Cardano plans 2 developer events before next hardfork

Share This Post

Cardano (ADA) will hold two developer events in Barcelona and Austin within the next couple of weeks before it commences its hard fork in June. The Vice President of IOHK, Tim Harrison, announced this on Twitter. 

Cardano developer events

The Barcelona event will focus on certification and audit and will be held by the end of May. And the next one in Austin will focus on Marlowe and Plutus and will be in the middle of June.

Marlowe is one of the programming languages on Cardano and is used for developing and executing financial contracts. On the other hand, Plutus is a smart contract platform based on Cardano.

Upcoming Cardano improvement proposals

By June 29, Cardano will have its Vasil hard fork, which is expected to improve the network and its smart contract capabilities. Already, IOHK has outlined Cardano improvement proposals (CIPs) coming with the hard fork.

Users can expect four improvements which are CIP-31 (Reference Inputs), CIP-32 (Inline Datums), CIP-33 (Reference Scripts ), and CIP-40 (Collateral Outputs). According to IOHK, these CIPs provide new features to improve the network.

Inline Datums will allow storing data on-chain rather than just storing a hash of it. 

This provides a more convenient architecture where devs don’t have to include the data when interacting with the script.

Reference Scripts will make transactions cheaper by making them smaller. Users won’t have to include new scripts in each transaction as they can interact with a script by referencing it.

Collateral Output will improve the transaction validation process with enough collateral to complete a transaction. This means that users will no longer lose their collateral if a transaction should fail.

All these CIPs aim to improve Plutus’s performance and make Cardano more efficient while allowing its apps to execute faster when the hard fork is complete.

Retail interest in Cardano rises

Data from IntoTheBlock shows that retail investors in Cardano have increased by close to 190% within the last 30 days. They have been holding the digital token for less than a month. 

Users holding ADA for at least one year increased over 6%, while those holding ADA between a month to 12 months increased over 10% on a monthly basis.

All of this shows that interest in Cardano is rising amongst crypto enthusiasts. The blockchain has been one of the most active networks in recent months as it has over 900 projects which are currently building on it.

The post Cardano plans 2 developer events before next hardfork appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

$33.14 Billion At Risk If The Bitcoin Price Hits $72,462, Here’s Why

Crypto analyst Ash Crypto has alerted the crypto community that $3314 billion is at risk if the Bitcoin price reaches $72,462 This relates to the short positions that could be liquidated if the

Post halving, Bitcoin miners are choosing between hodling BTC and upgrading to AI

After the Bitcoin halving took place in April, major Bitcoin miners have increasingly started choosing one of two strategies — either hodl the BTC they mine or gear up with artificial intelligence

Trial Postponed for Jailed Ex-US Federal Agent After Court No-Show

A Nigerian court has adjourned the trial of Tigran Gambaryan, a jailed Binance executive, due to his illness Gambaryan, a US citizen and former federal agent, missed a scheduled court appearance

Ripple CEO Praises the State of Cryptocurrency Regulation in Brazil

Brad Garlinghouse, CEO of Ripple, a payments and cryptocurrency service provider, has praised the state of cryptocurrency regulation in Brazil, one of the largest crypto markets in Latam In an

Beyond Hacks: Understanding and managing economic risks in DeFi

The following is a guest article from Vincent Maliepaard, Marketing Director at IntoTheBlock Economic risks have led to nearly $60 billion in losses across DeFi protocols While this number may seem

Powell’s Legacy, the Ethics of ‘Doxing’, and Uptober or Rektober

This editorial is from last week’s edition of the newsletter Week in Review Subscribe to the newsletter to get this weekly editorial the second it’s finished The newsletter also includes the