
v1.2 is out 🚀 Here’s what you need to know
So in the past few weeks, we’ve been collecting surveys, conducting user interviews, and completing our masterplan for a seamless digital asset community & exchange. Our next update will be HUGE. And, it’ll take some time and a lot of QA to get it just right. So, about a week ago, we decided to pencil in a smaller update—we wanted to add features many of you requested in your survey answers and user interviews. Enter v.1.2, a modest upgrade to our current crypto community platform.TL;DRFollow...
Notable timeline of Ripple and the SEC’s fight
XRP vs SEC timelineOne of the long-standing issues in the crypto market, the legal battle between Ripple and SEC has been going on for over two years. Let’s take a look at the notable timeline of Ripple and the SEC’s fight. · Dec 2020 The SEC filed a lawsuit against Ripple Labs, alleging that they had conducted an unregistered securities offering by selling XRPtokens. · Jan 2021 Ripple filed its initial response to the SEC’s lawsuit, denying the allegations and arguing that XRP is not a secur...
Console’s New Feature ‘Verify’: Distribute Discord Roles via Wallet Verification
We’ve added a new feature for NFT creators called ‘Verify.’ Creators can create and distribute roles based on certain criteria–currently, we only offer the ability to determine roles based on the number of NFTs held in a single wallet. After an NFT creator sets the minimum number for each role and adds our bot to a channel, holders can connect their wallet to automatically receive a role. The following is guide on how creators and holders can use our new feature, ‘Verify.’For NFT CreatorsAfte...
Not your ordinary crypto community. Catch alpha, trade better.

v1.2 is out 🚀 Here’s what you need to know
So in the past few weeks, we’ve been collecting surveys, conducting user interviews, and completing our masterplan for a seamless digital asset community & exchange. Our next update will be HUGE. And, it’ll take some time and a lot of QA to get it just right. So, about a week ago, we decided to pencil in a smaller update—we wanted to add features many of you requested in your survey answers and user interviews. Enter v.1.2, a modest upgrade to our current crypto community platform.TL;DRFollow...
Notable timeline of Ripple and the SEC’s fight
XRP vs SEC timelineOne of the long-standing issues in the crypto market, the legal battle between Ripple and SEC has been going on for over two years. Let’s take a look at the notable timeline of Ripple and the SEC’s fight. · Dec 2020 The SEC filed a lawsuit against Ripple Labs, alleging that they had conducted an unregistered securities offering by selling XRPtokens. · Jan 2021 Ripple filed its initial response to the SEC’s lawsuit, denying the allegations and arguing that XRP is not a secur...
Console’s New Feature ‘Verify’: Distribute Discord Roles via Wallet Verification
We’ve added a new feature for NFT creators called ‘Verify.’ Creators can create and distribute roles based on certain criteria–currently, we only offer the ability to determine roles based on the number of NFTs held in a single wallet. After an NFT creator sets the minimum number for each role and adds our bot to a channel, holders can connect their wallet to automatically receive a role. The following is guide on how creators and holders can use our new feature, ‘Verify.’For NFT CreatorsAfte...
Not your ordinary crypto community. Catch alpha, trade better.
Share Dialog
Share Dialog

Subscribe to OG

Subscribe to OG

We’re happy to announce a new update to our site, NFT Terminal. In version 1.1, we’ve added the following features:
Discover–a page with NFT collection recommendations and trends
Collections–individual collection pages with market and rarity data
Light & Dark Mode UI–switch between a light and dark mode UI
Search–search for individual NFTs or NFT collections by name or contract address
In this article, we’ll cover how site visitors can use these new features.
“Discover” features various NFT collections grouped in several categories. In version 1.1, some content will update daily while other sections will update weekly. (Typically, we refresh our data at midnight UTC.)
All sections of NFT Terminal will feature a header with a search bar where users can search by collection or NFT ID. The header still features a gas tracker that displays gwei in real-time. Lastly, users can switch between a dark mode UI (the default) and a light mode UI.

NFT Terminal’s staff handpicks NFT collections for the main banner section. The staff selects collections that have made waves in the NFT space in either OpenSea, Looks Rare, Twitter, etc.

In this section, we automatically sort upcoming NFTs on the Ethereum blockchain by most upcoming to least upcoming. The staff has amassed a vast list of projects that have announced their listing via popular listing sites, Twitter, or other social media platforms.We’re always in search of new upcoming projects and will be preparing a listing form for creators who wish to be featured in “Upcoming.”

In NFT Terminal’s “Trending” section, NFT collections are ranked by volume in two time intervals: 24-hour volume and 7-day volume. NFT Terminal takes on-chain data and parses it everyday at 12:00 a.m. UTC or 8:00 p.m. EST. In future iterations of “Discover,” the development team plans on utilizing the on-chain data to provide more insights for NFT buyers and traders.

Handpicked by our editors, this section features a curated list of NFT collections based on a theme. For version 1.1’s launch, the staff has selected the following collection themes: women-led NFT projects and anime-inspired ones. This section will update two to four times a month.

