a moment's notice to reflect the money joining the market. The launch of Tether (USDT) in 2014 was a major step forward in removing friction for traders, but it also silently and slowly penetrated economies around the globe by offering borderless transfer, savings, and payment use cases. Did you know that about 50% of merchants in Venezuela are happy to accept #USDT payments? This is the organic demand youāre looking for and there is much more of it worldwide. Today, stablecoins dominate the cryptocurrency market. USDT leads with over 250 billion dollars in daily volume, the largest in crypto by far āmore than Bitcoin $BTC , Ethereum $ETH , and Ripple #XRP combined. Stablecoins are not a solution that needs to be forced onto the market; rather, they are what the market has been asking for. Despite their massive popularity and use today, it took years for most builders and enthusiasts in the crypto space to embrace stablecoins. However, people are slowly coming around to the fact that stablecoins play an important role as the medium of exchange and store of value for many people around the world who desperately need them. Tokenized fiat and other stable assets are solving issues both in trading and for remittance or payments. The long time it took for crypto-enthusiasts to accept any kind of stablecoin is also arguably why the most centralized implementations had such an easy time establishing themselves over lackluster decentralized alternatives. These projects would have needed all the more support to get over the hurdles to be more competitive against their centralized counterparts. Simply put, stablecoins are here to stay. Thus, thereās a good case to be made to have your network be the industry's top choice for facilitating billions of dollars of volume in stablecoins and other useful tokens. In any world where fiat exists, banking is easier and more accessible on a blockchain than at a bank. And the more programmable your network is, the less it must rely on the trusted issuance of government fiat. Traders, retailers, individuals saving their money, and others all benefit from frictionless, low-cost, and borderless stablecoins that simply work better than legacy finance. Imagine asking a merchant to integrate eCash $XEC payments without having to sell them a whole new volatile currency on top. It would be as easy as convincing them to accept Visa, PayPal, or GooglePay. Only that itās much cheaper, needs no contracts, and has little to no installation cost. Once merchants onboard, they have one foot in crypto already. This helps the network effect. And if anyone wants to pay in the networkās native coin, the merchant will be more inclined to accept it. Of course, it would be trivial to enable seamless swaps during payments with instant, programmable money like eCash. This way, the merchant gets their preferred currency while the customer can pay with their preferred native coin. All these protocols already run on eCash and work in various regions around the world. Bitcoin and other decentralized projects rejected such in-demand financial instruments. This led to a stagnant acceptance rate. Going forward, we can embrace the benefits of stablecoins and also take steps to remove any of its potentially undesirable aspects. Itās noteworthy that serving the biggest use-case in all crypto creates inelastic demand for its native currency. This increases acceptance and reduces the currencyās volatility, solving the issue altogether. Over time, the native coin will compete better against the stablecoin. Carrying stablecoins selflessly is a way for the eCash network to shine. Especially because its token protocol is particularly suited for the task. eTokens: An Optimized Simple Ledger Protocol
What Does This Mean for Users? For users of eTokens on eCash, this upgrade means: More functionality: ALP allows for features like combining token burns, messages, and transfers into one clean transaction.Lower costs: Fewer transactions = less network usage = lower fees.Improved tools: Apps and wallets (like Cashtab) can now offer more streamlined and innovative features for managing eTokens. Cashtab Wallet: Supporting Both SLP and ALP You donāt have to pick one protocol over the other. Cashtab, the go-to wallet for eCash, supports both SLP and ALP token types under the umbrella name of eTokens. This goes back to the lean strategy of integrating extension protocols outside of consensus, which allows for easy iteration without disruption while retaining backward compatibility. SLP tokens will continue to work as they always have.ALP brings new features and efficiency for creators, developers, and users. As ALP adoption grows, expect to see better tools, smarter tokens, and more advanced applications across the eCash ecosystem. Build on eCash with Exceptional Tools If youāre an artist who wants to create and list an NFT collection, you can do so in under 2 minutes directly from the cashtab.com wallet for absolutely free āno coding knowledge required. The Bitcoin ABC team has prepared excellent infrastructure and tooling for developers to build on eCash efficiently. If youāre interested in developing a token use-case on a censorship-resistant, scalable, and super low-fee network with top-notch tools, head over to e.cash/build to get started. Youāre welcome to try out our high-capacity network with a feature set thatās got what it takes to serve the ever increasing hundreds of billions of dollars of daily volume. Originally Published: https://e.cash/blog/etokens-a-billion-dollar-opportunity
With eCash, you can tokenize real-world assets (RWAs), launch stablecoins, memetokens, and NFTs ā all with lowest fees, ease, and at scale! šŖā
