Galxe x Dabba Network

Recorded: April 30, 2025 Duration: 0:44:48
Space Recording

Short Summary

Daba Network is set to launch its token soon while expanding its wireless infrastructure project in India, aiming to connect millions. The company has partnered with WeatherXM for weather data collection and Bonk for community engagement, marking significant growth with over 100,000 devices connected.

Full Transcription

Music Thank you. I'm going to go to the next video. Music Thank you. welcome welcome glad to be back for another great week and another fantastic space for those that may listen in now or listen in later.
I just want to thank you for taking the time to join us today, whether it's your morning, afternoon or night.
I know we have people from all over the world that listen in either later on or join us right now.
So we are here with Daba Network today.
We have Karam joining us.
Let's go ahead and dive into it.
Let's start with an intro to yourself, Karam,
just to give us a little bit about you and your background.
Yeah, thank you so much for doing this space.
Really excited to be here.
I'm Karam.
I'm one of the co-founders of Daba.
My mission in life is to make a difference to internet connectivity around the world.
I love that.
Honestly, I think that it's a really important aspect worldwide that really
does need to be taken very seriously. I think everybody should have the right to connectivity
and access the internet worldwide. I fully agree with you there. And with that obviously
being a big part of Daba, would you be able to give us your best overview of the project maybe as well as its kind
of initial journey? Yeah I'm for sure really excited to do that. So I think the best way to
talk about this is emerging markets around the world you know places like India, lots of Africa, lots of countries in South
America, that sort of thing, has a really hard time building good infrastructure for
a variety of reasons, right?
It's, you don't have great power networks, power generation plants, power transmission,
that sort of thing.
You don't have great connectivity, roads, things along those lines.
And that's because it's incredibly expensive and incredibly time-consuming to execute projects like this.
And we think that, you know, there's a better way you can do this.
If you coordinate the right number of people and give them the right set of incentives,
these big infrastructure projects can absolutely be tackled and incredibly empowering things
can be done for the world.
And we think that crypto and specifically the deepened space within crypto is the best way to do this.
So for anyone that's listening, let me just give you a little bit about background of what deepened is.
If this is the first time that you're hearing this concept.
Deepened basically. Of course.
Oh, sorry. Yeah. Deepened basically stands for decentralized physical infrastructure, right? The idea here is you can use crypto to incentivize people to contribute either time, labor, capital,
or hardware or actual expertise to solve one of these real world problems.
Really good examples of things like this from the last two, three years in the crypto community
that have really taken off are HiveMapper, for example, is a great one.
So HiveMapper is a service where you install this little dash cam in your car.
And as you drive around, it records all of that data and uses it to create real time maps.
data and uses it to create real-time maps, right? Because maps right now in the world
are centralized by Google or other players. And this allows us to create decentralized
maps of the world and more interestingly, fresher maps, right? Because a Google car,
for example, drives down the street maybe once a year. But if you have this distributed
feet of people mapping all of the time, you now get live map data. And HiveMapper has been insanely successful. I think in the last
two, three years, they've done a fair chunk of the world already. And now it's not so much about
just mapping parts, but making sure that you get as fresh imagery and mapping data as possible.
And the people that do the driving, do the contributing, get HiveMapper, honey tokens
in return.
So that's in the mapping area.
Another really good area to sort of bring us closer to what we're doing is there's a
project called Helium.
And their idea is basically that in a lot of places in the US,
cell phone coverage is not good enough, right?
Verizon, T-Mobile, AT&T don't have enough towers,
enough places to give good enough service for everybody.
So what they do is you can buy a hotspot,
a wifi hotspot from Helium.
It looks exactly like the wifi hotspot
that you probably have in your home or office. You can buy one of their hotspots and install it in your house or in a cafe
or somewhere. And anyone that's using the T-Mobile network, their phone will automatically roam onto
your Wi-Fi hotspot to fill gaps in coverage. So these Wi-Fi hotspots actually behave like tiny cell phone towers.
So Helium is using people and coordinating them to build sort of distributed cellular
infrastructure to support bigger telcos.
And they're phenomenally successful at this.
I think they just hit almost 1 million daily active users or something along those lines.
And they have almost a hundred thousand hotspots deployed across the U S.
