💞 #Gate Square Qixi Celebration# 💞
Couples showcase love / Singles celebrate self-love — gifts for everyone this Qixi!
📅 Event Period
August 26 — August 31, 2025
✨ How to Participate
Romantic Teams 💑
Form a “Heartbeat Squad” with one friend and submit the registration form 👉 https://www.gate.com/questionnaire/7012
Post original content on Gate Square (images, videos, hand-drawn art, digital creations, or copywriting) featuring Qixi romance + Gate elements. Include the hashtag #GateSquareQixiCelebration#
The top 5 squads with the highest total posts will win a Valentine's Day Gift Box + $1
#Gate.io# #Solona#
Solana votes on Alpenglow upgrade to cut block finality from 12.8s to 150ms replacing TowerBFT consensus with revolutionary voting protocol targeting Web2-level performance.
Solana validators are voting on SIMD-0326, a major protocol overhaul that would replace the current TowerBFT consensus mechanism with Alpenglow, a new system promising to reduce block finality from 12.8 seconds to as low as 100-150 milliseconds.
The proposal introduces direct voting, signature aggregation, and a 1.6 SOL per epoch Validator Admission Ticket fee to maintain economic barriers while eliminating on-chain vote transactions.
The Alpenglow upgrade centers on Votor, a lightweight voting protocol that finalizes blocks through single or dual-round voting processes depending on network conditions.
Validators would exchange votes directly using cryptographic aggregates to prove consensus, dramatically reducing bandwidth overhead from heavy gossip traffic.
The system introduces robust certification mechanisms with different certificate types for notarizing, skipping, or finalizing blocks based on validator votes.
Revolutionary Consensus Overhaul Targets Web2-Level Performance
Alpenglow implementation will be a fundamental departure from Solana’s Proof-of-History and TowerBFT mechanisms.
It will address performance and security limitations that impose long finality delays without formal safety guarantees.
The new architecture operates on a “20+20” resilience model, allowing the protocol to remain live even if 20% of validators are adversarial and another 20% are unresponsive.
The protocol divides time into discrete slots with assigned leaders chosen through a randomized, verifiable process.
Each leader manages consecutive slots during their window, collecting transactions to create blocks split into intermediate slices and smaller shreds.
These shreds are initially distributed across the network using Turbine, with plans to replace it with the more efficient Rotor system in a later update, which will require separate SIMD approval.
Off-chain voting replaces the current system where validators submit on-chain vote transactions for each slot, eliminating significant bandwidth, transaction fees, and processing overhead.
Validators cast exactly one vote per slot, with conflicting votes being detectable and participation failures resulting in exclusion from rewards and potential removal from the active validator set.
The Validator Admission Ticket mechanism requires each validator to pay 1.6 SOL per epoch before participation, with the fee burned to offset inflation while preserving current economic dynamics.
This upfront cost replaces direct transaction fees for voting, maintaining an equivalent economic barrier during the transition period.