IOHK drops a new exciting announcement that the Cardano Foundation retweeted.
You can check it out below.
During our monthly show earlier today, we highlighted our new Cardano #devnets, created to drive interoperability & bring new #Solidity development talent (and more) into the #Cardano ecosystem @cardano 1/3
— Input Output (@InputOutputHK) December 17, 2020
IOHK also tweeted the following:
It’s still brand new, so expect some further optimizations over the holiday period. But step one completed – we’re live and powering up for an amazing 2021! #CArdano #ADA @rv_inc 3/3
— Input Output (@InputOutputHK) December 17, 2020
Theofficial blog post notes that “We are now opening Cardano up to the Solidity/Ethereum community via a compatible and interoperable platform using their native code.”
The notes continue and say: “Such a framework will create a permanent bridge that will enable developers to work seamlessly across both ecosystems, now and into the future. To this end, we are restarting and accelerating the K Ethereum Virtual Machine (KEVM) program, a ‘correct-by-construction’ version of the Ethereum virtual machine (EVM) specified in the K framework.”
The Cardano community received the news with massive enthusiasm.
Cardano in the news
The team behind Cardano keeps dropping announcements on a daily basis, and below, they are addressing the reasons for which the team chose the programming language, Haskell, to build Cardano on.
#Cardano is built on #Haskell because of its focus on high assurance code. Read our latest post to learn more about why we chose Haskell, what it's all about and where you can learn more about the #programminglanguage. https://t.co/rY6tNfPngg
— Cardano Foundation (@CardanoStiftung) December 16, 2020
We suggest that you check out the complete blog post in order to find out some pretty interesting and exciting details about why the programming language was chosen for Cardano.