Last week I spoke extensively about the concern and confusion about EOS full history API nodes. Hopef
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March 7 · Issue #41 · View online
The Week in EOS.
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Last week I spoke extensively about the concern and confusion about EOS full history API nodes. Hopefully I was able to clarify the situation for readers. If any of you are interested in diving in even deeper, I interviewed Aaron Cox and Scott Sallinen from Greymass last week about this issue specifically. The Greymass interview was one of my favorites I’ve ever done, and I highly recommend giving it a listen. Greymass is one of the most talented and hard-working BP teams, and much of the mission-critical infrastructure work they focus on doesn’t get nearly as much attention as it deserves. In this interview they had the chance to highlight some of that work and talk about how critical it is to the performance and usability of the network. If you’re not yet voting for Greymass, consider throwing some votes their way! Check out the full interview here, or on your favorite podcast app.
Myles Snider, CEO
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The real pace of development of EOS
Rami James from Scatter talks about the inaccuracy in Yahoo Finance’s latest piece on EOS. Github activity, in general, isn’t a great proxy for overall developer activity– there’s a lot more nuance to those numbers than meets the eye. But the team at Yahoo Finance failed to even do basic due diligence to present a factual case, and Rami offers a far more informed perspective.
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Maple Leaf Capital on Twitter: DAPP Network Thread
Maple Leaf Capital is one of our favorite Twitter accounts dedicated to doing EOS ecosystem analysis. They have been somewhat quiet recently, but they recently published a thread with some (as usual) thought-provoking commentary on LiquidApps DAPP token.
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EOS Infrastructure, APIs, and Full History Nodes with Team Greymass | EOS Voter
In this episode we spoke to the Greymass block producer team about EOS network infrastructure, history nodes, APIs, dApps, wallets, and much more.
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All the Blockchain Games You’ve Imagined, Here. | ITAM Store
ITAM Games released a short teaser video for their upcoming ITAM Store for blockchain-based games. Brendan Blumer caught wind of the announcement and chimed in, “The future of gaming is play to earn.” Blumer is a gaming industry veteran himself, and it’s becoming increasingly clear that this is the vertical to watch on EOS this year.
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eos-voter wallet update - Greymass
Greymass released the latest update to their excellent eos-voter desktop wallet, now with support for the Meet.one sister chain (plus a number of other features).
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Introducing "Torus" Wallet - EOS Tribe
EOS Tribe announced the beta release of their Torus mobile wallet, which is now available for testing through Apple’s Testflight app.
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My EOS Wallet Update - Attic Lac
Attic Lab has fixed a number of issues and asked Android users of their mobile wallet to update to the latest version.
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Introducing eosfinex
Bitfinex formally introduced eosfinex, their non-custodial, fully on-chain exchange offering built on EOSIO. The DEX space is one to watch extremely closely this year. Both Bitfinex and Binance are launching non-custodial DEX (or at least hybrid exchange) products that will seed liquidity from their centralized counterparts. Binance’s DEX is built on Tendermint, while Bitfinex’s is built on EOSIO. Further, Dan and Block.one continue to tease their DEX product built on EOS as a potential product release this year.
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Prospectors Alpha Version is Ready!
Prospectors is a multi-player online game built on top of EOS that’s been in development for several months now. The team just released the details of the alpha version of the game. If you’re interested in being an early player, give it a read.
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The eosfinex Exchange Contract
For developers looking to dive into the mechanics of eosfinex itself, the team published details on how to interact with the exchange contract.
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dGoods Dev Update
Rudy from Mythical Games published a developer update for the dGoods project. The most interesting part is their support for semi-fungible tokens (SFTs). Examples include concert tickets with different seat numbers or digital items with different identifying characteristics. The dGoods team is really taking things to the next level with this token standard, which will likely be the most detailed and robust token standard the industry has ever seen. Amazing work from all of the teams involved.
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Austin, TX
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