
It’s the most wonderful time (hot emin summer) of the year. Lock in. $hotemin on avax 🔺
6𝒊𝒊𝒙𝒕𝒕𝒚🎒
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@6iixtty
Trader 📈|| Community manager || Moderator || Collab Manager

It’s the most wonderful time (hot emin summer) of the year. Lock in. $hotemin on avax 🔺



The Beaks by @DKashtalyan May 26, 3 PM UTC. A universe built over 20 years enters its next chapter. On @OpenSea Launchpad. opensea.io/collection/the…





We’re going to be posting some very good car deals. Stay tuned and follow us 🫶🏽





We’re going to be posting some very good car deals. Stay tuned and follow us 🫶🏽


Nobody thinks about the lock on their door until someone tries to break in. That's where most blockchains are with quantum computing right now the lock works, but a much stronger key is being built in the background and the timeline is getting shorter every year. Almost every major chain secures transactions with cryptography that quantum computers will eventually be able to break. Not today, not tomorrow but the direction is clear enough that Google has already started migrating its own infrastructure away from it. When Google moves, it's usually worth paying attention. Miden was built with quantum resistance from the start. By the time other chains are scrambling to retrofit a solution, Miden won't need to. @0xMiden




GLiFS What started years ago as 30 sketches has evolved into 300 animated symbols. Now, 3000 collector-made compositions will be built by you, using a co-creation process ~$20 each (reflected in ETH on mint day) Launching June 3 in partnership w/ @opensea + @transientlabs ↓


You know how gas fees spike the moment everyone rushes to mint the same thing? a free mint that would cost $0.30 or $1 to mint spikes to $20 when the queue keeps getting longer. That's everyone fighting over the same single lane of traffic. One queue, one network, everyone waiting behind everyone else. Miden is built differently. Your transaction runs on your own device and has nothing to do with what anyone else is doing at the same time, so they never compete for the same space. Two people transacting simultaneously on Miden are essentially in their own lanes they run independently, settle cleanly, and neither one slows the other down. Most chains treat congestion as a scaling problem to solve later. Miden's architecture just doesn't create it in the first place. @0xMiden