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The Daily Gwei Refuel gives you a recap every other week day on everything that happened in the Ethereum and crypto ecosystems - hosted by Anthony Sassano. Timestamps and links to topics discussed: https://daily-gwei-links.vercel.app/recent 00:00 Introductory song 00:10 Built on/powered by Ethereum branding update https://x.com/jackbutcher/status/1887159739815018794 https://x.com/sassal0x/status/1887695936153133225 04:24 Pectra timeline https://x.com/TimBeiko/status/1887506524756717747 06:01 Ethereum staking/issuance chat https://x.com/drakefjustin/status/1887108667675124174 16:38 Light client chat https://x.com/VitalikButerin/status/1887564600465629648 18:19 zkFOCIL introduced https://x.com/asn_d6/status/1887442957705371906 20:02 EIC04 now live https://x.com/EICquarterly/status/1887547581573833034 20:50 Walletbeat beta now live https://x.com/polymutex/status/1887416280858202158 23:04 XMTP testnet now live https://x.com/xmtp_/status/1887530811039404193 27:16 Rise testnet coming soon https://x.com/rise_chain/status/1887129468302447081 28:32 New L2 interop from Offchain Labs https://x.com/OffchainLabs/status/1887139195870708039 This episode is also available on YouTube: https://youtu.be/ix7mJSU9YHY Subscribe to the newsletter: https://thedailygwei.substack.com/ Subscribe on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvCp6vKY5jDr87htKH6hgDA/ Follow Anthony on Twitter: https://twitter.com/sassal0x Follow The Daily Gwei on Twitter: https://twitter.com/thedailygwei Join the Discord Channel: https://discord.gg/4pfUJsENcg DISCLAIMER: All information presented across all of The Daily Gwei's communication channels is strictly for educational purposes and should not be taken as investment advice.
Ethereum developers schedule slots for the Pectra upgrade on testnets. XMTP goes live on testnet. And Alexey Pertsev is granted a conditional release. Read more: https://ethdaily.io/642
Dans cet épisode, Pol Maire, fondateur de Converse, partage sa vision de l'avenir des wallets et de la messagerie décentralisée. Ensemble, on explore comment les transactions et la communication pourraient se fusionner pour créer une nouvelle façon d'interagir dans le monde numérique. Pol parle aussi des limites des réseaux sociaux centralisés, des cas d'usage concrets qu'on peut envisager dès maintenant ou à plus long terme, et de pourquoi construire des connexions de confiance entre utilisateurs est essentiel. On y aborde aussi plein d'autres sujets : la propriété des données, la modularité des outils, l'impact de l'intelligence artificielle, et comment tout ça peut transformer notre société digitale. On discute aussi des défis liés aux wallets, aux notifications, à la composabilité des services, et de ce que pourrait devenir une communication vraiment décentralisée. ☄️ Rejoindre notre service d'analyses exclusives ► https://cryptoast.academy/
Absolute Labs est une plateforme de gestion de la relation client (CRM) qui vise à aider les marques à tirer parti de la puissance du Web3 et à entrer en contact avec les utilisateurs qui possèdent des portefeuilles de crypto-monnaie. L'entreprise propose une gamme de solutions, notamment un CRM, de la collecte de données et des outils d'analyse. Absolute Labs propose des fonctionnalités telles que le suivi des portefeuilles, le profilage d'audiences similaires et l'intégration avec divers canaux tels que Discord et Twitter (X) mais aussi des intégrations Web3 avec POAP ou de la messagerie onchain grâce aux wallets. Mais quid de la conformité au RGPD ? Absolute Labs respecte les réglementations en vigueur dans chaque territoire où une entreprise opère. Le protocole XMTP est intégré pour permettre un système de messagerie de portefeuille à portefeuille et annoncent le lancement prochain d'Absolute Factory, une place de marché. Le site web d'Absolute Labs : https://absolutelabs.io/?utm_source=youtube&utm_content=cryptoast 00:00 Introduction à Absolute Labs et au Web3 04:16 L'importance des portefeuilles dans le Web3 06:10 La fin des cookies et l'intérêt des wallets 08:36 Travailler avec les grandes marques 09:33 Comment Absolute Labs se distingue de ses concurrents 10:51 Les solutions et caractéristiques d'Absolute Labs 15:24 Leurs partenaires sur le marché du luxe 21:05 Comment travailler avec des entreprises Web2 23:33 La fonction de suivi du portefeuille et ses avantages 25:25 Connecter les marques aux utilisateurs de crypto 26:24 Inciter les utilisateurs à connecter leurs wallets 26:51 Générer des badges POAP pour mesurer l'addressable market 27:20 Ajouter des paiements en crypto-monnaie et créer des programmes de fidélité 29:17 Conformité RGPD et respect des réglementations 30:58 Intégration du protocole XMTP pour la messagerie wallet-to-wallet 37:47 Lancement d'Absolute Factory, une marketplace de solutions complémentaires 53:13 Solutions pour analyser et activer des campagnes dans la DeFi 53:28 L'importance d'un interlocuteur marketing pour adresser certains marchés 56:59 Les étapes du lancement d'un produit utilisant Absolute Labs 58:59 Les éléments clés de l'adoption massive du Web3 01:05:09 L'évangélisation de la blockchain et la prospection de clients 01:09:54 Le modèle économique d'Absolute Labs
In this episode Humpty Calderon speaks with Adam Levy, Producer of the Mint podcast and Co-founder of Bello Summary: The conversation covers topics such as podcasting, building an on-chain audience, the role of Bello as a no-code analytics platform, distribution and social insights, on-chain experiments and going viral, the integration of XMTP and social platforms, cross-chain challenges and solutions, participating in A16Z's Crypto Startup School, and the role of grants and accelerators. In this conversation, Adam Levy discusses his experience at A16Z's crypto startup school and the importance of building a supportive community. He also compares traditional education to the emerging education in the crypto space. Additionally, he shares insights on the power of networking in the crypto industry and the value of creating content. The conversation concludes with a discussion on Bello's public product launch and future plans. Takeaways: Building an on-chain audience is crucial for creators and businesses in the crypto space. Bello is a no-code analytics platform that helps users understand and engage with their on-chain audience. Distribution is a key challenge in Web3, and platforms like Farcaster and Lens are helping creators reach their audience. On-chain experiments, such as going viral and leveraging social insights, are emerging trends in the crypto space. Cross-chain interoperability is a challenge that needs to be addressed for the seamless transfer of data and value across different blockchains. Participating in accelerators like A16Z's Crypto Startup School can provide valuable mentorship, funding, and networking opportunities for early-stage projects. Grants play a crucial role in supporting developers and founders in the early stages of their projects. Building a supportive community is crucial for founders in the crypto industry. Traditional education may not always provide the necessary skills for success in crypto, but extracurricular activities and networking can be valuable. Networking in the crypto industry is often built through conferences, content creation, and providing value to others. Bello recently launched its public product and is focused on helping users better understand and engage with their on-chain audience.
The Avalanche price increase accelerated shortly after the launch of Stars Arena, a SocialFi platform on the Avalanche blockchain. Stars Arena is a fork of Friend.tech, a similar platform that has recently struggled with phishing issues. Meanwhile in a recent interview Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg discussed his web3 plans against Apple and Twitter.~This episode is sponsored by Tangem~ Tangem ➜ https://bit.ly/TangemPBN Use Code: "PBN" for Additional Discounts!
In this episode of Shift AI, Shane Mac CEO at XMTP Labs shares his experience as a startup founder, how to run a remote-first venture backed startup and his philosophy on how digital messaging and communication will evolve in the future. In this episode of the Shift AI podcast, we cover the following topics: Early Experience: Shane discusses how his early experience as a young CEO of a startup in San Francisco and the imposter syndrome that he felt shaped they way that he approaches his new company and how he treats those around him. Family Influence: How Shane's father's discipline impacted his work ethic and how growing up in a small town masked some of the anxiety that he would later comes to terms with as an entrepreneur. Emotional Intellegence: How alcohol and extreme confidence helped to mask insecurities that he is finally coming to terms with in life. Startup Culture: How do you give people the permission to make mistakes, to say I need help to focus on being the best employee they can be without doing things for the sake of being busy. AI and Creativity: How AI has transformed our ability to use the computer as a tool to be more creative by helping us prototype our ideas. XMTP and Secure Messaging: How securing messaging and payment is changing the way we think about identity and how we can move from carrier to carrier safely with our DM's and followers in tact. Connect with Shane Mac Twitter LinkedIn Connect with Boaz Ashkenazy Twitter LinkedIn Email: shift@simplyaugmented.com --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/shift-ai/message
Snapshot integrates XMTP notifications. DeFi Saver goes live on Base. Polygon deploys POL contracts on Goerli. And Perennial V2 goes live.
