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Deployer
@deployer
Being a solo founder is hard. Hams biggest problem is marketing imo. If you dig in you'll find a robust tech stack. Ham chain, a layer 3 that enables any coin to become tippable in the social feed, FID to wallet and wallet to FID mappings so you can read Farcaster account data from smart contracts enabling new interesting projects to be built (shoutout to @syndicate) The recently launched Hamcaster, a socialfi app that uses this onchain mapping of FIDs to wallets to create tokenized representations of your Farcaster accounts and lets you share $HAM rewards with people who stake your token. Let's not forget the Ham community on Warpcast. A couple thousand people engaging on Farcaster and earning $HAM based on various metrics. The only product with onchain tipping where tips are settled within a minute or two after they are set. Floaties - tipping Base coins with emojis. I've done all the development work and product design, @facu did the incredible design work and lent his expertise to product ideas.
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adnum
@adnum
One way not having a good marketing might be a positive thing. Although the product is almost flawless from the first interaction there is probably minimal support requested. With proper marketing and large user base support request would be huge. Not in the quiet times you can build and test the products with probably minimal headaches. When the time comes, crypto mainstream adoption, flood of new users, a lot of them pouring into HAM, because the current userbase will be the best marketing you could wish for, the support needed will greatly outnumber the time available for development. HAM will be huge and we need to prepare for it
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