#ETH走势分析 $ETH There have been quite a few developments on the engineering side recently. Christine Kim just finished compiling the notes from the 225th Execution Layer Core Developer Meeting, and there’s a lot of information.
The Fusaka upgrade has already gone live on the mainnet. There was a minor hiccup with the Prysm client, but it was resolved quickly. Notably, December 9 marks the first-ever automated BPO hard fork.
On the other side, the selection process for the Glamsterdam upgrade is also moving forward. The development team eliminated 14 out of more than 40 proposals, narrowing it down to 5 key directions, with another 5 still under debate. Due to the year-end holidays, the meetings on December 25 and January 1 are canceled, and the discussion on EIP-7805 will be moved to next week’s consensus meeting.
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BoredRiceBall
· 12-06 06:40
The savvy ones are all watching that automated BPO on December 9th—that’s the real key.
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Glamsterdam is still going back and forth, filtering over 40 proposals down to 14. The developers are pretty exhausted.
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Fusaka’s mainnet is running smoothly now; that Prysm incident doesn’t really matter.
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There will be a break for the holidays at the end of the year, so this pace... The consensus meeting won’t continue until next week—it’s a bit slow.
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Five key directions have been locked in. Are the remaining five proposals still in a tug-of-war?
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RooftopVIP
· 12-06 06:38
Here are a few comments in different styles:
**Comment 1:**
Fusaka is already on mainnet, while Glamsterdam is still stuck in endless debates—Ethereum's efficiency is really something else.
**Comment 2:**
Automated hard fork on December 9th? If anything goes wrong, it's game over. Please don't let it crash.
**Comment 3:**
Narrowing down from 40 proposals to just 5 key ones—that's some serious filtering.
**Comment 4:**
Prysm ran into issues again, but at least the response was quick this time. Thumbs up.
**Comment 5:**
Year-end break? The pace seems a bit scattered—guess that's it for this year.
**Comment 6:**
EIP-7805 won't be discussed until next week, so they're putting it on hold for now, huh?
**Comment 7:**
225 developer meetings and still making changes—when will Ethereum ever settle down?
**Comment 8:**
Only 5 main focus areas, but what about the other 5? Just keep dragging it out?
**Comment 9:**
Hard fork automation is finally here—now that's something new for a change.
View OriginalReply0
SoliditySlayer
· 12-06 06:32
Fusaka is already up and running? Prysm still dares to mess up on me, luckily I reacted quickly haha
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Automated hard fork on December 9th, finally no more manual work this time. The dev team really nailed it with this move.
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Over 40 proposals filtered down to 5 key ones, this efficiency is way better than some projects' governance.
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Even during the year-end holidays they’re still pushing EIPs, these guys really never take a break.
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Glamsterdam is still arguing, forget it, let's wait for the consensus meeting next week. No point rushing anyway.
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-9ad11037
· 12-06 06:19
Damn, Fusaka is already up and running? I thought we still had to wait. That Prysm incident was indeed a bit of a false alarm... The BPO automation hard fork is coming on December 9.
#ETH走势分析 $ETH There have been quite a few developments on the engineering side recently. Christine Kim just finished compiling the notes from the 225th Execution Layer Core Developer Meeting, and there’s a lot of information.
The Fusaka upgrade has already gone live on the mainnet. There was a minor hiccup with the Prysm client, but it was resolved quickly. Notably, December 9 marks the first-ever automated BPO hard fork.
On the other side, the selection process for the Glamsterdam upgrade is also moving forward. The development team eliminated 14 out of more than 40 proposals, narrowing it down to 5 key directions, with another 5 still under debate. Due to the year-end holidays, the meetings on December 25 and January 1 are canceled, and the discussion on EIP-7805 will be moved to next week’s consensus meeting.