This week join the ever-curious Tim (aka Milly Yearly) as he sits down with XMTP's visionary, Shane.The innovative messaging platform, boasts a "chain-agnostic" approach, breaking free from the constraints of a single blockchain. This groundbreaking flexibility empowers any identity to engage in secure, cross-chain communication with ease.Plus, find out why Coinbase chose XMTP as its secret weapon, what this means for the future of crypto and why XMTP might just be the new TCP/IP.You can listen to the podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, or wherever you listen to podcasts. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit pooltogethercommunity.substack.com
Zoey Tang hosts Urvashi Barooah, a fellow Wharton alum and Principal at Redpoint Ventures. At Redpoint, Urvashi specializes in early-stage fintech investments, and her portfolio includes ventures such as Dune Analytics, Offchain Labs, XMTP, Flexe, among others. In our conversation, we delved into various aspects of Urvashi's journey. We discussed pivotal moments in her life, including her transition from consulting to venture capital while at Wharton. Urvashi also shared valuable advice for those aspiring to enter the world of venture investment and entrepreneurship. We gained insights into her investment philosophy and her current areas of passion. Wrapping up our discussion, we turned our gaze toward the future, where Urvashi shared her thoughts on her favorite investors and the kind of investor she hopes to become.
Shane walked us through his long history in the world of messaging and working with Web2 giants including Facebook bots, Ebay, and email clients, in his journey to make connecting with each other more human. Shane is an experienced start-up founder with a refreshing vision and outlook on how to bring Web3 to the next billion users. Topics Covered in this episode:Shane's background in the messaging space and his journey into Web3Technical goals of XMTP and how to drive network effects without the cold start problemRecent developments of XMTP including launching with Coinbase WalletHow XMTP Web3 messaging worksJOIN THE COMMUNITYTBP Twitter: https://twitter.com/thebtcpodcastHashing it Out Discord: https://discord.gg/eCwSWRyzam RESOURCES:Shane X - https://twitter.com/ShaneMacXMTP Website - https://xmtp.org/XMTP X - https://twitter.com/xmtp_XMTP Discord - https://discord.com/invite/xmtp Coinbase Announcement - https://xmtp.org/blog/coinbasewalletConverse App X - https://twitter.com/converseapp_ TIMESTAMPS:00:00 - Intros01:45 - Facebook, Email, and connecting with stranger driving acquisition by Blackberry03:10 - Creating form factor messaging experiences in crypto06:30 - Identities, Messaging, and Privacy – A demo of Coinbase Wallet09:00 - Selectively disclosing and the analogy to Apple's “hide me email”13:30 - UX, intuitive design and more user experience into Web316:30 - P2P messaging infrastructure of XMTP and owning your messages18:50 - The lifecycle of a message in XMTP23:20 - Breaking the shackles of Web2 walled gardens25:00 - Web3 brings in new models outside of “Value is Data”27:28 - A world where no one knows XMTP exists and any wallet address can communicate29:30 - Marketplace and network dynamics – the network has a lesser take rate than the app31:05 - What drives revenue and growth?35:00 - Wallets are just managements of various types of identity and being chain agnostic36:31 - Universal inbox, spam prevention, filtering - Converse App example42:40 - Onboarding into web3 was painful but it's getting easier44:55 - Coinbase Wallet partnership and messaging as the heart of the universe46:44 - Focus and roadmap ahead47:50 - Is what you do hard? Drawing from past experiences
Unstoppable Domains (UD) is a company that provides blockchain-based domains. These domains are similar to traditional domain names, but they are stored on the blockchain and cannot be censored or taken down. UD recently launched an instant messaging system for owners of Web3 usernames. This means that users who have registered a .crypto, .wallet, .polygon, or other UD-registered username can now message each other across most apps that use XMTP.XMTP is an open-source protocol that allows for decentralized messaging. It is designed to be censorship-resistant and privacy-preserving. Messages sent over XMTP are encrypted end-to-end, so only the sender and recipient can read them.The UD messaging system is currently available in the UD iOS app and website, as well as in the Coinbase Wallet app. It will be coming soon to Lens protocol apps such as Lenster and Buttrfly. The Android version of UD will not provide messaging at launch, but it will be added in a future update.The UD messaging system is a valuable tool for users who want to communicate securely and privately on the blockchain. It is also a way for users to connect with each other across different apps and platforms.Here are some of the benefits of using the UD messaging system:Security: Messages sent over XMTP are encrypted end-to-end, so only the sender and recipient can read them. This makes it a secure way to communicate, even if one of the parties is not trustworthy.Privacy: The UD messaging system does not collect any personal data about its users. This means that your messages are not being tracked or stored by anyone, not even UD.Interoperability: The UD messaging system is built on top of XMTP, which is an open-source protocol. This means that it can be integrated with other apps and platforms, making it a more versatile communication tool.If you are looking for a secure and private way to communicate on the blockchain, then the UD messaging system is a good option. It is easy to use and it is available across a variety of platforms.
In this episode, I'm joined by Shane Mac, the CEO and Co-founder of XMTP.We had an intimate conversation about Shane's entrepreneurial history where we took a detailed glimpse into his previous startups, multi-million dollar acquisitions, and his vision for the XMTP protocol.The motivation behind this episode was to capture a core pillar of web3 growth networks and why communication is the bedrock of any thriving project or company. Their recent partnership announcement with Coinbase Wallet sparked a wave of excitement around wallet-to-wallet communication, especially at Bello.Recently, Bello integrated XMTP where users can now send mass messages to their NFT collectors or rather any list of wallets. XMTP is key for web3 mass adoption and I couldn't be more excited to capture this moment on Mint.So without further ado, I hope you guys enjoy our conversation.
The 16:9 PODCAST IS SPONSORED BY SCREENFEED – DIGITAL SIGNAGE CONTENT Germany's Lang AG is a family-owned and run business that has developed through the years into one of the larger and more influential players in the pro AV market - operating as both a supplier for rentals and staging market, as well as a distributor for systems integrators. The company is run by Tobias Lang, who based on a couple of chats, clearly has both passion and deep knowledge of the sector, business demands and both the state and opportunity of emerging display technologies. We had a 30 minute-plus conversation that flew by, getting into a bunch of things - including the potential for a projection systems, which these days don't get anywhere near the attention of LED displays. We also spend a lot of time talking about LED, and how he thinks that technology isn't necessarily supplanting LCD. From his perspective, he thinks LCD and LED technologies are actually merging. Have a listen and he'll explain. Subscribe from wherever you pick up new podcasts. TRANSCRIPT Tobias, thank you for joining me. Can you give me a rundown of what your company is all about, what it does, and its background? Tobias Lang: Yeah. Thank you, Dave. Lang AG is a video-only company, which is doing only B2B, which means we cover both verticals, which are rental and staging and system integration. We supply mostly the European rental and staging market with big projectors, LED screens, cameras, converters, whatever you need in video, and as a distributor, we supply both rental companies and system integrators with the staff of the manufacturers we work with such as Epson, Panasonic, several LED manufacturers to supply the modern technology to them in a good way to consult them, which is fitting to each other. What amount of your business would you describe as being involved in digital signage? Tobias Lang: First of all, if you look at the turnover of Lang AG, we do have companies in Switzerland, Spain, the UK, and Germany, which is the biggest. Germany did more than 80 million last year, and 60% of this is done by sales. If you look at digital signage, which is part of sales, this is a significant number, maybe 15 to 20% of our business. The business itself is in the orbit of Cologne, that area? Tobias Lang: Yeah, we are spotted in the western part of Germany. We have everything in Germany in one warehouse, as we have in Zurich, Switzerland, Barcelona, Spain, and London, UK because it's very important for our customers to have the opportunity of a one-stop video strategy. How long has the company been around? Tobias Lang: We are now 45 years old. My father, when my brother was born, said, “Hey, I have three kids now. I should start something serious.” He founded a company in 1978 without any other ideas because he loved stuff like projection at this time. With the evolution of technology, we ended up being where we are today. Were you groomed to run the company one day or were you doing other things and decided to go into the family business? Tobias Lang: I worked for the company as a child which is typical for a family business, then I tried to step away a bit. I studied mathematics. I founded a software company. I did some interesting things. This stuff is still existing and I still have my chairs, but at one point, I decided that it was a great opportunity to join the family business Lang AG and to be honest, this was maybe one of the best decisions in my life. I love what I'm doing. That always helps, doesn't it? Tobias Lang: It does, yeah. Is there a particular market where you're seeing a lot of activity right now and is it evolving? Tobias Lang: Over the last two years, this immersive art experience vertical projection was said to be dead or going down five years ago, ten years ago, and what we were able to see over the last months is that projection is growing, and we enjoy this because we love projection and this is based on all these immersive experience setups which are done worldwide mostly based on art, but we believe other verticals can follow. So these are effectively entertainment venues? Tobias Lang: So far, yes. But we believe that corporations will use similar setups for brand experience and stuff like that. I've been to at least a couple of those venues, they work because they're darkened, they're purpose-built and you can control the lighting and everything else. When you get into a corporate environment, that becomes more challenging but is the technology catching up in terms of laser light brightness, the projection engines getting smaller and detached, the projection head being away from the rest of the equipment, and so on? Tobias Lang: This is a challenge for sure, but if you look at most installations, most of the projectors are around 10,000 lumens, and you could use brighter projectors, and there are opportunities from the technology side to set up even brighter projectors than we have today. The brightest projector at the moment for the event market or the integration market is 50,000 lumen. You could easily go above. It's a question about the demand, how much it will rise. But, I believe we will see this too because if you look at the Pavillion of Dubai Expo, 2/3 of these pavilions used projection over LED because of the flexibility of the technology. LED is a strong technology and a strong growing technology, but there