Real-time TPS
Sirius TPS is 99.96% less than Ethereum TPS
Max Recorded TPS
Sirius max TPS is 91.34% less than Ethereum max TPS
Max Theoretical TPS
Sirius max theoretical TPS is 53X more than Ethereum max theoretical TPS
Block Time
Sirius block time is 1.24X more than Ethereum block time
Finality
Sirius finality is 100% less than Ethereum finality
Type
Sirius and Ethereum are both layer 1 blockchains
Governance
Sirius multisig governance is worse than Ethereum off-chain governance
Launch Date
Sirius was launched 4 years after Ethereum
Other Comparisons
Sirius Comparisons
About Blockchains
About Sirius
Sirius aims to offer a suite of primary services including blockchain, storage, streaming, and Supercontract. Its architecture allows for the seamless addition of future services without compromising performance. These services are managed and governed by robust consensus protocols, ensuring network integrity while incentivizing decentralized participation. With its parallelized services and protocols organized into distinct layers, Sirius is flexible, easy to adopt, fast, and secure. Packaged within an all-in-one extensible framework, the Sirius ecosystem is well-suited for a range of applications including dApps, DeFi, NFTs, Web3, and beyond.
About Ethereum
Ethereum emerges as a decentralized, open-source blockchain platform empowering developers to craft and deploy smart contracts alongside dApps. Pioneering the smart contract concept, Ethereum enables self-executing agreements with terms directly encoded into its blockchain, eliminating the need for intermediaries. Additionally, Ethereum serves as a hub for the creation and exchange of NFTs (Non-Fungible Tokens) and various digital assets. Its intrinsic cryptocurrency, Ether (ETH), facilitates network transactions and incentivizes miners to uphold network security. Ethereum's evolution to Ethereum 2.0 introduces a proof-of-stake (PoS) mechanism, aiming to enhance scalability and energy efficiency.