ThinkSui x ThriveCoin x Mysten Labs | All things #Sui

Recorded: March 5, 2024 Duration: 1:31:21

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Alrighty, I think we can actually get started here, Glenn.
Hello everyone, this is a last minute Twitter space that we threw together.
Quite diligently, actually.
Scott and I have been working on the back end to make this happen.
And before we get started diving into the topic of today, do you want to give a quick
intro into who you are, how you got into the industry, and kind of what you've been working
on over the last couple of years?
Yeah, sure.
Noah, thank you so much for helping this come together last second.
For all of you who don't know me, my name is Scott.
I've done everything from source, power, and infrastructure for Bitcoin miners to lead security
token offerings, but now fully invested and excited to be on the Thrivecoin rocket ship
Yeah, hi, I'm Daniel.
I am one of the co-creators of the Thanks SUI initiative, and I'm also a co-founder of Thrivecoin
and the Thrive protocol.
And a little bit of background on us, we believe that people deserve to be rewarded for the
contributions that we make to our Web 3 communities.
And we believe that when that happens, the impact is greater value, greater efficiency,
greater utility for communities, but also better lives, better Web 3 lives for all
So we built something called the Thrive protocol that makes it really easy to validate and
reward when people make truly valuable contributions to their communities.
We launched it with Apecoin, and we've scaled it across the Apecoin, Arbitrum, Optimism,
other ecosystems.
And now we're so excited to be supporting SUI with Thanks SUI, and I'm excited to share
more about it in a little bit.
Beautiful.
Saibon, did you want to jump in here?
Yes, for sure.
Thank you, Noah.
Great day, everybody.
Great evening, wherever y'all are at.
So I am at the Liston Labs team, and I am on the partnerships team over there, specifically
I work on the Commerce Vertical, and have been working really closely with Daniel with
Scott and the rest of the Thrivecoin team on the Thanks SUI program, and looking forward
to the chat today.
Beautiful.
And then we have Lexicon that is just connecting.
If you want to jump in with a quick intro, after that I will dive into what Thrivecoin
I think Daniel's going to take that one.
Think Lexicon might be having issues with connecting.
So while he does that, Daniel, let's jump in.
Give us a high-level overview of what Thrivecoin is, and then we can dive into it on some
Yeah, sure.
Thrivecoin makes it really easy for people to contribute value to the communities that
we care about.
So we'll just use SUI as an example.
So with SUI, we've got this big initiative going on called Think SUI.
You can check it out at thinksui.com, and when you go there, you're going to notice
that you have the opportunity to earn from a pool of $720,000 worth of SUI in grants right
And all you have to do if you want your piece of over $720,000 in grants is connect your
wallet to Think SUI.
You'll see all kinds of ways in which you can contribute.
But there are two ways in particular that you can contribute that we're particularly
interested in right now.
So there's a builder track, and there's a content creator track, a creator track.
And so if you have ideas for how you can build on SUI, if you're a developer, an engineer
for how you can build on SUI that you think can make the network better, we want to hear
from you.
We want to get those ideas.
You can earn up to $25,000 to build on SUI right now.
And in a little bit, I think Scott or Martin are going to tell you more about how you can
go through the process of filling out a very simple form to submit your idea.
Additionally, if you want to share content, if you want to host Twitter spaces, create
YouTube videos, all kinds of ways in which you can spread the cheers, spread the good
message and good word about the work that Sue is doing and all the incredible projects,
calls, NFTs, meme coins that are happening on SUI, then there's the opportunity for you
to create and to be rewarded for the value that you create for the SUI ecosystem.
So Thrivecoin makes Think SUI possible.
We're the underlying infrastructure to support it.
And if you're interested later, I'm happy to get into some of the really unique technology
that we use that allows us to auto validate any of theoretically millions of ways in which
people can contribute value to Think SUI and to other ecosystems to reward people immediately
and to attest to basically think people on chain.
But any time you want to nerd out, we can do it, but that's the high level for now.
Let's nerd out because I have a general understanding now of the grant opportunities available to
individuals who want to build, whether they're content creators or developers.
The way that you explained it made me think that they're being paid in SUI tokens.