will always be room for projection because of its flexibility. For example, the setup time of a projector, don't underestimate that. Yeah. It used to be for projection mapping and edge blending and everything else. That was like a lot of work and a lot of mathematics and everything else, and now you can do it in software quite quickly from what I understand. Tobias Lang: Yeah, that's fantastic. That's true. Yeah, makes a huge difference. The thing I like about projection is the way it can just arrive and be unexpected versus if it's fixed hard physical displays, you know that there's something there in most cases with the exception of places like the Comcast Tower, but the projection, you can have a wall that all of a sudden is a digital canvas. Tobias Lang: Yeah, and our understanding of the word, “screen” will change. Mapping is a good example, we use buildings as screens. Decades ago, we had a television at home and this was the screen for us, and yeah, we see changes happening and we see different dimensions of screens and in this flexible world, we will use projectors more. But in our world, we'll be LED, and we'll be covered with some kind of display, but where we don't have a display, we could add a projection screen to add some value. Is the partner reseller market and as well as the end user market getting more sophisticated, do they understand this technology more or is part of the role of your company doing education and holding their hand? Tobias Lang: I think it is both. This is always about technology that has different layers. First, you have to train the experts. You have to give an understanding of the possibilities, and then you need to set up a discussion about opportunities for creative people, and then demands rise, and there's some latency in this process as you could feel from the immersive art experience and the change to other verticals, and I believe that they're by nature and you can't change it. From what I saw on your website, you have a lot of technical people on board. People who can pull apart devices and get down to the board level with them and everything else. Is that a bit unusual? Tobias Lang: I wouldn't say this is unusual. What may be is unusual that we have technical staff who can decide every single day what they want to do, because of some service and stuff like this, it's necessary sometimes, but we drive an R&D team, which is absolutely free to make a choice of what they believe is important for us tomorrow. The market expects us to give feedback on future technology and therefore we have to look deep with our partners into product planning and technology, and this is what we love, and I think that's within our organization, a great job opportunity if you join one of those teams. So when you say you're doing R&D, you're not coming up with your own products, I assume, or am I getting that wrong? Tobias Lang: No, we are not a manufacturer, but we have to set up solutions sometimes. So what we try to do is, we add value to a product. For example, in the US market, most people know us as the cage company, as we did all the projector frames. They almost thought for a while, this is our business. What we did, in reality, is that we looked for a solution for our projectors to use them in rental, and we added a mechanical solution on top. For other products, we add batteries as a solution to run wireless. Now, we added some drone business because we believe if you're strong in mappings and you supply media servers and high-brightness projectors to the markets, you should cover the pixels in the sky in the future too. It also means you're future-proof. Tobias Lang: Future-proof is a hard word. Let's say we are interested in the future, and how it will go. Yeah, I guess you can never be totally sure because it moves so fast. Tobias Lang: That's true. I would assume that when you're doing all this value-added engineering work, it's in part that in order to service a customer and address a project, you can't wait on the marketplace for the suppliers to just develop something and put it on their roadmap to serve your needs. Sometimes, you must do it yourself to make it all happen. Tobias Lang: You have to bring together the information of the need of the market on the one hand and the possibility of, what's on the technical side thinkable on the other hand. So we have to bridge between our customers and the manufacturers, and it depends on the demand or the project. To be honest, in the first project, you understand the need, but the solution is not available yet. But you learn from it to bring it back to the discussion of product planning, and future roadmap, and then you can return with the right solution for the future because if there is a need in AV for a solution, this will hit you a second, a third time and so on. Are you in front of end-user customers at all, or your team, or is that something that you stay at arm's length? Tobias Lang: We try, and I believe we are mostly invisible. Most of the end customers in the European market have no clue that we exist. If our customers rent material from us, it's just a gray case without any brand of Lang AG. I assume that your business partners prefer it that way, they want to own the customer? Tobias Lang: Yeah. We always say we are behind, we let the show to our customers and I think those who like this come back to us and we understand this as one of our values. When we were talking ahead of turning the recording on, you were talking about one of the things that your firm does is you work hard to try to forecast what will be possible and what matters and what the need is of the marketplace. That has to be challenging just because of the way technology shifts, and also, there are so many different factors as to what the marketplace wants including, the war in Ukraine and supply chains and everything else that has happened in the last couple of years. Tobias Lang: Yeah, around 10 or 15 years ago, it was much easier to drive a mid-size family business. But today, with the experience of a pandemic, of such a war influencing the supply chains, you have to make sure that you have an understanding of the global world and the effects which are happening for your industry. So we try to be in shape around this. For the actual situations, we handle this quite well. It is easier if you always love to ask yourself what's new, and what's next, because, then you are flexible and agile enough to change fast. Some of the trends that I've been hearing a lot of discussion about are moving manufacturing out of China into other countries, having storage warehouses, different methodologies for shipping, and everything else. Has that been critical with the weather the last two, or three years? Tobias Lang: I wouldn't say critical, but it is part of the game. This is mostly a discussion around LEDs, and in the end, you have to understand that even if you produce an LED panel in Europe, there will still be parts that will be supplied from Asia. So it's only bringing the challenge to different classes regarding customs rules. It is a bit about politics because it depends on what the European Union will change in the rules of customs, I think there is a similar story in the US. When I was at the Munich Digital Signage Summit Europe, one of the areas that was discussed quite a bit was green signage and sustainability. Is that factoring into how you do business? Tobias Lang: Yeah, a lot, and this is rising fast, and I believe there's no stopping it. So it will continue to rise. In every single supply chain, you will have to report what you do regarding sustainability. You will have to explain yourself in the future much more intensively, much more often how you face this challenge. As a company, it's very important that you have to accept these circumstances and then you should work on it. Energy management and conservation and cutting energy costs were something that was around prior to the Ukraine War and everything that kind of bubbled out that, but has that really heightened in the last year and a half? Tobias Lang: Yes, there is a different pace of this change. I'll give you an example. Last September, there was a new rule by the European Union that all signage displays had to be turned off in Germany between 10:00 PM and 6:00 AM, and most LED screens were never built to be turned off, so they just used a black image to be turned off. But in reality, they were still running. So this was a challenge, no one was prepared for and I think it's sustainable and good that we now have the discussion of how to manufacture an LED screen, which is easy, honestly speaking, that you can turn off every day. Yeah, I didn't even know that until I was at the Munich thing, because you just assume it's a display, there's an on-and-off. Why is it difficult for them to be turned off and then turned back on gracefully? Tobias Lang: Honestly, in most installations, those screens were done modular, which is no surprise because it's cheaper in transport, and then you set up the screen, and you do some kind of dressing, and not all screens understand the dressing once you turn the screen on. The result is if you turn the screens off, you can turn it on again. You need to have an LED Technician too, because the dressing is no longer working. These are just simple things, but this is a different way of thinking because, in the past, people were consulted to let the screen runs. And are there workarounds? Is this all being addressed? Tobias Lang: Yes, there are some workarounds out there. There's a lot ongoing and I believe this story will be done in 12 to 18 months completely. It is a learning curve, and it also shows the strengths of our industry that we can adapt fast. We can do a lot regarding sustainability because we can save energy quickly if we focus on the right questions. In an absolute way of thinking, we are maybe not the greenest industry, but in relation from year to year, we improved so much that we can be proud as an industry of what we are doing. Is it a hardware fix that puts an intermediary device, or is it a software fix, or is it like the new generation of Nova Star controllers and so on that will get around that? Tobias Lang: So, in the first step, it is a hardware fix, what is done now, and in the second step, it will be mostly a software fix. One of the things that I read in another article that was attributed to you was, and we were talking ahead of this discussion, you were saying how LED and LCD will merge, and I was thinking it kind of is because LCDs are using LEDs as their backlighting and so on, but you're talking about something different here, right? Tobias Lang: First of all, I have to mention that it is tremendous what is happening in 2023 in the LED market. When I went to ISE, I was surprised at how many manufacturers talked about micro LEDs… And some of it actually was true micro LED. Tobias Lang: Yeah, that's true. But before this year's ISE, it looked like all the manufacturers of high-resolution LEDs were going to chip-on-board technology, and then the semiconductors offered a micro LED package, so a package again with where you could do pick and place like with SMDs to produce an LED panel, and a lot of companies looked into this and announced that where they will have a product in future based on this technology. And I wondered, okay. Is this even before COB has started to come to the top the end of COB because there is a superior technology? This is still an open question. I can't answer it by today. But it shows how interesting it is, and the comment about LED and LCD merging is based on the fact that now nearly every former LCD manufacturer, like the Chinese BOE, is joining the LED race because everyone is accepting that there will be a lot of replacement from the LED or former LCD installations and based on this challenge, a lot of LCD manufacturers ask their health how to use the stuff they did in the past, and they found out that if