And I think that goes to show that you can, these two examples go to show that
you can tackle problems like this.
So we were deeply inspired by things along these lines.
And we took a look at places in the world that I mentioned earlier,
emerging markets where infrastructure problems exist.
And there's this opportunity to build out giant, great infrastructure. And that's the area that
we want to contribute to. So Daba's focus is on building wireless infrastructure and we're
starting in India. The reason that we're doing this is India is this unique snowflake in the world.
We are the second largest telecom market.
There are 800 million mobile subscribers in India using 4G and 5G.
Indians consume the highest amount of data in the world.
The average Indian does something close to 40 gigabytes a month just on their phone.
And millions, if not hundreds of millions of Indians have dual SIM cards.
Data consumption has doubled something like 3x over the last five years.
So you've got this insane data boom.
But the thing in India is broadband networks like Wi-Fi never got built out because India took
this giant development leap where we went straight from barely any old school landlines
straight into mobile.
So now that you have an exploding amount of demand for data in India, the race is on to
build out these broadband networks.
these broadband networks. And this is the area that Dabba specifically contributes to.
And this is the area that Dabba specifically contributes to.
Basically, what we do is we align all of the stakeholders necessary, and I can dive into
the detail of that later, but we align all of the stakeholders necessary that it takes to deliver
super fast, super cheap broadband Wi-Fi to people in their homes, offices, and everywhere. And so far,
this approach for us over the last two years has been incredibly successful.
We've sold nearly 12,000 hotspots.
So basically, the way our service works
is anyone, anywhere in the world, so if you're sitting
in the US and listening to this, or you're in Europe,
you can go to Daba.com, you can buy a hotspot and we will install and
maintain that for you in india where someone's going to pay for it right the idea here is you
are helping subsidize the cost of connectivity in india and you get dabba tokens in return
and this has been incredibly successful like i said we've sold nearly 12,000 hotspots. We're consuming something like 70 terabytes a day
of data is being consumed and paid for on the network.
Something like 100,000 devices have connected
and use the network regularly already.
We're in three cities across the country,
and our goal is to expand to 100,000 connections this year
and then maybe to move on to other emerging markets.
We're building on Solana and we hope to have a TGE fairly soon.
Incredible.
The initial vision and inspiration is very enlightening, I would say, honestly, to take a look at areas like this where I think a lot of people don't realize how different the infrastructure is and how different places like India, for example, experienced the boom of cell phones, right? And, you know,
who was prepared and who wasn't. And it's quite interesting to hear the amount of data consumption
versus everywhere else. I mean, I guess obviously a big part of that, you know, will probably be
population versus non-population, et cetera. A lot of places are very vast in North America with a little amount of people in them
where you'll see a lot of connectivity issues.
I think due to a lot of people being like,
oh, we don't need to focus on that area
because there's less people,
which I think has been a big issue for a while.
It's funny that you mentioned that though.
I actually recently have been looking to move
and the place that I was looking to move to
is like a dead zone almost.
So they've been petitioning to put a new cell tower
in to no avail.
So it actually sounds like the helium
that you mentioned would be a perfect solution.
So very funny that it lines up like that.
But yeah, that's very exciting
that you guys have jumped into this currently. I'm
actually on your connectivity network map right now looking over all the areas you guys have
access to right now. And it's definitely a really cool piece that you guys have put together.
Now, when we talk about what you guys have been doing and a little bit about how it works,
what you guys have been doing and a little bit about how it works.
What would you say are some of the more interesting or unique features or ideals
around your project that may make you stand out alongside anyone else that could
be building in this particular space as well?
So I think one of the really fun things that would be worth covering about what
makes the market unique and what we're doing
um is unique is so along with the fact that that i mentioned earlier that you know with
the second largest market in the world and the scale is mad um like to give you a sense of uh
how far we have to go when it comes to building our broadband and the size of the market that is
available is the U.S. has something like 120 million broadband connections. China has something
like 650 million and India has all of 40 million. So less than something like five or six percent of
Indians have access to broadband. And one of the reasons is the structure
of the Indian market is also incredibly unique you know sometimes I feel like the Indian market
is like a Galapagos island or something where it's completely unique and evolution happens on its own
where in 99 percent of countries around the world, the telecom situation, like the
broadband and mobile connection is roughly this, right?
