duongtd.eth
579 posts

duongtd.eth
@kamapcrazy
#dev #rnd #etherscaner #blockchain

I'm happy to announce @efp is now integrated into @etherscan! 🍾🍾🍾 on every account page click the "Cards" tab to see the account's @ensdomains name & avatar plus their onchain EFP follower/following counts 🔥 onchain social is very much alive, my friends




'@OKX_Ventures and @HashKey_Capital are now strategic partners of Vietnam Prosperity Crypto Asset Exchange (CAEX), joining founding shareholders VPBankS & LynkiD in meeting capital requirements for Vietnam's crypto asset trading pilot #CAEX #VPBankS #LynkiD #OKXVentures #Hashkey


dear @etherscan please allow for connecting any wallet easily 🤲

The indexers situation in EVM is pretty bad. And I am surprised how it's underdiscussed. Having access to correct history should be a must and not something hard to get or gated behind expensive apis. If you use etherscan you are fine. Their data is by far the most correct. But etherscan free does not work for @base or @Optimism. Now you may say no worries, use @bloskcscout or use @routescan. Good luck. For Base blosckscout is struggling to re-index the chain for months now. Routescan has given up. The reason is that it's really hard to index and they get no support from Base. Incidentally this is the same reason Etherscan has put both Optimism and Base behind a paid API. For optimism transactions before bedrock for both blockscout and Routescan return wrong data. They return no internal transactions for transactions that should have them. That means people relying on this data make wrong assumptions, accounting, taxes etc. I love etherscan and am super thankful for their persistence on accurate data. But ofc relying on only one indexer is not good. Not gonna lie the situation is pretty bleak for EVM history. I have personally stopped using the chains that are hard to index. For me data accuracy and its guarantee into the future is paramount.








This morning I needed to check which addresses were signers on my multisig. I was on my phone, and did not have the Safe app installed there. I realized that I could just look up my address on etherscan, and use the "read contract" feature to get what I want directly. These are the kinds of additional UX benefits you get if your wallet or application is open source and passes the walkaway test. Giving users access to alternative options often helps in unexpected situations much more mundane than the Safe website "walking away" outright. (Of course, this exact workflow will eventually have to break because privacy. One way to make an equivalent privacy-friendly workflow is that the user can save a "viewing key" that is an extended version of their address and also contains extra private info, and the block explorers can support it, putting the private info in the hashtag part of the url so it stays client side. Though this has the weakness that encouraging people to paste any kinds of secrets into URLs or webpages is risky; ultimately we just need to be able to do more things through your wallet directly)












