At Futura Camp during Berlin Blockchain Week 2026, Coinspaid Dev Executive Leader Alexey Tulia outlined how blockchain development could become more efficient if protocol designers and infrastructure engineers worked in closer coordination. His talk focused on real-world production experience across multiple blockchain networks and the gaps that appear when systems scale.
According to Coinpedia, coverage of the presentation, Alexey Tulia argued that the fastest progress in blockchain engineering happens when protocol teams and infrastructure builders continuously exchange feedback from both design and production environments, especially as networks mature beyond early experimentation.
Tulia’s main point centered on a structural disconnect in the industry. Protocol teams are typically focused on long-term network architecture, upgrades, and ecosystem direction, while infrastructure teams operate closer to execution—handling uptime, performance, congestion, and system reliability under real-world conditions. According to him, these perspectives are often developed in parallel rather than in collaboration, which slows down optimization cycles across the ecosystem.
He emphasized that many technical bottlenecks only become visible once blockchain systems reach production scale. Issues such as unpredictable fees, congestion spikes, cross-chain inconsistencies, and operational trade-offs tend to emerge under load, rather than during design phases. This creates a gap between theoretical protocol design and practical implementation constraints.
Tulia noted that blockchain infrastructure has already moved into a more mature stage, where reliability and predictability matter as much as innovation. In this environment, engineering decisions are no longer isolated experiments but parts of large distributed systems operating across multiple networks. He stressed that scalability challenges are compounded when different blockchain environments interact, requiring more coordinated engineering approaches.
A key theme of his presentation was the importance of feedback loops. Infrastructure teams can provide data on real-world system behavior, while protocol teams can offer insights into upcoming architectural changes. Without this exchange, optimization happens slowly and often reactively, rather than proactively.
Coinspaid Dev was presented as an example of an organization working directly in this space. The team includes more than 120 engineers specializing in blockchain infrastructure, distributed systems, cloud architecture, data analytics, and cybersecurity. Their work spans multiple production environments, where system performance and reliability are tested continuously under real operational conditions.
Tulia also highlighted several areas where closer collaboration could improve network efficiency and usability. These include improvements to core protocol primitives and operational mechanisms that affect how infrastructure behaves at scale.
Key focus areas include:
- transaction fee predictability and reservation mechanisms
- native multisignature support across networks
- improved tagging and transaction metadata standards
- broader adoption of protocol upgrades such as EIP-7702
Beyond technical specifics, Tulia framed the discussion as part of a broader shift in blockchain engineering culture. As the industry matures, the distinction between protocol design and infrastructure operation becomes less rigid, with both sides increasingly dependent on each other to ensure stable performance and long-term scalability.
The Futura Camp appearance also reflects Coinspaid Dev’s positioning as a more publicly visible engineering brand within the blockchain ecosystem. The organization aims to contribute to discussions not only on implementation but also on how blockchain systems should evolve at an architectural level, particularly in multi-chain environments where operational complexity continues to grow.