Our goal has always been to be the go-to blockchain node platform across any chain and environment. Today, that includes the nodes you run on your own hardware. Running your own Ethereum infrastructure should be the basic right of every individual and household. Nodes should be easy. The catch? Self-hosting has always meant complexity. Manual setup, client updates, nodes falling out of sync, moni
In this second week of #100daysofsolana , i got got introduced with the concept of account . I learned it by contrasting with the database of web2 . However , i am aware that Solana's account model is not replacement for web2 database, rather it's solving a different problem: storing state in a system where no single entity has control, reads are public, and writes require cryptographic authoriz
If you’re coming from Web2, identity probably means a username and password. You sign up for a service, create credentials, and the platform stores your data. Whether it’s GitHub, your email, or a banking app, your identity exists because a company manages it. Solana works differently. On Solana, your identity starts with something called a keypair. This is made up of two things: a public key and
Key Takeaways Multichain user journeys span social discovery, multiple chains, and offchain touchpoints so analytics tools must unify all data sources into a single user profile to avoid making decisions on structurally incomplete information. Web3 conversion cycles are far shorter than Web2 with users moving from first touch to transaction within a single session, making real-time attributi
When you build a PowerShell project from multiple files, the natural structure is clear: enums first, then classes, then functions. Each group has its own place, and as long as dependencies only flow in one direction, that structure works perfectly. But sometimes a function depends on a class, and that class calls the function. There is no longer a clean boundary between the two groups — they need
Key Takeaways Web3 community tools span five distinct categories covering messaging, data collection, social platforms, quest and reward gamification, and token-gated access management, each serving a different engagement goal. Spreading moderation across too many platforms weakens community presence so teams should build depth on one or two core platforms that match their audience before ex