And maybe I'm correct in understanding that, but can you explain how Thrivecoin actually
Tell us more about the intersection between Think SUI, Thrivecoin, the underlying token
that you guys have, and ultimately how it helps foster innovation and growth within
the community.
So Thrivecoin right now does not have a token.
So the name is almost a misnomer, right?
So Thrivecoin, we support the tokens of the communities that we support.
So with Think SUI, you do not have the opportunity yet to earn Thrive.
You have the opportunity to earn SUI.
And the way that Thrivecoin works is when you go to thinksui.com, you can connect
your wallet immediately and you're going to see all of these ways in which you can
contribute value even right now, and you can earn SUI.
And there are two ways in which we can validate the value that you contribute.
One is we auto-validate that stuff.
So there are Twitter contributions that you can make.
There are other easier contributions that you can make that we auto-validate.
The other is that we actually use the Thrive protocol to do something called human validate
that scale, some of the more valuable contributions that you can make to SUI.
And the two valuable types of contributions right now, like the really interesting, cool
opportunities are two types of projects that you can submit.
You can submit a builder project or you can submit a content creator project.
And if there's some way that you want to contribute value to the ecosystem, then,
again, I think, Scott, if you want to take the ball and explain how people can go to
the form to fill out the details for the projects that you can contribute, do it.
I think we have like three days left, something like that, to fill out the form and contribute
value at least at the project level.
And if you do that, up to $25,000 in rewards that you can get for doing so.
Yeah, Daniel.
Yeah, Daniel, it really is pretty simple.
We're making it, I want to say, idiot-proof.
So I posted, and it should be down in the thread here, you guys can simply go to a form
and fill out your project, your critical milestones, and what you hope to accomplish and submit
It's pretty simple.
And we've laid out guidelines that make it pretty clear what we're looking for and how
to be successful.
So there's two different contribution paths that you can go down.
There are content creation, so if you want to create a video or short form or long form,
if you want to create long form content or short form, you're welcome to do that and
spread it to your audience, and we will provide a grant for that.
Additionally, there's a builder path.
Builder path, it kind of sounds like you have to be a developer to do it, but you
really don't.
A builder path can be an NFT project as well.
In fact, Sui loves NFTs, and we're going to get to why Sui is a great place to build
NFTs, and a little bit later, and save on it.
I can't wait to lean into some of your knowledge there, but really, it is for
everybody.
You don't have to be just a builder.
You can be a content creator.
You can be an artist.
Sui is a fantastic place to build.
The ecosystem is ripe for an explosion of talent and interconnected apps.
It's really an exciting opportunity, and you know what?
There's a massive grant opportunity right in front of you.
I will say to piggyback off of what Scott was just echoing, I have explored
different ecosystems and different blockchains during the bear market looking
for grant opportunities for content creators, and not many of them are offering
grant opportunities to content creators.
It's just builders, so I think there's one other.
I'm not going to mention it, because this is a Sui space, but I think it's
unique in Sui to offer these sorts of KA wall opportunities or content
creator opportunities in the form of compensation through grants, but let's
take a step back and save on, can you give us a high-level overview of Sui?
What is special about Sui?
What distinguishes it from other blockchain ecosystems, and maybe not going
too deep into the tech, because I don't want to get off track, but what's
unique about the tech of Sui?
Yeah, sure thing.
So I'll try to keep it light while still explaining what makes it different.
Fundamentally, you really have to look at it at its granular level, and what I
mean by that is, Ethereum and EVM-based changed the use solidity for the
coding, and I'm sure everybody who's really in the space, you notice that
every few months, there's some new upgrade happening to Ethereum, and it'll
be this new token standard, now this new standard, now this thing, now that
thing, all of that is good, don't get me wrong, none of us would really be
here without Ethereum, or the space wouldn't be where it is, but all of
those upgrades are because Ethereum is not designed to be a all-purpose
flexible programming language, not really.
