moonbeam
polygon-edge
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moonbeam | polygon-edge | |
---|---|---|
65 | 79 | |
874 | 946 | |
2.5% | 2.3% | |
9.4 | 9.4 | |
6 days ago | 10 days ago | |
TypeScript | Go | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
moonbeam
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Discover our native token: SEDC
SEDC, is supported by the Moonbeam, Polkadot, and Celo technology.
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If you had 10k to invest in the DOTSAMA environment during the bear market, would you go all in...
Moonbeam | Polkadot Smart Contract Platform
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Devconnect: Chronological View
Then there was a guy from Moonbeam. They built an EVM-compatible para-chain on Polkadot.
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Polkadot (DOT) is incredibly undervalued - parachains launch Dec 18! Here are some facts to celebrate.
There are some very serious projects launching via the PLO system within the next month. Moonbeam, https://moonbeam.network/, and Acala, https://acala.network/. These projects have already launched sister tokens against Kusama. Moonbeam is a bridge to Ethereum. Acala is the leading stable coin for the DOT ecosystem.
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Acala Wins the First (ever!) Polkadot Parachain Slot!
In the final days, it was a very close race between Moonbeam and Acala, with each project raising over 34 million and 32 million DOT, respectively.
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Voting on the first round of Polkadot Parachain Slot Auction has begun. Heres a short overview of all projects that aim to snatch a spot as parachain!
Moonbeam: A smart contract EVM parachain bridging Ethereum Solidity smart contracts to the Polkadot ecosystem
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Using Parallel Finance to participate in Polkadot's Crowdloans
Moonbeam
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How do I prepare DOT for the Parachain auction?
Certainly read up on the Parachain projects, I have consolidated my choices to Moonbeam, Astar, Acala, and Phala. I suspect the reveal of when the Polkadot auctions will be announced Oct 13th, During the sub0 conference.
- Polkadot Parachain Auctions: Best Participants Discussion
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Ankr in Q2
Moonbeam: Moonbeam’s powerful Ethereum compatibility enables Ankr to port its Ethereum-based code to Polkadot with minimal to no changes required.
polygon-edge
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Build blockchain with Polygon Edge
$ git clone https://github.com/0xPolygon/polygon-edge.git $ cd polygon-edge/ $ go build -o polygon-edge main.go $ sudo mv polygon-edge /usr/local/bin
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Best way to run a "standing" development chain?
Look into Polygon Edge
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Ethereum L2 Optimism Sees 500% Growth in Active Users Since July
Polygon is crushing it in their own right. The best business development skills in the game. They have a multitude of ZK solutions on the way with only Polygon Edge being live right now. Definitely a big player, more so when their ZK solutions are on the mainnet.
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What is the best way to learn ethereum?
read Mastering Ethereum. If you are looking to make your own sidechain, I'd also look at Polygon Edge. It's much easier to understand what is happening under the hood there.
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BDGR Tokens from Black Dragon & Proteck Capital (How to reclaim)
2-Go to Polygone (https://polygon.technology)
- Why build anything on ethereum network???
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Bridging in Crypto: from Surge to Lifestyle
If you bridge BNB — Binance Smart Chain’s native BEP-20 token — to Polygon, a wrapped BNB-equivalent, ERC-20 token will be deposited to your wallet, connected to Polygon. This allows you to take advantage of potentially higher yields on farms and tap on liquidity that would otherwise not be available on the Binance Chain, for example.
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Layer 1 vs. Layer 2
Similar to how Layer 1 networks have different approaches to consensus, each layer 2 network will implement a scaling solution, or means to map transactions back to its layer 1. For instance, a commonly discussed layer 2 scaling solution is the implementation of zero-knowledge rollups. The idea is that a side-chain performs transaction ordering and processing and submits mathematical proof that they have processed the transactions fairly. Some examples of layer two scaling solutions are the Lightning Network, Polygon, and Starknet. The majority of scaling layer two solutions depend on cryptographic systems. For resources on the cryptography behind zero knowledge proofs I recommend this resource. The watered down version of what is happening, is that a mathematical proof is created by a verifier that some knowledge is correct.
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Too expensive to use. (Dont get mad)
As for which L2s to use, the two most commonly used ones right now are Polygon and Arbitrum, but there are others (18 right now, 19 if you include Polygon). L2Beat is a good site to use to look at the different L2s available and compare them, and L2Fees is good to use to compare fees between different L2s and the L1 chain.
There's generally three different types of L2s in use right now: - Side chains, which are technically not L2s, but most people consider them to be L2s. The main one is Polygon, but there are others. These are entirely new blockchains with their own consensus and security, that support the EVM (the engine at the heart of Ethereum) and many of the same dapps that are on Ethereum, that are connected to Ethereum (or even other chains) via a bridge. - Optimistic rollups, which are true L2s. The two main ones right now are Arbitrum and Optimism. These are harder to explain, but are basically special contracts on the Ethereum L1 that take a bunch of transactions (both from the Ethereum L1 and from within the rollup itself), will execute them off the L1 chain (allowing them to be executed much, much faster), and will then post transaction data onto the L1 chain, where transactions are secured by the L1 chain. These support the EVM, and are somewhat comparable to side chains in how much they reduce fees, but are much more secure than side chains, since rollups in general piggyback off the L1 chain for their transaction security and decentralisation. - ZK rollups. There's a few, the main ones right now being Loopring and dYdX, with StarkNet being a promising one that I'll talk about at the end. Like optimistic rollups, ZK rollups are the same special contracts that execute transactions off chain and post data on chain, but ZK rollups are more secure and faster/cheaper than optimistic rollups, with one major downfall: the (current) lack of EVM compatibility. ZK rollups at the moment do not support the EVM, and so cannot support any dapps whatsoever, with dapp-esque features having to be built directly into the rollup (Loopring is a decentralised exchange in rollup form, as is dYdX, for example). It's best to think of these as single applications, but work is being done to make an EVM-compatible ZK rollup, in the form of StarkNet. If StarkNet is successful, we should see dapp ecosystems flourish in ZK rollups, like they have in side chains and optimistic rollups.
What are some alternatives?
Astar - The dApp hub for blockchains of the future
Acala - Acala - cross-chain DeFi hub and stablecoin based on Substrate for Polkadot and Kusama.
cosmos-sdk - :chains: A Framework for Building High Value Public Blockchains :sparkles:
hardhat - Hardhat is a development environment to compile, deploy, test, and debug your Ethereum software.
Tailwind CSS - A utility-first CSS framework for rapid UI development.
chainlink - node of the decentralized oracle network, bridging on and off-chain computation
substrate - Substrate: The platform for blockchain innovators
ckb - The Nervos CKB is a public permissionless blockchain, and the layer 1 of Nervos network.
protocols - A zkRollup DEX & Payment Protocol
l2beat - L2BEAT is an analytics and research website about Ethereum layer two (L2) scaling solutions.
optimism - Optimism is Ethereum, scaled.