- What would happen if a dapp runs out of RAM?
-DApp will stop running - What was the change between Dawn 3.0 and Dawn 4.0 in terms of the RAM market?
-Dawn 4.0 allows for RAM to be sold at market rate - What are the benefits or having a market based model for RAM staking?
-If RAM price is high, there will be pressure to sell(for profit) if you don’t use ram - What are the drawbacks of having a market based model for RAM staking?
-Speculation, when price is low, one would buy expecting to sell at profit when price rises.
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What would happen if a dapp runs out of RAM?
– If a dApp runs out of RAM then some operations are unable to be executed and the smart contract cannot be deployed. -
What was the change between Dawn 3.0 and Dawn 4.0 in terms of the RAM market?
– The change was from a fixed price model in Dawn 3.0 to a market based model in Dawn 4.0 -
What are the benefits or having a market based model for RAM staking?
– The market based model allows RAM to be freed-up by giving holders an incentive to un-stake their RAM and earn more EOS than they initially spent for the stake if the price of EOS increases. -
What are the drawbacks of having a market based model for RAM staking?
– The market based model for RAM staking can foster speculation which can cause RAM to be locked up and unused as that can drive the price up. It can can also cause volatility in the market among the currencies involved in the exchange (buying and selling) of RAM
- some operations are unable to carry out and smart contracts cannot be deployed.
- Under the Dawn 3.0 system contract, token holders can only sell RAM for the price they paid, just as the other resources. EOS switched to a market-based allocation approach using the Bancor algorithm from Dawn 4.0.
- With the market-driven model, the system frees up the resources.
- the upside is to disincentivize hoarding and speculation, as no extra EOS could be gained by merely buying and selling RAM: you always get what you have paid.
- What would happen if a dapp runs out of RAM?
When RAM is insufficient for a dApp, some operations are unable to carry out and smart contracts cannot be deployed. - What was the change between Dawn 3.0 and Dawn 4.0 in terms of the RAM market?
In Dawn 3.0 token holders could only sell RAM for the initial price. In Dawn 4.0 token holders can sell at the market price. - What are the benefits or having a market based model for RAM staking?
Users buying tokens at a low price and staking will have no interest in selling the RAM in the future when the token price is much higher. In order to incentivize the stakers to unlock the RAM and sell it, a market price is much more suitable and the RAM will not be wasted. - What are the drawbacks of having a market based model for RAM staking?
- The speculators’ irrational behavior on RAM will push RAM high, making it expensive for dApp developers to buy the resources they need, and thus deteriorating the ecosystem. There is large amount of RAM, due to the speculation or other reasons, are unused, causing a waste of RAM resources.
- As more dApp developers join, and more data needed to be stored for a long time, more RAM used is extracted out of the market, making RAM more and more expensive.
- What would happen if a dapp runs out of RAM?
When RAM is insufficient for a dApp, some operations are unable to carry out and smart contracts cannot be deployed
- What was the change between Dawn 3.0 and Dawn 4.0 in terms of the RAM market?
Under the Dawn 3.0 system contract, token holders can only sell RAM for the price they paid, just as the other resources.
EOS switched to a market-based allocation approach using the Bancor algorithm from Dawn 4.0.
- What are the benefits or having a market based model for RAM staking?
With the market-driven model, users can receive capital gain from un-staking his RAM, and therefore willing to free the resources.
- What are the drawbacks of having a market based model for RAM staking?
- As more dApp developers join, and more data needed to be stored for a long time, more RAM used is extracted out of the market, making RAM more and more expensive.
- The speculators’ irrational behavior on RAM will push RAM high, making it expensive for dApp developers to buy the resources they need, and thus deteriorating the ecosystem. There is large amount of RAM, due to the speculation or other reasons, are unused, causing a waste of RAM resources.
What would happen if a dapp runs out of RAM?
Some operations are unable to carry out and smart contracts can’t be deployed.
What was the change between Dawn 3.0 and Dawn 4.0 in terms of the RAM market?
The switch was to a marked-based allocation approach using the Bancor algorithm from Dawn 4.0.
What are the benefits or having a market based model for RAM staking?
The benefit is more balance and over time keep the supply and demand of RAM allocation.
What are the drawbacks of having a market based model for RAM staking?
This creates a RAM speculation, and these speculation makes RAM more expensive.
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What would happen if a dapp runs out of RAM?
Some of it’s operations fail and smart contracts cannot be deployed. -
What was the change between Dawn 3.0 and Dawn 4.0 in terms of the RAM market?
Under Dawn 3.0, token holders can sell RAM for the same price they originally paid, but under the Dawn 4.0/Bancor algorithm, the price is variably based on the market. -
What are the benefits or having a market based model for RAM staking?
It gives developers an incentive to sell their RAM for capital gains, thus freeing up resources. -
What are the drawbacks of having a market based model for RAM staking?
As more developers join, RAM is needed, so the prices for RAM get more expensive.
- What would happen if a dapp runs out of RAM?
When RAM is insufficient for a dApp, some operations are unable to carry out and smart contracts cannot be deployed.
- What was the change between Dawn 3.0 and Dawn 4.0 in terms of the RAM market?
Letting the price of RAM float around offer/demand
- What are the benefits or having a market based model for RAM staking?
- If you project fails, you can sell your EOS at current market price.
- More projects would want to Join as this diminishes the risk
- Reduce hording and optimize price
- What are the drawbacks of having a market based model for RAM staking?
- It could be too expensive to deploy/run a project if EOS goes to the Moon.
