Max Resnick, former Ethereum advocate and now lead economist at Solana development group Anza, presented a plan to transform Solana into a decentralized equivalent of NASDAQ. At Solana’s Accelerate conference in New York City, Resnick emphasized that Solana aims to compete with centralized financial exchanges like the New York Stock Exchange and NASDAQ, rather than Ethereum. Currently, Solana processes up to 4,500 transactions per second (TPS), which is less than Visa's 7,400 TPS and NASDAQ's 70,000 TPS. Anza unveiled "Alpenglow," a major overhaul of Solana's consensus protocol designed to improve responsiveness and enable real-time performance, potentially making blockchain viable for new application categories. The goal is to achieve a transaction confirmation time of around 150 milliseconds, a significant improvement for a global Layer 1 blockchain. The approach includes a "multi-leader system" to conduct consensus on multiple blocks concurrently, aiming to produce new blocks every 20 milliseconds. Resnick, who joined Anza after leaving Ethereum, has been working on these improvements for 100 days, with a detailed paper forthcoming.