It is, you have two, maybe three operators and they dominate the market, whether it comes
to your 4G, 5G, or it comes to your connectivity at home, they dominate.
So like in the US, it's like Comcast, AT&T, T-Mobile, right?
Something like that. In Europe, it would be Vod&T, T-Mobile, right? Something like that.
In Europe, it would be Vodafone and T-Mobile, things along those lines. And in a lot of other
countries, only the government is allowed to dictate who gets to run a telecom company as well.
And so India is incredibly different and unique because we have this hilarious situation
where you have two big telcos,
they're called Airtel and GEO,
but they primarily focus on the mobile market, right?
They have about 400 million subscribers each.
But when it comes to broadband,
there are what's known as local cable operators
that dominate like 50% of the market, right?
There are 150,000 tiny local cable operators who have about 400 subscribers each.
And all of these guys want to transition into being internet service provider because their history is basically providing satellite and cable TV services.
So picture in your head some dude who's like 25 to 45 in a small town has got this satellite
dish pointed at the sky and has got this cool in his garage or in his house or whatever,
has this awesome little setup of like a switch box and things like that. And is running cables from there
to a couple of hundred people in his neighborhood
or maybe even a couple of thousand for them.
So the internet landscape in India
is fragmented to this scale
where you have 150,000 of these tiny local entrepreneurs
that are providing something like 50 to 60%
of connectivity already.
So what we do is we aggregate all of these
providers, help them update their software, their hardware, and all of their service and
operations. Because, you know, they don't have, they have amazing like, put spy and will and
entrepreneurial ability, but they don't have formal training and technical ability in a lot
of ways. So we give them this tool set to basically double or triple the size of their network.
And so when you buy a hotspot and say, I want to help contribute connectivity in India,
when you buy a hotspot, we share it with one of these local cable partners who then installs
it in a customer's home or premise, basically whoever their next customer is.
And they're getting more and more customers every day because now because of the DubbDar network,
they're able to offer faster and cheaper services to either existing customers or more likely,
they're able to expand to new areas altogether that didn't even have connectivity before.
So it's this really cool thing. What we're really doing in a lot of ways is we're using crypto and deepen to do what Airbnb and Uber did, you know, back in the day, which is aggregate a massive market of providers and sort of deliver a greater value to customers in terms of accessibility and price.
No, that's actually so cool.
I love the angle you guys have taken. And that's so interesting.
Actually, I did not realize the amount of, it must be so crazy to be able to keep among like
the 150, et cetera, different providers with, you know, X amount amount of subscribers and that seems like such an insanely competitive
market it's 150 000 providers 150 000 yeah sorry yeah that's that's so crazy um yeah a lot of
people probably have no idea about the intensity of this so that's definitely a very interesting piece that I'm learning today personally.
So I am curious, though.
So obviously, if I today wanted to support connectivity in India, which would be fantastic, obviously.
I know right now, currently, if you go to the hotspots page, you can see the total hotspots, the top hotspot, etc.
What is the process for me to buy? You can see the total hotspots, the top hotspot, et cetera.
What is the process for me to buy?
Is it a lengthy process?
Is it very easy?
And I know that it says tokens rewarded
and you guys are working on a TTE.
Are these just like stand in tokens for now, et cetera?
If you could just walk us through that process a little bit.
Yeah, for sure.
So the process of getting involved
and purchasing a hotspot is super simple.
You go to Daba.com and you buy a hotspot.
And when we do our TGE,
you will be able to log into the dashboard,
choose the local cable provider
that you wanna support specifically,
or we can auto assign that for you.
And then your hotspot gets deployed and you start earning Daba tokens as soon as data
starts getting consumed.
We also give you 20,000 Genesis rewards for buying before the TGE. And those tokens get unlocked on a daily schedule from
the date of the TGE onwards. I just want to take a quick step back and give you sort of context
into the tokenomics. So I think that maybe you can see the bigger picture of how this whole thing
is structured. Of course. So our model should be fairly familiar to anybody that's heard of or seen any of the
other Deepin projects, wherein basically we have a fixed supply of 10 billion tokens,
60% of which are allocated towards the community and the hotspot owners for the rewards.
