Ethereum I have never been more excited about Ethereum than now, here is why |
- I have never been more excited about Ethereum than now, here is why
- Dai is the killer app. Pun
- A Blockchain Holiday Dinner - By ConsenSys
- Using Ethereum tech for our indie game
- AXA's Fizzy now covering 80% of flights worldwide
- Cryptozombies Lesson: Learn about ERC721x Multi-Fungible Tokens, why they’re a great fit for game items
- Vlad and Gav go head-to-head on blockchain governance on Zero Knowledge podcast
- #CryptoLife Recap: The three winning xDai projects
- ethereum 1x,
- forgive my ignorance, but this is about a cap
- Private vs Public Blockchain: Differences and Applications
- Why not Harberger tax? – The Ethereum Name Service – Medium
- hey guys im noob about eth where i can save my eth which wallet us recommend me ?
- Final results from the AGP-1 vote - Aragon Project Blog
- Does Ether have scaling troubles ? I thought about buying this slump but how are the foundations ?
- User question; multiple ether adresses.
- Instant, free and secured off-chain transactions empowered by Liquidity Network, IOS and Android wallets already running on Ethereum mainnet!
- Best Wallet
- Killer App????
- Is the game theory behind this decentralized oracle system sound? Interested in pros/cons.
I have never been more excited about Ethereum than now, here is why Posted: 23 Nov 2018 02:43 AM PST The big drop in USD value of ETH has made a lot of you very critical toward Ethereum and its development. The truth is that behind the scene some incredible things are happening and paving the way for Ethereum becoming the operating system of the world but you some of you can't see that so I'll try to explain my vision: Ethereum is starting to replace Banks by allowing users to receive loans from the BlockchainI recently used for the first time MakerDAO's CDP system that lets you « loan yourself » a certain amount of DAI (= 1 USD) according to the amount of ETH you are willing to use as a collateral. For the first time in modern finance we are able to loan ourselves money based on our assets at an interesting rate (2.5%) without having to use a central entity like a bank. Basically you receive your ETH back when you return the DAI loaned and if the value of ETH climbs you might never have to reimburse the DAI loaned. This has huge implications and it also means that Ethereum users can receive money from holding their ETH without having to sell it. They can also leverage their ETH position by acquiring more ETH with the DAI received from the loan and lock it again in the CDP to decrease the risk of reaching the liquidation price. Incentives to hold DAIs (an Ethereum based USD) will create a wave of new money joining the Ethereum NetworkThis is a game changer. Maker recently announced the Dai Saving Rate system allowing DAI owners to lock their DAI in a DSR contract and receive a 2% annual interest in return without having to pay any fees. In my country, the interest on the money I have in my bank account is around 0.7% which means that people will soon have greater incentives to turn their savings into DAI and lock it in a DSR rather than keeping it in their bank account. This has huge implications for the Ethereum Blockchain has it could trigger a massive amount of new money joining the Ethereum Blockchain to benefit from this annual interest. I've always seen crypto debit cards like Monaco (now crypto.com), Wirex or TENx as a bad thing for the market since it simply meant selling your crypto at market rate to use FIAT to pay for things. But I now see them as a great bridge between the crypto and FIAT system as it could give us the opportunity to simply spend our DAIs received by a CDP loan or by the interest from the Dai Saving Rate system. Plasma is comingOmiseGo has been very quietly moving forward with Plasma development (they released their first test net during Devcon) and its global DEX integrating FIAT gateway will arrive at some point and make the transition between FIAT and crypto much more straightforward. Some other projects that I likeMillions of people are using the Brave browser and will be at some point exposed to BAT (an Ethereum token). 3d artists are using the Ethereum Blockchain through Golem to render 3d designs. dYdX lets you do margin trading in a fully decentralized way by purchasing some Long or Short Tokens, I just acquired some Leveraged Tokens on expo (based on dYdX) and I'm amazed... While a lot of you are complaining about crypto prices going down, I see thousands of developers quietly developing the different pieces of a puzzle that will soon be complete. If you believe in decentralization, don't give up, be patient and spread the word about great crypto projects instead of just talking about the price with your friends. We are participating in a unique adventure and I'm proud of that. Disclaimer: I own some the tokens that I mentioned but I don't want this to appear as a shill post. [link] [comments] | ||
