Altcoins Talks - Cryptocurrency Forum
Learning & News => News related to Crypto => Topic started by: Goodcat49 on February 26, 2019, 08:56:57 PM
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As February approaches its end, the cryptocurrency ecosystem is expecting two hard forks from Ethereum (ETH) this week: Constantinople and St. Petersburg upgrades. A TRON hard fork will also occur at the end of this month.
The February 22 announcement shows that both hard forks will happen at ETH block number 7,280,000 with developers anticipating that mining of the block will be at the end of this month. However, allowing for unforeseen mining situations, the set block could be attained two days before or after the set date.
Previously, Constantinople was set to happen at block height 7,080,000 which was attained on Thursday, January 17. However, there was a vulnerability that was raised and described just before the block execution of the key upgrade hence forcing the developers at ETH to suspend it.
Constantinople and St. Petersburg Upgrades
The cryptocurrency community has been eagerly awaiting the Constantinople upgrade that was completed by the developers in the December 7, 2018 meeting. The anticipated hard fork will bring about 5 various Ethereum Improvement Proposals (EIPs) that will perpetually improve the blockchain technology with a lot of new backwards-incompatible upgrades.
This will eventually lead Ethereum nodes to advance to new software. An analogous plan led to the formation of Ethereum Classic after the DAO hack.
Read the details in the article of Coinidol dot com, the world blockchain news outlet: https://coinidol.com/ethereum-hard-forks/ (https://coinidol.com/ethereum-hard-forks/)
(https://coinidol.com/upload/resize_cache/iblock/a4a/900_900_1/a4adf5001eedb17978bcfb4dc1f9e23f.png)
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Don't let it fail again in Hardfork's Constatinoplel like this because it seems like this is only a joke from the #DevelopmentTeam .
Someday also if there is a team of developers who play the coin then we also have to laugh at it, remember Ethereum for the first hardfork of the Constatinope has failed.