Tableland is a permissionless database that allows developers to use relational data and SQL from any contract, wallet, or app.

The Quest for a Content Addressable SQLite
Happy Birthday SQLite! SQLite 1.0 was released 23 years ago today, so to celebrate this momentous occasion, join us on an exciting quest as we blend the old with the new, the familiar with the cutting-edge, and dare to dream of a future where edge databases and content addressable storage work together. Our destination? An experimental project to combine SQLite's features with the high performance, scalability, and deduplication capabilities of Content Addressable Storage (CAS). We’ll pr...

Discord Roles from Chain-driven Application Data
What Is It?The Tableland team is excited to introduce our new Discord<>Tableland bot integration—linking on/off-chain retribution back to Discord roles! Namely, developers can create/deploy this bot as an extension to Vulcan using its native features. It allows the bot to read data from an application’s Tableland tables and use it in Discord user/role management—all with a decentralized cloud database!Why Did We Do It?Vulcan is great for checking Discord member NFT ownership and creating role...

Welcome to Tableland
Today, we are excited to announce Tableland, where we are building a novel protocol to enable relational tables and SQL in Web3. In Tableland, we believe the new app stack is NFTs and DAOs. Apps are no longer user interfaces sitting on top of a pile of APIs. Now apps are human experiences that optimize for features like ownership, belonging, access control, and participation. Many of the people buying NFTs today are buying them for the experiences they confer. As the creators of those experie...

The Quest for a Content Addressable SQLite
Happy Birthday SQLite! SQLite 1.0 was released 23 years ago today, so to celebrate this momentous occasion, join us on an exciting quest as we blend the old with the new, the familiar with the cutting-edge, and dare to dream of a future where edge databases and content addressable storage work together. Our destination? An experimental project to combine SQLite's features with the high performance, scalability, and deduplication capabilities of Content Addressable Storage (CAS). We’ll pr...

Discord Roles from Chain-driven Application Data
What Is It?The Tableland team is excited to introduce our new Discord<>Tableland bot integration—linking on/off-chain retribution back to Discord roles! Namely, developers can create/deploy this bot as an extension to Vulcan using its native features. It allows the bot to read data from an application’s Tableland tables and use it in Discord user/role management—all with a decentralized cloud database!Why Did We Do It?Vulcan is great for checking Discord member NFT ownership and creating role...

Welcome to Tableland
Today, we are excited to announce Tableland, where we are building a novel protocol to enable relational tables and SQL in Web3. In Tableland, we believe the new app stack is NFTs and DAOs. Apps are no longer user interfaces sitting on top of a pile of APIs. Now apps are human experiences that optimize for features like ownership, belonging, access control, and participation. Many of the people buying NFTs today are buying them for the experiences they confer. As the creators of those experie...
Tableland is a permissionless database that allows developers to use relational data and SQL from any contract, wallet, or app.

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We started this blog and our Weeknotes newsletter on Substack to give the community insight into the latest happenings with Tableland. Since then, we began research and experiments around web3-native data needs—which led to the MVP for Basin. Our blogs started to incorporate topics outside of the core Tableland database, but everything we’ve shared has been built by the team behind the protocol—Textile.
ICYMI—Mirror and Paragraph are joining forces (see here), so moving from Mirror to Paragraph was inevitable. For reference, Paragraph is a web3-native blog + newsletter service. And since we’ve been publishing about Textile-built products under “Tableland” handles, we decided it was time to consolidate everything from both Mirror and Substack to Paragraph under a single @textileio handle.
You can find all of our blogs at https://blog.textile.io (it’s using Paragraph under the hood).
Nothing! We’ll export all of our Substack and Mirror subscribers and import them to Paragraph. Starting next week, you’ll automatically receive the Weeknotes newsletter in your inbox!
If you’re in a similar position, Paragraph makes it super simple to migrate your existing articles and subscribers from Substack and Mirror. After signing up, you’ll have a dashboard page to edit your settings—including the import/export page. Here, you can just drop in an RSS link.
For example, with our existing Tablealnd Substack and Mirror, the RSS feed can be found by appending a specific URI on the domain:
Substack: append /feed—for example, https://tableland.substack.com/feed
Mirror: append /feed/atom—for example, https://mirror.xyz/tableland.eth/feed/atom
And that’s (basically) it! There also might be some steps for exporting subscribers or content regarding who published the article, but that’s the gist of it.
We started this blog and our Weeknotes newsletter on Substack to give the community insight into the latest happenings with Tableland. Since then, we began research and experiments around web3-native data needs—which led to the MVP for Basin. Our blogs started to incorporate topics outside of the core Tableland database, but everything we’ve shared has been built by the team behind the protocol—Textile.
ICYMI—Mirror and Paragraph are joining forces (see here), so moving from Mirror to Paragraph was inevitable. For reference, Paragraph is a web3-native blog + newsletter service. And since we’ve been publishing about Textile-built products under “Tableland” handles, we decided it was time to consolidate everything from both Mirror and Substack to Paragraph under a single @textileio handle.
You can find all of our blogs at https://blog.textile.io (it’s using Paragraph under the hood).
Nothing! We’ll export all of our Substack and Mirror subscribers and import them to Paragraph. Starting next week, you’ll automatically receive the Weeknotes newsletter in your inbox!
If you’re in a similar position, Paragraph makes it super simple to migrate your existing articles and subscribers from Substack and Mirror. After signing up, you’ll have a dashboard page to edit your settings—including the import/export page. Here, you can just drop in an RSS link.
For example, with our existing Tablealnd Substack and Mirror, the RSS feed can be found by appending a specific URI on the domain:
Substack: append /feed—for example, https://tableland.substack.com/feed
Mirror: append /feed/atom—for example, https://mirror.xyz/tableland.eth/feed/atom
And that’s (basically) it! There also might be some steps for exporting subscribers or content regarding who published the article, but that’s the gist of it.
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