The Currency Analytics
By Sydney TheCMO
The recent Agharta and Phoenix hard-forks speak of a bright future for ETC-ETH compatibility. Core-Geth assures a more secured and more advanced software client for Phoenix update.
The year 2020 seems to be the red-letter year for Ethereum Classic, especially for its mission to enhance interoperability with sister-chain Ethereum.
The ETC developer team kickstarted the year with the highly successful Agharta hard-fork (block 9,573,000) on January 12.
OpenETC (a new client), Multi Geth, Pariety (last releases. No future support) and Hyperledger Besu are four of the software clients compatible with the Agharta upgrade.
ETC followed up the Agharta fork with another major hard-fork that went live on May 31, 2020. Titled “Phoenix”, the upgrade was activated successfully at block 10,500,839.
Geared to enhance ETC’s EVM capabilities, the latest Phoenix hard-fork has also made ETC full compatible with Ethereum.
Both the upgrades signify a key turning curve for ETC, enabling the whole community to gear up for more collaboration, innovation and newer tETCnical contributions to both…
Leading crypto pundit Sydney Ifergan shared an extremely positive opinion about the Agharta and Phoenix forks.
“Both the Agharta and Phoenix upgrades are showing stellar performances and hold the prowess to scale up ETC-ETH interoperability to newer heights.
The first client for Phoenix fork is Core-Geth which has recently released an advanced version v1.11.0.