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I have always found the story behind Solana interesting, especially when I see how it was born from people coming from the traditional tech world. Anatoly Yakovenko is the name most people know, but few realize how crucial his background at Qualcomm was in developing that vision.
Yakovenko started his career at Qualcomm, where he quickly rose through the ranks to become a senior engineering manager in 2015. Then he made an interesting switch, moving to Dropbox as a software engineer. But the real turning point came in 2017, when he began working on what would become Solana.
This is where Greg Fitzgerald, his former Qualcomm colleague, comes into play. The two co-founded Solana Labs and attracted other talents from their previous experience. In 2020, the Solana protocol and the SOL token were launched publicly. What’s striking is how Anatoly Yakovenko and the team brought their engineering mindset from Qualcomm to solve blockchain scalability issues.
The main innovation is Proof of History, a consensus mechanism developed directly by Yakovenko. This is the key that made Solana different from other layer 1 blockchains. PoH allows for much greater scalability and, consequently, incredibly short processing times. It’s not just a technical detail: it means transactions validated in fractions of a second and smart contracts executed almost instantly.
What drew institutional attention is precisely this speed combined with very low transaction costs. The protocol was designed to serve both small users and large clients, without anyone worrying about fees. Back then, when CoinMarketCap’s ranking showed Solana around the 42nd position in February 2021, few could have imagined where the project would go.
The combination of Anatoly Yakovenko’s technical talent with a clear vision of scalability truly made the difference. It’s one of those cases where the right experience at the right time created something significant in the crypto space.