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Nico.cast🐱
@n
What will be the consumer crypto 'aha' moment like ChatGPT is to AI?
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Ludo Landry pfp
Ludo Landry
@ludo
We are still waiting for it.
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Navy pfp
Navy
@coel
True. There’s nothing yet. Who do you think is the most likely to come up with it?
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andric.eth pfp
andric.eth
@andric
An individual or team who’s great at UX, understands the need for technology like crypto, deeply cares about fixing its flaws and isn’t apologetic about them, has the skills to deliver a working system which scales, and most importantly, doesn’t have a cavalier attitude in the style of a postmodernist or postrat.
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Ludo Landry pfp
Ludo Landry
@ludo
You have to start by: “what service do I provide for users” before figuring out which tech to use and what will the UX look like.
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Navy pfp
Navy
@coel
And what problem do web3 users face on a daily basis? Also, what problems are there in the real world that NEED web3 to solve them?
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andric.eth pfp
andric.eth
@andric
That’s a good question to ask once a specific technology is actually working well, and you have evidence that people are using it to solve a problem. Then you can use the answer to that question to market or sell that technology to a larger audience. Many crypto technologies are not yet at that stage.
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andric.eth pfp
andric.eth
@andric
Before the stage where you can apply analysis methods to find out what problems a technology solves, you need to apply abductive techniques (i.e. design thinking, systems thinking) to understand the dynamics of the sociotechnical system you’re trying to intervene in, and points of leverage where you can affect change
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andric.eth pfp
andric.eth
@andric
Crypto technologies are still in their infancy in the sense that technologists are still feeling for an understanding of the sociotechnical systems they’re intervening in (i.e. global financial markets and monetary systems), without yet understanding what makes them tick or where there may be points of leverage.
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andric.eth pfp
andric.eth
@andric
People who are schooled in financial markets, economics, and monetary systems are often mocked for their critiques of cryptoeconomic systems designed by those who are epistemic trespassers. And mocked in a cavalier, postmodern fashion. I think a team that takes the critique to heart will make headway.
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andric.eth pfp
andric.eth
@andric
I think it’s possible to be an outsider but still display humility. Bitcoin is not the last word in monetary technologies, and neither is Ethereum in decentralized compute.
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andric.eth pfp
andric.eth
@andric
There’s lots to be done, chief among which is developer experience. Why does OpenAI and LangChain have easy-to-use Typescript and Python libraries, but working with Ethereum is so full of footguns? Why do LLMs play nice with PostgreSQL, MongoDB, Neo4J, and REST APIs, and blockchains do not?
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Navy pfp
Navy
@coel
I feel like these dev problems will be solved at scale as soon as there’s a huge amount of demand is created for writing blockchain code. When there’s a shit ton of demand, devs will start using Huff, Rust on Ethereum, and other languages to build on ETH and the dev tools will be built for them as well
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Navy pfp
Navy
@coel
Assuming the dev tools exist, what real world problem are we solving here? We have built a global financial market where you can trade stocks. But the govts will never allow that. We have built a Forex system that makes cross border payments seamless, but govts are shutting off stablecoins rn.
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