Martin
@koeppelmann.eth
Circles 2.0 uses 1155 tokens. Once you realize the possibilities—that you can just send tokens to an address, and the address can then "do stuff," and you can even add a message to this, "and the address can do context-dependent stuff dependent on sender and message"—you never want to go back to ERC20!
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Martin
@koeppelmann.eth
approve + transferFrom instead of callback on the receiver has held the whole space back probably by multiple years.
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Chinny
@chinelo
Good
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