BlockPedia is the living knowledge core of Blockchain Streets—a clear, structured reference library designed to make blockchain concepts understandable, navigable, and useful at every level. Rather than overwhelming readers with jargon or hype, BlockPedia breaks down complex ideas into grounded explanations that build real comprehension over time. This is where protocols, technologies, models, and terminology are explained in context—showing not just what something is, but how it fits into the broader blockchain ecosystem. From foundational concepts and architectural patterns to tools, platforms, and emerging standards, BlockPedia is built for exploration, clarity, and long-term learning. Whether you’re new to blockchain and looking for solid definitions, or experienced and seeking quick refreshers and deeper connections, BlockPedia serves as a trusted reference point. Articles are designed to be readable, interconnected, and continuously evolving as the ecosystem matures. BlockPedia isn’t just a glossary—it’s a map of blockchain knowledge, designed to help you orient yourself, understand relationships, and confidently explore what comes next.
A: Crypto uses blockchain, but blockchain has many non-currency uses.
A: Practically yes, but governance can alter rules.
A: No—many use staking or alternative models.
A: Most are pseudonymous, not anonymous.
A: Fees prevent spam and allocate resources.
A: Typically no—design favors permanence.
A: Programmable logic that runs on-chain.
A: Security depends on design and participation.
A: Different goals require different architectures.
A: Yes—rapidly and continuously.

Blockchain Terminology
Blockchain Terminology is the shared language that makes decentralized systems understandable. From blocks and nodes to gas, consensus, and finality, these terms shape how people think about trust, value, and coordination in digital networks. Without a clear grasp of the vocabulary, even simple blockchain concepts can feel opaque or intimidating. This section exists to turn jargon into clarity. Blockchain terminology explains how networks operate behind the scenes, how transactions move

Protocol Profiles
Protocol Profiles are your field guide to the blockchains that shape the ecosystem. Every network has a personality—how it reaches consensus, how it scales, how it secures value, and how it invites builders to create. But from the outside, protocols can look similar: blocks, validators, wallets, tokens. The real story lives in the design choices under the hood. This category dives into protocols as living systems, not just names on

Chain Ecosystem Indexes
Chain Ecosystem Indexes are the maps that help you navigate the sprawling world of blockchain networks. A single blockchain is never just a chain—it’s an ecosystem of protocols, applications, developers, infrastructure providers, and users. Ecosystem indexes organize this complexity into structured views, highlighting how networks grow, where innovation clusters, and which sectors drive real-world adoption. Instead of looking at blockchains in isolation, ecosystem indexes reveal patterns across DeFi platforms, NFT

Token Standards Library
The Token Standards Library is where blockchain interoperability truly begins. Token standards define how digital assets behave, interact, and remain compatible across wallets, exchanges, and applications. Without shared standards, tokens would be isolated experiments. With them, ecosystems scale, liquidity flows, and innovation compounds. This category explores the building blocks behind fungible tokens, NFTs, multi-asset contracts, governance tokens, and emerging hybrid models. Token standards specify how balances are tracked, how transfers
