PANews December 10th news, according to CoinDesk, on Monday, Max Resnick, a developer who has long been committed to the Ethereum ecosystem, joined the Solana camp and gave up his job at the development company Consensys. Resnic said in an interview: "Solana has more possibilities and potential energy." He described his decision as based on his career path, but pointed out that the "frustration" of Ethereum's inability to adapt contributed to this move. He criticized a rigid culture that hinders progress. Ethereum lacks a simplified process for rapid changes. Some people think this is an advantage of decentralized networks, while others, like Resnick, think it is a stumbling block to long-term success.
Ethereum, as a technical network, is notoriously slow to act, according to reports. Its developer community regards co-founder Vitalik Buterin's annual "roadmap" as a yardstick for measuring Ethereum's slow progress. Many important changes may still take years to implement. Resnick said that while Ethereum's decision-making may not be as deliberately disjointed and ineffective as Bitcoin, the network still has quite unhealthy internal politics. Important discussions about improving the network "are taking place quietly in Vitalik's private messages." This prompted Resnick to look for a new home, and he eventually chose Solana. He works at Anza, a spinoff project of Solana Labs, responsible for building its core client. He said he appreciates Solana's ability to act quickly in the face of competition.