Join us as we share the pod summary from @gabrielhaines featuring Andrew Thurman. @Blockanalia worked for Chainlink before becoming a journalist at Cointelegraph and CoinDesk. Read on more as he shares what life is like as a crypto-journalist.
🔸 Masters in Creative Nonfiction, also taught journalism
🔸 Starting investing in 2017 top
🔸 Started a business on @chainlink ecosystem, building the framework to allow node operators to work efficiently with data providers on a data call billing model
@gabrielhaines@Blockanalia@chainlink 🔸 Chainlink invited them to present at Web3 in Berlin in 2019
🔸 Co-founded a smart contract data marketplace which becomes the Oracle Network API3
🔸 One of his first calls was with @bobbyong from @coingecko
🔸 Running biz development campaign for them from 2019 through 2020
🔸 Officially was the Senior Partnership Manager
🔸 Worked with Daniel Kochis to bring projects to join the Chainlink ecosystem
🔸 Contributed to the most successful BD campaign for Chainlink
🔸 Wanted to do something altruistic - starting freelancing as a writer
🔸 Wrote for @Cointelegraph and @CoinDesk
🔸 The former hired him
🔸 Personal record: published 5 articles in a day📰
🔸 Very good experience but has a bad rep because of unknown owner
🔸 People treated him differently while he was at Chainlink vs when he was a journalist
🔸 Don't get invited to seed rounds anymore because perception is that journalists are poor
🔸 Crypto media suffering from a decline in influence
🔸 Yet Bloomberg and CNBC are covering crypto from an uninformed place
🔸 As a crypto native, he can provide valuable context/insight
🔸 CoinDesk is one of the few places that has significant reach
🔸 Takes pride in covering stories outside the box
🔸 To be able to differentiate between what is popular and what is important
🔸 Works on stories that people will not be able to find in Bloomberg
@gabrielhaines@Blockanalia@chainlink@bobbyong@coingecko@Cointelegraph@CoinDesk 🔸 Back when telephones are introduced in the US, news covered controversial aspects rather than the tech
🔸 This is what is happening in crypto news as well
🔸 Many writers just write what fits their preconceived biases or the biases of their audience
🔸 Not been to many trips because of Covid - older journalists are the ones with stories to tell
🔸 Knew people online
🔸 Need to have a network of contacts that will vouch for you if you are a newcomer
🔸 Did lots of legwork to reach out to young & anon teams
🔸 @lionelbarber wrote an essay called Trump & Truth
🔸 Discusses that having a certain kind of play acting of neutrality from the press very nearly led to the destruction of democracy
🔸 Reality gets warped when we portray equality when it is not
🔸 Industry takes this seriously with lots of informal rules
🔸 Once broken, you might not get info anymore
🔸 Last fav part of his job - should not be how a good news ecosystem works
🔸 Too much power given to companies/PR agencies to frame narrative
Blockchain + Web3 is revolutionary, but what is limiting their potential to change the world are the challenges involved in indexing and accessing data on the blockchain itself. @ZettaBlockHQ aims to address this issue.
• Has a #Web3 startup team that operates globally
• The team is led by two experienced co-founders, Scott Shi and Chi Zhang
🔸Scott Shi (@scottshics)
• Has over a decade of expertise in engineering
• Worked at companies like @Uber, @salesforce & EA
🔸 Chi Zhang
• Was a product manager at @databricks
• Holds a PhD from @UCBerkeley
• Experience in building data and #AI products
• Proven track record of supporting data-driven
organizations
He discusses anthropology, Web3 and other subcultures, and many other interesting topics with @chaserchapman in this episode of On The Other Side 👇
Background
🔹 An anthropologist
🔹 Is an artist
🔹 A DAO contributor
🔹 Has a Substack, but it’s not really a newsletter, but a cultural report
Substack
🔹 It’s more an anthropological collection of a subculture
🔹 Trying to record the why and the what behind the different projects
🔹 Important to have a bird’s eye view to see the connections
🔹 Is an obsessively curious person. Have always been searching for cool stuff
Today, I'll be sharing the book highlights of @peterthiel's Zero to One. Peter Thiel is a serial entrepreneur who helped to start up many companies, like @PayPal and @PalantirTech, and invested in Facebook.
If he has something to say about startups, I want to know. Read on 👇
There are 2 kinds of progress:
• Horizontal (1 to n)
• Vertically (0 to 1)
E.g. Horizontal progress is about getting existing products distributed to more places (globalization), while vertical progress is about coming up with new products (tech).
From the book's title, you should be able to deduce which is the better kind of progress. Going from zero to one will be hard, but the rewards will be way better than going from 1 to many.
👉 Look for companies that go from 0 to 1 instead of 1 to n.
🔹 People remember the year for all the terrible stuff that happened
🔹 Important to remember the positive events too (e.g. the merge)
🔹 The merge is a transaction inclusion time decrease
🔹 Have multiple zk-EVM implementations that will have a mainnet launch in 2023
🔹 @signinwitheth has seen massive gains in adoption
🔹 Cryptocurrency payments worked during the invasion of Ukraine
🔹 Have always recommended @KeePassXC or @Bitwarden:
🔸 KeePassXC: A completely offline tool. Reserved for extreme scenarios
🔸 Bitwarden: A secure password manager that synchronizes your password database across multiple devices
Now
🔹 Online password managers have advanced quite a bit
🔹 Every reputable password manager encrypts everything on your machine before it goes into the database
🔹 Does not recommend LastPass, 1Password, Dashlane
🔹 For people new to password managers, he recommends Bitwarden