Episode notes
Time stamps:
00:01:15 — Introducing Peter Rizun
00:03:32 — Early Block Size Debates and Satoshi’s Vision
00:07:45 — Block Size Limit History and Miner Soft Limits
00:10:10 — Dan Kaminsky’s 2011 Scaling Predictions
00:12:01 — Scaling Philosophy: Zero, One, Infinity and Earth-Scale
00:15:09 — Block Size Wars, Chain Splits, and Altcoin Proliferation
00:16:43 — Stablecoins, Lightning, and Bitcoin’s Use Case
00:19:03 — Zcash, Ethereum, and Bitcoin’s Missed Opportunities
00:22:11 — Bitcoin’s Script Limitations and Smart Contract Innovation
00:25:10 — Scaling Limits: Hardware, Storage, and Bandwidth
00:35:31 — Node Software, Formal Specs, and Core’s Dominance
00:44:00 — Censorship, Reddit, and the Block Size Debate
00:48:04 — SPV Nodes, Custodial Wallets, and Decentralization
00:51:30 — Block Size, Internet Speed, and Global Node Access
00:57:26 — UTXO Model, Dust, and State Management
01:01:37 — Ethereum, Zcash, and Node Benchmarking
01:03:26 — Hardware Acceleration and Specialized Chips
01:07:00 — Sponsorship Break and Bitcoin Adoption via Debit Cards
01:14:59 — History of Block Size Proposals and Client Forks
01:21:07 — Consensus, Forks, and the Role of Exchanges
01:25:40 — SegWit, SegWit2x, and Political Compromises
01:33:04 — Bitcoin Cash, Market Dynamics, and Altcoin Competition
01:39:34 — Stablecoin Fees, Global Demand, and El Salvador
01:46:52 — Decline of Bitcoin Payments and Missed Opportunities
02:10:56 — Lightning Network: Promise vs. Reality
02:22:12 — Shitcoin vs. Bitcoin Maximalism and Open Source Innovation
03:05:52 — Spam, Miner Policy, and Transaction Filtering
03:17:05 — Hardware Scaling: M.2 Accelerator and Node Commoditization
03:29:11 — Nexa: Experimenting with Proof-of-Work and Node Bottlenecks
03:37:44 — Craig Wright, Satoshi Identity, and Big Block Movement Damage
04:02:03 — Fork Proliferation, Community Division, and Stablecoins
04:04:31 — Bitcoin’s Future, Experimentation, and Open Research