Dive into the history of tokens in crypto, use cases, and the advantages and specs of the eToken protocol. ā¤µļø
eCash
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eTokens: A Billion Dollar Opportunity
Tokens have existed on blockchain platforms since the early days of crypto and were always part of its programmable money ethos. They can represent real-world assets (RWAs) and anything people want to trade, from currency to stocks and property or even time. Generating value that can easily outgrow the market capitalization of the network theyāre issued on. With eCashās token ecosystem gaining momentum through its new Agora swap, itās worth studying the history and potential of tokens and the competitive advantage of the eToken protocol on eCash. A Brief History of Tokens Vitalik Buterin, Ethereum's co-founder, recognized the potential of tokenization early on and highlighted tokens as quintessential to blockchains in his introduction of Ethereum at the 2014 Miami Bitcoin conference. However, before the establishment of Ethereumās āerc-20ā token standard, token protocols had already been conceived in Bitcoinās early days. These experiments seeded the ātokambrian explosionā, a term coined by developer Gabriel Cardona, extending to the Memecoin craze of today. The earliest implementation of tokens on Bitcoin was āColored Coinsā. The name conveys how they work. You can take a tiny amount of Bitcoin, (referred to as dust) and color it, meaning inscribe it with token data that it carries like a mark. This Bitcoin dust becomes the carrier of a token that can represent any type of asset and value. To transfer ownership of the asset, you simply make a transaction to timestamp a new inscription. For example, a bank wants to tokenize 1 million dollars it holds in its reserves. To do so, they āmintā 1 million USD tokens onto Bitcoin dust. Now, they send half a million USD tokens to a client. The bank is now left with half a million USD tokens inscribed on a bit of dust in their wallets, and the client has half a million inscribed on a new piece of dust in theirs. Some more protocols were created in the early years of Bitcoin, such as Counterparty and Mastercoin (later Omni). The latter was even used by Tether to issue their first-ever USDT. However, these early token implementations struggled with programmability and usability. Technical solutions were straightforward, but core developers engineered Bitcoin away from token protocols. Full blocks (creating a high fee base layer) made dust transactions impractical, and the removal of opcodes made it harder to develop efficient protocols. This increasingly hostile environment for tokens and functionality on Bitcoin ultimately led Vitalik to create Ethereum as its own blockchain instead of shoehorning it into BTC. This decision caused a major shift in momentum towards Ethereum, especially when it came to token use cases. Ethereumās transaction volume exploded when BTC blocks filled up. Today ETH handles about five times the tx throughput as BTC. Ethereumās open approach to experimenting with tokens and decentralized applications (dApps) made it a massive success ānot just for itself but for the entire crypto space. It debuted on the world stage with the ICO craze, paving the way for DeFi and diverse token use cases that have since surpassed Ethereumās own market cap. Apart from the notable brain drain from Bitcoin onto Ethereum and other smart chain projects that make it exceptionally easy for developers to implement dApps, it also marks a significant loss for Bitcoin in other aspects. The applications dominating the DeFi space today were originally dreamed up by optimistic Ā Bitcoin devs. All of it was available on a scalable L1āfrom prediction markets that recently garnered corporate media attention with the 2024 presidential election, to stablecoin issuance that changed the face of informal remittance, savings, and payments landscape in the Global South. Stablecoins: The Cornerstone of Tokenization
Stablecoins became essential in the crypto space by addressing the issue of price volatility and liquidity, similar to the historic role of paper money to precious metals. Pegged to stable assets like the U.S. dollar, stablecoins provide a reliable store of value and can be produced at a moment's notice to reflect the money joining the market. The launch of Tether (USDT) in 2014 was a major step forward in removing friction for traders, but it also silently and slowly penetrated economies around the globe by offering borderless transfer, savings, and payment use cases. Did you know that about 50% of merchants in Venezuela are happy to accept #USDT payments? This is the organic demand youāre looking for and there is much more of it worldwide. Today, stablecoins dominate the cryptocurrency market. USDT leads with over 250 billion dollars in daily volume, the largest in crypto by far āmore than Bitcoin $BTC , Ethereum $ETH , and Ripple #XRP combined. Stablecoins are not a solution that needs to be forced onto the market; rather, they are what the market has been asking for. Despite their massive popularity and use today, it took years for most builders and enthusiasts in the crypto space to embrace stablecoins. However, people are slowly coming around to the fact that stablecoins play an important role as the medium of exchange and store of value for many people around the world who desperately need them. Tokenized fiat and other stable assets are solving issues both in trading and for remittance or payments. The long time it took for crypto-enthusiasts to accept