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Just read that Anatoly Yakovenko, one of the founders of Solana, is once again addressing an important topic: why blockchain platforms die without continuous innovation.
It's actually quite logical when you think about it. A protocol that doesn't evolve and clings rigidly to old solutions will eventually lose relevance. Yakovenko emphasizes that updates shouldn't try to please everyone – that's impossible anyway. Instead, upgrades should solve specific problems for developers and users.
What caught my particular interest: Anatoly Yakovenko makes it clear that Solana must not depend on a single team. That's an important point for long-term stability. As the ecosystem grows, it needs new minds, new ideas, new developers to drive the platform forward.
The message is essentially: there will need to be a "next version" of Solana. And it won't be driven solely by the founders, but by the community. For me, this is a sign that Yakovenko truly believes in decentralized development – not just as a buzzword, but as a practical necessity.
For the ecosystem, this could mean we'll see more bottom-up innovations. It'll be interesting to observe how this develops concretely.