Dragonchain: Developer Plan available, The team at Blockchain Expo in Amsterdam, Several new AMA’s, Hacked with Joe Roets #3

Paradigm
Paradigm
Published in
13 min readJun 28, 2019

Biweekly update 14th June — 28th June

The Dragonchain team was burning the candle at both ends these weeks! They made a presence at several significant domestic and international events. Dragonchain CEO Joe Roets, and VP of Strategic Business Development, Filip Hantson, traveled from the US to The Netherlands. One of the events attended was Blockchain Expo 2019 in Amsterdam. Luckily, Joe found some time, or a lot of time, to answer all the AMA questions (more than 30!) that were previously asked on Reddit, but not yet answered. If you’ve missed the livestream on Twitter, you can either watch it back or read all the questions and answers in the Dragonchain blog. Earlier Joe talked about the end of Early Access Program, community verification nodes, upcoming Eternal features, open sourcing of the core platform, what keeps him motivated and stupid people. These weeks Joe also featured in developer focused AMA which covers digital assets, containerized smart contracts, multi-cloud and on-premise solutions and the future of Dragonchain’s commercial blockchain platform. The third edition of ‘Hacked with Joe Roets’ was published! As many of You knows, in ‘Hacked’, Dragonchain’s CEO takes some of the most challenging and insightful interviews, podcasts, infographics, news or conversations in the blockchain and business space and applies them to Dragonchain. This week Joe ‘hacked’ a Forbes article by contributor Nikki Baird who recently published her thoughts on blockchain in retail and the limitations associated with it. Read Joe’s response to how Dragonchain can be an effective solution for retail! Such a sapid read! And last but not least, registration for Dragonchain Academy’s first developer course and certification is still open. Dragon Den expects to see a full public release in Q3 2019. Development is still in progress mostly in private repositories and the community continues to grow. The Dragonchain Developer plan is still available and you can start building today on the most flexible and scalable blockchain platform and see what you can accomplish with BaaS! Follow Paradigm to get up-to-date!

Development

GitHub metrics:

Last commit on public GitHub was made on April 29th, 2019 in dragonchain.github.io repository.

Also there are private repositories (~100 private repositories on commercial GitHub).

Dragonchain CEO Joe Roets in Official Telegram group:
Dragonchain, Inc. began in 2017 and has been developing the enterprise and scalable platform on multiple private and proprietary repositories.
We’ve stated from the beginning that we intend to make the open source codebase network compatible with the commercial platform. We expect to do that sometime in 2019, and will involve an update to the open source codebase.

Developer activity (from Coinlib.io):

Dragonchain Developer Plan Available Now — Your First Steps to Getting Started on Dragonchain:

Dragonchain’s Blockchain as a Service platform is now more accessible than ever, thanks to the release of the Dragonchain Developer Plan. This plan allows users to get started on the Dragonchain Platform and interact with the console. By registering for the Dragonchain Developer Plan, new users will receive the necessary credits to spin up an L1 node and start building their own blockchain projects, applications and solutions. Users that make an account and receive verification within this initial release window will also receive 3 months of free access as a bonus for signing up.

To get started on your Developer Plan, follow the steps below:

  1. Select the Developer plan from among their price plans
  2. Fill out the sign up form and create a Dragonchain console account
  3. Check your inbox for the verification code sent by registration@dragonchain(dot)com
  4. Enter the verification code to complete the registration process

After completing the registration process, you will immediately be taken to the Dragonchain console and begin your 3-month free access period. From there, you will be able to post transactions and start building blockchain applications and smart contracts with full access to the Dragonchain Platform. If you want to know where to begin as a new user, the following tasks are a good place to get started and will help introduce you to the way that Dragonchain operates.

  1. Create a chain
  2. Create a transaction
  3. Build a smart contract

If you need help completing these or any other processes on Dragonchain, the team has some valuable resources to help you move past help obstacles. Once you’re registered, take a look at our Guide to Develop on Blockchain, which can provide you with instructions and examples related to different Dragonchain features. This page will also connect you to useful smart contract templates and our Dragonchain SDKs for Python and NodeJS.

To get a more personalized experience or address a specific issue, you can visit the Dragonchain Developer Forum. If you have any questions or want to receive more resources, feel free to contact the team.

Social encounters

Blockchain: High performance, privacy, and ease of use — Hacked with Joe Roets #3

According to Nikki Baird, a contributor on Forbes, three big blockchain challenges will impact retail. Baird states that retailers don’t care so much about the technological details behind how blockchain works. They just miss three key features in blockchain technology today:

  • High performance
  • Ease of use
  • Privacy

These are three of the key features that the Dragonchain blockchain platform delivers not only to retail, but to everyone using it, by design. Flexibility for developers and Interchain technology are two more examples that distinguishes Dragonchain’s blockchain solutions from other blockchains. Read some of the concerns Baird mentions together with Dragonchain CEO Joe Roets, and how Dragonchain already solved most of the existing challenges in blockchain.

