如何利用线上工具发掘和追踪区块链新项目
如何利用线上工具发掘和追踪区块链新项目 在区块链的世界中,如果我们能够做到监测正确的钱包地址,那么就有可能帮助你找到下一个10倍、100倍的机会,想要做到这一点,我们可以借助一些高效的区块链工具来实现。 接下来,我们将结合目前使用率最高的链上分析工具来帮大家做一个简单的梳理,希望能够对大家进一步深入区块链世界有所帮助。 1.为什么追踪链上信息是一件重要的事情呢? 首先,我们要明白的是,目前区块链世界中,一些聪明的资金方(比如巨鲸、VC)他们都是有内幕消息的,如果许多巨鲸同时开始购入一个项目的代币,那么这可能会表明该项目团队可能很快就会发布重要公告,这对于我们普通散户来说,跟着大佬去操作,从一定程度上可以降低我们自己瞎操作的风险,可以给我们的选币方向带来一定的优势。 我们来看下图(图1),这是一个具体的例子,通过链上数据追踪,有人发现一些新币种在上交易所之前,有人就会在链上钱包进行大额的操作,等新币正式上了交易所,币价一般都会有至少数倍的涨幅,而这些钱包就可以获得非常可观的利润。 而对于很多散户来说,等你发现某些新币上了交易所后,看着蹭蹭蹭的往上涨,这时候如果再追高进去,很有可能就...
干货:Dune Analytics 初学者完全指南(区块链)
Dune 可能是目前向公众提供的最强大的区块链数据分析工具,而最棒的是:它还是免费的! 通过 Dune,你可以通过一个公共数据库近乎实时地访问区块链数据,你可以通过 Dune 的网站使用 SQL 查询。 这是一个很大的能力。 Dune 在将区块链数据添加到他们的数据库之前对其进行解码,这意味着你不需要自己弄清字节码通信。相反,你可以使用 Dune 的数据集浏览器来浏览数据集、特定的智能合约、事件或调用 随着 Dune最近宣布他们的 V2 引擎,性能提高了 10 倍,现在是时候让你学习如何使用 Dune 了。 在本指南中,你将学习:第一部分:Dune 的界面第二部分:用 SQL 建立你自己的查询和图表 -- 从最基本的功能开始第三部分:将所有内容组织成一个仪表板在这个手把手教程中,我们将为 Pooly NFT 系列建立以下仪表盘的查询,本文较长,做好准备,学习完收获很大。 仪表盘是一个查询的集合,它被安排成一系列的图表、展示面板和其他信息,给用户提供关于特定兴趣领域的数据。下面,我打开了一个由传奇人物@hildobby制作的以太坊仪表盘。在这里,我们可以看到从 Dune 的数据库中...
Web3 从撸毛入门到精通
其实在很早之前,我就计划写一篇《Web3 新手教程》,送给 想要进入Web3 或者 刚刚进入Web3 的小伙伴,但是考虑到两点原因,我还是打算把这件事推迟一些时日。 一是在各大媒体都鼓吹 All In Web3 的时候,难免会有很多朋友头脑一热,辞去大厂的工作,怀揣着暴富的梦想,冲刺进入 Web3 行业。但是 这无论是对于行业还是你个人来说,都不是一件正确的事,我也不想在那个时候火上浇油。希望大家做任何事情之前都要经过理性的思考,不要被各种声音影响了自己的判断。现在,随着市场的逐渐冷却和越来越多质疑声音的出现,人们开始回归理性,大量的投机者也带着谩骂和空空的钱包离开了,这个时候你如果还深深热爱着这个行业,那么我认为你才是应该投身 Web3 的人,我也愿意把我的一些经验和思考分享出来,供大家参考。 二是我实在认为自己对行业的认知深度还不够,需要更多的时间研究项目、观察行业动向与社区情绪,不想早早地写篇所谓的教程误人子弟。当然有的朋友可能觉得现在进入 Web3 是不是太晚了?我想说, 你什么时候进入 Web3 都不晚,**区块链诞生才短短十几年,而同为前沿科技的人工智能诞生已经六十多...