And these rewards are emitted on a fixed supply basis
on a day-to-day basis and they're split equally among all hotspot owners now the fun part about
it is there are two parts of utility to the dubba token that you're getting as your rewards that
are incredibly important obviously apart from your ability to trade it.
So the first thing to note is that Daba uses what's called a mint and burn model.
And this is how we accrue value
to these tokens that you're getting.
So all of the revenue that any customer pays, right?
So when you buy your hotspot,
you lease it to your local cable operator
and you do this to our Explorer and super straightforward process.
It takes you less than like not even two minutes.
When your hotspot gets deployed, the customer now who's using this is paying
for it every month, like they pay for their, like you pay for your normal
broadband bill.
So what we do is we take that revenue and we use it to buy and burn the DABA token,
thereby reducing the supply of the token
and giving it value.
Now, the second utility of the DABA token,
apart from proof of data being consumed,
which is what that previous cycle was,
is that it's used to align and ensure
that the local cable operators do their job in the most effective manner in terms of installing and maintaining your hotspot.
So all rewards on an epoch basis, which is daily, come to you, the hotspot owner, and you share a tiny percentage of those rewards to the local cable operator in return for helping operate your hotspot,
right? This is their incentive to do so. And because the rewards come to you first and then
you distribute it to them, there's a check and balance system here where if the local cable
operator is not doing a good job of maintaining your hotspot and data is not being consumed and
the rest of that, you can stop supporting them and your hotspot instantly
gets assigned to someone else.
So there's this nice balance of utility and proof of work in the token.
And we think that this is really important because this is what contributes to the sustainability
and meaningfulness of the network, where it's a network that generates meaningful revenue,
fullness of the network where it's a network that generates meaningful revenue, has demand,
and that revenues has a direct link of accruing value to the token.
No, I think that was a fantastic explanation. I think it's perfect to look at this and be
in the perspective of the give and take. And I think that provides a nice balance
for those that do want to get involved and start pushing for this. And that, you know, if the
opposite end isn't keeping up on the maintenance, then yeah, it can switch to someone who is willing
to. And I also think that's good because, you know, sometimes in on the other end of the stick right like just say for example
things happen in uh whoever's on the other end's life where you know they can no longer do this
it's good that it can still move on to another position and maybe even later on they can be
reassigned someone else um so that's definitely very interesting format i've i've not personally seen anything like this that's so person to person at the same time.
This really does connect people across the water in such an interesting way.
I'm definitely very...
That's a great point.
Sorry, go ahead.
I think that's a great point that you highlighted when it comes to connecting people from sort of across the water in different
parts of the world because one of the side benefits of doing it this way, there are a
couple of benefits, right?
So take, for example, the earlier things that I mentioned, Helium or HiveMapper.
Now let's say that you love mapping things, right?
And you buy your HiveMapper and you're really happy with it.
And now you want to earn more from HiveMapper. It's a little hard to do so because now you need another card and
you know, you're going to buy another device and that sort of thing. One of the cool things that
we bring to the table is you can buy as many hotspots as you want. One of the really interesting
behaviors that we are seeing of people who choose to participate for the project is you can see the standard behavior
play out where somebody hears about us
from either a space like this or somewhere on X
or something like that.
And they sort of buy one hotspot just to check it out
and see how things go.
Then they join our Discord.
They follow us on X.
They sort of keep an eye on the dashboard.
And you will see that at least 50% of those
people will come back a week later and buy another five hotspots.
And then they'll come back, you know, a month later and buy 10 more hotspots.
And we've seen that sort of really nice structure of greater and greater support.
The third point that is really useful and worth mentioning is by decoupling the location of who owns the hotspot and where it gets deployed allows us to bring more efficiency into the market compared to a lot of existing projects.
So just to continue with the example of HiveMapper, in a HiveMapper situation, or a Helium situation is better, right?
You can't control where the hotspots get deployed.
So you tend to have a lot of hotspots on the network where it's up and it's running,
but nobody's really using it because it's in a super rural area, for example, or something like that.
But what we're able to do is we make sure that every single hotspot is going in a location
where somebody is going to use it and someone's going to pay for it. And so we think that sort of bringing these three things really
helps with that greater sense of connection because you're able to bring lack of friction,
greater efficiency, and greater ability to scale as well.