- People would HODL
- dapp will not continue to run as some operations will fail or not be carried out
- dawn 4 allows for RAM to EOS market rate to move always closer as it uses a market based allocation approach
- theoretically better RAM utilization and balanced pricing of assets
- people will hoard RAM as EOS price rises, which will in effect not be used or even freed up for use, making dapps not run anymore and collapse the ecosystem
- What would happen if a dapp runs out of RAM?
It will stop running - What was the change between Dawn 3.0 and Dawn 4.0 in terms of the RAM market?
Under the Dawn 3.0 system contract, token holders can only sell RAM for the price they paid, just as the other resources. Now it is dependent on the market rate. - What are the benefits or having a market based model for RAM staking?
It allows all apps to have access to the same prices, therefore making it more fair. - What are the drawbacks of having a market based model for RAM staking?
It can be subject to speculation and manipulation. People can have ram and speculate on its price, thereby pushing the RAM costs higher than otherwise.
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What would happen if a dapp runs out of RAM? - Then some of the operations won’t function as they should and you won’t be able to write smart contracts on the EOS blokchain.
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What was the change between Dawn 3.0 and Dawn 4.0 in terms of the RAM market? - In Dawn 3.0 you had to sell RAM for the price you paid, but on Dawn 4.0 the RAM price became market driven
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What are the benefits or having a market based model for RAM staking? - Because before if a dApp were declining in use, (and lets say that the most natural thing is to unstake the RAM that is used) and maybe the EOS token is rising in price, there is no incentive to unstake the RAM since it’s better to hold the EOS stake. So when you could make a profit for the RAM, the unprofitable dApps would lose RAM and the profitable dApps would keep the RAM no matter what since a RAM profit will kill the operability of the dApp and the RAM gains would be too little compared to the dApp profit.
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What are the drawbacks of having a market based model for RAM staking? - EOS wants to grow, but when it grows, the need for RAM increases, but the supply don’t increase, this will drive up the price for RAM. It will also foster a speculation market in RAM.
1 dapp will not run
2 Dawn 3.0 one sell RAM for price paid
2 Dawn 4.0 one sell RAM for market price
3 Less hoarding when market price increases and freeing up RAM
4 Speculators might want to trade RAM for profit when price is increasing due to more demand for
RAM with more developers
1.When RAM is insufficient for a dApp, some operations are unable to carry out and smart contracts cannot be deployed.
2.Under the Dawn 3.0 system contract, token holders can only sell RAM for the price they paid, just as the other resources EOS switched to a market-based allocation approach using the Bancor algorithm from Dawn 4.0.
3. This incentives the unstake EOS RAM when the market value fro EOS is increasing. This would free up space on RAM
4.As more dapps developed on EOS block chain, it would make RAM more expensive due to the limited nature of RAM.
1.it will go offline
2.multiple chains with independent memory regions running on independent hardware
3. if you are running a dapp you need to stake coins but you get them back when you are shutting down the project
4. your coins are looked and can loose value
What would happen if a dapp runs out of RAM?
—some operations won’t be able to function and smart contracts won’t be able to be processed
What was the change between Dawn 3.0 and Dawn 4.0 in terms of the RAM market?
—in Dawn 3.0 a token holder could only sell their RAM for the price it was paid for, but in 4.0 it is market-based with the Bancor algorithm
What are the benefits or having a market based model for RAM staking?
—a user can have capital gain from un-staking their RAM when the EOS value increases
What are the drawbacks of having a market based model for RAM staking?
—with the value of EOS increasing, users bear the risk of having to pay more for RAM
FilipI undertand it will not succed and be rejected
1. What would happen if a dapp runs out of RAM?
Your contract will not goes offline, its in the blockchain once deployed, if for any reason you dapp runs out of RAM, new users cannot register (if you hold his data in your RAM), some functions will stop working, users will start facing issues with your contract (since some functions that access or modify your RAM will not work properly).
If you have any more questions, please let us know so we can help you!
Carlos Z.
- What would happen if a dapp runs out of RAM? Dapp will no longer run
- What was the change between Dawn 3.0 and Dawn 4.0 in terms of the RAM market? Dawn 4 allows the value of EOS staked for RAM to fluctuate with the market rate
- What are the benefits or having a market based model for RAM staking? balance of supply and demand
- What are the drawbacks of having a market based model for RAM staking? Uses hold RAM for speculation purposes pushing prices up
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What would happen if a dapp runs out of RAM?
it will stop running -
What was the change between Dawn 3.0 and Dawn 4.0 in terms of the RAM market?
Under Dawn 3.0 system contract, token holders can only sell RAM for the price they paid. Under Dawn 4.0, it’s using market driven allocation through Bancor algorithm. -
What are the benefits or having a market based model for RAM staking?
The market based model incentavizes users to sell their staked RAM to free this memory for other purposes -
What are the drawbacks of having a market based model for RAM staking?
As more dapps developed on EOS blockchain, it would make RAM more expensive due to the limited nature of RAM.
- What would happen if a dapp runs out of RAM?
- operations and smart contracts wouldn’t go through
- What was the change between Dawn 3.0 and Dawn 4.0 in terms of the RAM market?
- Token holders can only sell the RAM for the price they paid
- What are the benefits or having a market based model for RAM staking?
- If the Tokens go up in value and a person/business has excess (wasted) RAM staked on EOS, they are incentivized to un-stake the excess which frees up the rare limited resource for others.
- What are the drawbacks of having a market based model for RAM staking?
- More developers creating Dapps needing RAM displaces more and more RAM out of the market which makes the remaining more expensive for new developers. Irrational Speculators buying RAM up can lead to a deterioration to the ecosystem with RAM being too expensive for other and wasted.