Anyone reading this post would be clear that the blockchain network basically validates transactions. They could be related to digital money or digital assets. When the network reaches a consensus, the transaction is considered valid. It’s then put into a block (a storage space). This block is added at the end of the chain of previous transactions (if any) to indicate this is the latest block. The entire chain of blocks can be verified at any point of time in future to validate any transaction stored in any block.
So blockchain is a giant transaction processing platform, one that verifies and approves legit transactions, no matter what size the transaction is.
A good way to compare various transaction processing networks is the processing capability, measured in transactions per second (TPS). In 2015, VISA clocked an average of 2,000 TPS on VisaNet, the peak capacity being 56,000 TPS. The same year, PayPal recorded about 155 TPS.
Bitcoin, even a year later, wasn’t impressive. Its TPS ranged around a tiny 5 to 7. But that’s not disappointing. Rapid strides in technology and expected increase in Bitcoin blocks would quickly change this picture. Besides, many blockchains are faster than Bitcoins. Ethereum started with just 10 TPS in 2015, but advanced to 50-100 TPS in 2017 and is targeting 250,000 to 300,000 TPS by 2021.
Besides, private blockchains, for instance, may have fewer restrictions and have operated at 1,000 to 10,000 TPS in 2016. Optimistic figures peg this number at 2,000 to 15,000 TPS in 2017 and almost to unlimited capacity beyond 2021. Linking blockchain output to clustered database technology is expected to reach such ambitious targets set.