如何利用线上工具发掘和追踪区块链新项目
如何利用线上工具发掘和追踪区块链新项目 在区块链的世界中,如果我们能够做到监测正确的钱包地址,那么就有可能帮助你找到下一个10倍、100倍的机会,想要做到这一点,我们可以借助一些高效的区块链工具来实现。 接下来,我们将结合目前使用率最高的链上分析工具来帮大家做一个简单的梳理,希望能够对大家进一步深入区块链世界有所帮助。 1.为什么追踪链上信息是一件重要的事情呢? 首先,我们要明白的是,目前区块链世界中,一些聪明的资金方(比如巨鲸、VC)他们都是有内幕消息的,如果许多巨鲸同时开始购入一个项目的代币,那么这可能会表明该项目团队可能很快就会发布重要公告,这对于我们普通散户来说,跟着大佬去操作,从一定程度上可以降低我们自己瞎操作的风险,可以给我们的选币方向带来一定的优势。 我们来看下图(图1),这是一个具体的例子,通过链上数据追踪,有人发现一些新币种在上交易所之前,有人就会在链上钱包进行大额的操作,等新币正式上了交易所,币价一般都会有至少数倍的涨幅,而这些钱包就可以获得非常可观的利润。 而对于很多散户来说,等你发现某些新币上了交易所后,看着蹭蹭蹭的往上涨,这时候如果再追高进去,很有可能就...
干货:Dune Analytics 初学者完全指南(区块链)
Dune 可能是目前向公众提供的最强大的区块链数据分析工具,而最棒的是:它还是免费的! 通过 Dune,你可以通过一个公共数据库近乎实时地访问区块链数据,你可以通过 Dune 的网站使用 SQL 查询。 这是一个很大的能力。 Dune 在将区块链数据添加到他们的数据库之前对其进行解码,这意味着你不需要自己弄清字节码通信。相反,你可以使用 Dune 的数据集浏览器来浏览数据集、特定的智能合约、事件或调用 随着 Dune最近宣布他们的 V2 引擎,性能提高了 10 倍,现在是时候让你学习如何使用 Dune 了。 在本指南中,你将学习:第一部分:Dune 的界面第二部分:用 SQL 建立你自己的查询和图表 -- 从最基本的功能开始第三部分:将所有内容组织成一个仪表板在这个手把手教程中,我们将为 Pooly NFT 系列建立以下仪表盘的查询,本文较长,做好准备,学习完收获很大。 仪表盘是一个查询的集合,它被安排成一系列的图表、展示面板和其他信息,给用户提供关于特定兴趣领域的数据。下面,我打开了一个由传奇人物@hildobby制作的以太坊仪表盘。在这里,我们可以看到从 Dune 的数据库中...
Web3 从撸毛入门到精通
其实在很早之前,我就计划写一篇《Web3 新手教程》,送给 想要进入Web3 或者 刚刚进入Web3 的小伙伴,但是考虑到两点原因,我还是打算把这件事推迟一些时日。 一是在各大媒体都鼓吹 All In Web3 的时候,难免会有很多朋友头脑一热,辞去大厂的工作,怀揣着暴富的梦想,冲刺进入 Web3 行业。但是 这无论是对于行业还是你个人来说,都不是一件正确的事,我也不想在那个时候火上浇油。希望大家做任何事情之前都要经过理性的思考,不要被各种声音影响了自己的判断。现在,随着市场的逐渐冷却和越来越多质疑声音的出现,人们开始回归理性,大量的投机者也带着谩骂和空空的钱包离开了,这个时候你如果还深深热爱着这个行业,那么我认为你才是应该投身 Web3 的人,我也愿意把我的一些经验和思考分享出来,供大家参考。 二是我实在认为自己对行业的认知深度还不够,需要更多的时间研究项目、观察行业动向与社区情绪,不想早早地写篇所谓的教程误人子弟。当然有的朋友可能觉得现在进入 Web3 是不是太晚了?我想说, 你什么时候进入 Web3 都不晚,**区块链诞生才短短十几年,而同为前沿科技的人工智能诞生已经六十多...
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
This piece is a collaboration between Tina He and Packy McCormick. Tina is the founder of Station, which I was lucky enough to invest in via Not Boring Capital, and the author of one of my favorite Substacks, Fakepixels. All the smart parts are hers.