they use the transistor film, they have an LCD, they could supply active matrix solutions based on LED as the video source. So driving every single pixel by a transistor to get a value as a product that is superior to what we know. So I believe we will see screens that are more flexible, and more transparent than we used to, and this is incredibly interesting because it will change our understanding of the word display and screen to have just one dimension in a 4:3 or 16:9 screen. We have to start to think completely differently, and the funny thing is that the concept of active matrix and passive matrix, I don't know, maybe 30 years old or whatever, was there as long as I am in the industry, but it was always too expensive to drive every single pixel and there were no advantages, but now it seems like an active matrix became reachable in a price range, and there are supplies added values because you get such light and flexible products and for example, the hype of the transparent LED from Muxwave we saw at the last shows was one of the rising stars, gives us a first look in the first understanding of what could be the future, what could be possible and I'm pretty sure we will see many more products based on this technology. Not everyone, to be honest, agrees that this is the way to go. There are some manufacturers which believe passive matrix is still the way to go, but there are also a lot of manufacturers which believe in active matrix. It is very interesting to follow this discussion and to see every single move of the different manufacturers, and this is for example, for me, a strong argument why it is wrong as a market player just to visit one show a year. That's the reason why you have to show ISE and InfoComm, Display Week because the different levels of information you get at the different shows by the different timing is helping me so much to face these questions. I'm trying to wrap my head around this. When you're talking about TFT, does that limit the dimensions and shape of the displays to how LCD is made right now in terms of having mother glass, and the largest display you're going to get is 105 inches, or does that not really in play here? Tobias Lang: Yeah, I'm not an expert, to be honest, on LCD factories. What is the limitation of the size? Is it the glass? Is this the Tft? Is it a combination? But for sure, this will have an influence on active matrix products. For example, at Muxwave, it's about the drivers, the number of pixels, you can reach, it's not about the transistors. So this question will be answered by yes/maybe if you have really high-resolution products, and maybe by no, if you have lower-resolution products. Because you do a lot of work in the rental market, equipment is going to be put up and torn down repeatedly. You have to think a lot about durability, right? Tobias Lang: Yes, that's true, and redundancy. This is one of the main challenges. If we face AV over IP, which will come into our market for sure, and we believe based on XMTP and IPMX but it is a change, and people in the event, want to be sure that everything is working out because if you look at a modern event what kind of amount of setup timing those professional players have left, it's quite tight, and they need to be sure that everything is working and therefore, we have to understand that our role is to make their work as easy as possible. Having chip-on-board and things with hardened or more durable surfaces and having lightweight, grid-based systems, even down to something like the Muxwave product, which is super thin and would go up and down pretty easily, that stuff, I assume, is pretty attractive? Tobias Lang: Yeah, that's one of the arguments we believe you will see those solutions in rental and staging too because there are advantages in rental and staging regarding transport cost, which is also a question which is regarding sustainability, and then it is an advantage quite often, in setup timing. There will be a mix, and this is somehow in our life so incredible that you can always learn from one vertical to the other, so sometimes technology, which is done for integration, will be helpful in event and staging and vice versa. Last question. I'm curious if there's a project that you've seen in the last year or so, digital signage or pro AV in some way where you thought, okay, that's really good, that's where this is all going. Tobias Lang: As you can imagine, I was involved in several projects, and I don't want to mention any particular out of this, but I can tell you I'm really looking forward to coming to Vegas to see the fair by myself in real life because I did some running when they were setting it up while different shows in the morning and I always pass by, and when I saw the first images on social media, I was excited and this is for sure a big thing, and like I think everyone in the industry, I would love to see it in real life. Yeah, I'm looking forward to that in December when I go to Digital Signage Experience. I've been watching it for a while now and actually trying to do a podcast with them, and maybe one day they'll say, yes. Tobias Lang: I will for sure listen to this podcast. Yes. It's the company that's the LED suppliers, the same one that put the LEDs on the Burj Khalifa in Dubai, Montreal Company. Alright. Tobias, thank you very much for spending time with me. Tobias Lang: Much appreciated, Dave. Thank you for having the interest, and I enjoyed every single second.
Join our host Tim (aka Milly Yearly) in this exciting episode as we delve into the world of web 3.0 messaging and its potential impact on social interactions!Our special guest, Pol from Converse.xyz, shares his passion for decentralized networks and the power of XMTP in creating meaningful connections.Discover how messaging apps can become more user-controlled and innovative in the crypto space.You can listen to the podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, or wherever you listen to podcasts. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit pooltogethercommunity.substack.com
“The question is: Can you have a model that gives control and ownership back to the individual?” -Shane Mac Shane Mac is the CEO & Co-Founder of XMTP Labs, a company working on XMTP, the largest open protocol and network for secure Web3 messaging. With XMTP and over the last decade and a half, Shane has focused on improving communications technology and leading companies that constructively challenge how we work. Through his career, Shane has been working to reconcile the inevitable boundaries between being a founder, executive, investor, mentor, and friend. These days, he believes life works best by knowing there's always more to learn, being aware of what he doesn't know, and always challenging himself to ask better questions. In this interview, we discuss the important functionality XMTP brings to Web3, how the idea came to be, the journey to get to where they're at now, and goals for the future. Website: https://xmtp.org/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/shanemacsays/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shanemacinstas/?hl=en
“The question is: Can you have a model that gives control and ownership back to the individual?” -Shane Mac Shane Mac is the CEO & Co-Founder of XMTP Labs, a company working on XMTP, the largest open protocol and network for secure Web3 messaging. With XMTP and over the last decade and a half, Shane has focused on improving communications technology and leading companies that constructively challenge how we work. Through his career, Shane has been working to reconcile the inevitable boundaries between being a founder, executive, investor, mentor, and friend. These days, he believes life works best by knowing there's always more to learn, being aware of what he doesn't know, and always challenging himself to ask better questions. In this interview, we discuss the important functionality XMTP brings to Web3, how the idea came to be, the journey to get to where they're at now, and goals for the future. Website: https://xmtp.org/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/shanemacsays/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shanemacinstas/?hl=en
Drop 1: Ripple x SEC https://cointelegraph.com/news/ripple-wins-case-against-sec-as-judge-rules-xrp-is-not-a-securityDrop 2: Polygon $POL https://twitter.com/0xPolygonLabs/status/1679427540790681600?t=cwK61odEO47bQ9_77D5F4w&s=19Drop 3: Nações Unidas busca padronizar Blockchain https://crypto.news/united-nations-aims-to-standardize-blockchain/ .. More: Patek Phillipe NFT como garantia em empréstimo DeFihttps://cointelegraph.com/news/nft-de-fi-borrower-uses-luxury-watch-backed-nft-as-collateral-for-a-loanDébora Secco vai ter avatar no Uplandhttps://blocktrends.com.br/deborah-secco-anuncia-avatar-no-metaverso-upland-durante-stock-car/UK HM Treasury abre consulta para valores moniliários digitaishttps://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/consultation-on-the-digital-securities-sandboxMobiup lança solução de NFT de empréstimo https://cointimes.com.br/startup-br-inova-com-nfts-de-emprestimo/#gsc.tab=0GDF publica código de conduta para instituições em criptohttps://www.linkedin.com/posts/sandraro_global-digital-finance-advancing-digital-activity-7084713931067273216-9wwJ?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_androidWater&Music etica na Música e IAhttps://www.waterandmusic.com/making-music-with-ai-start-with-these-ethical-guidelines/Coinbase anuncia integração com XMTP, protocolo de mensagem descentralizadohttps://www.coinbase.com/blog/say-gm-with-messaging-on-coinbase-walletGoogle App Store vai liberar NFTs e ativos digitais em apps https://www.coindesk.com/web3/2023/07/12/google-play-changes-policy-on-tokenized-digital-assets-allowing-nfts-in-apps-and-games/ Nubank firma parceria com Fireblocks em custodia criptohttps://valor.globo.com/google/financas/criptomoedas/noticia/2023/07/12/nubank-faz-parceria-com-a-fireblocks-para-custodia-de-criptoativos.ghtmlBase, a L2 Etehreum da Coinbase, abre sua mainnet para desenvolvedores https://base.mirror.xyz/hwNwqXHVoLlO8s4DZppog4DfGvM34tigaDjOWuEJQfYOndo Finance atinge 135M de ativos tokenizados sob gestão https://www.coindesk.com/markets/2023/07/13/real-world-asset-platform-ondo-finance-expands-tokenized-treasurys-to-polygon/Globoplay lança Xuxaverso com NFTshttps://gshow.globo.com/tudo-mais/pop/noticia/globoplay-lanca-xuxaverso-com-oferta-de-nfts-incluindo-experiencia-inovadora-com-a-rainha-dos-baixinhos.ghtmlChina testa CBDC offline com cartao SIM no celularhttps://cryptonews.com/news/chinese-central-bank-unveils-sim-card-based-offline-cbdc-wallet.htmTokenless governance na Joke DAOhttps://joke.mirror.xyz/btwtFJKw8tEWGXuZ9rcJiGnldV8-LLUiC0h_Xvu2aSw Meu conteúdo em inglês https://bi.11fs.com/Me sigam em blockdrops.lens e na newsletter do linkedin https://www.linkedin.com/build-relation/newsletter-follow?entityUrn=7056680685142454272 --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/blockdropspodcast/message
Top US-based crypto exchange platform Coinbase is launching a new feature that would allow private direct messaging between Ethereum (ETH) addresses powered by web3 chat protocol XMPT that aims to grant users ownership of their chats. Lens Protocol is an open-source and composable social graph based on Web3 and built on the Polygon blockchain. The project aims to allow developers to launch social media platforms and profiles based on Web3.~This episode is sponsored by Chart Prime~Elevate your Trading Game with Chartprime 30% discount Link ➜ https://bit.ly/3lZvR7M
Web3 Academy: Exploring Utility In NFTs, DAOs, Crypto & The Metaverse
Google Play changes policy on tokenized digital assets, Coinbase wallet integrating XMTP, Arkham Intel in bed with the CIA?, 6529 Rants on NFTs & Blur, Ether Failed Mint, Sound Opens to the Public and Raises $20million from A16z, Coinbase and SnoopDogg, Parallel Launches PFPs with ERC-6551s and AI & more!