High performance

Baird states that high performance basically comes down to scalability. Visa can handle 65,000 transactions per second. Bitcoin (4,7 transactions per second) and Ethereum (15 transactions per second) handle a lot less transactions per second currently. For use cases mentioned, such as advertising and IoT in supply chain, both Bitcoin and Ethereum are not scalable enough.

Google, on average, handles 40,000 search queries per second. In advertising, they have to make sub-nanosecond decisions into deciding what advertisements to load when you view a web page. This process can sometimes involve dozens of parties, all operating in miniscule fractions of a second.

Nikki Baird: ‘’For now, for blockchain to truly achieve retail adoption, blockchain performance and scalability as it stands today is not enough’’.

Joe Roets:

While I would agree that Bitcoin and Ethereum are not at all close to what is needed, solutions do exist to meet this need. As an example, Dragonchain based its entire architecture on a philosophy geared to making blockchain technology usable in real business applications. A huge part of that is of course scalability. If a system cannot handle business at scale, it cannot be considered.

We approach scalability from a few angles. Operationally, we use a hybrid blockchain architecture to isolate a business’ important processes from the worldwide consensus process. Instead, a business’ node provides near real time performance, tunable to massive systems if needed, yet leverages 5 levels of consensus on Dragonchain’s network, progressing to further and further decentralization, ultimately posting an aggregated hash in multiple public networks (currently BTC, ETH, ETC, and NEO).

We also think that this is a development and engineering issue. That is, all other platforms require specialized skill sets that traditional developers do not typically have; this affects time to market, which results in fewer successful blockchain projects. Since our business nodes are private, they allow more flexibility to the developer. They allow businesses to use their current developers with longtime experience with their data, systems, and customers. This is a massive advantage for businesses.

Privacy

As stated correctly by Baird, Bitcoin is not so anonymous as many may think. Some companies like Microsoft try to tackle privacy concerns with overly complicated and off-chain settlements, using a protocol on top of Ethereum, under the name ‘Coco’. Furthermore utilizing edge hardware and environments like Intel’s “trusted execution environment,’’ Ethereum can be used with more privacy.

However, for retailers, they also face issues with personally identifiable information and the General Data Protection Regulation, known as GDPR, Europe’s regulations around consumer privacy.

Nikki Baird: ‘’Blockchain has the potential to make all of that much easier, if we can evolve to a place where consumers can use blockchain to store their personal information, and decide and control which companies have access to which pieces of information’’. Baird wonders who should provide this service?

Joe Roets:

This should be a service that allows consumers to control access to their own information. Some term this “Self Sovereign Identity.” Without going into academic detail, we believe that this will benefit both the consumer and the organization. That is, the consumer will benefit from the fact that so many organizations won’t be holding all of their personal and financial information. At the same time, the organization will benefit from a lowered risk (in both financial and brand) of holding such sensitive information. At its core, it’s the segregation of data that will avoid the issue of information honeypots attracting attackers. It’s more organic as well, as people have a personal incentive to protect their own information.

We believe that flexibility is extremely important in this area, and believe that the “factors” of identity need to be able to be captured at any degree of granularity. That is, something as specific as “eye color,” something as broad as “citizenship,” or something as abstract as “over_21” should be capturable as identity factors. These factors can then be grouped in any combination to provide a custom level of measurable identity for interactions between parties.

The beauty of this is that a business that needs to know something of your identity to do business with you has the ability to allow you to choose which factors of identity you are comfortable with to expose to that business.

Another challenge Baird mentioned is that “the data is only as protected as the password — there have been spectacular bank robberies of crypto vaults and exchanges, and there have also been stories of consumers (and worse — crypto company executives) who lost the password to their crypto wallet and flat-out could not get back in.”

Joe Roets:

Our angle on credentials is that they should be public key based, and should be recoverable by an average and non-technical person (the Grandma test). We do this by placing the identity itself on chain, with factors separated, and allowing rolling or recovery operations with organic, people based verification.

Ease of use

When it comes to ease of use, there is still a long way to go in crypto and in blockchain. Baird explains how she didn’t buy a Bitcoin in 2009 simply because the process to obtain one was too difficult. Since that time, ease of use has come a long way.

How can Dragonchain bring blockchain to consumers without making it readily apparent that they are based on blockchain?

Nikki Baird: ‘’For blockchain to make a difference in retail, it has to be much more about the experience than the technology’’.

Joe Roets:

This is massively important to adoption of blockchain technology everywhere. I see it as a parallel to what we saw with adoption of many technologies in their early days (e.g. radio, television, Internet). Early adopters tend to need to know more, have more frustrating interfaces, and deal with a higher overall cost in using technology. Over time, better interfaces are found and tested, and costs are lowered with increasing adoption.

We have a few examples of making blockchain usable to ordinary people, in ways that don’t expose or highlight the fact that the application is built atop a blockchain. The Dragonchain Academy is a great example of making a product that has no outward and direct appearance to the user that the entire system is built as a native blockchain application. We’re working on several other applications with partners that focus on the real business value and not directly on blockchain itself.

