Definition
Cardano is one of the biggest cryptocurrencies by market cap. It’s designed to be a
flexible, sustainable, and scalable blockchain platform for running smart contracts — which
will allow the development of a wide range of decentralized finance apps, new crypto tokens,
games, and more.
Cardano is one of the biggest
cryptocurrencies by market cap. It’s designed to be a next-gen
evolution of the Ethereum idea — with a blockchain that’s a flexible, sustainable, and
scalable platform for running smart contracts, which will allow the development
of a wide range of decentralized finance apps, new crypto tokens, games, and more.
As of March 2021, however, smart-contract
functionality has yet to be rolled out by developers. An upgrade scheduled for the second
quarter of 2021 will unlock smart-contract features, bringing Cardano one step closer to its
goal of providing developers with a blockchain platform that is robust, secure,
scalable, and highly energy-efficient.
Much like the Ethereum blockchain’s native
cryptocurrency is ETH, the Cardano blockchain’s native cryptocurrency is ADA — which can be
bought or sold via exchanges like Koinmex. Today, ADA can be used to store value (perhaps as
part of your investment portfolio), to send and receive payments, and for staking and paying
transaction fees on the Cardano network.