It's much more flexible, of course, than something like Bitcoin, but there are
certain limitations that stem from the fact that Ethereum is really based on
account abstraction, and as a very practical example, when you buy an NFT, or
you buy a token, you would think in your head, the way it feels is if you went
bought this item, and now that item lives inside of your wallet, that's not
actually how it works. Nothing moves, nothing goes anywhere, the way that you
can literally send like an mp3 file over email to somebody, they can download that
file, that's not what's happening on Ethereum and EVM chains, what's happening
is that the asset is created, and then it lives where it's created, and then when
a new owner comes into play, there's a database, it's like a spreadsheet that
basically has this log, this ledger that says, hey, you know, this asset was
created this time, this place, blah blah blah, and the contract owns it, and then
when you buy it, it now updates that name and says that you own it, and then
when you sell it, it updates that name and says the next person owns it, and attracts
all of this, and all of this is valuable, relative to non-DLT based systems, but it
makes it complicated to actually create robust applications and programs that
really thrive and benefit from the asset, actually be able to move around freely,
the way that they traditionally do on most programs and systems, and so SWE, and
particularly the SWE move language that SWE is built on top of, has an
object-centric model, which means that assets actually do exist as discrete
assets that can move around from your wallet to another wallet, and so on and
so forth, and so you add that with some of these other primitives that then
open up the ability to, for instance, actually enforce royalties and not need
to only have your assets exist on one marketplace, so on and so forth, you can
actually create royalties that can't be circumvented, you could put other rules
on the assets, you could say for instance, and I've yet to see somebody do
this, which is still pretty interesting, but you can actually set a floor price
on your NFT collection, you could say hey this has to trade for at least 50
SWE, or you can't transfer this to some other wallet, you could also set
a ceiling on it, you can set any number of nuanced rules around how the asset
trades and behaves, the transfer policies themselves, and then there's the
expressivity of what you can do with these assets, it's just far more robust
for a lot of other reasons, but I've already gone more into the technicalities
that I planted, so I'll yield there. Yes sir, and I'm sure we can have another
space where we dive into each nut and bolt of the different technicalities,
because it does seem a lot different than the traditional EVM ecosystems that
most of us play around with. Okay, so Daniel Scott, I think I want to rope in
to what inspired the creation of things SWE, and kind of piggybacking off of
what Saevon said, what is it about the tech that align with what you guys are
trying to build, and kind of the value that you're trying to provide, creators
in the industry. Yeah, go for it. Yeah, I mean, listen, I think what we're doing
here at Thrivecoin, transverses all ecosystems. The goal here with SWE is to
really showcase what they're capable of, what this technology is capable of,
and really build out their ecosystem. And to do that, we have to incentivize
people to make that move, right? Like, Saevon just talked about the move
programming language. For people who aren't technical, Ethereum, EVM chains
are Solidity-based, Solana, Rust-based, and there's move. Move has a lot of
advantages over other protocols, which Saevon went into, and we won't go too
deep. But really, what we saw is an opportunity for an up and coming
ecosystem that could benefit from the technology that we have, the principles
that we have, and the ability to drive meaningful growth within that ecosystem
using that technology. And Daniel, correct me if I'm wrong, but SWE is unique
to any other chain that we've worked with before in the sense that its technology
is much different. It's capable of much more. Yeah, I mean, we really believe
that SWE is going to help drive the future of NFTs, gaming, and DeFi in Web
3, and it is quite meaningful for us to play a role in that. And the background on
how thinkSWE came together is that a few months ago, I was talking with Saevon
and shared a somewhat brash idea with him and with Rohan from Mists in Labs about
how we can fund truly valuable contributions to this community with the
support of the Thrive Protocol and how the impact can and should be that we can
get people talking, we can get people excited, we can get people moving in this
ecosystem and thinkSWE is the result of that idea. It's been a collaboration of
Mists in Labs, the SWE Foundation, Thrive Coin, even a few of the OGs in the
SWE ecosystem around this simple idea that SWE community members deserve to be
rewarded for the contributions you make to the community. And when that happens, we
all believe that the impact is going to be greater opportunity for you as builders
and content creators and obviously immensely more efficiency and value and
utility created in the ecosystem. And you know, so this is a big deal. It's like
$720,000 worth of SWE in season one, right? Just in this quarter that is being
given to people to create enormous value for this ecosystem and we're just
getting started.
Beautiful. So I want to dive into a bit more, actually no, excuse me, I want to dive
into a bit more of the key principles that guide the program and we've talked
about the opportunities for content creators and the opportunities for
developers and in the latter group, the technical advantages that SWE has for
developers to be able to build that they want to build, excuse me, the way that they
want to build. But if we could dive into a bit more of the key principles,
right? What are the requirements? What are the guidelines? And what are the
specifics into how individuals and teams are able to contribute to the
program in order to, in order to one, give back but also be able to earn as well.
