1/ Topic: Blockchains are the new app stores 🧵
2/ If you were an ambitious, risk-seeking founder in the mobile golden age circa 2009-12, you built a new mobile app. That was when Uber, WhatsApp, Instagram, Venmo, Snapchat, and many other top apps were built.
3/ Mobile has since moved up the technology adoption S-curve. Great mobile apps will still be built, but the low-hanging fruit has been picked.

The computing frontier of this decade is building apps on programmable blockchains like Ethereum.
4/ Blockchains are virtual computers that run on top of networks of physical computers. They have new properties and new capabilities that prior kinds of computers didn’t have. cdixon.org/2020/01/26/com…
5/ We say blockchains are programmable when they have highly expressive, near Turing-complete programming languages. The most popular programmable blockchain is Ethereum.
6/ Programmable blockchains are interesting for the same reason mobile phones became interesting when they opened up development to 3rd parties via app stores. The best ideas tend to come from the fringes.
7/ We saw this start to play out last year during "DeFi summer" as the first wave of crypto/blockchain killer apps broke out: Uniswap, Aave, Compound, Maker, etc.
8/ DeFi shows it’s possible to build financial services that are inclusive, fair, transparent, and composable. On Wall Street, value flows inward to institutions at the center. In DeFi, value flows outward to people at the edges.
9/ This year NFTs and gaming were the next wave of blockchain apps to break out: NBA Top Shot, CryptoPunks, Axie Infinity, etc. You can see this reflected in the rapid growth of gross sales at OpenSea, the largest NFT marketplace:
10/ To some people, NFTs seem frivolous and toy-like. But NFTs are important because they offer radically better economics to creators and developers versus existing Web 2 platforms.
11/ What will be the next wave of blockchain killer apps? Computing waves are hard to predict, but there are some interesting emerging categories.
12/ DAOs (decentralized autonomous organizations) are internet-native, global collectives that share resources, build products, and work together toward common goals.
13/ Social tokens are new ways for creators to make money online. They remove rent-seeking intermediaries and enable the development of mini-economies that grow along with the fan base.
14/ Blockchain-based social networks make strong commitments to users and developers, so they can build on solid ground, without worrying about changing APIs and economics.
15/ Crypto-enabled 3D worlds and metaverse experiences let people socialize, earn money, and build mini-worlds, while guaranteeing interoperability and genuine ownership.
16/ These are some ideas, but entrepreneurs are better at building the future than people like me are at predicting it. It’s very likely the best ideas either haven’t yet been conceived or seem strange to us today.
17/ If you work in crypto, you are used to outsiders looking at you funny or thinking what you are doing is silly or a scam. We often don’t have names for what people are working on. It’s too new.
18/ This is what working at the start of the S-curve feels like. Programmable blockchains are the computing frontier, as PCs were in the 80s, internet in the 90s, and mobile in the last decade.
19/ We look back today on classic moments in computing and wonder what it was like to be there.
20/ But you are there! The Homebrew Computer Club of 2021 is a DAO or a Discord server, but the pattern is the same. Enthusiasts sharing ideas. Tinkerers hacking away on nights and weekends. These are the good old days - life on the frontier.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Chris Dixon

Chris Dixon Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @cdixon

22 Aug
1/ Topic: Turning networks into economies 🧵
2/ We spent the last 20 years building networks on the internet. Social media platforms like Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, and Discord are networks, which can be divided into billions of smaller networks, consisting of followers, friends, subscribers, backers, etc.
3/ These platforms gave many people an audience who didn’t previously have one. But due to fundamental structural misalignments between the networks and the companies that own them, we’ve seen increasing tension around these networks’ rules and economics.
Read 18 tweets
14 Aug
Recently went down the @lexfridman podcast rabbit hole. Love how he asks simple, fundamental questions to fascinating people in science, math, CS etc.

My favorite episodes (so far):

Luís and João Batalha: Fermat's Library and the Art of Studying Papers
Cumrun Vafa: String Theory

Konstantin Batygin: Planet 9 and the Edge of Our Solar System

Sara Walker: The Origin of Life on Earth and Alien Worlds
Jordan Ellenberg: Mathematics of High-Dimensional Shapes and Geometries

Katherine de Kleer: Planets, Moons, Asteroids & Life in Our Solar System
Read 5 tweets
12 Aug
1/ Topic: Going from Web 2 to Web 3 - “Your take rate is my opportunity” 🧵
2/ Jeff Bezos famously said "your margin is my opportunity" referring to the way Amazon took market share by lowering prices and eating into competitor margins.
3/ What Amazon did in commerce is what the internet did more generally. Lowering prices and redistributing value back to users has been the internet’s core economic dynamic since the 90s.
Read 13 tweets
28 Jul
1/ New technologies often arrive with flaws: toy-like, expensive, janky, lacking clear applications, etc.

To predict how they’ll develop, it’s important to dig deeper. Here are a few common ways new technologies can be misunderstood 🧵👇
2/ “It’s just a toy.” 🚂

This was the mistake made early on about breakthrough technologies like the telephone, personal computers, and social media. cdixon.org/2010/01/03/the…
3/ When the telephone was first invented, incumbents like Western Union dismissed it, as the sound quality was poor and it only worked at short distances. They failed to imagine how quickly those things would be improved.
Read 14 tweets
19 Jul
1/ Today we’re announcing that we are promoting @AriannaSimpson as our newest General Partner in the a16z crypto fund. a16z.com/2021/07/19/ari…
2/ We got to know Arianna through her fund Autonomous, and we continued running into Arianna as a co-investor in projects like @CeloOrg, @dapperlabs, and @MakerDAO. We kept hearing amazing feedback from founders that she went above and beyond for them.
3/ Arianna has been writing and video blogging about crypto for over seven years—long before most people were paying attention.
Read 5 tweets
17 Jul
1/ Topic: The internet treats bad business models as defects and routes around them. 🧵👇
2/ Let’s start with this fascinating chart (from matthewball.vc) which raises the question: why has the video game industry grown alongside new technologies, while the music industry has not?
3/ For a long time, video games and music had the same, straightforward business model: charge money for a perpetual license to the base content — the game or music itself.
Read 17 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(