

Subscribe to gangloff.eth
Subscribe to gangloff.eth
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
If you haven't heard of Web3 lately, you're definitely behind the curve on the Internet.
Web3 is not as accessible as it sounds, nor is it yet widely popular. Some Web3 properties and services require you to understand those components and principles they involve in order to work, such as your cryptocurrency wallet, dApps (decentralized applications such as the OpenSea NFT marketplace), and the blockchain running underneath them.
While this may sound complicated (and some knowledge is indeed complicated), most Web3 experiences are still built on top of open Internet technologies and you can access them through a well-designed browser.
In today's world (our society that has not yet embraced Web3), when we enter a website address into a browser, we are relying on the browser to handle all the complex back-end content and take us to our destination in virtual space.
While the applications we use to access Web3 are still the same, we have to do some errands (like setting up a wallet, or choosing the right protocol to access) to experience the decentralized world. Ideally, all this work should be handled by the Web3 browser, but this is not currently the case.
To get an insider's perspective on how browsers should integrate these technologies, we spoke with the people at several companies responsible for building Web3 browsers and standards - we explored topics ranging from the challenges of creating a new paradigm for connectivity to what the future of the Internet browsing experience should look like. The list goes on.
If you haven't heard of Web3 lately, you're definitely behind the curve on the Internet.
Web3 is not as accessible as it sounds, nor is it yet widely popular. Some Web3 properties and services require you to understand those components and principles they involve in order to work, such as your cryptocurrency wallet, dApps (decentralized applications such as the OpenSea NFT marketplace), and the blockchain running underneath them.
While this may sound complicated (and some knowledge is indeed complicated), most Web3 experiences are still built on top of open Internet technologies and you can access them through a well-designed browser.
In today's world (our society that has not yet embraced Web3), when we enter a website address into a browser, we are relying on the browser to handle all the complex back-end content and take us to our destination in virtual space.
While the applications we use to access Web3 are still the same, we have to do some errands (like setting up a wallet, or choosing the right protocol to access) to experience the decentralized world. Ideally, all this work should be handled by the Web3 browser, but this is not currently the case.
To get an insider's perspective on how browsers should integrate these technologies, we spoke with the people at several companies responsible for building Web3 browsers and standards - we explored topics ranging from the challenges of creating a new paradigm for connectivity to what the future of the Internet browsing experience should look like. The list goes on.
<100 subscribers
<100 subscribers
No activity yet