Coinbase Wallet integrates wallet-to-wallet messaging. Google Play allows in-app NFT integrations. EigenLayer increases its restaking caps for LSTs. And Starknet v0.12.0 goes live on mainnet.
This week, Hashing It Out explores Web3 messaging with Shane Mac, co-founder of XMTP — an open protocol and network for secure Web3 messaging — who explains the differences between Web2 and Web3 messaging. Mac also explains how Web3 messaging could spark major adoption for the entire industry moving forward, regardless of current user experience limitations. Follow Cointelegraph on Twitter: @CointelegraphFollow the host on Twitter: @ghcryptoguy, or connect with him on LinkedIn: Elisha (GhCryptoGuy)Cointelegraph's website: cointelegraph.comThe views, thoughts and opinions expressed in this podcast are its participants' alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph. This podcast (and any related content) is for entertainment purposes only and does not constitute financial advice, nor should it be taken as such. Everyone must do their own research and make their own decisions. The podcast's participants may or may not own any of the assets mentioned.Follow Cointelegraph on Twitter: @CointelegraphFollow the host on Twitter: @ghcryptoguy, or connect with him on LinkedIn: Elisha (GhCryptoGuy)Cointelegraph's website: cointelegraph.comThe views, thoughts, and opinions expressed in this podcast are its participants' alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph. This podcast (and any related content) is for entertainment purposes only and does not constitute financial advice, nor should it be taken as such. Everyone must do their own research and make their own decisions. The podcast's participants may or may not own any of the assets mentioned.
Shane Mac is the Co-Founder of XMTP, the largest open protocol, and network for secure web3 messaging. Prior to XMTP, Shane founded Assist, which built the first business messaging for Facebook Messenger, Apple Business Chat, Google Business Messaging, and SMS. Assist was acquired in 2019. In 2017, Shane co-founded & bootstrapped Squared Away, which provides remote executive assistants powered by military spouses. Squad Away recently passed $25M in revenue, led by his co-founder. In this conversation, we discuss:- Web3 messaging- Decentralized communication- Portability of messages is key in developing the web3 ecosystem- 13yr old Shane making $3k per month selling baseball bats- Nashville is booming- Working with FaceBook & 1-800-FLOWERS- Builders keep building- Communication before commerceXMTPWebsite: xmtp.orgTwitter: @xmtp_Discord: discord.gg/xmtpShane MacTwitter: @ShaneMacLinkedIn: Shane Mac --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This episode is brought to you by PrimeXBT. PrimeXBT offers a robust trading system for both beginners and professional traders that demand highly reliable market data and performance. Traders of all experience levels can easily design and customize layouts and widgets to best fit their trading style. PrimeXBT is always offering innovative products and professional trading conditions to all customers. PrimeXBT is running an exclusive promotion for listeners of the podcast. After making your first deposit, 50% of that first deposit will be credited to your account as a bonus that can be used as additional collateral to open positions. Code: CRYPTONEWS50 This promotion is available for a month after activation. Click the link below: PrimeXBT x CRYPTONEWS50
Join us in this week's episode as we delve into the game-changing AI Chatbots that are Web3 Enabled, with the groundbreaking XMTP powered technology known as Relay. Our host, Milly Yearly aka Tim, sits down with Sean, the founder of Relay, to learn the basics of how it all works, Sean's beginnings, and his plans for the future. They also talk about some of the challenges that Relay faces and how Sean plans to overcome them.Relay's advanced natural language processing capabilities allow it to understand complex queries and deliver real-time responses.Tune in now to witness the revolution of AI chatbots and embrace the transformative power of Relay in Web3 communication. Don't miss out!Listen to this podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, or your favorite podcast platform. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit pooltogethercommunity.substack.com
“If Messenger, Telegram, and WhatsApp were built with XMTP, everyone could use their preferred app. You could use Messenger to message your dad on WhatsApp and to message your friend on Telegram. And one day, if you all decide to use the same app, you could do so seamlessly with all your messages and contacts available in your interoperable inboxes.” This is the future that Matt discusses with us today on Base Layer, one of the more important ideals that digital assets have pushed forth - interoperability and control of your messages, identity, finances, and more. This is an amazing conversation with a founder who has been around digital assets for many years. You can find out more about XMTP here.
Shane Mac is the Founder & CEO of XMTP (http://xmtp.org). Backed by a16z, Sound Ventures, Alexis Ohanian, Naval Ravikant, Balaji Srinivasan, & many more, XMTP is building the communication network & protocol for web3. In this episode we discuss the remarkable people who've come alongside XMTP's purpose (with emphasis on the developers), the nature of value accrual for a network like XMTP, what the earliest days of XMTP were like, and much more.Recorded Monday April 17th, 2023.