When trying to understand tokens, it’s tempting to draw from what we already know.
Sometimes, tokens function like equity in a company, and owning a token is akin to holding a stake in the project’s potential upside. Other times, tokens function like a “token-of-gratitude” and symbolize goodwill among close friends in the purest sense. The wide-ranging role isn’t a bug but a feature representing value in the most abstract sense, whose meaning is given by the system's very design. In other words, a token doesn’t necessarily have any intrinsic value but relative value. It’s the encapsulation of a unit of value universally recognizable and enforceable by a system.
Tokens are barely a new concept. Shells and beads were the earliest types of tokens as a medium of exchange. Others that we’re familiar with today — casino chips, credit card points, stock certificates, concert tickets, and club memberships – are all forms of tokens as they represent a unit of value universally recognized and enforced by the system that issues that token. When the respective systems fail to enforce and recognize the value of these tokens, the jurisdiction can step in to protect the token holders.
Think about the last token you interacted with — What does it allow you to do that you otherwise cannot? Why are you holding it and want to own more of it? What happens if you discard or transfer ownership of your tokens? To many, the answer to these questions would be “getting even more tokens.” To others, holding tokens allows for participation rights in projects and communities that they care deeply about. The former speaks to the economics of holding a token, the latter to access rights.
A token design is poor when there’s value misalignment between value accrual in the system and value accrual to the token. Gabriel Shapiro aptly describes tokens like UNI, COMP, and the recently launched APE, as “value by association,” as he acutely identifies the fragmentation in value streams for the protocols aforementioned — the prime slice has been preserved for the insiders, while the “illusion of power” gets distributed to the rest.
One of the reasons that there is so much confusion around token design, and value accrual specifically, is that tokens, and the DAOs and protocols that issue them, are so multifaceted. Sometimes, the issuers want them to behave like shares in a corporation. Others issue “governance” rights to skirt regulations while insiders pump the tokens in the hope of getting out before the price tumbles. Others still want to build and unify digital nations. Often, even the issuers aren’t clear exactly what they want to do with the token, but they know that tokens are a great way to capture value.
While token design isn’t the only important aspect of creating a new protocol or digital economy – delivering value to users should always be priority #1 or else the token’s price will inevitably crumble – it’s a critical one. Just like a messy cap table can inflict mortal wounds on a startup or poor monetary policy can derail a nation’s economy, bad token design can doom a protocol before it even gets off the ground. The crypto graveyard is littered with examples of good projects whose token designs cemented their eventual demise from day one – maybe the tokenomics encouraged too much growth, too fast – and we’ll cover some of them here. There are others whose token designs allow them to do things that non-web3 companies can’t by properly aligning incentives in the system, and connecting the system to the larger ecosystem. We’ll cover those, too.
Why does it matter? Everything is falling apart. Terra collapsed largely thanks to its token design. Projects that attracted millions or billions of dollars with the promise of absurd APYs are learning the truth of the old adage, “Easy come, easy go.” The regulators are coming. Tokens that were worth a lot of fiat a couple weeks ago are worth a lot less today.
All of those reasons and more are exactly why it’s critical to understand good token design today. Not only because good token design can help avoid catastrophic outcomes, but because, assuming we’re entering a sustained bear market, now is the perfect time to experiment with novel token designs without the pressure of the expectation of high prices and “up only.”
Tokens are naturally economic; they have a price attached from inception, and are instantly tradeable on liquid, global, 24/7 markets. But tokens can be much more than that. They’re programmable primitives that allow DAOs and protocols to signal what matters in their ecosystem, to reward good participation, to trade with each other and build interconnected webs of support, and to support new forms of digital organizations and nations.
So what are you building? Are you building a club or a co-op, a corporation or a country?
Protocols can be all of the above, so we’ll start by walking through how they compare to companies and countries, before laying out a framework for token analysis, and imagining what the world will look like when the dust settles. We hope that it’s useful to the builders, contributors, and investors alike.
We know you wanted a break, anon, but it’s time to jump back down the rabbit hole.
This piece is a collaboration between Tina He and Packy McCormick. Tina is the founder of Station, which I was lucky enough to invest in via Not Boring Capital, and the author of one of my favorite Substacks, Fakepixels. All the smart parts are hers.
