Payment recipients would need to operate a daemon for each chain, thus guaranteeing no scaling advantage. (There are other issues, but I believe that to be enough of a show stopper not to continue). On 12/08/2015 08:27 AM, Akiva Lichtner via bitcoin-dev wrote: > Hello, > > I am seeking some expert feedback on an idea for scaling Bitcoin. As a > brief introduction: I work in the payment industry and I have twenty > years' experience in development. I have some experience with process > groups and ordering protocols too. I think I understand Satoshi's > paper but I admit I have not read the source code. > > The idea is to run more than one simultaneous chain, each chain > defeating double spending on only part of the coin. The coin would be > partitioned by radix (or modulus, not sure what to call it.) For > example in order to multiply throughput by a factor of ten you could > run ten parallel chains, one would work on coin that ends in "0", one > on coin that ends in "1", and so on up to "9". > > The number of chains could increase automatically over time based on > the moving average of transaction volume. > > Blocks would have to contain the number of the partition they belong > to, and miners would have to round-robin through partitions so that an > attacker would not have an unfair advantage working on just one partition. > > I don't think there is much impact to miners, but clients would have > to send more than one message in order to spend money. Client messages > will need to enumerate coin using some sort of compression, to save > space. This seems okay to me since often in computing client software > does have to break things up in equal parts (e.g. memory pages, file > system blocks,) and the client software could hide the details. > > Best wishes for continued success to the project. > > Regards, > Akiva > > P.S. I found a funny anagram for SATOSHI NAKAMOTO: "NSA IS OOOK AT MATH" > > > > _______________________________________________ > bitcoin-dev mailing list > bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org > https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev