This concept sounds similar to Crypto Compare's public portfolios: https://www.cryptocompare.com/portfolio-public/#/overview. I don't think you can comment on them, however.
Celo invites all countries to mobile defi solutions. I like that they act with the motto of prosperity for all. Together with this Hackathon, they will continue to implement mobile solutions. I'm sure many developers will agree with this. It will be delightful to create Web3 applications in popular areas such as NFT, DeFi, gaming. Moreover, there is the opportunity to work with many successful business people.
Hi,
Me and my friends created an app called cryptohype (https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.anmol.coinpanda) It scrapes positive tweets from official coin handles on twitter and it also fetches pinned messages from telegram for the coins which are in ico stage, thus save time and organises everything in one place. The data can be used to trade on positive news, many people have done it previously as the tweets are posted within a minute on app. I will like to invite you to try it and give us your comments in the telegram group or maybe you can collaborate with us if you can help it make better. Website- www.cryptohype.live
Probably by looking for grants. See whether you can build what other projects are looking for and get in touch.
Example:
https://www.notion.so/satoshipay/Pendulum-Grant-Program-b38f44726d034e0bbe7286300f999df4
If you are really serious, you should accept the fact that it's going to take a lot of effort to really get competent (at least a year of committed study and practice).
It would make sense to start with frontend web development. Check out freeCodeCamp:
This will give you an intro to making user interfaces in the web browser. Once you have progressed past that and are comfortable with using javascript to make the user interfaces actually do stuff, you should at least get familiar with some backend development (you can skip this step - depending on your project, smart contracts will essentially be your backend - but it's valuable to understand and I would highly recommend learning it).
Then you can look into some web3 and smart contract tutorials. I learnt through Dapp University and cryptoZombies.
We created a multifaucet android app at: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.multifaucet.app currently delivering ropsten and rinkeby eth, might add more later if it goes as wanted. For more info try it out or Dm me directly
Thanks, yeah, the Ethereum docs are full of tons of great info. They're doing a lot of the heavy lifting as far as getting people up to speed with crypto goes. And they do recommend that newcomers just read all of it, which is good, but it can get overwhelming and it's starting to feel disorganized. No big deal though - that's a standard problem with really thorough documentation - same as Stripe: https://stripe.com/docs
You have to really know what you're looking for, or read the whole thing, or spend a while browsing to find it at the risk of missing something important.
now also on product hunt, https://www.producthunt.com/posts/fochoc-keep-an-eye-on-your-crypto-portfolio-anytime-in-the-terminal
Job announces are on Twitter, Telegram or teams website. For example you can see our job board at https://status.im/our_team/open_positions.html for: - Nimbus eth2 client - Protocol engineering for decentralized P2P messaging.
You can also find some on more traditional websites like angel.co.
In Eth2, the Ethereum Foundation did drive the consensus and cryptographic spec but there is constant back-and-forth with implementers on the feasibility of it. For serialization and networking its client teams that drove the spec and implementations.
> background is in economics and finance
That is really awesome and one of the best backgrounds for this space.
As for the tech background, to add up to what others said, I recommend that you start with Blockchain Basics: A Non-Technical Introduction in 25 Steps. This is one of the best books there and I've been recommending it to everyone with a similar to yours question for almost 4 years now without fail.
Once you get through the book, you'll have a sort of map in your head on where to move next and what to learn from the technical perspective.
And yeah like others said—learn Solidity. Just get there and go from scratch to a deployed contract on an Ethereum network. It's not that difficult and you'll get the feeling and what it's like first hand.
When you have some grasp of Solidity and the associated toolchain, you'll have a grasp of all the geth-based networks there (Ethereum-based), of which there are a lot—polygon (matic), binance smart chain etc.
Just go through a step-by-step tutorial, for example this one Trust fund account with Remix.
Me and my friends created an app called cryptohype (https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.anmol.coinpanda) It scrapes positive tweets from official coin handles on twitter and it also fetches pinned messages from telegram for the coins which are in ico stage, thus save time and organises everything in one place. The data can be used to trade on positive news, many people have done it previously as the tweets are posted within a minute on app. I will like to invite you to try it and give us your comments in the telegram group or maybe you can collaborate with us if you can help it make better. Website- www.cryptohype.live