When trying to understand tokens, it’s tempting to draw from what we already know.
Sometimes, tokens function like equity in a company, and owning a token is akin to holding a stake in the project’s potential upside. Other times, tokens function like a “token-of-gratitude” and symbolize goodwill among close friends in the purest sense. The wide-ranging role isn’t a bug but a feature representing value in the most abstract sense, whose meaning is given by the system's very design. In other words, a token doesn’t necessarily have any intrinsic value but relative value. It’s the encapsulation of a unit of value universally recognizable and enforceable by a system.
Tokens are barely a new concept. Shells and beads were the earliest types of tokens as a medium of exchange. Others that we’re familiar with today — casino chips, credit card points, stock certificates, concert tickets, and club memberships – are all forms of tokens as they represent a unit of value universally recognized and enforced by the system that issues that token. When the respective systems fail to enforce and recognize the value of these tokens, the jurisdiction can step in to protect the token holders.
Think about the last token you interacted with — What does it allow you to do that you otherwise cannot? Why are you holding it and want to own more of it? What happens if you discard or transfer ownership of your tokens? To many, the answer to these questions would be “getting even more tokens.” To others, holding tokens allows for participation rights in projects and communities that they care deeply about. The former speaks to the economics of holding a token, the latter to access rights.
A token design is poor when there’s value misalignment between value accrual in the system and value accrual to the token. Gabriel Shapiro aptly describes tokens like UNI, COMP, and the recently launched APE, as “value by association,” as he acutely identifies the fragmentation in value streams for the protocols aforementioned — the prime slice has been preserved for the insiders, while the “illusion of power” gets distributed to the rest.
One of the reasons that there is so much confusion around token design, and value accrual specifically, is that tokens, and the DAOs and protocols that issue them, are so multifaceted. Sometimes, the issuers want them to behave like shares in a corporation. Others issue “governance” rights to skirt regulations while insiders pump the tokens in the hope of getting out before the price tumbles. Others still want to build and unify digital nations. Often, even the issuers aren’t clear exactly what they want to do with the token, but they know that tokens are a great way to capture value.
While token design isn’t the only important aspect of creating a new protocol or digital economy – delivering value to users should always be priority #1 or else the token’s price will inevitably crumble – it’s a critical one. Just like a messy cap table can inflict mortal wounds on a startup or poor monetary policy can derail a nation’s economy, bad token design can doom a protocol before it even gets off the ground. The crypto graveyard is littered with examples of good projects whose token designs cemented their eventual demise from day one – maybe the tokenomics encouraged too much growth, too fast – and we’ll cover some of them here. There are others whose token designs allow them to do things that non-web3 companies can’t by properly aligning incentives in the system, and connecting the system to the larger ecosystem. We’ll cover those, too.
Why does it matter? Everything is falling apart. Terra collapsed largely thanks to its token design. Projects that attracted millions or billions of dollars with the promise of absurd APYs are learning the truth of the old adage, “Easy come, easy go.” The regulators are coming. Tokens that were worth a lot of fiat a couple weeks ago are worth a lot less today.
All of those reasons and more are exactly why it’s critical to understand good token design today. Not only because good token design can help avoid catastrophic outcomes, but because, assuming we’re entering a sustained bear market, now is the perfect time to experiment with novel token designs without the pressure of the expectation of high prices and “up only.”
Tokens are naturally economic; they have a price attached from inception, and are instantly tradeable on liquid, global, 24/7 markets. But tokens can be much more than that. They’re programmable primitives that allow DAOs and protocols to signal what matters in their ecosystem, to reward good participation, to trade with each other and build interconnected webs of support, and to support new forms of digital organizations and nations.
So what are you building? Are you building a club or a co-op, a corporation or a country?
Protocols can be all of the above, so we’ll start by walking through how they compare to companies and countries, before laying out a framework for token analysis, and imagining what the world will look like when the dust settles. We hope that it’s useful to the builders, contributors, and investors alike.
We know you wanted a break, anon, but it’s time to jump back down the rabbit hole.
Subscribe to okscan.eth
Subscribe to okscan.eth
<100 subscribers
<100 subscribers
No activity yet