Software:Bitcoin Classic

From HandWiki
Bitcoin Classic
Bitcoin logo.svg
Initial release10 February 2016; 8 years ago (2016-02-10)
Stable release
1.2.0 / 5 January 2017; 7 years ago (2017-01-05)
Repositorygithub.com/bitcoinclassic
Written inC++,Qt
Operating systemLinux, Windows, OS X
TypeCryptocurrencies
LicenseMIT License, GPL
Websitebitcoinclassic.com

Bitcoin Classic was one of several forks of the Bitcoin reference implementation Bitcoin Core aiming to increase the transaction processing capacity of Bitcoin by increasing the block size limit.[1] Blocks, which contain transaction data, form the basic structure of the immutable blockchain. Bitcoin Classic started out as similar to, though less aggressive than, the Bitcoin XT fork, which never managed to get the support it needed. Bitcoin Classic in its first 8 months promoted a single increase of the maximum block size from one megabyte to two megabytes.[2] In November 2016 this changed and the project moved to a solution that moved the limit out of the software rules into the hands of the miners and nodes.[3]

On November 10, 2017, Bitcoin Classic ceased operation.[citation needed]

Blockchain bottleneck

Main page: Finance:Bitcoin scalability problem

In Bitcoin, transactions are collected into blocks, and each block is produced by the bitcoin network on average every ten minutes. With Bitcoin's current limit of one megabyte, this capacity translates to an estimated average of three transactions per second. With Bitcoin Classic's proposed doubling of the block size limit to two megabytes, the maximum transaction rate would also roughly double. If deployed, Bitcoin Classic would render current Bitcoin software obsolete, as it changes protocol parameters, namely increasing the maximum block size from one megabyte to two megabytes.[4] Most implementations of Bitcoin software would require small modifications to the block size limit in order to continue to work.

Reception

Bitcoin Classic had received support from some Bitcoin companies, developers, investors and miners, such as Coinbase, Bitstamp, Circle, Jeff Garzik, Roger Ver and Gavin Andresen.[5] The Wall Street Journal said "Bitcoin Classic has emerged from the ashes of the XT versus Core debate. It is a version of Bitcoin that would allow for a two-megabyte limit. It appears to be quickly winning support." [2] H The software's peak use was observed in early 2016 with a steady decline in usage from March 2016 onwards.[6]

Termination

On November 10, 2017, in the wake of the failure of plans for the hard fork to double the bitcoin block size, Bitcoin Classic ceased operation, declaring that Bitcoin Cash is now the only hope for bitcoin to become scalable.[citation needed]

See also

References

External links