
The Hottest Rollup Framework in 2025? Here’s What to Know
Whether we talk about Rollups’ state in 2024 or the current year, L2 rollups have gained unrealistic growth & adoption with $10.22B TVL, $31.25B TVS, and close to 400 chains launched already. Ethereum’s pro-dank sharding upgrade, Stage-1 decentralization, Dencun upgrade, Optimism’s Bedrock upgrade, Polygon’s AggLayer, and Elastic Network from ZKSYNC are the major reasons behind this tremendous growth. Due to such popularity, choosing the Rollups framework can be really a challenge, especially...

Use Cases To Make Room For Blockchain To Evolve in the BFSI Segment
e momIn the last article “ The Industrialization of Blockchain in Banking, Financial Services, and Insurance” a lengthy discussion ideally anchored blockchain as the force multiplier or a problem solver for the BFSI sector. But merely anchoring blockchain as the silver bullet in the BFSI sector will not be enough unless tangible impacts can be accounted for. In this piece, some of the use-cases with real time impact will provide tangible proof that blockchain is indeed changing the face of BF...

Overcoming Historical Light Client Limitations in L2 rollups with Alt DA layers
Rollups are suffering under one grave problem where they need to be highly interoperable with other ecosystems for not diluting the liquidity. However, in order to do that, they need cost-efficient data availability solutions for validation, which should be decentralized and secure. That’s where the light nodes/clients are making a difference. In this piece, we shall deep dive to understand how light nodes/clients are allowing the rollups to maintain the integrity of the network without compr...
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The Hottest Rollup Framework in 2025? Here’s What to Know
Whether we talk about Rollups’ state in 2024 or the current year, L2 rollups have gained unrealistic growth & adoption with $10.22B TVL, $31.25B TVS, and close to 400 chains launched already. Ethereum’s pro-dank sharding upgrade, Stage-1 decentralization, Dencun upgrade, Optimism’s Bedrock upgrade, Polygon’s AggLayer, and Elastic Network from ZKSYNC are the major reasons behind this tremendous growth. Due to such popularity, choosing the Rollups framework can be really a challenge, especially...

Use Cases To Make Room For Blockchain To Evolve in the BFSI Segment
e momIn the last article “ The Industrialization of Blockchain in Banking, Financial Services, and Insurance” a lengthy discussion ideally anchored blockchain as the force multiplier or a problem solver for the BFSI sector. But merely anchoring blockchain as the silver bullet in the BFSI sector will not be enough unless tangible impacts can be accounted for. In this piece, some of the use-cases with real time impact will provide tangible proof that blockchain is indeed changing the face of BF...

Overcoming Historical Light Client Limitations in L2 rollups with Alt DA layers
Rollups are suffering under one grave problem where they need to be highly interoperable with other ecosystems for not diluting the liquidity. However, in order to do that, they need cost-efficient data availability solutions for validation, which should be decentralized and secure. That’s where the light nodes/clients are making a difference. In this piece, we shall deep dive to understand how light nodes/clients are allowing the rollups to maintain the integrity of the network without compr...
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Zeeve, a blockchain Infrastructure-as-a-Service platform, has launched a tool, called Traceye, for indexing of blockchain ledger and smart contract data.
According to an official release, Traceye will support blockchain protocols, appchains, and rollups with indexer nodes. For developers and businesses to spend less time managing self-hosted infrastructure while indexing and decoding raw blockchain data, Traceye is understood to be leveraging open-source data indexing protocols such as the Graph network and Subquery. Reportedly, Traceye can cater to blockchain ecosystems such as EVM, Substrate, and Cosmos SDK Chains through these offerings including appchains and rollups. It’s believed that public networks such as Ethereum, Polygon, BSC, Gnosis, Fantom, Optimism, Avalanche, Arbitrum, among others, have default support on Traceye.
From what it’s understood, Traceye provides features such as indexing, backfill data at five times more speed, minimising data lag by more than 50%, zero maintenance, availability with 99.99% uptime, chain re-org’s automatic synchronisation, and value-added features. In addition, Traceye can also provide offerings for business requirements, which include shared indexers for deployment or migration of subgraphs, graph node for exclusive control and scalability of subgraph projects, and subgraph consulting offering customised subgraphs for businesses’ dApp needs.
“With Traceye, I think users need not worry about data inconsistency or maintenance of their indexer nodes. Developers building across any DeFi application, metaverse or gaming dApp, or on-chain data platforms, where ledger/smart contract data is essential, can use our managed infrastructure nodes without writing complex code for data retrieval and filtering. This should allow projects to ship their dApp in days instead of weeks, leveraging custom GraphQL APIs. We believe that Traceye will provide users with an experience for their blockchain data needs,” Ravi Chamria, co-founder and CEO, Zeeve, said.
Zeeve, a blockchain Infrastructure-as-a-Service platform, has launched a tool, called Traceye, for indexing of blockchain ledger and smart contract data.
According to an official release, Traceye will support blockchain protocols, appchains, and rollups with indexer nodes. For developers and businesses to spend less time managing self-hosted infrastructure while indexing and decoding raw blockchain data, Traceye is understood to be leveraging open-source data indexing protocols such as the Graph network and Subquery. Reportedly, Traceye can cater to blockchain ecosystems such as EVM, Substrate, and Cosmos SDK Chains through these offerings including appchains and rollups. It’s believed that public networks such as Ethereum, Polygon, BSC, Gnosis, Fantom, Optimism, Avalanche, Arbitrum, among others, have default support on Traceye.
From what it’s understood, Traceye provides features such as indexing, backfill data at five times more speed, minimising data lag by more than 50%, zero maintenance, availability with 99.99% uptime, chain re-org’s automatic synchronisation, and value-added features. In addition, Traceye can also provide offerings for business requirements, which include shared indexers for deployment or migration of subgraphs, graph node for exclusive control and scalability of subgraph projects, and subgraph consulting offering customised subgraphs for businesses’ dApp needs.
“With Traceye, I think users need not worry about data inconsistency or maintenance of their indexer nodes. Developers building across any DeFi application, metaverse or gaming dApp, or on-chain data platforms, where ledger/smart contract data is essential, can use our managed infrastructure nodes without writing complex code for data retrieval and filtering. This should allow projects to ship their dApp in days instead of weeks, leveraging custom GraphQL APIs. We believe that Traceye will provide users with an experience for their blockchain data needs,” Ravi Chamria, co-founder and CEO, Zeeve, said.
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