“Decentralisation” is the holy grail of blockchain technology that participants seek to achieve by expanding their network across many nodes and multiples geolocations. Web 3.0 requires a different approach that we will outline in this article.
UIs encompass all on-screen controls that support user interactions. As a framework, Substrate comes with an array of UI tools that facilitate designing for a wide range of users’ needs. Let’s examine some of them.
APIs are light-weight software that run between applications and are designed to help them consume data. In this article, we consider how Substrate-based APIs establish a robust programming layer for DApps that persists on top of recurring runtime upgrades.
DApps are programmes that run on blockchains but often underperform due to limited on-chain resources. Substrate establishes new models to enhance DApps functionalities and execution within a multi-chain ecosystem.
Web 3.0 is emerging with a strong narrative that is readily translated into code. Let’s compare and contrast some of the most popular frameworks in the growing web development space.
In this article, we explore how Substrate uses the FRAME framework to facilitate blockchain development.
This post presents some essential front-end components that are used to interact with a Substrate blockchain node.
From the Web 1.0 of the 90s to the Web 2.0 of the 2010s, users and developers alike seem to be in a perpetual race to catch up with digital technologies that forever elude them. But this doesn’t have to be the case. This series of articles gives an overview of Web 3.0 development with the Substrate Framework for Polkadot and Kusama.
Blockchain democracy commits today’s voting onto tomorrow’s stack. (Part 3/3: Verifiable identities)
In previous sections, we have explored the theoretical framework of Quadratic voting for Ethereum (Part 1) and the implementations of Mechanism designs on Polkadot (Part 2). This final section focuses on the concept of Verifiable identities as deployed on the Sovrin blockchain.
In the previous section, we have explored the theoretical framework of Quadratic voting for Ethereum (Part 1). This second section considers in details the Mechanism designs implemented on Polkadot.