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@bumblebeed11 I enjoyed reading this. Truly, you cannot enjoy the process of learning a skill if you're coming from a mindset of survival. Great things take time, and the process to attain them cannot be skipped.
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I stepped away from web3 security for a few months, this is what the break taught me.
A few months ago, back in May, I noticed I was struggling a lot with security work. Everything felt heavy, starting a project took so much energy that I ended most days completely drained. So after a certain experience I was felt the need to go in a different way. It wasn't a rational decision but my heart was pointing me to somewhere new.
During this break (actually it started with that experience), God taught me one big lesson: to trust myself. I followed my intuition wherever it led. I studied a lot about marketing, dove into spiritual and esoteric topics that completely reshaped how I see life, and even reconnected with music, producing and playing after years away.
Looking back, I now see why I felt so stuck before.
1. I was a little too attached to outcomes.
Everything I studied was about "making more money". That mindset comes from lack, and when you act from lack, life mirrors that back. The version of me who already "made it" wouldn't be chasing outcomes, they'd be enjoying the process.
2. I was acting from fear.
When we operate from survival mode, creativity dries up, and our inner compass turns off. True inspiration only flows when we're calm, grateful and present (I was always concerned about the future, trying to control everything).
3. I was trying to control everything.
I didn't trust myself or the process. I've since learned that our job with out monkey mind isn't to control every details, it's to follow what feels right and let life surprise us. When we stop clinging, new doors open that we could never have planned.
"the love inside your heart will guide you to places money can't buy"
Now, I feel genuinely excited to return to web3 security, not from fear, but from inspired action. Even though I stepped away for a while, deep down I always knew this is where I belong, and that my purpose is deeply connected to this field.
This time, I'm here to learn, to enjoy the process, and to follow what truly excited me. Let's see how it goes.
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@rosarioborgesi @panditdhamdhere Truthfully there was no better way to say it
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@panditdhamdhere If the foundations are not solid, the house will collapse on its own.
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Dream Continues 😄
Proof of Work kinda blew my mind today
I finally looked into how blockchains maintain fairness and resist attacks and wow.
Learned about:
Proof of Work (PoW): miners compete to solve cryptographic puzzles.
Nonce & Difficulty: the secret sauce that decides how hard mining gets.
Dynamic Difficulty: automatically adjusts to keep block times stable.
51% Attack Prevention: making sure no single entity can rewrite history.
It’s fascinating how math and game theory combine to keep a network honest.
Every block mined feels like solving a riddle that secures the world
Next stop: guess 😅
code: github.com/blockchainBard…


blockchainBard::Move (Build arc) 🌍@web3Bard101
From Hashes to Whole Blockchains Last time, I was geeking out over SHA-256. Today? I leveled up, built my first Blockchain class in TypeScript 🤓 Now my blockchain can: ✅ Add new blocks ✅ Validate if a chain is legit ✅ Replace itself with a longer, valid chain (like a true distributed ledger) It’s wild how it all comes together; blocks, hashes, validation logic; the same core principles that power networks like $Sui, $Bitcoin, and $Ethereum. Slowly moving from 'curious dev' to 'I built that' 💪🔐 Next stop: guess 😅 code: github.com/blockchainBard…
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After an intense 3 days of getting more familiar with @certora, it looks like I was able to write a first successful rule: having the YieldCoin Rebalancer pausing successful. Feeling way more comfortable now and the UI makes a lot of sense now. Progress...

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Finished with the Wallet.
Audit by @Web3_Vinay
Frontend and Smart Contract by Me.
On to the next.

KELECHI KIZITO UGWU@0xkelechii
Disabled the add signer button after the max signers has been reached.
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Currently part of the Women in Ethereum Protocol Cohort 4 @wiepteam, and it’s been such an incredible experience so far!
we’ve been learning about the ethereum layers and contributing to repos, and the most exciting part….. my PR got merged yesterday!!!
Huge milestone for me☺️

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On this day, October 20, 2025, I got my EVM certification.
-Thank you @AlchemyLearn for providing the platform that made this possible
-Thank you @gabrieldegiuli and @LTebbs2 for answering my questions when I was confused
-Thank you @obed_tech for not allowing me to give up😂

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Today I wrote more documentation for Compose, the new smart contract library I am working on. Sharing with you here:
Purpose of Compose
The purpose of Compose is to help people create smart contract systems. We want to help them do that quickly, securely, confidently, with understanding, and with the functionality they want. Nothing is more important than this purpose.
Vision
Compose is an effort to apply software engineering principles specifically to a smart contract library.
Smart contracts are not like other software, so let's not treat them like other software. We need to re-evaluate knowledge of programming and software engineering specifically as it applies to smart contracts. Let's really look at what smart contracts are and design and write our library for specifically what we are dealing with.
What we are dealing with:
1. Smart contracts are immutable. Once deployed, the source code for a smart contract doesn't change.
2. Smart contracts are forever. Once deployed, smart contracts can run or exist forever.
3. Smart contracts are shared. Once deployed, smart contracts can be seen and accessed by anyone.
4. Smart contracts run on a distributed network. Once deployed, smart contracts are running within the capabilities and constraints of the Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) and the blockchain network it was deployed on.
5. Smart contracts must be secure. Once deployed, there can be very serious consequences if their is a bug or security vulnerability in a smart contract.
6. Smart contracts are written in a specific language. In our case our library is written in the Solidity programming language.
If we gather all knowledge about programming and software engineering that has ever existed and will exist, including what you know and what you will soon learn or know, and we evaluate that knowledge as it can best apply specifically to a smart contract library, to create the best smart contract library possible, what do we end up with? Hopefully we end up with what Compose becomes.
Design
The design and implementation of Compose is based on the following design principles, given in order of importance and emphasis by the project.
1. Understanding
This is the top design and guiding principle of this project. We help our users understand the things they want to know so they can confidently achieve what they are trying to do. This is why we must have very good documentation, and why we write easy to read and understand code. Understanding leads to solutions, creates confidence, kills bugs and gets things done. Understanding is everything. So let's nuture it and create it everywhere.
The code is written to be read
More to come!
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obed🤖🔺 retweetledi

Compose, the new smart contract library I am working is now open to contributors. I invite you to work with me on this new endeavor. To get started, read the README here: github.com/Perfect-Abstra…
#OpenSource #smartcontracts #library #solidity
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All the best things in life start with a G:
• gelatine
• glycine
• goulash
• gelatinous soup
• ginger
• gowns
• girl
• grass fed beef
• grounding
• going on vacation
• God
• glossy hair
• glucose metabolism
• goat milk
• gold
• glowing skin
• goats cheese
• Gregorian chants
• gentlemen
• Georgian wine
• good lighting
• garlic butter
• Greek mythology
• growth
• grace
• good digestion
• genuine laughter
• grand pianos
• gym
• gossip with gfs
• golden hour
• gardens
• goblets 🍷
• Greek cheese
• glitter
• girlfriend
• grand hotels
• grapes
• ghee-fried livers
• glutathione
• getting away with it
• guillotine
What else
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