
CRYPTOPILLED
How I went from knowing next to nothing about crypto to taking a full-time job in web3, all in under 6 monthsAt the beginning of this year I knew next to nothing about the world of web3 or crypto. Six months later, I quit my job to take a full-time position in the industry. What happened? This is the story of some of the major moments within that half-year and the lessons I learned along the way. In January of 2021 I felt dissatisfied with the web. I had been feeling this way for years. Don’t...
A New Frontier
Growing up in the 90s, our first family computer was a Compaq Presario. It was a chunky desktop PC with speakers that attached to the monitor like oversized ears and a translucent purple faceplate on the tower that popped open to store CDs. It was glorious.My beloved Compaq PresarioThat computer changed my life — and so did a piece of software that came with it called Microsoft Encarta. Encarta was an encyclopedia digitized, Wikipedia before Wikipedia, and opening it revealed countless entrie...

Less Likes, More Connections
Shifting the Web Back Towards Open-HandednessLess Likes, More Connections this essay is available both in video (above) and text (below) formats // video available via auction on Zora One of the most important objects of my life rolled in on squeaky wheels when my teacher brought a brand new computer into the elementary school classroom. Now, the school already had a few computers at the time, but those were green-and-grey text machines, rudimentary and clunky, unfriendly to children and teac...
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CRYPTOPILLED
How I went from knowing next to nothing about crypto to taking a full-time job in web3, all in under 6 monthsAt the beginning of this year I knew next to nothing about the world of web3 or crypto. Six months later, I quit my job to take a full-time position in the industry. What happened? This is the story of some of the major moments within that half-year and the lessons I learned along the way. In January of 2021 I felt dissatisfied with the web. I had been feeling this way for years. Don’t...
A New Frontier
Growing up in the 90s, our first family computer was a Compaq Presario. It was a chunky desktop PC with speakers that attached to the monitor like oversized ears and a translucent purple faceplate on the tower that popped open to store CDs. It was glorious.My beloved Compaq PresarioThat computer changed my life — and so did a piece of software that came with it called Microsoft Encarta. Encarta was an encyclopedia digitized, Wikipedia before Wikipedia, and opening it revealed countless entrie...

Less Likes, More Connections
Shifting the Web Back Towards Open-HandednessLess Likes, More Connections this essay is available both in video (above) and text (below) formats // video available via auction on Zora One of the most important objects of my life rolled in on squeaky wheels when my teacher brought a brand new computer into the elementary school classroom. Now, the school already had a few computers at the time, but those were green-and-grey text machines, rudimentary and clunky, unfriendly to children and teac...
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
At its core, the internet is a portal.
This has been evident since the 1990s, when web browsers emerged as doorways to an altogether new digital realm for the world to navigate and explore. During this time, the internet was like a vast library with uncharted aisles and hidden corners where every click might lead to a new discovery.
The internet was a portal to knowledge.
As the internet evolved, so too did the portal. It became a portal to commerce, revolutionizing the way we shopped. It became a portal to news, enabling real-time updates on stories refreshed minute-by-minute. It became a portal to community, connecting us with others. Many platforms quite literally marketed themselves as portals, like AOL and Yahoo, both aiming to become the only portal you would ever need.
In the 2000s, social media transformed the portal again. It became a portal to communicate, share experiences, and shape how you presented yourself to the world. With this change came algorithms, curating what you saw based on your past actions. Because of this, the portal became far less open-ended. The internet's former essence as a library of infinite possibility had narrowed to a deliberately landscaped path directed by forces outside of our control.
Around this time, the portal shifted shape, from a gateway in your living room to one that fit in your pocket. This evolution in access and connectivity brought a new level of dependency on the portal, as people relied on it for information, communication, entertainment, and work.
The portal became all-consuming.
This is where we are today, and it's time to rethink the portal once more.
We must remember that we are not passive consumers of whatever the portal shows us, but active participants with the ability to shape our experiences. Reimagining the portal ultimately empowers us to reclaim agency over our digital lives.
Perhaps a model for a reimagined portal already exists in fledgling form: the web3 wallet. Currently focused on financial transactions, the wallet may transform into a personalized portal which curates our most valued digital possessions - artwork, writing, videos, even messages from friends.
A portal for identity.
This portal would not be an endless library or a confined pathway, but a tailored sanctuary for self-expression and human connection. While the existing internet overwhelms, this portal nurtures. It won't replace the digital world, but it could provide a powerful counterbalance.
We can transform the internet back into a space for exploration, creativity, and human connection. Portals inherently represent possibility - we need only to step through it once more.
At its core, the internet is a portal.
This has been evident since the 1990s, when web browsers emerged as doorways to an altogether new digital realm for the world to navigate and explore. During this time, the internet was like a vast library with uncharted aisles and hidden corners where every click might lead to a new discovery.
The internet was a portal to knowledge.
As the internet evolved, so too did the portal. It became a portal to commerce, revolutionizing the way we shopped. It became a portal to news, enabling real-time updates on stories refreshed minute-by-minute. It became a portal to community, connecting us with others. Many platforms quite literally marketed themselves as portals, like AOL and Yahoo, both aiming to become the only portal you would ever need.
In the 2000s, social media transformed the portal again. It became a portal to communicate, share experiences, and shape how you presented yourself to the world. With this change came algorithms, curating what you saw based on your past actions. Because of this, the portal became far less open-ended. The internet's former essence as a library of infinite possibility had narrowed to a deliberately landscaped path directed by forces outside of our control.
Around this time, the portal shifted shape, from a gateway in your living room to one that fit in your pocket. This evolution in access and connectivity brought a new level of dependency on the portal, as people relied on it for information, communication, entertainment, and work.
The portal became all-consuming.
This is where we are today, and it's time to rethink the portal once more.
We must remember that we are not passive consumers of whatever the portal shows us, but active participants with the ability to shape our experiences. Reimagining the portal ultimately empowers us to reclaim agency over our digital lives.
Perhaps a model for a reimagined portal already exists in fledgling form: the web3 wallet. Currently focused on financial transactions, the wallet may transform into a personalized portal which curates our most valued digital possessions - artwork, writing, videos, even messages from friends.
A portal for identity.
This portal would not be an endless library or a confined pathway, but a tailored sanctuary for self-expression and human connection. While the existing internet overwhelms, this portal nurtures. It won't replace the digital world, but it could provide a powerful counterbalance.
We can transform the internet back into a space for exploration, creativity, and human connection. Portals inherently represent possibility - we need only to step through it once more.
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