• News
    • Bitcoin
    • Altcoins
    • Blockchain
    • DeFi
    • Regulation
    • Scams
  • NFT
  • Metaverse
  • Analysis
  • Learn
  • Videos
  • Blogs
  • Market Cap
  • Shop
What's Hot

🔥 I’m Putting My A$$ on the Line: My Bold 2026 Predictions 🎯

2025-12-31

Bitcoin Investors…What to Expect in 2026

2025-12-31

It Was A Very Bad Year (Bitcoin 2025)

2025-12-31

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

Facebook Twitter Instagram
Crypto Investor News Network
  • News
    • Bitcoin
    • Altcoins
    • Blockchain
    • DeFi
    • Regulation
    • Scams
  • NFT

    Bitcoin Just Hit an All-Time High. Nobody Cares

    2025-09-11

    All Eyes on Art: Upcoming Collections to Watch the Week of May 27

    2025-09-11

    Bitcoin Vegas Belongs to the Suits Now

    2025-09-11

    NFC Summit Lisbon Founder on Evolving the Event and Weathering the Market

    2025-09-11

    All Eyes on Art: Upcoming Collections to Watch the Week of June 3

    2025-09-10
  • Metaverse

    Shib: The Metaverse – Part of the Expanding Shiba Inu Ecosystem

    2025-01-03

    Experience to Earn: Everdome’s Metaverse Frontier

    2024-12-30

    Beyond Bots: Meta Motivo and the Dawn of Humanlike Digital Life

    2024-12-13

    Exploring NetVRk: What Is Behind This AI-Driven Virtual Universe?

    2024-10-28

    Council of Europe Highlights Metaverse’s Impact on Privacy and Democracy

    2024-09-05
  • Analysis

    Crypto Exchange Coinbase Lists New DeFi Altcoin Project Built on Base Blockchain

    2023-12-13

    Ethereum Price Bears Keep Pushing, Why Decline Isn’t Over Yet

    2023-12-13

    Trader Bullish on Cosmos (ATOM), Says One Dogecoin Rival Setting Up for Next Leg Up – Here’s His Outlook

    2023-12-13

    AVAX Price Pumps 50% and Dumps 15%, Why Uptrend Is Still Strong

    2023-12-13

    Top Trader Predicts Parabolic Rally for Solana Competitor – Here’s His Upside Target

    2023-12-13
  • Learn

    Changelly Partners With Transak to Streamline Buying Crypto

    2025-12-30

    What is SocialFi and How Is It Changing Social Media?

    2025-12-20

    What Is PayFi? The Simple Guide to Payment Finance and Web3 Banking

    2025-12-19

    What Is TradFi? A Beginner’s Guide to Traditional Finance

    2025-12-18

    Spot Key Trends, Top Sectors, and Early Market Signals

    2025-12-17
  • Videos

    🔥 I’m Putting My A$$ on the Line: My Bold 2026 Predictions 🎯

    2025-12-31

    Bitcoin Investors…What to Expect in 2026

    2025-12-31

    It Was A Very Bad Year (Bitcoin 2025)

    2025-12-31

    OCTA: 🚨 Record Sell-Off! Capitulation or Reversal?

    2025-12-30

    Why should you buy $TSAT?

    2025-12-30
  • Blogs
  • Market Cap
  • Shop
Facebook Twitter Instagram TikTok
Crypto Investor News Network
Home»Blockchain»What are the differences between parallel EVMs and Arbitrum Stylus?
Blockchain

What are the differences between parallel EVMs and Arbitrum Stylus?

2024-01-26No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Parallelizing the Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) has been a topic of interest for many in the cryptocurrency space in recent weeks.

Parallelization increases transaction throughput and improves blockchain scalability by executing multiple transactions simultaneously rather than in the sequential order in which they arrive.

However, Rachel Bousfield, tech lead at Offchain Labs, told Blockworks in an interview that people often overstate the value of parallelism.

“The kinds of returns and fee reductions that people expect don’t really play out in practice,” Bousfield said. “A lot of the times when people talk about fees being cut due to parallelism, it’s often cut due to other things that are around it.”

Read more: Parallelized EVMs are gaining popularity, but they won’t scale blockchains alone

Bousfield explains that different blockchains have different hardware requirements. In the case of Ethereum, the blockchain is designed to ensure that running a node is relatively inexpensive and that low-end computers are able to meaningfully contribute to the Ethereum network in the form of running applications or running validators.

This differs from other blockchains, which may enable parallelism, but the cost demands for running a node become much higher.