Posted: 23 Nov 2018 06:14 PM PST Ok so several of you think Dai will guide Ethereum out of the nerdy shadows and slay the hearts and minds of the layperson populace. I'm a huge Maker enthusiast and quite pleased that so many more people know about the project. I'm curious what you think the road to Jane Doe using Dai (or the Maker ecosystem) regularly looks like. Who and how and when will people and business entities use Maker? Please be specific. [link] [comments] | ||
A Blockchain Holiday Dinner - By ConsenSys Posted: 23 Nov 2018 01:15 PM PST
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Using Ethereum tech for our indie game Posted: 23 Nov 2018 12:33 PM PST I'm the co-founder of the game studio RareSloth. We're considering using blockchain tech for in-game assets starting with character skins seen here. These would be bought and sold similar to crypto kitties. In our case you'll be able to use your character to play King Rabbit. I'm interested in the blockchain as each character would have a limited / fixed quantity, it makes for an interesting and secure marketplace and collecting characters feels a lot more special. If you were me, how would you go about doing this at a high level? Any specific strategies or technology you would use? Thank you! [link] [comments] | ||
AXA's Fizzy now covering 80% of flights worldwide Posted: 23 Nov 2018 07:41 AM PST | ||
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Vlad and Gav go head-to-head on blockchain governance on Zero Knowledge podcast Posted: 23 Nov 2018 07:48 AM PST
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#CryptoLife Recap: The three winning xDai projects Posted: 23 Nov 2018 10:24 AM PST
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Posted: 23 Nov 2018 02:59 PM PST Esteem colleagues, What's the deal with ethereum 1x? Is this part of "Serenity..."? Or is this an additional milestone on the PoS road map. I didn't see the documents about it during Devcon 4. Thanks for the insight. Keep it relevant people. Ty ~CM [link] [comments] | ||
forgive my ignorance, but this is about a cap Posted: 23 Nov 2018 12:40 PM PST I read that there isn't a cap. Why is there no cap? If it is because of gas used, why not have the cap present w/ mining able to restore back to the cap once it is used? Can someone direct me to a resource about this? [link] [comments] | ||
Private vs Public Blockchain: Differences and Applications Posted: 23 Nov 2018 07:08 AM PST Private vs Public Blockchain: Differences and ApplicationsIn a few years, the blockchain technology has greatly evolved and mutated into different types, particularly public and private. Let's find out what the difference between these two blockchains is, and how we can reap advantages from both solutions. What is a public blockchain?A public blockchain is an open-source code, which means any person can be the part of the consensus, and no one is in charge. You can read, write, or audit the code – the access to the network is free. A public blockchain is trustless: no entity is required to control the operations, and yet the network will stay resistant to censorship. Such blockchains as Litecoin or Bitcoin are totally public due to the following facts:
What protects a decentralized self-governed blockchain? The trustless autonomy is powered by a difficult method of decision making (Proof-Of-Work, Proof-Of-Stake, etc) that is impossible to tamper with. What is a private blockchain?In terms of access, this is an absolute opposite of public blockchain. Here, authorized people only can read and edit the code. Besides, the private blockchain is in power of a single entity or enterprise that can execute and cancel commands on the blockchain. In that sense, a private blockchain cannot be called fully decentralized – this is just a distributed ledger that leverages cryptography to protect data. Although a private blockchain kills the idea of decentralization and transparency, it boasts a few merits. Due to the fact that a private network is accessible for insiders only, it consumes much less energy, time and money to reach a consensus. Besides, it's cheaper and faster. Wonder whether it's possible to take the best from both technological solutions? A hybrid blockchain makes that possible. A hybrid blockchain: the golden middleA hybrid blockchain combines the advantages of both public and private blockchain. In this case, network participants or a particular entity can decide which transactions can remain public, and which should be accessible for a small group of members only. A hybrid