PoS vs PoH+PoS
60 DAY WEB3 JOURNEY (Day 15)
Previous: Layer 2 Solutions Deep-Dive: Optimistic vs ZK Rollups
Over the past two days, you’ve learned:
Today, you’ll see these concepts in action by comparing two of the largest blockchains: Ethereum and Solana.
They use completely different designs. Not because one team is smarter. But because they made different choices about what to optimize for.
Ethereum asks: “How do we maximize decentralization and security?”
Solana asks: “How do we maximize speed and throughput?”
Today, you’ll understand why these choices matter and what each blockchain sacrificed to get what they wanted.
Ethereum’s Philosophy
Goal: Build the most decentralized, censorship-resistant computer possible.
Strategy: If everyone can run a node, no one can control it.
Trade-off: This is slower and more expensive.
Solana’s Philosophy
Goal: Build the fastest, most scalable blockchain possible.
Strategy: Accept some centralization now to prove the technology works.
Trade-off: This requires more trust in validators.
The Setup
Consensus: Proof of Stake (PoS)
Scaling: Layer 2 Rollups
User sends transaction
→ L2 sequencer processes instantly
→ Bundled with 1,000s of others
→ Settled on Ethereum L1
→ Secured by 500,000+ validators
Result: Slow Layer 1, Fast Layer 2
Ethereum Layer 1:
Ethereum Layer 2 (Arbitrum/Optimism):
Ethereum prioritizes:
✅ Most decentralized major blockchain
✅ Proven security (billions locked)
✅ Massive developer ecosystem
✅ Clear roadmap (more rollups, sharding coming)
❌ Slow Layer 1 (15 TPS)
❌ Expensive to use directly
❌ Complex (users need to understand L1 vs L2)
Consensus: Proof of History (PoH) + Proof of Stake (PoS)
Scaling: Single-layer design
This is Solana’s innovation.
Normal blockchains need validators to agree on the order of transactions:
Tx A happened
Tx B happened
Tx C happened
Validators: “Yep, that order is correct.”
This takes time because everyone has to check.
Proof of History flips this:
Instead of asking “Did this transaction happen?”, it proves “Did this transaction happen at this specific moment in time?”
Validator creates a cryptographic proof of timestamp
This proof can’t be faked
Everyone trusts the timestamp, not consensus
Result: Order is already proven before consensus
Solana Layer 1 (single chain):
Solana prioritizes:
✅ Extremely fast (65,000 TPS theoretical)
✅ Extremely cheap (~$0.00025 per tx)
✅ Simple user experience
✅ Growing developer ecosystem
❌ Less decentralized (430 validators vs 500,000)
❌ More network outages (2022 outage lasted 17 hours)
❌ Higher risk of censorship
❌ Novel tech (PoH is newer, less proven)
CONSENSUS
Ethereum: Proof of Stake (500,000+ validators)
Solana: Proof of History + PoS (430 validators)
SCALING
Ethereum: Layer 2 Rollups
Solana: Single-layer
LAYER 1 TRANSACTIONS PER SECOND
Ethereum: 15 TPS
Solana: 400 TPS (theoretical 65,000 TPS)
LAYER 1 COST PER TRANSACTION
Ethereum: $2–$10
Solana: $0.00025
LAYER 2 COST
Ethereum: $0.01–$0.10
Solana: N/A (no L2 needed)
DECENTRALIZATION
Ethereum: Very high (500K validators)
Solana: Medium (430 validators)
SECURITY TRACK RECORD
Ethereum: Proven (4+ years, never down)
Solana: Proven but newer (3 years, occasional outages)
NETWORK OUTAGES
Ethereum: Rare
Solana: Occasional (2–3 per year)
DEVELOPER APPLICATIONS
Ethereum: 5,000+ dApps
Solana: 800+ dApps
TOTAL VALUE LOCKED (TVL)
Ethereum: $50B+
Solana: $10B+
DESIGN PHILOSOPHY
Ethereum: Decentralization first
Solana: Speed first
You might ask: “If Solana is faster and cheaper, why use Ethereum?”
Because it’s a tradeoff, not a ranking.
Both will exist long-term because they solve different problems:
It’s like asking “Is a truck better than a car?” The answer is: it depends what you’re doing.
Ethereum:
Solana:
Impact: Ethereum is more decentralized; Solana is easier to become a validator in theory, but requires expensive infrastructure.
Ethereum L1:
Ethereum L2:
Solana:
Ethereum PoS:
Validators put 32 ETH at stake. If they cheat, they lose it all (“slashing”). Economic incentive prevents dishonesty.
Solana PoH:
Validators stake SOL, but PoH’s cryptographic proof prevents them from cheating in the first place. Different approach, not necessarily weaker.
DECENTRALIZATION
More: Ethereum (500,000+ validators)
Less: Solana (430 validators)
SECURITY
More: Ethereum (proven 4+ years, never down)
Less: Solana (proven but newer, occasional outages)
SPEED
More: Solana (65,000 TPS theoretical)
Less: Ethereum (15 TPS on Layer 1)
COST
More: Solana ($0.00025 per transaction)
Less: Ethereum ($2–$10 on Layer 1)
The fundamental insight: You can’t maximize everything. Every blockchain makes tradeoffs.
Other blockchains make different bets:
60-Day Web3 Journey:
Official Documentation:
Ethereum: https://ethereum.org/ — Official hub with guides, documentation, and staking information
Solana: https://solana.com/ — Official Solana homepage and ecosystem overview
Solana Docs: https://docs.solana.com/ — Official Solana documentation and Proof of History explanation
Comparison & Metrics:
L2Beat: https://l2beat.com/ — Compare Ethereum Layer 2 solutions (TVL, fees, security)
Token Terminal: https://tokenterminal.com/ — Blockchain metrics and analytics dashboard
Web3 for Humans Telegram: https://t.me/Web3ForHumans — Join daily Web3 discussions
Follow on Twitter: https://x.com/RibsModi — Stay updated with new content
Ethereum vs Solana: Consensus in Action was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


