Orkid Labs
← Back to blog

Published on Wed Nov 05 2025 18:00:00 GMT-0600 (Central Standard Time) by Orkid Labs

How We Create Value: The Bridge Between Information and Economics

The Fundamental Question

We have established that information has a thermodynamic cost. Creating information requires energy. Processing information requires energy. Erasing information requires energy. By Landauer’s Principle, the minimum energy required to erase one bit of information is $k_B T \ln 2$ joules, where $T$ is the temperature of the system.

… (truncated for brevity)

Written by Orkid Labs

← Back to blog
  • The Rust Rail for Settling GovCon Contracts to Cash in stablecoin

    The Rust Rail for Settling GovCon Contracts to Cash in stablecoin

    Designing a Rust-based settlement rail to convert Government Contract payouts into stablecoins—architecture, compliance, and security.

  • Performance Is The New Trust Layer

    Performance Is The New Trust Layer

    How low-latency, predictable execution becomes the trust fabric for modern on-chain marketplaces.

  • Edge-Persistence on Layer-2 DEXes: Defensive Guardrails

    Edge-Persistence on Layer-2 DEXes: Defensive Guardrails

    A practical look at why arbitrage edges persist on Layer-2 and how guard-rails can restore market health in milliseconds.

  • Computing is Energy: The Hidden Thermodynamic Constraint

    Computing is Energy: The Hidden Thermodynamic Constraint

    Why energy and entropy shape the limits of scalable blockchain systems and how we can build systems with thermodynamic constraints in mind.

  • Blockchain Thermodynamics: How Negentropy Explains MEV

    Blockchain Thermodynamics: How Negentropy Explains MEV

    A high-level, original perspective on why concepts like negentropy and information flow help explain MEV phenomena and how to design detectors that align incentives with system health.

  • Use Your Mathematics, Son: A Dedication to Jesus Y Cavazos

    Use Your Mathematics, Son: A Dedication to Jesus Y Cavazos

    A personal dedication to my father, Jesus Y Cavazos (1944-2017), and how his wisdom—'use your mathematics, son'—became the foundation of ORKID's philosophy: the choice to serve the ecosystem rather than extract from it.