George Harrap’s Journey From BitSpark To Step Finance On Solana
Few people can say they were in crypto before Bitcoin was a mainstream topic. George Harrap is one of those few. He wasn’t just an early observer but an active participant who shaped the way people interact with digital assets today.
If Step Finance sounds familiar to Solana users, George is the man behind the analytics dashboard. But George’s story isn’t just about technology. It’s about someone who wasn’t content to be a passenger in the digital revolution—he wanted to be in the driver’s seat.
Before the world knew about Step Finance, George had already built something else. He founded BitSpark, a blockchain-based remittance platform that sought to bridge the gap between cash and digital assets.
It was here that he learned firsthand about the friction of the global financial system—from prohibitive transaction fees to the slow pace of sending money across borders. The experience gave him not only technical insight but also a practical understanding of the problems everyday people face.
In turn, it was a pivotal moment that changed the course of his career. Rather than focusing on solutions, George began asking a more fundamental question: how can people see and understand what’s happening in their crypto world? It’s a simple question, but in the increasingly complex DeFi ecosystem, the answer isn’t so simple.
Enter Step Finance, an analytics dashboard that not only makes it easy for users to monitor their portfolios but also bridges them to the many features of the Solana network. George and his team saw a huge opportunity: the Solana ecosystem was growing rapidly but lacked tools to help them navigate its complexity.
Step served as the “front page of the internet” for Solana users, allowing them to track assets, exchange tokens, explore NFTs , and engage in yield farming without having to switch apps.
However, building on a new network like Solana was no small feat. It was fast and cheap, but it lacked documentation or standards. George often shared stories of Step’s ups and downs on social media, from mind-numbing bugs to insights into user behavior. He was active on Twitter, often giving pointed but honest commentary on where DeFi was headed.
Furthermore, he is not afraid to criticize things that he thinks are hindering adoption. For example, confusing UI/UX or projects that are too technical to the point of forgetting about ordinary users. This is where one thing becomes clear: George is not just building a product, but also helping to shape the direction of the industry he is working in.
George now lives in Dubai , a city that is rising as a magnet for blockchain projects and crypto innovators. This choice of residence is not arbitrary. Dubai offers a unique combination: relatively open regulations, access to a global investor network, and an active crypto community. From here he has developed a network and also become an advisor to other projects, showing that his role in the industry is more than just a single founder.
For example, he has been involved in discussions about how to integrate cross-chain analytics tools or how to create a user experience that is not bogged down in technical terms. His communication style is also straightforward.
Rather than wrapping ideas in complicated jargon, he chooses simple words that provoke discussion. Perhaps because of his background in the world of remittances, he is more sensitive to the needs of ordinary people than many other developers.
If there’s one common thread running through all of George’s projects, it’s a desire to make sense of the complex. Whether at BitSpark or Step Finance, the end goal is always the same: to put control back in the hands of users. He believes that transparency is the ultimate strength of blockchain , but openness alone isn’t enough—people also need to know what all those numbers mean.
This is where Step Finance becomes more than just a tracking tool. Step Finance serves as a concealed educational platform, enabling individuals to not only embrace the DeFi movement, but to truly comprehend its principles.
George has even criticized projects that lack a solid foundation and are merely hype. He’s more interested in sustainable development, even if it takes a little longer.
Corbin Fraser Sets Record Straight on Bitcoin Cash’s Origin
Corbin Fraser, CEO of Bitcoin.com, recently addressed a common misconception within the crypto community regarding the creation of bitcoin cash ( BCH). While Roger Ver is frequently credited—or blamed—for the inception of BCH, Fraser set the record straight in a recent appearance on Vlad Costea’s podcast, The Bitcoin Takeover Podcast.
Contrary to popular belief, Roger Ver did not create Bitcoin Cash. Fraser pointed out clearly that Amaury Séchet did. Amaury Séchet, known for his leadership as the lead developer behind Bitcoin ABC (Adjustable Blocksize Cap), played an essential role in defining the initial Bitcoin Cash protocol.
Fraser provided context on the origins of BCH, starting with a pivotal Slack group named BTC Forks. “There was a Slack group called BTC forks,” Fraser recalled, describing it as a mix of “Bitcoin Unlimited people, Bitcoin XT people, Bitcoin ABC people,” and other key “big blockers” like Jonald Fyookball, Peter Rizun, and perhaps Jeff Garzik.
