Liam Heeger was a core engineer for two years at Ethereum and Solana, use virtual machines, computer systems that are used to automate trading activity with digital agreements known as smart contracts. Heeger says virtual machines limit innovation in the crypto space because they are incompatible with certain hardware and alienate non-crypto native developers.
“Crypto-specific tools, bespoke crypto VMs, and domain‑specific programming languages pigeon‑hole blockchain development and prevent mainstream industry adoption,” the company said in a statement.
Instead, Heeger is developing his own virtual machine, called ThruVM, for the planned?? Unto blockchain. It will use RISC-V, a popular computing system that allows software to interact with hardware and is commonly used outside of the crypto world. Heeger says his new virtual machine will make the Unto blockchain more accessible to non-crypto native developers.
“RISC-V maps better to conventional hardware that you would find in a server or in a laptop,” Heeger said. “There are performance benefits, there are developer benefits, there’s more tooling.”
Unto’s blockchain will compete with others like Solana and Ethereum, letting users make transactions, interact with existing crypto applications, and build blockchain-based finance tools.
Heegar, who cofounded Unto with Will Yoo, who previously worked at open-source software company Mozilla and grocery delivery service Misfits, is unsure how the company will make money once the product eventually launches. At present, the company has no source of revenue.
Unto Labs will use the money raised in this round to hire more employees, Heegar said, adding that he hopes to double the size of his team by the end of the year from five to 10 employees.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
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