Mailchain is basically a web3 email. It provides a web app that lets you send your emails as if you used Gmail or Hotmail. But you send your emails via your wallet, ENS, Lens profile, and other identities you may use. Thanks to that and end-to-end encryption, your emails are 100% private. Today we're talking with Tim Boeckmann, Co-Founder & CEO of Mailchain, who shares their project's story. *** Follow Web3 Talks on Twitter:https://twitter.com/web3talks/ Get 15% off your EpicWeb3 conference tickets by using the WEB3TALKS code:https://www.epicweb3.com/ *** TIMESTAMPS: 1:46 Origins of Mailchain 6:01 Why they didn't decide to put emails on chain 7:56 How Mailchain works 11:51 How the first versions of Mailchain looked like 14:56 How they acquired their first users across NFT artists and collectors? 19:09 How is Mailchain different from XMTP? 25:20 How do they decide which protocols to integrate 28:14 How do they acquire new users now? 30:16 What's the process for integrating a new partner? 31:59 How do they want to prevent SPAM? 36:02 What's enclave computing? 38:07 How do they plan to prepare for a scale of billions of users? 41:39 How do they plan to monetize Mailchain? 44:25 What metrics do they follow? 48:28 Why it might be hard to connect your Mailchain email to Gmail 51:08 How would the world of communications look if Mailchain became a household name 56:05 What would Tim build if he wasn't building Mailchain 1:00:00 Guests ideas
XMTP is one of the leading web3 messaging protocols. What were the early days of this project? What web3 native features they developed How they built a developer community around their protocol? How did they start handling DMs on Lens? This and much more in our conversation with Matt Galligan, Co-Founder & President @ XMTP. *** Follow Web3 Talks on Twitter: https://twitter.com/web3talks/ Get 15% off your EpicWeb3 conference tickets by using the WEB3TALKS code:https://www.epicweb3.com/ Mint free episode NFT (pls share your e-mail address so we can let you know when it gets utility!): https://web3talks.xyz/nfts/ *** TIMESTAMPS: 01:48 Why they built XMTP 07:45 What were the early days of XMTP? 10:11 How they acquired their first users? 15:00 How XMTP built a partnership with Lenster? 17:07 How does XMTP work? 20:08 What were the hardest tradeoffs in the early days? 25:57 What web3-native features does XMTP have? 32:29 What's conditional deliverability? 35:29 What are the most interesting apps built on top of XMTP? 40:03 Why most wallets still haven't integrated DMs? 43:17 Let's say it's 2030 - how does web3 messaging look? 48:47 Most important metrics and factors for XMTP? 50:15 How do they track developers' happiness? 50:52 Biggest surprises when building XMTP? 52:57 What would Matt fix about web3 with his magic wand? 54:24 What would Matt build if he wasn't building XMTP? 57:07 Where you can learn more about XMTP
Shane Mac is building a crypto-native communication protocol for web3. Similar to SMTP for email, XMTP will enable communication between existing crypto wallets via its own independent protocol and decentralized network. XMTP has raised a $20M Series A from a16z Crypto, with participation from strategic angels like Packy McCormick, Alexis Ohanian, Anthony Pompliano, Austin Rief, Balaji Srinivasan, Bored Elon, Naval Ravikant, Rahul Vohra, Scott Belsky, and Sriram Krishnan. We talk about being young and lucky, learnings from interviewing Gary Vee, writing a book at 23, entrepreneurship, the origin story of XMTP, and much more. SPONSORS BridgeUp: DM me on Twitter to raise $100,000+ in non-dilutive capital Listnr: https://listnr.tech/?via=prashant Dukaan: https://mydukaan.io/ Recast: https://recast.studio/ GUEST LINKS Twitter: https://twitter.com/shanemac Blog: https://blog.shanemac.com/ CONNECT Prashant Bagga: https://linktr.ee/prashantpbagga Billion Moonshots: https://linktr.ee/billionmoonshots OUTLINE (0:00) - Young and Lucky (12:22) - Getting calmer (18:31) - Gary Vee (25:37) - Hosting Podcast (30:57) - Great podcast episode (32:08) - Heavy Conversations (40:33) - Culture (42:50) - Writing Book (52:00) - Entrepreneurship (59:06) - XMTP (01:04:25) - Meaning of Life TOP EPISODES 77: Shashank Kumar, Founder of Razorpay [Hindi] 75: Kyla Scanlon, Founder of Bread 74: Adam Jackson, Co-founder of Braintrust 68: Natalie Brunell, Host of Coin Stories Podcast 62: Suumit Shah, CEO of Dukaan [Hindi] Past guests of Billion Moonshots include Shashank Kumar, Suumit Shah, Natalie Brunell, Danielle Strachman, Chirag Taneja, Suhas Motwani, Aditya Mohanty, Jan-Philipp Peters, Mo Islam, Peer Richelsen, Justin Nguyen, Paul Griffiths, Gautam Gupta, Sang Le, Rahul Rana, Grace Ling, Joseph Choi and many more.
Shane Mac is the co-founder & CEO of XMTP Labs. In this conversation, we talk about decentralized messaging, what exactly happens when you send an encrypted message, how XMTP hopes to build the protocol that various applications & technologies can be built on top to empower private direct messaging. This is an important problem, and they are working diligently to come up with a solution that can usher in global adoption of private messaging. ======================= Announcing LYCEUM | Miami, a day-long event on March 4th in Miami Beach hosted by Pomp. We're gathering an explosive group of experts to engage in a series of bold discussions, covering topics from investing, emerging tech, longevity, space exploration, entertainment and more.The speaker lineup includes names such as investing legend Cathie Wood, NYT bestselling author Vivek Ramaswamy, billionaire Christian Angermayer, master of Contrarian Thinking Codie Sanchez, Modern Wisdom host Chris Williamson plus many more. Listeners will receive an exclusive 40% discount on VIP and Insider Pass tickets with code POMP40. General Admission tickets are free of charge. Spots are limited so head to lyceummiami.com to buy your ticket today. ======================= Pomp writes a daily letter to over 200,000+ investors about business, technology, and finance. He breaks down complex topics into easy-to-understand language while sharing opinions on various aspects of each industry. You can subscribe at https://pomp.substack.com/ =======================
Web3 Academy: Exploring Utility In NFTs, DAOs, Crypto & The Metaverse
Matt is an early internet adopter, serial entrepreneur and co-founder of XMTP, an open protocol and network for secure web3 messaging. We chat with Matt about the current issues with multi-platform messaging and how XMTP is solving them.
Web3 Academy: Exploring Utility In NFTs, DAOs, Crypto & The Metaverse
Communication and social media in web2 are extremely segregated. Web3 protocols like XMTP Labs are working to fix these issues and create platforms with interoperability.
In today's episode of the Growing Web3 podcast, we catch up with Matt Galligan, Co-founder of XMTP Labs. Matt breaks down governance proposals and structuring, and what this may mean for the future of Web3. Topics: - Matt's beginnings - XMTP Labs and wallet-to-wallet breakdown - Communication fragmentation issues - Email protocol - Community integration and growth strategy - And more Follow Matt: here Timestamps: (00:00) Matt's beginnings (07:48) XMTP Labs and wallet-to-wallet breakdown (12:11) Communication fragmentation (14:45) Email protocol (20:28) Community integration and growth (26:20) The future of XMTP (35:40) Growth marketing for another protocol -- Sponsors: Hype Partners: https://www.hy.pe/ Brought to you by Hype Partners. Hype is the Web3 super-agency with 150 employees across 35 countries. Hype helps $billion protocols and communities scale their ecosystems with cutting-edge creative, community, and growth campaigns.
Lens Protocol integrates direct messages via XMTP, Instagram uses Arweave for data storage, Wallet Connect raises $12.5 million, and Curve Finance releases a new UI. Newsletter: https://ethdaily.substack.com
In today's episode of Category Visionaries, we speak with Shane Mac, Co-founder & President of the crypto-native communication protocol, XMTP, about his career in digital communications, and why he believes that decentralized messaging services are the future of online interaction in the Web3 era. With the explosion of activity in crypto, NFTs and the Web3 in general, XMTP's activity-first, wallet orientated communication protocol will help connect millions of people conducting transactions with each other in a way which is more streamlined, dynamic and efficient. Topics Discussed: Why new identities always drive the development of new communication platforms, and why digital communication is such an interesting space to work in Why crypto-native communications are a logical next step for Web3 and how XMTP identified their market The strange situation where information is exchanged and transactions are conducted, but direct communication between users is not possible How to stand out in the blockchain economy, and why not being a financial product helps XMTP stay focused on their mission Why activity-first is the future of digital communications, and how a decentralized platform will bring new benefits for users
Today, I'm joined by Matt Galligan, co-founder of XMTP Labs. XMTP is a messaging protocol built atop EVM wallets. Situating itself in the lineage of email protocol SMTP and Jabber IM protocol XMPP, XMTP aims to make DMs, notifications, group chats, and more available to everyone with a blockchain wallet. XMTP Labs, Matt's new company, is the primary developer of the protocol. In this episode, Matt shares what it was like to be one of the very earliest Twitter users. We discuss his prior startups Socialthing and Circa, and his motivation for creating a decentralized comms protocol atop the existing blockchain infrastructure, today. Matt sheds light on why developers may choose to send messages using a shared protocol, rather than building their own solution or using a centralized service provider. It was great talking with Matt about XMTP. I hope you enjoy the show. Topics Discussed - XMTP Litepaper - @xmtp_ - Relay app
Shane Mac is building a crypto-native communication protocol for web3. Similar to SMTP for email, XMTP will enable communication between existing crypto wallets via its own independent protocol and decentralized network. They have raised a $20M Series A from a16z Crypto, with participation from other popular funds and strategic angels. We talk about the origin story of XMTP, learnings from interviewing Gary Vee, being young and lucky, writing book at 23, entrepreneurship and much more. SPONSORS BridgeUp: DM me on Twitter to raise $100,000+ in non-dilutive capital Listnr: https://listnr.tech/?via=prashant Dukaan: https://mydukaan.io/ Recast: https://recast.studio/ GUEST LINKS Twitter: https://twitter.com/shanemac Blog: https://blog.shanemac.com/ CONNECT Prashant Bagga: https://linktr.ee/prashantpbagga Billion Moonshots: https://linktr.ee/billionmoonshots OUTLINE (0:00) - Young and Lucky (12:22) - Getting calmer (18:31) - Gary Vee (25:37) - Hosting Podcast (30:57) - Great podcast episode (32:08) - Heavy Conversations (40:33) - Culture (42:50) - Writing Book (52:00) - Entrepreneurship (59:06) - XMTP (01:04:25) - Meaning of Life TOP EPISODES 77: Shashank Kumar, Founder of Razorpay [Hindi] 75: Kyla Scanlon, Founder of Bread 74: Adam Jackson, Co-founder of Braintrust 68: Natalie Brunell, Host of Coin Stories Podcast 62: Suumit Shah, CEO of Dukaan [Hindi] Past guests of Billion Moonshots include Shashank Kumar, Suumit Shah, Natalie Brunell, Danielle Strachman, Chirag Taneja, Suhas Motwani, Aditya Mohanty, Jan-Philipp Peters, Mo Islam, Peer Richelsen, Justin Nguyen, Paul Griffiths, Gautam Gupta, Sang Le, Rahul Rana, Grace Ling, Joseph Choi and many more.
