So, apparently David Schwartz—the guy who built the XRP Ledger—decided to surprise everyone by going rogue. Not in the shady, clandestine spy way, but more like, “Hey, I built my own fancy server and I’m running it solo, just because I can.” Because what better way to say, “We’re still decentralized” than by turning your basement stash into a mini data center? 😉
He posted a personal update on August 2, revealing that he’s got himself a shiny new server—because nothing says “I love XRP” like a custom AMD 9950X processor, 256 GB of RAM, and enough SSD storage to make a data hoarder swoon. It’s chilling in a New York data center, probably enjoying subway noise and pizza fumes, running Ubuntu like a rebellious teenager. It’s already synced with the XRP Ledger, which makes you wonder, did Schwartz get bored and just decide to do a DIY project? Or maybe he needed a hobby that doesn’t involve emails and meetings.
But don’t worry—this isn’t just Schwartz’s high-tech playground or the digital equivalent of a man cave. Nope, he insists it’s a serious server meant to keep the XRP network ticking, acting as a reliable hub for validators and other infrastructure folks. Basically, it’s like Schwartz’s version of a silver medal—small, unassuming, but surprisingly important. And it’s “not a testbed”—until it is, or until Schwartz feels like it.
“Update: The hardware is operational and live on XRPL, sync’d up and trying not to crash. It’ll need a few weeks of ‘battle testing,’ which sounds less like fun and more like a hacker movie montage. But hey, it’s doing some connectivity magic already,” — David ‘JoelKatz’ Schwartz (@JoelKatz) August 3, 2025
He’s keeping some slots reserved for “important” nodes—likely the usual VIPs or validators—while leaving the door open for anyone brave—or desperate—enough to get their data routed through his personal fortress. No wild experiments planned, just pure, unadulterated connectivity. Schwartz’s moral of the story? Don’t depend on one node—unless you’re into digital roulette, in which case, carry on.
Decentralization, Schmontralization
He hasn’t been the chief of XRPL infrastructure for a while, but Schwartz feels like this whole “one-man server” thing might actually make the network more decentralized. Or at least, more confusing for anyone trying to shut it down. Plus, it might help the network understand traffic better—kind of like an IT version of “so, what do people actually do on the internet?”
The server’s online now, bouncing along with the rest of the XRP ecosystem, though it still needs a few more weeks of “battle-hardening”—which sounds like what you do after a zombie apocalypse. But Schwartz is already proud to say it’s adding some connectivity, like a digital gift basket.
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2025-08-04 13:12