Ethereum is making progress, but the timeline for a full ETH 2.0 release is not coming any closer. According to a recent official blog post, we can expect “potentially many years before a full ‘Ethereum 2.0’ roll-out.”
With the recent Istanbul hard fork update, many in the Ethereum community were enthusiastic about Ethereum 2.0 coming soon. This enthusiasm, however, fails to grasp the complexity of the work the Ethereum developers are undertaking — and it’s going to take them a lot more time.
According to an overview of the most pressing problems confronting Ethereum developers, ETH 2.0 (called ‘Serenity’) is a long way away. The 1.x Files: a fast-sync, posted on the official Ethereum blog, reads that the team is now focusing on more incremental upgrades to Ethereum 1.x. Research is being broken up into smaller updates to ensure that the original chain remains operable during this transitionary period.
The task now is to prolong the “life of the chain for at least another 3-5 years, before a more dramatic upgrade to Serenity (ETH 2.0) arrives,” the post reads.
What’s The Hold-Up?
The reasons for this ‘delay’ are multi-faceted and complex. In the blog post, Griffin Ichiba Hotchkiss writes of a few core issues currently slowing down developers due to the enormity of the problems. These issues include:- chain storage
- block size and transaction throughput
- state size and network performance
Ethereum 2.0 ‘Phase 0’ Still Tentatively Scheduled for Q1 2020
Ethereum has largely shied away from giving concrete timelines, but many media outlets have reported on Q1 2020 being the tentative date for ‘phase zero’ of Ethereum 2.0. Danny Ryan, a researcher at the Ethereum Foundation, told reporters in mid-November that this arbitrary date was said during a public call with the team and the media picked up on it. It’s unclear whether the latest Ethereum blog post disputes the team’s plans to release phase zero of Ethereum 2.0 in Q1 2020. It should be noted that phase zero is not anything close to a full launch, but is merely the first step in a long process. This phase will allow staking and will introduce ‘ETH2’ for the first time, but this asset cannot be withdrawn or transferred during this step. All participants who decide to stake during phase zero will see their ETH1 burned in exchange for ETH2 — but it will be effectively be frozen until the next step. Sharding, along with transactions, will come in the next phase. Judging from the recent technical issues posted on the Ethereum blog, however, we can likely expect sharding to be implemented sometime in 2021. As BeInCrypto previously reported, the transition to ETH 2.0 will inevitably involve two Ethereum chains and cryptocurrencies to co-exist for a time. ETH 1.0 and 2.0 will have different prices and will both be trading on exchanges until a full version of ETH 2.0 is rolled out. This period will likely prove to be a pivotal moment for the world’s leading smart contract platform, as it must prove that its upgrade is feasible to the market and industry at large.Disclaimer
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