“Discover” features a truncated version of “Live Feed” on the right panel (desktop version only). This section will feature the same categories found in “Live Feed”: “Notables,” “Sales,” “Mints,” and “Transfers.”

All collections listed in “Discover” or “Live Feed” link to a detailed page that lists a collection’s NFTs and rarity information. We utilize information readily available in a collection’s smart contract to provide these details.
Each “Collection” page displays a collection’s NFTs with relevant market data.
The collection can be sorted by …
Price: low to high
Price: high to low
Rarity: low to high
Rarity: high to low
ID
In addition, users can refresh a collection’s market and rarity data–the last time the collection has been updated is displayed next to the refresh button.

At the top of the page, we display basic stats and tags associated with the collection. If available, the page will display the collection’s market cap, volume, and floor price. Tags will include the blockchain associated with the collection’s smart contract, the number of NFTs held by Terminal’s “Notables,” and basic social media follower metrics. On the top-right corner, we display relevant links to a collection’s website, Twitter account, Discord channel, and Etherscan contract address.
NFT Terminal’s “Collection” page also includes a filter panel, which is closed by default. Users can filter by price, rarity score, and various properties determined by a collection’s smart contract.
We’ll be working internally to add more features and fine-tune our platform. We’ll also be posting weekly rankings on our Twitter account and may have an NFT giveaway soon, so stay tuned.
For the full press release, please download our media kit via Google Drive (link below).
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1JsmEp-MBpEKybgKspGlx1BuU_pzHn0q4?usp=sharing

We’re happy to announce a new update to our site, NFT Terminal. In version 1.1, we’ve added the following features:
Discover–a page with NFT collection recommendations and trends
Collections–individual collection pages with market and rarity data
Light & Dark Mode UI–switch between a light and dark mode UI
Search–search for individual NFTs or NFT collections by name or contract address
In this article, we’ll cover how site visitors can use these new features.
“Discover” features various NFT collections grouped in several categories. In version 1.1, some content will update daily while other sections will update weekly. (Typically, we refresh our data at midnight UTC.)
All sections of NFT Terminal will feature a header with a search bar where users can search by collection or NFT ID. The header still features a gas tracker that displays gwei in real-time. Lastly, users can switch between a dark mode UI (the default) and a light mode UI.

NFT Terminal’s staff handpicks NFT collections for the main banner section. The staff selects collections that have made waves in the NFT space in either OpenSea, Looks Rare, Twitter, etc.

In this section, we automatically sort upcoming NFTs on the Ethereum blockchain by most upcoming to least upcoming. The staff has amassed a vast list of projects that have announced their listing via popular listing sites, Twitter, or other social media platforms.We’re always in search of new upcoming projects and will be preparing a listing form for creators who wish to be featured in “Upcoming.”

In NFT Terminal’s “Trending” section, NFT collections are ranked by volume in two time intervals: 24-hour volume and 7-day volume. NFT Terminal takes on-chain data and parses it everyday at 12:00 a.m. UTC or 8:00 p.m. EST. In future iterations of “Discover,” the development team plans on utilizing the on-chain data to provide more insights for NFT buyers and traders.

Handpicked by our editors, this section features a curated list of NFT collections based on a theme. For version 1.1’s launch, the staff has selected the following collection themes: women-led NFT projects and anime-inspired ones. This section will update two to four times a month.

“Discover” features a truncated version of “Live Feed” on the right panel (desktop version only). This section will feature the same categories found in “Live Feed”: “Notables,” “Sales,” “Mints,” and “Transfers.”

All collections listed in “Discover” or “Live Feed” link to a detailed page that lists a collection’s NFTs and rarity information. We utilize information readily available in a collection’s smart contract to provide these details.
Each “Collection” page displays a collection’s NFTs with relevant market data.
The collection can be sorted by …
Price: low to high
Price: high to low
Rarity: low to high
Rarity: high to low
ID
In addition, users can refresh a collection’s market and rarity data–the last time the collection has been updated is displayed next to the refresh button.

At the top of the page, we display basic stats and tags associated with the collection. If available, the page will display the collection’s market cap, volume, and floor price. Tags will include the blockchain associated with the collection’s smart contract, the number of NFTs held by Terminal’s “Notables,” and basic social media follower metrics. On the top-right corner, we display relevant links to a collection’s website, Twitter account, Discord channel, and Etherscan contract address.
NFT Terminal’s “Collection” page also includes a filter panel, which is closed by default. Users can filter by price, rarity score, and various properties determined by a collection’s smart contract.
We’ll be working internally to add more features and fine-tune our platform. We’ll also be posting weekly rankings on our Twitter account and may have an NFT giveaway soon, so stay tuned.
For the full press release, please download our media kit via Google Drive (link below).
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1JsmEp-MBpEKybgKspGlx1BuU_pzHn0q4?usp=sharing
<100 subscribers
<100 subscribers
No activity yet