No, I completely agree. I think that's fantastic. I appreciate you diving a bit more
deeper into that. My next question for you, though, I know you have recently been
partnered with Bonk in particular, and I know when you go to the buy section,
there is also a portion for Bonk and then Animoca as well. Could you tell us a little bit more
about how those two pieces kind of come together?
Yeah, so Bonk, so one of the things
that we love focusing on and doing is partnering
with other ecosystems and communities
that we think that we can bring value to as well.
And so Bonk is a great example of this, where we think that one of the most fascinating
things about the meme community is the level of conviction in the community.
Surprisingly, even though the volatility of trade is insane and the swings are insane,
you've got to love the conviction of the core people.
Yeah, I agree.
So you want, in the beginning,
when you're tackling insanely hard problems like this,
you want to attack people with high levels of conviction, right?
So we really wanted to participate
in the mean community some way.
Now, Bonk specifically was super interesting to us because we think that, like, if you look at
the number of integrations that Bonk has and the number of platforms that Bonk has, whether it's
BonkSwap or I think the Bonk launch that just happened, right, where they're trying to bump out funds, sort of put a better version equivalent of it.
Bonk has this really cool
focus on utility
that we really admire.
And we wanted to take that
to the next level and bring
real-world utility to the
Bonk community that already cares about
doing useful stuff, right? And if you
think about it in some sense,
it's this really funny
and cool exploration where you couldn't have two things on useful stuff right and if you think about it in some sense it's this really funny um
and cool exploration where you couldn't have two things on either end of a spectrum in crypto
where like you have your memes on one end and you have hardcore utility like us where you're
doing physical installations of internet connections on ground and we're trying to
smash these things together so far um it's been really good. We're
really impressed by the just sort of intelligence and ability of the Bonk core contribution team.
The ideas they have and the things that you're going to see us come up with are going to be
really cool. And we're starting with sort of just the basics, right? We're going to have more things,
but first things first is the way that we bring value to the Bonk community is that a little bit of the revenue that the hotspot earns is used to burn Bonk tokens as well, thereby delivering value to Bonk by reducing the supply of Bonk on that side.
It also brings us a utility because, like I mentioned, it allows us to bring in sort of people with a high degree of conviction and help them
do something useful so that's been amazing so far I'm really excited about the new things that
we're going to be doing as well the other one that you mentioned which is Animoca so Animoca Brands Japan is really interesting for a couple of reasons.
So the other thing that I touched upon way early in this conversation was how in most
countries telecom is already a monopoly, whether that's broadband or Wi-Fi or 5G.
So a really good example of this is these deep end projects have a really hard time getting people to participate in a country like Japan.
Because in Japan, it's so restricted where if you want to install, let's say, a public Wi-Fi hotspot in your office or cafe or something, basically where you're resharing the Internet, you as an individual actually have to get a physical approval from the Japanese government.
You've got to fill out this application, submit it, and then they will process it and come,
And so as a result, it is really hard for companies like HiveMapper, Helium, and existing
Deepin projects to be able to enter such markets.
So what we wanted to do was be able to help markets
like this. Cool. If they can't build, deepen in their infrastructure in their country as yet,
there will be a lot of people who still want to support it, but be able to do it in another
country instead. So one of the advantages that Dabba brings to the crypto community in Japan is they're able to participate in helping build out physical infrastructure only because of this remote ability that we bring to them.
The second thing is there's actually a really long history of collaboration when it comes to infrastructure in India between Japan and India, where one of the clearest examples of it.
Interesting.
Yeah, like people don't realize it, but India's got a massive car market as well, right?
A passenger vehicle market.
The largest car maker with a dominant position of roughly 60% of car market share is Suzuki,
and they've held that position, I think, for a solid 20,
25 years, right? A lot of the bridges, a lot of the dams, a lot of things like that in India
are built out in partnership with the mega large Japanese corporations like Mitsubishi and Hitachi
and that sort of thing. So there's already this great deal of infrastructure collaboration
happening between the two countries.
And we thought it was a great opportunity to bring a layer of crypto on that
and expand that as well.
