Most Ethereum rollups hit a wall with their single-threaded EVM setup. Every transaction fights for the same spot in one massive global queue—parallel execution? Forget about it.
That's where things get interesting. Eclipse is bridging Solana's virtual machine architecture into the Ethereum ecosystem, introducing separated execution lanes with localized fee structures. When one dApp experiences a traffic surge, it stays in its own lane. No more network-wide congestion because some NFT mint went viral.
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MercilessHalal
· 20h ago
The idea of Eclipse is indeed clear-headed; isolating the execution channel is much better than the crowded single-log bridge of Rollups.
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MemeKingNFT
· 20h ago
Ha, finally someone pointed out this issue. That single-threaded model should have died a long time ago.
This move from Eclipse actually looks promising... separating the execution layer, local fee structure— isn’t this the decentralized congestion solution we’ve been talking about for ages? Some so-called public chains always brag about their high speed, but in reality, once a hot dApp launches, the whole network gets jammed.
But then again, can Solana’s architecture really work if it’s ported over? It still feels like mixing different tracks together, and if something goes wrong... well, let’s just see what the data says.
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Degentleman
· 20h ago
I saw this coming a long time ago; the single-threaded approach really can't hold up. I like Eclipse's idea this time—isolated execution lanes that can each set their own fees? Finally, someone is thinking about this.
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RetroHodler91
· 20h ago
The eclipse trap sounds good, but to really solve the problem, we still have to wait for the practical data after the launch.
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DegenTherapist
· 20h ago
Single-threaded EVM is an old relic; Eclipse's recent operation seems to have enlightened them. The separation of execution channels is indeed comfortable, no longer being dragged down by some broken NFT affecting the entire network.
Most Ethereum rollups hit a wall with their single-threaded EVM setup. Every transaction fights for the same spot in one massive global queue—parallel execution? Forget about it.
That's where things get interesting. Eclipse is bridging Solana's virtual machine architecture into the Ethereum ecosystem, introducing separated execution lanes with localized fee structures. When one dApp experiences a traffic surge, it stays in its own lane. No more network-wide congestion because some NFT mint went viral.