Shane Mac is particularly proud of one of the several successful companies he co-founded in the last 10 years: Squared Away. Co-founded with his former assistant without venture funding, Squared Away connects military spouses with quality remote employment opportunities. In addition to Squared Away, Shane is the co-founder and President of XMTP, founder and General Partner of Logos Labs, and a passionate writer and musician. He also co-founded and served as CEO of Assist, which was acquired by Verint after merging with Conversocial. In this episode, Shane provides insight into his impressive trajectory, beginning with crucial advice he received from his brother during his senior year of high school. He discusses the additional influential figures who have helped shape his path and what they have accomplished together by embracing curiosity and communication. Shane opens up about managing anxiety and sobriety while discussing relocating from San Francisco to Nashville, and his exciting ideas for the “switchboard” city. Later in the episode, Shane talks Eric through his current projects, including a glimpse into his ready-to-launch XMTP, a new communication protocol for Web3, which, if all goes well, will be virtually invisible. (1:44) – Following his curiosity (4:55) – A brother's impact (6:21) – Baseball (8:09) – Finding music (12:32) – Exploring e-commerce (15:00) – Microblogging (17:25) – Developing Assist (23:33) – Examining company culture (28:03) – Squared Away (35:12) – Escaping San Francisco for Nashville (37:01) – Dealing with anxiety (40:24) – Designing the perfect day (43:50) – Cauliflower gnocchi and Taco Bell (47:05) – XMTP (57:44) – Logos Labs Eric Satz—entrepreneur, serial investor, lover of hot peppers— is the founder and CEO of Alto. The idea behind Alto was born out of a problem. Eric found a clear need to give people more control over their investments (and investment opportunities) in a simple, streamlined way and created Alto to make these opportunities available to all investors, not just the ultra-wealthy or institutional investors. If you'd like to receive new episodes as they're published, please subscribe to The Altogether Show with Eric Satz in Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. If you enjoyed this episode, please consider leaving a review in Apple Podcasts or Spotify. It helps others find the show. Podcast episode production by Dante32.
Shane Mac is particularly proud of one of the several successful companies he co-founded in the last 10 years: Squared Away. Co-founded with his former assistant without venture funding, Squared Away connects military spouses with quality remote employment opportunities. In addition to Squared Away, Shane is the co-founder and President of XMTP, founder and General Partner of Logos Labs, and a passionate writer and musician. He also co-founded and served as CEO of Assist, which was acquired by Verint after merging with Conversocial. In this episode, Shane provides insight into his impressive trajectory, beginning with crucial advice he received from his brother during his senior year of high school. He discusses the additional influential figures who have helped shape his path and what they have accomplished together by embracing curiosity and communication. Shane opens up about managing anxiety and sobriety while discussing relocating from San Francisco to Nashville, and his exciting ideas for the “switchboard” city. Later in the episode, Shane talks Eric through his current projects, including a glimpse into his ready-to-launch XMTP, a new communication protocol for Web3, which, if all goes well, will be virtually invisible. (1:44) – Following his curiosity (4:55) – A brother's impact (6:21) – Baseball (8:09) – Finding music (12:32) – Exploring e-commerce (15:00) – Microblogging (17:25) – Developing Assist (23:33) – Examining company culture (28:03) – Squared Away (35:12) – Escaping San Francisco for Nashville (37:01) – Dealing with anxiety (40:24) – Designing the perfect day (43:50) – Cauliflower gnocchi and Taco Bell (47:05) – XMTP (57:44) – Logos Labs Eric Satz—entrepreneur, serial investor, lover of hot peppers— is the founder and CEO of Alto. The idea behind Alto was born out of a problem. Eric found a clear need to give people more control over their investments (and investment opportunities) in a simple, streamlined way and created Alto to make these opportunities available to all investors, not just the ultra-wealthy or institutional investors. If you'd like to receive new episodes as they're published, please subscribe to The Altogether Show with Eric Satz in Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. If you enjoyed this episode, please consider leaving a review in Apple Podcasts or Spotify. It helps others find the show. Podcast episode production by Dante32.
We sit down with Shane Mac, the cofounder of XMTP, which aims to become the communication network for web3. We discuss the evolution of communication and how there's a huge gap in web3 for wallet-to-wallet communication that requires an infrastructure layer like SMTP to power it.
What could communication look like in web3? Spam-proof, Anonymous, and Default Public. Shane Mac is building XMTP, a protocol which could become the foundation layer of messaging in the world of wallets and blockchains – like HTTP or SMTP are today. In this episode of Jorgenson's Soundbox, I continue exploring the world of web3 with my friend and former coworker Shane Mac. Shane is now the cofounder of XMTP, a decentralized and economic messaging protocol being built for web3. During our conversation, we talk about XMTP as a new protocol for building communication tools. We can spam-proof the next generation of the web! How Shane builds company culture to help him compete with world renowned companies and his personal and professional investing strategies. To kick off our conversation, we talk a bit about Shane's decision to move to Nashville, driven by the exhausting culture of work scale at all cost in San Francisco, and the music scene there. Shane then discusses how he came to work with Matt Galligan and start XMTP. When looking for an opportunity to build a new company, he had a lightbulb moment when Robert Leshner, the founder of Compound, presented a communication problem in the web3 space. Shane realized that people who have wallets want to be able to communicate with others that have wallets and to be able to prove ownership, and he recognized the potential for a new messaging communication protocol with the wallet as a means of sending and receiving messages. XMTP was thus founded as a decentralized messaging protocol with a universal backend that developers could build on top of and that we can all be owners of. What is different about the messaging protocol is the goal is to create a network of people with aligned incentives that everyone agrees on and wants to build on top of. Also what's new is that it is part of the public blockchain, and the network protocol can be seen publicly and is economic. The fundamental difference lies in that the content of the message is private, but the senders and receivers are public. Currently, interaction is based on identity before activity and identity is how you get opportunity, but with the new protocol, activity can instead drive interaction and opportunities prior to identity being disclosed. Due to the existence of spam and bad actors in the space, a verification system is needed, and Shane recognizes the wallet as the best identity mechanism. The economics of the messaging protocol will be based on token holdings and pricing set to reach wallet holders. We also discuss how platforms like Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc., currently control the pipe of interaction and charge brands money to reach you and the potential to instead have individuals create and profit from that fee for themselves. In the second half of the conversation, we explore Shane's ability to create an awesome company culture. Shane says that while he can't compete with renowned companies on having the most interesting idea, he can compete on culture. Shane aims to remove people's anxieties so that they can be more productive. He does so by hiring personal assistants and coaches not only for executives but for everyone, removing the vesting cliff, and teaching people how to quit. We wrap up the conversation by talking about how Shane goes about investing. He says he focuses on what he knows well and believes in. Regarding crypto, he thinks of it as startup investing, and he has invested in Bitcoin and Ethereum and plans to hold for the long term. He also is the General Partner of the Logos Fund which invests similarly in startups, mostly focusing on the seed stage. Links: Eric's Newsletter XMTP.com How to Quit (and have everyone support you) Compound Squared Away Koinly Topics: (2:59) - Shane Mac: the maker of parties + Moving to Nashville (6:33) - Leaving San Francisco (9:08) - The decision to found another company (17:20) - How do you go about building a protocol? (22:41) - The activity before identity paradigm (26:56) - The valid criticisms of Web3 based on what we know with the issues of Web2 (31:53 - What is different about protocols in the Blockchain era? (37:36) - Does XMTP have its own token? (38:05) - What was the decision to make XMTP a company instead of a DAO? (42:12) - What do you see being built on XMTP? (51:24) - Creating Meritocracy via making more information public (rename) (55:32) - Flipping control to the user with when we see ads (58:20) - To what extent does Web2 get torn down and rebuilt on top of Web3 and how much does Web3 get layered on top of Web2? (1:05:38) - Is XMTP built on ETH? (1:08:14) - Commentary on building the XMTP team & culture (1:29:53) - How to Quit (1:35:34) - How do you scale trust? (1:42:25) - The Blockchain as a generational technology (1:50:19) - What's your skin in the game in regards to cryptocurrency? (2:03:36) - Wrapping up Additional Episodes If You Enjoyed: SquidDAO: Web3 Project Deep-Dive: Part Crypto Hedge Fund, Part NFT DAO. An Anonymous Conspiracy for Mutual Enrichment Jason Hitchcock: Your Guide to Web3 (DeFi, NFTs, and The Metaverse) If