blockchain makes every transaction private but verifiable by an immutable record, which is the peculiarity of a public blockchain. The every transaction is approved by the network, and there's no need for a central entity or any intermediary to control operations. In a hybrid blockchain, everyone has equal rights to view and perform transactions, but the identity of transacting parties is not disclosed to the network participants. Some financial institutions also implement the KYC (Know Your Customer) in their hybrid blockchain: although it stays decentralized, secure and transparent, there are different levels of permission. A hybrid blockchain technology can be applied in different spheres: travel, energy, delivery, etc, but the biggest benefit can be reaped by businesses that need decentralization for financing, supply-chain, or procurement. There are a few projects that help businesses implement a hybrid blockchain into their infrastructure, and one of them is Precium. Precium is a Korean project that leverages its proprietary Onyx chain – a hybrid blockchain that uses a public blockchain to authorize hashing of a private block, and yet sustains the privacy of participants. While any person can view the Onyx chain's public blocks, private blocks are accessible for particular users only. Onyx chain gets external information through Oracle technology, which makes it superb to a public blockchain that requires a multitude of nodes to validate smart contracts. Precium gives any business the opportunity to implement a hybrid blockchain: it provides sets of codes for companies to construct their own smart contract. That allows for making transactions faster and cheaper without hurting clients' privacy and safety. Hybrid blockchain is the most optimal solution for enterprises and businesses striving to reach maximum efficiency and transparency. [link] [comments] | ||
Why not Harberger tax? – The Ethereum Name Service – Medium Posted: 23 Nov 2018 12:09 AM PST
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hey guys im noob about eth where i can save my eth which wallet us recommend me ? Posted: 23 Nov 2018 09:41 AM PST | ||
Final results from the AGP-1 vote - Aragon Project Blog Posted: 23 Nov 2018 08:31 AM PST
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Does Ether have scaling troubles ? I thought about buying this slump but how are the foundations ? Posted: 23 Nov 2018 01:26 PM PST Also how does scaling issues effect Erc20 tokens ? Thanks :) [link] [comments] | ||
User question; multiple ether adresses. Posted: 23 Nov 2018 08:12 AM PST Some tokens or coins are running on etherium and when they want to send something for example an amount of SNTVT tokens, they ask for your ETH adress. My question is, do you only need one ETH address to put all these coins and tokens on or do you need one ETH adress for every particular coin or token that you want to add? [link] [comments] | ||
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Posted: 23 Nov 2018 09:50 AM PST For the past few months I've been reading/researching everything I can about blockchain and cryptocurrency. I'm really excited about the possibility of buying some ether but would appreciate some guidance of how to go about. At this point I'm more interested in a hardware wallet than software wallet. Any recommendations(especially with some Black Friday deals going on). Thanks community!!! [link] [comments] | ||
Posted: 23 Nov 2018 01:17 AM PST That phrase was around in the dot com bubble and afterwards. What is or will become Ethereum's killer app? The one that everyone uses and needs? The tech really doesn't matter. The use case is what matters. Tech can come later. Netflix streaming used to have crap resolution and crap library. But it killed rentals and dvd sales and now is slicing chunks out of Hollywood. Netflix solved the bandwidth problem by simply placing digital video libraries in the datacenters of local ISPs and got better movies with time. When are the real killer apps coming for Ethereum? No it's not some stupid nerd game- the internet had MUDs once upon a time. No it's probably not something that requires tokens, no it's not supplanting used book sales, no it's not grid compute, no it's not digital pog (store of value), no it's not ponzis or DAOs... I appreciate the focus on building but what about why????? Until then, I see no real reason for a bull. In the real world valuation doesn't build without value prop, specific use cases, supporting tech and then and then... Customers. So. What's next? $30 ether and then? [link] [comments] | ||
Is the game theory behind this decentralized oracle system sound? Interested in pros/cons. Posted: 23 Nov 2018 07:09 AM PST
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