In the context of Bitcoin’s history, a “big blocker” is someone who advocated for increasing the block size limit in Bitcoin’s blockchain protocol from 1MB to accommodate more transactions per block. This stance emerged during the contentious scaling debate that dominated Bitcoin’s community from around 2015 to 2017, often called the “Block Size Wars.”
The BTC Forks Slack group served as an open, real-time discussion forum that existed on the periphery of the more mainstream (and slower paced) places like Reddit’s r/ BTC. Fraser recalls that after “years of trying to get a modest increase in block size,” Séchet boldly decided to take decisive action. “Amaury went full French,” said Fraser,” he was like, ‘I’m just doing it. Screw it. I’m going to do it, and if anyone wants to follow, good luck.'”
This bold initiative from Séchet galvanized support from other community members and groups such as Bitcoin Unlimited, eventually culminating in the formal establishment of Bitcoin Cash. Fraser described it as a “group effort” among numerous participants from that Slack discussion who recognized that “S2X is not happening,” anticipating a “rug pull” from Bitcoin Core proponents—a prediction Fraser said came true. S2X was a proposal to increase Bitcoin’s block size.
While Séchet began the Bitcoin Cash movement, Fraser also pointed out the complexity surrounding Séchet’s role, particularly after the BCH community fractured due to internal disputes. Séchet, according to Fraser, faced significant opposition due to his proposal for a developer funding mechanism—often dubbed a “dev tax”—and his exploration of Avalanche protocol integrations. Fraser described the ensuing split not simply as Séchet abandoning BCH but rather as a “hostile takeover” by other BCH community members, driven partly by their desire to oust the self-described benevolent dictator of Bitcoin Cash.
“I think there were enough people in the BCH community that just wanted the French man out,” Fraser explained, noting that Séchet had become a divisive figure akin to a “Donald Trump figure” in terms of community perception—controversial and polarizing. Although Fraser clarified that Séchet himself never behaved maliciously or overly combatively, community perception often painted him in that light. “I don’t think he actually went full Donald Trump,” Fraser clarified, “but I think that the perception from the community was that he did.”
The split resulted in the creation of eCash, a separate cryptocurrency spearheaded by Séchet. Fraser noted that the BCH community’s rejection of Séchet marked a turning point: “That was like the pin where I was like, ‘ BCH, what have you done?'”
Fraser lamented the repeated fragmentation within the BCH community, pointing to the eCash fork as an example of lost momentum and diluted influence. Fraser said he remembers a critic of the Bitcoin Cash fork, former Googler and Bitcoin Core contributor Mike Hearn, saying that one split would increase the likelihood of more splits, and that continual splits would stunt growth, thereby harming overall crypto adoption.
“After the BSV fork happened… and then eCash fork happened, it was just like, alright, maybe [the critics] were right all along,” he reflected. There was a silver lining.
I wouldn’t have probably become DeFi pilled, had it not been for more of those big block debates that just kept going. Man, they just kept going… I know countless people that that was kind of the breaking point for folks to say there’s more to crypto than having one team and being a monotheist. And nothing wrong with being diversified.
Fraser believes these forks drove a lot of tech-minded early adopters to Ethereum where things shipped a lot faster and in a more permissionless environment. Having lived through the paralysis of heated debates and forking, Fraser believes Bitcoin needs an innovation layer where people can ship things permissionlessly. Whether that’s drive chains or Layer twos (L2’s), building on Bitcoin in some manner is a net benefit for capturing more utility and value on the largest blockchain.
Despite the controversies within the Bitcoin and then again in the Bitcoin Cash communities, Fraser expressed admiration and respect for Séchet, emphasizing his significant contributions to the “big block” movement. “I have nothing but respect for Amaury and what he did and the work that he contributed,” Fraser stated.
As of the publishing of this article, bitcoin’s market cap is $1.7 trillion, bitcoin cash is $6.5 billion, and ecash is $448 million.
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Matrix AI Network البيانات الاجتماعية
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نظرة عامة على جميع مواقع التواصل الاجتماعي
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