you want to support the podcast, here are a few ways you can: >> Buy a copy of the Navalmanak: www.navalmanack.com/ >> Share the podcast with your friends and on social media >> Give the podcast a positive review to help us reach new listeners >> Make a weekly, monthly, or one-time donation: https://app.omella.com/o/9Bufa >> Follow me on Twitter: @ericjorgenson >> Learn more and sign up for the “Building a Mountain of Levers” course and community: https://www.ejorgenson.com/leverage I appreciate your support! Important quotes from Naval on building wealth and the difference between wealth and money: How to get rich without getting lucky. - Naval Ravikant Making money is not a thing you do—it's a skill you learn. - Naval Ravikant I came up with the principles in my tweetstorm (below) for myself when I was really young, around thirteen or fourteen. I've been carrying them in my head for thirty years, and I've been living them. Over time (sadly or fortunately), the thing I got really good at was looking at businesses and figuring out the point of maximum leverage to actually create wealth and capture some of that created wealth. - Naval Ravikant Seek wealth, not money or status. - Naval Ravikant Wealth is having assets that earn while you sleep. - Naval Ravikant Money is how we transfer time and wealth. - Naval Ravikant Ignore people playing status games. They gain status by attacking people playing wealth creation games. You're not going to get rich renting out your time. You must own equity—a piece of a business—to gain your financial freedom. - Naval Ravikant The most important skill for getting rich is becoming a perpetual learner. You have to know how to learn anything you want to learn. The old model of making money is going to school for four years, getting your degree, and working as a professional for thirty years. But things change fast now. Now, you have to come up to speed on a new profession within nine months, and it's obsolete four years later. But within those three productive years, you can get very wealthy. - Naval Ravikant Important quotes from the podcast by Naval on Leverage: “Give me a lever long enough and a place to stand, and I will move the earth.” —Archimedes To get rich, you need leverage. Leverage comes in labor, comes in capital, or it can come through code or media. But most of these, like labor and capital, people have to give to you. For labor, somebody has to follow you. For capital, somebody has to give you money, assets to manage, or machines. - Naval Ravikant Fortunes require leverage. Business leverage comes from capital, people, and products with no marginal cost of replication (code and media). - Naval Ravikant Capital and labor are permissioned leverage. Everyone is chasing capital, but someone has to give it to you. Everyone is trying to lead, but someone has to follow you. - Naval Ravikant Code and media are permissionless leverage. They're the leverage behind the newly rich. You can create software and media that works for you while you sleep. - Naval Ravikant If you can't code, write books and blogs, record videos and podcasts. - Naval Ravikant Leverage is a force multiplier for your judgment. - Naval Ravikant Apply specific knowledge, with leverage, and eventually you will get what you deserve. - Naval Ravikant “We live in an age of infinite leverage, and the economic rewards for genuine intellectual curiosity have never been higher. Following your genuine intellectual curiosity is a better foundation for a career than following whatever is making money right now.” - Naval Ravikant Important Quotes from the podcast on Business and Entrepreneurship There is no skill called “business.” Avoid business magazines and business classes. - Naval Ravikant You have to work up to the point where you can own equity in a business. You could own equity as a small shareholder where you bought stock. You could also own it as an owner where you started the company. Ownership is really important. Everybody who really makes money at some point owns a piece of a product, a business, or some IP. That can be through stock options if you work at a tech company. That's a fine way to start. But usually, the real wealth is created by starting your own companies or even by investing. In an investment firm, they're buying equity. These are the routes to wealth. It doesn't come through the hours. - Naval Ravikant
On this episode of the Somewhat Frank Podcast, Frank Gruber (@FrankGruber) and John Guidos (@JohnGuidos) talk about late-summer activities, entrepreneurs tackling civilian space exploration, cloning dinosaurs, and slowing hurricanes, and more. Frank and John also celebrate the following people from their networks: Charlie O'Donnell has raised a third fund for Brooklyn Bridge Ventures - https://www.brooklynbridge.vc/bbv-raises-third-fund Jewel Burks Solomon and Collab Capital has raised its first fund to invest in black innovators - https://medium.com/capital-innovation/collab-capital-closes-50m-first-fund-to-invest-in-black-innovators-22896db11ae8 Michael D Smith nominated for AmeriCorps - https://amp-cnn-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/amp.cnn.com/cnn/2021/06/15/politics/biden-michael-smith-americorps/index.html Katie Stanton raised her second fund - https://www.forbes.com/sites/alexkonrad/2021/07/19/moxxie-ventures-85-million-fund-katie-stanton-alex-roetter/ Max Crowley has had his coffee delivery startup Bandit acquired by Gopuff - https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/bandit-now-part-gopuff-max-crowley Matt Galligan on the launch of his new company XMTP and securing $20M in funding - https://blog.xmtp.com/series-a/ Frank and John also also invite listeners to apply for the following upcoming events: Startup of the Year Awards Summit - If you're interested in an opportunity to be a part of those awards and for a shot at potential investment and bragging rights, if you're named Startup of the Year then join our community before Sept 30th and if you're one of the 100 startups selected you could be in the running. More info at http://soty.link/apply NASA iTech Cycle II Forum startup competition - NASA is searching for non-government funded technologies that are addressing the following focus areas: Enabling Technologies for Commercialization of Low-Earth Orbit Hybrid Electric Aircraft Technologies and Alternative Fuels Physics-Based Machine Learning for Artificial Intelligence Technologies Using NASA Data to Foster Climate Resilience X-Factor Innovations (anything so cool, NASA should know about it). Apply here: http://est.us/NIT (the deadline is Friday, October 15th at 11:59 AM PDT) The guys talk about these new books/articles: Civilians in Space! --https://www.space.com/spacex-inspiration4-returns-to-earth?utm_source=join1440&utm_medium=email Real-Life Jurassic Park? - Colossal, this startup just raised $15M with the goal of bringing the woolly mammoth back from extinction by 2027 using CRISPR, a revolutionary gene-editing technology. --https://www.cnet.com/news/woolly-mammoths-could-walk-the-earth-again-by-2027-if-crispr-startup-succeeds/ Hurricane Killing Startup? --https://futurism.com/the-byte/startup-tech-kill-hurricanes Zoom brain is a thing. --https://techcrunch.com/2021/04/21/this-is-your-brain-on-zoom/amp/#click=https://t.co/1q2GPOILzx Chickens for rent -- Rent-a-chicken trend spikes during pandemic -- https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/article/chicken-rentals-spike-during-pandemic Sears is closing last store in home state of Illinois --https://www.cnbc.com/2021/09/16/sears-is-shutting-its-last-store-in-illinois-its-home-state.html Let's talk beef, Wagnu beef to be more specific… of the 3D variety… -- https://interestingengineering.com/scientists-reveal-worlds-first-3d-printed-marbled-wagyu-beef The guys are also watching the following shows/movies: Ted Lasso - Season 2 (Apple TV) The Morning Show - Season 2 (Apple TV) Only Murders In The Building (HULU) Lastly, the Frank and John chat about testing out some new gear: ITIWIT Inflatable Kayak - https://www.decathlon.com/collections/kayaks/products/kayak-touring-inflatable-high-pressure-dropstitch-floor-3-seat-x100-177376?variant=39473127751742 DJI Mini 2 Drone - https://www.dji.com/mini-2 As always, thank you for listening and feel free to reach out and let us know what you think at: somewhatfrank@est.us Get updates like this in your inbox before they hit the web by subscribing to the newsletter here: https://frankgruber.me/newsletter/
Is your crypto wallet address your new name and social media profile? Will your personality and status be represented by a public record of the art you buy and projects you support? Where identity goes, communication follows, so will crypto-native messaging replace email and Discord?Join us to discuss crypto materialism, anonymity, and why you're still early to this financial and cultural movement. On this week's PressClub, we interview NFT artist Shl0ms who shattered a toilet with a sledgehammer to create FNTN and sold it for $1M to a cult of his fans. We also talk to crypto chat protocol XMTP's co-founder and CEO Matt Galligan about raising $20M to build messaging for the metaverse. Come explore the world of CryptoPunks, DAOs, Loot, fractionalized art, blockchain social clubs, decentralized collaboration, and who you will become.Featuring:NFT Artist Shl0msXMTP CEO & co-founder Matt GalliganSound Ventures investor Maaria BajwaMemetic engineer and culture hacker Ronen VYour host Josh Constine, investor at SignalFireSubscribe to PressClub at http://constine.club/. This podcast is recorded live on Josh Constine's PressClub on Clubhouse, Thursdays at 6pm PT. PressClub is Clubhouse's first show, where the big names in tech discuss the biggest ideas. It's hosted by Josh Constine, an investor at early-stage venture fund SignalFire and the former Editor-At-Large of TechCrunch. PressClub is a relaxed venue where luminaries can share their stories, passions, thoughts on trends, and visions of the future. Past guests on PressClub include the founders of Facebook, Instagram, Slack, Shopify, Spotify, Substack, WordPress, Patreon, Genies, OpenSea, and more. Thanks for being part of our futurist community!