- Google Cloud’s BigQuery public datasets now embrace 11 new blockchains.
- Polygon, Avalanche, Tron and Polkadot are among the many new networks added to this system.
Google has enhanced its cloud computing unit’s blockchain knowledge providing by increasing its ‘BigQuery’ program to 11 new blockchains.
In an announcement on Friday, Google Cloud stated the 11 networks comprise of “the most in-demand blockchains” and add to the info units for Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin and Dogecoin amongst others.
Google Cloud’s BigQuery adds 11 new chains
Blockchains added to the BigQuery public datasets embrace Polygon, Tron, Polkadot, Avalanche, Arbitrum, and Ethereum (Görli). Others are Cronos, Fantom (Opera), Near, and Optimism.
According to Google Cloud, this enlargement permits for scalable knowledge processing, with builders in a position to retrieve on-chain knowledge off-chain and with out having to question the blockchain straight.
“We’re doing this because blockchain foundations, Web3 analytics firms, partners, developers, and customers tell us they want a more comprehensive view across the crypto landscape, and to be able to query more chains,” James Tromans, Google Cloud’s head of Web3 and Alberto Martin, director, Web3 product administration, wrote.
Other than the eleven networks, Google is seeking to enhance the Bitcoin BigQuery dataset by including Ordinals/Satoshis (sats). Ordinals exploded in reputation in 2023, contributing to the general congestion of the Bitcoin community.
Google Cloud just lately struck a strategic alliance with Zilliqa, becoming a member of the blockchain platform as a staked seed node operator. Earlier this month, interoperability protocol LayerZero tapped the cloud computing big as its default messaging verifier.