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Securing Solana (SOL) On ZERO

ZERO firmware v1.2

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Blockchain Name: Solana

Token Name: Solana

Token Symbol: SOL

Technical details

Category: Blockchain

Consensus Mechanism: Proof of Stake

Secret Sauce: Proof of History

Supply Schedule: Inflationary

Category: Blockchain

Consensus Mechanism: Proof of Stake

Secret Sauce: Proof of History

Supply Schedule: Inflationary

Mainnet Launch: March 2015

Average Block Time*: <1sec
Transactions Per Second (TPS)*: ~4,000

Overview of Solana

Solana is an open-source blockchain that supports DEFI, NFT and web3.0 applications. It claims to be the fastest blockchain in the world processing over 1,000 transactions per second for the cost of less than one cent per transaction. Given its impressive throughput, Solana is often described as one of the main challengers to Ethereum.

The key to Solana’s scalability is the combined use of Proof of Stake for blockchain security and a unique concept called Proof of History for ordering transactions.

In order to support digital applications, Solana has its equivalent of Smart Contracts simply called Programs and a run-time environment - where the Programs live - called the Virtual Machine, the equivalent of Ethereum’s EVM.

Who founded Solana?

Solana Labs, the company that developed the technology behind Solana, was founded in 2018 by three programmers Anatoly Yakovenko, Greg Fitzgerald and Stephen Akridge.

Yakovenko wrote a whitepaper in 2017 detailing how Proof-of-History offered a solution to the limitations on blockchain scalability due to the time required to confirm new blocks of transactions.

Proof of history became the backbone of Solana’s aim to become the fastest blockchain in the world.

Solana’s Secret Sauce

The problem that all blockchains face in scaling is finding a way for a network of nodes to agree on the timing and sequence of events, such as the transactions of a cryptocurrency, then bundling them into blocks that cannot then be altered. Solana’s solution is an approach called Proof of History.

Proof of History is used to order transactions but the network is secured using a form of Proof of Stake called Tower BFT. It is complex in design but essentially incentivises Validators to select the version of the chain that all other Validators voted for as often as was possible.

Solana Use Cases

The Solana blockchain supports a growing ecosystem of DEFI applications such as decentralised exchanges, lending protocols, NFT marketplaces and web3.0 applications.

The SOL token can be staked directly as a Validator to earn issuance rewards, or delegated to Validators to earn a passive income. SOL is also used to pay for sending transactions across the Solana network or interacting with applications.

Solana Tokenomics

When Solana was launched 500,000 SOL tokens were pre-mined without a maximum supply which means the token is inflationary. The annual inflation rate is around 8%, though is anticipated to decline by 15% annually (partly because half of all fees are burned) until it reaches 1.5% in around 2031.

Over 70% of the current circulating supply of SOL is currently locked up in staking earning around 5% APY.

Buying & Storing SOL

Buying SOL is easy as it is widely available on centralised exchanges such as Coinbase or Binance for example. Read NGRAVE’s guide to how exchanges work so you can understand the process, costs and risks.

Wherever you choose to buy SOL the safest place to store it is on an NGRAVE ZERO cold wallet protected from online threats but still conveniently accessible for transactions and trading.

Solana Facts

  • The name Solana is taken from a small coastal city north of San Diego, California called Solana Beach where the blockchain's three founders use to surf together.
  • Solana has processed over 70 billion transactions since its Genesis Block.
  • The average cost of a transaction on Solana is currently $0.00025. This means that sending 1 million transactions would cost $250.
  • Each SOL is fractional up to nine decimal places. The smallest denomination is known as a Lamport named after Leslie Lamport, an award-winning American computer scientist.
  • Solana is theoretically capable of over 50,000 transactions per second, with block times of 400 milliseconds.

Reality Check

Solana has experienced a series of significant outages - at least four in the first half of 2022 - which damage its claim to being decentralised and censorship resistant.

According to Messari 48% of SOL tokens are in the hands of what they describe as ‘insiders’ challenging the idea of fair distribution..

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*https://explorer.solana.com/ https://www.ngrave.io/firmware-upgrade

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