Dragonchain’s Blockchain as a Service already is capable enough to enable retailers to further adopt blockchain technologies to provide unique business value.

Blockchain open sourcing, EAP, nodes & stupid people — Community AMA with Joe Roets:

Dragonchain CEO Joe Roets talks about the end of Early Access Program, community verification nodes, upcoming Eternal features, open sourcing of the core platform, what keeps him motivated and stupid people.

34 Burning Community Questions About Dragonchain, Answered Live in Amsterdam at Blockchain Expo:

Last week Dragonchain CEO Joe Roets, and VP of Strategic Business Development, Filip Hantson, traveled from the US to The Netherlands. One of the events attended was Blockchain Expo 2019 in Amsterdam. Luckily, Joe found some time, or a lot of time, to answer all the AMA questions that were asked on Reddit, but not yet answered. If you’ve missed the livestream on Twitter, you can either watch it back or read all the questions and answers in the article.

If you prefer to watch and listen to the full live AMA, you can do so on Dragonchain’s Twitter account.

Dev AMA with Joe: Digital assets, containerized smart contracts, multi-cloud/on-premise & the future of Dragonchain:

Blockchain developer focused questions are answered by Joe Roets in a new ‘Ask Me anything’! This AMA covers digital assets, containerized smart contracts, multi-cloud and on-premise solutions and the future of Dragonchain’s commercial blockchain platform.

Dragonchain recent events:

June 19th, 2019: Amsterdam Blockchain Expo.

Good conversations between Joe Roets, Filip Hantson and the blockchain community in Amsterdam! Jack Sparrow asking great questions about open sourcing.

June 20th, 2019: WTIA Cascadia Blockchain Council Panel, Seattle.

June 26th, 2019: Roby Daquilante, Software Engineer at Dragonchain, was presenting at Coding Dojo in Bellevue on “Getting started with Blockchain and Building Custom Indexing.”

June 27th, 2019: MIPIM PropTech Seattle Meet Up.

Upcoming events:

No updates.

Dragonchain Academy

Sieng Van Tran‏ @sieng on twitter on Jun 18:

Looking forward to seeing very old friends and some new ones at Asia Blockchain Summit 2019 Taipei. Will unveil the developments around the use of @dragonchaingang, IOT & Artificial Intelligence in solving scaling in the Med Tech sector. #Blockchain #AI #IOT @DragonchainAca

Dragonchain Academy’s first developer course and certification released at the end of the February: Learn how to write and deploy smart contracts on the Dragonchain platform. Sign up to Daragonchain Academy mailing list to get first access to this course.

Finance

Token holders and the number of transactions dynamics (from Etherscan.io):

There is a slight decrease in the number of token holders these weeks.

Information from Coinmarketcap.com:

Dragonchain Wyrm Holes give you the ability to transfer tokens from one blockchain network to another. Learn more here.

Roadmap

The first installment of the Dragonchain 2019 Roadmap:

Q2

  • Time Products — Marketplace listing
  • Marketplace — vendor enrollment features
  • DragonDen — launch
  • Patent — licensing standardization
  • Commercial Platform — expanded dashboard features
  • Privacy Products — Launch
  • Dragon Factor — expanded features
  • Commercial Platform — multi-cloud capabilities

Dragonchain Q1 Roadmap Report:

Review of Dragonchain’s Q1 roadmap goals and technological achievements.

Partnerships and team members

Rumors

Twitter:

Satoshi’s identity doesn’t matter.

The code matters.

What we do with the code matters.

A spring of value directly from software based on its ability to incent, direct, or control humans.

On the way to the Amsterdam meetup — came across a NEO sculpture in the wild.

Learned some interesting things to come for @dragonchaingang

Let’s get it

@MrMichaelNye @j0j0r0 @jcryptoinsider

Discussions on Reddit:

Beaxy Cryptocurrency Exchange welcomes every American Dragonchain traders after Binance shutdown.

Telegram:

Mark your calendars! July 1st, 2019 — Dragonchain Rebrand announcement!

Jonel (admin): “Don’t pay attention to rumors. There’s too many in this industry guys. Pay attention to our fundamentals. Pay attention to what we are doing. What we have public that’s public. What we don’t have public is because of legal NDAs.”

Social media metrics

Social media activity:

Social media dynamics:

Dragonchain community continues to grow. Despite the fact of growth in other social media, there is a slight decrease in the number of subscribers of Dragonchain Telegram channels these weeks.

Facebook — Announcements, publications with 25–50 likes, 5–10 shares.

Twitter — Average number of retweets is 50–100 for one post.

Other media:

Bitcointalk.org: since August 17th, 2017. Discussion on latest news, price, etc. Last post — on June 15th, 2019.

Dragonchain also has Kakao talk for koreans.

The graph above shows the dynamics of changes in the number of Dragonchain Facebook likes, Reddit subscribers and Twitter followers. The information is taken from Coingecko.com.

This is not financial advice.

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Medium. Twitter. Telegram. Reddit.

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