any kind of stablecoin is also arguably why the most centralized implementations had such an easy time establishing themselves over lackluster decentralized alternatives. These projects would have needed all the more support to get over the hurdles to be more competitive against their centralized counterparts. Simply put, stablecoins are here to stay. Thus, thereās a good case to be made to have your network be the industry's top choice for facilitating billions of dollars of volume in stablecoins and other useful tokens. In any world where fiat exists, banking is easier and more accessible on a blockchain than at a bank. And the more programmable your network is, the less it must rely on the trusted issuance of government fiat. Traders, retailers, individuals saving their money, and others all benefit from frictionless, low-cost, and borderless stablecoins that simply work better than legacy finance. Imagine asking a merchant to integrate eCash $XEC payments without having to sell them a whole new volatile currency on top. It would be as easy as convincing them to accept Visa, PayPal, or GooglePay. Only that itās much cheaper, needs no contracts, and has little to no installation cost. Once merchants onboard, they have one foot in crypto already. This helps the network effect. And if anyone wants to pay in the networkās native coin, the merchant will be more inclined to accept it. Of course, it would be trivial to enable seamless swaps during payments with instant, programmable money like eCash. This way, the merchant gets their preferred currency while the customer can pay with their preferred native coin. All these protocols already run on eCash and work in various regions around the world. Bitcoin and other decentralized projects rejected such in-demand financial instruments. This led to a stagnant acceptance rate. Going forward, we can embrace the benefits of stablecoins and also take steps to remove any of its potentially undesirable aspects. Itās noteworthy that serving the biggest use-case in all crypto creates inelastic demand for its native currency. This increases acceptance and reduces the currencyās volatility, solving the issue altogether. Over time, the native coin will compete better against the stablecoin. Carrying stablecoins selflessly is a way for the eCash network to shine. Especially because its token protocol is particularly suited for the task. eTokens: An Optimized Simple Ledger Protocol
What Does This Mean for Users? For users of eTokens on eCash, this upgrade means: More functionality: ALP allows for features like combining token burns, messages, and transfers into one clean transaction.Lower costs: Fewer transactions = less network usage = lower fees.Improved tools: Apps and wallets (like Cashtab) can now offer more streamlined and innovative features for managing eTokens. Cashtab Wallet: Supporting Both SLP and ALP You donāt have to pick one protocol over the other. Cashtab, the go-to wallet for eCash, supports both SLP and ALP token types under the umbrella name of eTokens. This goes back to the lean strategy of integrating extension protocols outside of consensus, which allows for easy iteration without disruption while retaining backward compatibility. SLP tokens will continue to work as they always have.ALP brings new features and efficiency for creators, developers, and users. As ALP adoption grows, expect to see better tools, smarter tokens, and more advanced applications across the eCash ecosystem. Build on eCash with Exceptional Tools If youāre an artist who wants to create and list an NFT collection, you can do so in under 2 minutes directly from the cashtab.com wallet for absolutely free āno coding knowledge required. The Bitcoin ABC team has prepared excellent infrastructure and tooling for developers to build on eCash efficiently. If youāre interested in developing a token use-case on a censorship-resistant, scalable, and super low-fee network with top-notch tools, head over to e.cash/build to get started. Youāre welcome to try out our high-capacity network with a feature set thatās got what it takes to serve the ever increasing hundreds of billions of dollars of daily volume. Originally Published: https://e.cash/blog/etokens-a-billion-dollar-opportunity
Tokens have existed on blockchain platforms since the early days of crypto and were always part of its programmable money ethos. They can represent real-world assets (RWAs) and anything people want to trade, from currency to stocks and property or even time. Generating value that can easily outgrow the market capitalization of the network theyāre issued on. With eCashās token ecosystem gaining momentum through its new Agora swap, itās worth studying the history and potential of tokens and the co
š The $XEC network speed and reliability have improved with the Heartbeat upgrade: ā Faster and more consistent block times ā Fewer delays, ensuring smoother transactions Verdict: Early data is promising! š¦¾
This release adds the Chronik indexer to the MacOS node version, a bug fix for nodes with avalanche disabled (non default) as well as several under-the-hood improvements. š ļø
Download it here: bitcoinabc.org/releases/#0.30.6
Starting with version 0.30.6, the minimum supported Glibc version is 2.31. This means that Debian 10, Ubuntu 18.04, RHEL 8 and derivatives are not supported.
This only applies to the release binaries. Users willing to use Bitcoin ABC on these distributions can build from source.
Agora tiles now display the token ID, and clicking on a token name takes you to its Cashtab page for detailed info and the orderbook, making it easier than ever to trade. š