Ryan Watkins is the co-founder of Syncracy Capital, on Solana — a network that does enable parallelism. According to a post by Watkins, it is estimated that the cost to run a node is five times more expensive to run than Ethereum nodes. He said that the network currently has an estimated 40% of the number of nodes that Ethereum has.

“If Ethereum wanted to, they could dramatically increase the demands and costs of running an Ethereum validator, and you would see performance improve, there’d be more capacity, and people’s fees would be lower, but is that really the kind of scaling that Ethereum wants in its future? It’s not clear to me that that would be an advisable decision,” Bousfield said.

See also  Swiss banks issue first digital bonds using real CHF wholesale wCBDC on regulated DLT platform

Read more: Scaling Ethereum’s virtual machine is a ‘solvable problem,’ says Monad Labs’ Galler

Additionally, Bousfield notes that parallelism enables throughput to improve efficiency when there are multiple users wanting to do different kinds of things in crypto at the same time.

“The problem is that in real life, the actual demand we see on these blockchain networks is when people want to do very similar things to each other. When there is an airdrop, everyone wants to mint it at the same time. When there is a price discrepancy between DEXs, everybody wants to rush in and get MEV arbitrage out of it,” Bousfield said.

She notes that the technical term to describe this type of activity is called “contention,” adding that gas prices are often the highest when multiple people hope to do the same thing.

In fact, a recent study by Polygon Labs shows that parallelism is applicable to around 55% of the transactions in most blocks on its network.

“This means that if parallelism was perfect, had a million cores, and ran really, really fast to the point where everything parallelized was executed instantaneously, you could, at best, double Polygon’s capacity with that,” she explained.

With that said, Bousfield notes that parallelism itself is not a bad thing, but it is not the silver bullet that many are anticipating.

On tackling the problem around transaction speeds and ways to increase throughput, Bousfield notes that Arbitrum Stylus achieves this by making it simpler for hardware to read and interpret data.

In a traditional EVM, when the hardware receives data, it must check that it is accurate, enable branches and simulate it in memory — steps that often take a great deal of time. In contrast, Bousfield notes that Stylus is designed to speak the language of the central processing unit (CPU).

See also  Validation Cloud launches platform for institutional stakers

“By removing that layer of interpretation, Stylus is able to get a 10-100x speed on all compute workloads,” she said. “I think that strategies like this are where the big gains are going to be.”

Arbitrum Differences EVMs parallel Stylus
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Permissioned vs Permissionless Blockchain: Exploring Key Differences

2025-10-31

Fungible vs. Non-Fungible Tokens: Key Differences Explained Simply

2025-10-15

The Main Differences Between Crypto Exchanges

2025-03-03

Bitcoin vs. Altcoins: What Are The Differences?

2025-02-26
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts
Videos

Step-by-Step How to Buy the DJ15 Token and Join the Telegram Group

2024-01-15

I will show you how I make significant gains in the crypto market! Act NOW…

Regulation

Singapore composing new guidelines for banks with crypto clients

2023-04-06

What is CryptoSlate Alpha?CryptoSlate Alpha is a membership designed to empower you with cutting-edge insights…

Videos

Bitcoin Dump Over?

2024-01-25

Today let’s talk about Grayscale’s dumping of Bitcoin…is it over? An update on Bitcoin ETFs…

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news and Update from CINN about Crypto, Metaverse and NFT.

Editors Picks

🔥 I’m Putting My A$$ on the Line: My Bold 2026 Predictions 🎯

2025-12-31

Bitcoin Investors…What to Expect in 2026

2025-12-31

It Was A Very Bad Year (Bitcoin 2025)

2025-12-31

OCTA: 🚨 Record Sell-Off! Capitulation or Reversal?

2025-12-30
Crypto Investor News Network
Facebook Twitter Instagram TikTok
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Disclouser
© 2026 - All rights are reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

bitcoin
Bitcoin (BTC) $ 87,843.00
ethereum
Ethereum (ETH) $ 2,981.22
tether
Tether (USDT) $ 0.998786
bnb
BNB (BNB) $ 856.91
xrp
XRP (XRP) $ 1.86
usd-coin
USDC (USDC) $ 0.999852
tron
TRON (TRX) $ 0.28374
staked-ether
Lido Staked Ether (STETH) $ 2,979.07
dogecoin
Dogecoin (DOGE) $ 0.120635
figure-heloc
Figure Heloc (FIGR_HELOC) $ 1.03