So you can see the approach that we're taking where, like with Bonk,
it's focused on a community of people with hardcore conviction
and sort of expanding the awareness of deep into other areas of crypto. And with Animoca, it's trying to build on top of this
existing relationship of infrastructure and bring crypto rails and deepen innovation to that.
No, that's fantastic. I'm learning a lot today. I appreciate these short lessons on kind of these partnerships and pieces of infrastructure that many of us just would not, I guess, the information would never really be in front of us either, right?
Unless you're more so involved in those areas.
So it is always good to learn though at the same time. And I do fully
agree on the prospect of this being, it is something that you need to be passionate about.
I really do agree. And funny enough that you mentioned the meme coin people, they are very,
very passionate. So I love your comparison and conviction because one is just such a worldly aspect and the other is really something that has developed over time in this larger experience of internet culture, which I really feel is bleeding into real world and everything we do and is taking us in such a larger step forward in building these bigger
communities where people can come together like bonk for example and help and work on something
like infrastructure and connectivity in india so i think that's a really fantastic outlook
um and i'm super keen to see where things go with that for sure um but finally in in the midst of
speaking about partners
that you guys have had,
I know you guys have partnered with WeatherXM as well.
Could you give us a quick into what that means as well
Yeah, so I think we're really excited about that,
the partnership with WeatherXM.
You're gonna see us do really interesting things in
this direction.
A good way to talk about this is, so we have this concept of the way that we think about
ourselves, like we think about ourselves as what we call internally as a layer zero deep
in, right? The idea basically to sort of put context to it
is that there are three layers of sort of deep end projects, right?
The layer two would be something like a grass, right?
The project that launched a couple of months ago
where it's a piece of software that you install on your computer
and it takes all your phone and it takes piece of software that you install on your computer
and it takes all your phone and it takes advantage of some of the hardware on your phone or your
computer right so let's say it takes advantage of your gpu and contributes that processing power or
um you know like silencio uses your phone microphone to measure noise levels around
you things along those lines that would be two, software installed on hardware that you own.
Layer one would be one level below that, which is like HiveMapper.
Again, great example, where it's hardware that plugs into other hardware that you already own.
Like you need to have some physical infrastructure in place.
If you want to use HiveMapper, you've got to have a car.
You've got to have a car.
So that would be like layer two, sort of layer one.
So that would be like layer two, sort of layer one.
Layer zero is sort of where we're at, where we're building infrastructure, but the infrastructure
doesn't even exist.
So when we deliver a Wi-Fi, when you buy a hotspot and we're installing and maintaining
that for you through one of our LCO partners, there's a fair chunk of actual physical labor and work going in where someone is drawing
a fiber optical cable overhead through like telephone poles and trees and that sort of
thing, bringing it into your house or office and then connecting a Wi-Fi router to that.
We're building this base layer of infrastructure.
Now one of the coolest things about when you have this team and this infrastructure in place
is it becomes really easy to add on other value on top of that.
And so since our guys are going and installing Wi-Fi routers, they might as well install
something that collects weather data.
So weather XM's mission is to to bring better weather data to the world. Most people
don't realize it, but there are actually very few weather stations far and few between in
pretty much every country and they're not necessarily installed in the best place possible.
Most of these are government run projects. There's no real granular level of weather data. So WeatherXM is building
this network of weather sensors. So we're installing 800, in fact, I think we've pretty
much finished the installation of 800 weather stations across the country that are going
to help contribute weather data to the WeatherXM network. And we have this epic bundle in place where if you buy a couple of Davos,
you also get a share of those WeatherXM rewards that are generated.
So what we're doing with this layer zero infrastructure,
which is laying out connectivity,
is this allows us to create a platform to enable other Deepin projects
and other products as well to be launched into the Indian market.
So you can collect as much data as possible
and provide as many services as possible,
again, in the most efficient manner
in a market that is willing to pay and post it.
No, that's fantastic.
I think it's another really important and I'd say very, I would say an angle that makes sense is the best way to put it for sure.
It really does feel like infrastructure, the different aspects even leading to weather, of course, it is all so well connected and I think an important aspect to take a peek into.
So I'm definitely excited to see where you guys take this next for sure.
And I do want to say I appreciate you taking the time to join us today and run campaigns
with us as well as many know that's what you can do on Galaxy.
