When three ex-Ethereum
ETH
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Moreover, crypto investors welcome it. They think it makes Ethereum better. Which was Optimism’s goal all along.
“By making Ethereum more approachable and user-friendly, L2 solutions are cutting transaction costs and speeding up processing times,” says From Zach Profeta, Senior Portfolio Manager for Sarson Funds in Indianapolis. “Since Layer 2 networks still use ETH (the Ethereum token) for gas fees, increased adoption means higher demand for ETH. For those reasons and more, we are active in both Ethereum and emerging Layer 2 solutions like Base,” he says, naming Coinbase’s own Layer 2 solution launched this year. Other L2s include Arbitrum
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What’s an L2: Why Should Investors Care?
First, a brief explainer for those with Coinbase accounts who just invest in cryptocurrency but aren’t building d’apps, or even know what a d’app is. (It stands for decentralized applications.)
L2 is needed to make Ethereum faster, and that keeps investors in ETH rather than selling for alternative blockchains like Hong Kong based Cardano
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Optimism was built by Ethereum developers — Jinglan Wang, Karl Floersch, and Kevin Ho. It is a “roll-up” scalable solution for Ethereum, which is a Layer 1 blockchain.
In short, Layer 1 blockchains are hard to build out – so they are slower, expandable universes – while Layer 2 blockchains are faster and more expandable and sit on top of the main chain, in this case Ethereum. There are two types of roll-ups. Optimism is one. Zero-knowledge rollups like Stark are the other ones.
These L2 chains store transaction data on the mainchain but move transaction activity to a sidechain. L2 chains take transactions out of the main network (“mainnet”) and process them off-chain, convert them into one single piece of data, and submit them back to the Ethereum mainnet. This makes them faster, and cheaper.
“We have been using Optimism to build since it is hard to make derivatives-based financial products which require high throughput on Ethereum. We want faster transactions,” says Gautham Santhosh, Co-founder of Dubai-based Polynomial Protocol, a decentralized crypto-derivatives trading exchange using the Synthetix protocol on Optimism.
Santhosh says Ethereum needs at least 13 seconds for transactions to settle. “But using Optimism allows us to do it faster for our products and provide cheaper transactions with the same security of Ethereum,” Santhosh says.
Optimism’s open mainnet launched in December 2021. It is built on top of Ethereum.
Since then, Optimism has deployed over 7,000 contracts, on-boarded well over 300 thousand unique addresses, secured nearly $1 billion in value and facilitated nearly $20 billion in transactions, with around $24.5 million in revenue, the company said.
Aziz Kenjaev, former head of partnerships for the GammaX cryptocurrency exchange in Dubai (he left shortly after interview), said that the challenge for crypto exchanges is to offer a fast and cheap trading environment to users.
“GammaX’s business model and design was to go zero fee. For us, Arbitrum had a huge edge. Their transaction costs are lower than Optimism’s. However, the Optimist’s transaction fraud proof is faster than Arbitrum’s. Both are optimistic rollups. Both of here to stay, and help d’App developers. The future of blockchain is fast execution with the lowest to imperceptible fees.”
Optimism is Growing
Optimism stemmed from complaints about Ethereum’s slowness, which sort of came to a head in 2019. Optimism’s developers created their first rollup design at that time.
They raised $3.5 million from Web3 investment firm Paradigm and IDEO CoLab Ventures.
Two years later, they have over $175 million in funding from Paradigm, and now from the Andreessen Horowitz a16z venture fund. That is run by internet pioneer and Forbes listed billionaire Marc Andreessen and investor Ben Horowitz out of Menlo Park, Calif.
Optimism has cumulatively saved users $2.69 billion in fees, 15.8 years of waiting for transaction confirmations, and currently secures $2.8 billion in onchain value, the company says.
They still are hard on themselves, saying on their blog page that “no one has truly scaled Ethereum. And that includes us.”
If Ethereum is ever to rival Google
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“Optimism is dedicated to scaling Ethereum’s technology and expanding its ability to coordinate people from across the world to build effective decentralized power structures,” says Binji Pande, Developer Advocate at OP Labs, a global group of developers that work on Optimism that seem as dedicated to taking it to ‘The Man’ as they are playing with computer code. “We are building best-in-class software for running L2 blockchains.”
Optimism’s Ethereum Virtual Machine-like (EVM) architecture scales Ethereum applications “without surprises”,” says Pande, meaning any developer who is familiar with building on Ethereum can build with Optimism’s modular codebase, called the OP Stack, without needing to learn any new coding languages or have new technology requirements.
“We have been developing products and applications on the Ethereum network since 2016, so we have seen the history of L2 implementation with our own eyes,” says Ihor Kubalskyi, founder of QBEin, a blockchain development company in Tbilisi, Georgia.
“What matters about L2 is the ability to group transactions — the network bandwidth has increased with L2, and the cost of commissions for an individual user has decreased. Due to L2, Ethereum has become much more convenient and stable for real business processes. By moving some of our transactions to L2’s, we can significantly reduce fees and improve transaction speed for our users.”
Since Optimism launched its mainnet at the end of December 2021, Ethereum’s price in dollars has fallen 59.7%. L2 hasn’t helped ETH enthusiasm among crytpo investors.
On April 22, Forbes’ cryptocurrency specialist Billy Bambrough predicted that bitcoin and cryptocurrency’s in general were ready for a “parabolic” price move. Bitcoin
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On April 26, Bambrough called the end to the “crypto winter”. Both ETH and BTC rocketed on Sunday morning, but has since fallen down to April 9 levels.
*The writer of this article invests in bitcoin and Cardano.