ens
v1-contracts
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ens | v1-contracts | |
---|---|---|
293 | 2 | |
1,140 | 362 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
7 months ago | about 3 years ago | |
JavaScript | Python | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
ens
- Show HN: Prototype for ETH Signing for endorsing Wikipedia updates
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Don't trust, verify: Indexing ENS Domains with Subsquid
While creating these tutorials, I choose Ethereum Name Service as an example, because it's a famous project, and quite frankly, also because I take these changes to study some subjects I am interested in (sue me! 😛).
- Domain registrar Gandi gets bought out, screws existing customers
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Domain Names as Handles in Bluesky
> I hope this idea catches on
This already exists with Ethereum Name Service (ENS) https://ens.domains and Sign-in With Ethereum.
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Binance to Suspend US Dollar Bank Transfers
ENS is my go to example for something novel and useful that Ethereum enables. Instantly propagating private key based DNS.
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Nostr.how – A Complete Guide to Nostr
One of the first applications of blockchains was DNS. (Namecoin) ENS is a modern form. (https://ens.domains)
I would say there's still some degree of centrality for ENS, but it is more decentralized than DNS.
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Ethereum Name Service ($ENS) is Airdropping Tokens worth up to 5000$ for the first 1000 People To Claim it.
This is a scam. The real url is ens.domains, not ens.com.
- How do I register my address to a short, meaningful name? I have seen a lot with word and .eth - thanks!
- Its been a whole cycle now.
- $850 USD to renew your own .dev domain which is owned by Google, insane
v1-contracts
- Are there any interesting projects that are backed by "small" smart contracts?
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Ethereum Isn't Fun Anymore
If you're working on "large Ethereum smart contracts" you've missed the point. On chain logic should always be as minimal as possible. Uniswap v1 was two vyper files. One was 46 lines, and the other was 496 lines[1]. It took like 20 minutes to read through the code thoroughly, and was one of the most impactful contracts ever deployed to the network.
Solidity also matured a lot, which is why Uniswap v2 moved back. If you find yourself writing an EVM assembler from scratch, and you're trying to build something other than a compiler, you have veered way way off course, and need to re-evaluate your system architecture.
Feature creep might work well if you're trying to leech money from a government contract or something, or being paid by line of code you contribute, but it's fatal in the Ethereum world. I consulted for a number of projects that made the exact same mistake, and most of them aren't around anymore.
[1] https://github.com/Uniswap/uniswap-v1/tree/master/contracts
What are some alternatives?
ipfs - Peer-to-peer hypermedia protocol
v2-periphery - 🎚 Peripheral smart contracts for interacting with Uniswap V2
namecoin.org - Namecoin.org website in Jekyll -- send PR's to beta branch, then merge into master and gh-pages
homebrew-golem - Golem is creating a global market for computing power.
flow-nft - The non-fungible token standard on the Flow blockchain
pyteal - Algorand Smart Contracts in Python
rainbow - 🌈‒ the Ethereum wallet that lives in your pocket
quadrable - Authenticated multi-version database: sparse binary merkle tree with compact partial-tree proofs
ens-app - Legacy ENS manager app
solana - Web-Scale Blockchain for fast, secure, scalable, decentralized apps and marketplaces.
arweave - The Arweave server and App Developer Toolkit.
dfktools - Interact with the contracts of DefiKingdoms