So I was wondering today, Karam, if you could also take some time to
talk a little bit about the Daba community, how people can get involved with the community,
maybe any recent Galaxy campaigns that you guys have ran or any that are running right now that
they could participate in. Would love to do that. Yeah, our galaxy and the galaxy community, not just ours, is incredibly important to
us because it takes a ton of different type of participation and support to build massive
projects like this and take on these giant challenges.
And we're running a campaign on galaxy and I want to do a quick shout out to like the top three people on the leaderboard, CryptoKid,
LiverKidney, and PayZapZoo.
Awesome name.
I'm loving the support from them so far.
The quests we have on Galaxy are incredibly important.
They range from simple stuff to, you know, just follow us on X, to other things like
learn more about the project or maybe even participate
in one of the specific offers that we have.
It is absolutely worth everybody's time that is listening to this to consider participating
in those quests because, yeah, while we're doing hardcore things like installing hotspots
and weather stations and doing all of this on-ground work.
The stuff that happens online, which is the number of followers that we have on X, the size of our
Discord community, the amount of content that's created and that sort of thing are incredibly
important because kind of like, you know, if a tree falls in the forest, did anyone hear it? If
nobody was there? That really applies when it
comes to things like this, where we might be doing all of this cool stuff in the real world,
but if people don't hear about it and talk about it, in a lot of ways, it might as well may have
never happened in the first place. So what Galaxy and these quests help us do, and you should
strongly consider participating in them is helping us amplify
and build awareness of what it is that we're doing.
And we've got an epic reward pool as well.
You will get Daba tokens for having done this and we would deeply appreciate your participation
And I think tens of thousands of people have already participated
and continue to do so. Like on my timeline alone, I can see the growing number of followers
that we have on X and both on my profile, the Daba Network and other things. And I can see
our communities growing. So I can feel the impact that the Galaxy community is having. So if you haven't participated, please do so.
No, I completely agree.
There is a larger importance in community marketing, especially for something that you are very passionate about like this,
that does involve kind of, you know, a boots on the ground, a really street level aspect, right?
Going person to person when it comes to connectivity in particular.
I completely agree.
And I think that, yeah, actually, I looked at your leaderboard as well.
I see quite a few on there that I know from our community that are some very intelligent
grinders and passionate Web3 users.
So I know that's whenever I see them looking into certain things,
I know that's a green flag for me, too.
So alongside everything else, I've learned and felt from your passionate speaking today, for sure.
As we kind of get towards the end of our time for today,
I just want to give you a chance to,
if there's anything else you'd like to share
with the users today, anything we might have missed
or skipped or stepped over, any final thoughts you have
for everyone listening?
Yeah, I just want to sort of reiterate
the importance of participating in the quests because as we build up to our TGE, boosting this awareness really matters.
Other highlights include we just crossed 100,000 devices connected to our network. Solana, we're building on the Solana chain and the Solana community has been incredible.
There's a very cool video that they did about us that is on the Solana X account. If you get a chance, please go check that out.
That video has done a great job of helping people understand what we do and build awareness as well.
The only thing I can ask for and want to definitely highlight is, yes, please participate in the quest.
It makes a difference.
You may not realize it, but you liking one of our Twitter or X posts eventually leads to somebody getting cheap and fast connectivity that they really needed in
there which translates to literally it means that you know someone can work
from home now someone's learning and doing education at home or connecting
their relatives and that sort of thing these small actions make a butterfly
effect style genuinely make a giant difference on the other end of the world
difference on the other end of the world.
No, I completely agree and a lot of the time I like to think of campaigns going just beyond
socials but I think in this sense it's really cool to see I think just how important like you're
mentioning the likes and the retweets do matter for something like this that does affect day-to-day
people so i i definitely urge everyone as well to go and check out the quests and get involved and
make sure you guys uh check out that video from solana as well that's super awesome i have loved
getting a chance to talk to you today karam i love what you guys are doing at daba super exciting
stuff i hope we can do more together as well. I'll definitely be keen on making sure I
Complete all the quests myself. So thank you all to everyone listening. Thank you again Karam. We appreciate you all and we will see you next time
Thanks so much and thank you to the Galaxy community for all the support so far
Thanks everyone see ya