Great. Yeah, I'd love to introduce, this is a perfect segue, to introduce Lexicon
and Carlos who are both finally up as speakers here because they're doing a
lot of the nuts and bolts work to help guide things with SWE. So guys, you
want to take this one? You're me, Martin, or Lexicon? Go ahead. Yeah, I can jump in.
Yeah. Here, why don't you jump in while I work on the next one? Sure. Yeah, so the
there's a ton of opportunity. So as Daniel on the SWE account and Scott on the
Thrivecoin account have talked about, we're looking in particular for these two
types of creators, content creators and builders. And just to reiterate, content
creators is anyone who can make a YouTube video, a TikTok, a reel, write an
article on Substack, on Mirror, on Medium, write a really, really good x-thread.
And this is stuff that's all about SWE. So we're talking about SWE, the SWE
ecosystem, projects on SWE they're interested in, the parts of SWE tech
that make SWE exciting. We're talking about any sort of project you're
interested in building. So those are content creators. For the builders in
particular, we're talking about folks that are building NFT projects,
whether that's an NFT collection, whether that's a series of one-of-ones that has
a community back behind it, whether that's a series of co-apps that have a
story link to it, whether you're building a DAP, that DAP could be a gaming DAP that
has an NFT component, a ticketing app that has an NFT component. Maybe it's an
infrastructure DAP that you see in other ecosystems that you don't see in SWE.
It's something that you've created that you've never seen in any
ecosystem. All that stuff would count as a builder project. And the
way you enter is super, super simple. It's dumb simple. You go to
thinkSWE.com and you check out all the contributions. There's a link
actually I posted at the top here to that website. And it's actually, there's
even a direct link to the tweet that I posted up here. There's a link
directly to the form. The form gets you, I think there's like seven questions or
something like that. You fill in seven questions to get your project idea in.
So that's a content creator project idea or a builder project idea. And it's a
super simple form. We'll take a look at it, make sure it meets all the requirements,
and you're off to the races. There's also a set of guidelines in there. Take a look
at that. But for all you need to know, if you are a content creator or a
builder, if you have an idea of something you want to create, you have
two or maybe two and a half days, depending on what in the globe you are,
to put your project idea in this form. Just an idea. And after that you have,
just something to think about for the next three or six weeks. There's a real quick
community voting part that starts on Friday. And there's going to be a
selection of those projects that will move on to the next round. But all we need
to know right now is that you put your project idea in in the next few days.
You'll have a number of weeks to finish your project. We're giving content
creators two weeks to finish their project. Builders four weeks to finish your
project. And yeah, get in the door. Get this started.
Because when you put your project idea in, and you finish your project,
you will be eligible to earn anywhere from $600 to $900 just for finishing your
project and hitting your critical milestones. And there's an
opportunity to earn anywhere from two to 20,000 additional dollars if you are one
of the best projects in the lot. So yeah, as Daniel noted, you're looking at
upwards of $26,000 for a single project. And we are, you know, we are not shy to be
giving away dollars because we got $720,000 in SWE to give away in the next two months.
So that's the overview. As I noted again, the all you got to do is hit that first
pin tweet, calling all builders and content creators, click on that form, get your project
idea in the next two days. And we'll be in contact with you. So if you have other
additional questions, we'll be here to help you every step of the way. Carlos, what did I miss?
Yeah, just to add to it, too. Even if you don't have an idea and you're not sure,
we have a list of ideas for you to go take a look at. So and especially with the two days,
go take a look at the list. There's a bunch of things on there that people haven't even touched
yet that have submitted. So there's a lot of opportunities for you to take some of the
ideas that we have there and go run with it. If there's something that you see there,
like, screw it, I'm just going to write it on the form and put it in.
That's all we need. And just for you to expand on it and give your two cents and
put your flavor around the ideas that we've posted. So there's a bunch of examples,
a bunch of ideas. So feel free to hop in there. We also are available to answer any questions. We
have a support team ready. So if you do get stuck anywhere, we're here to help as you're
going through that form I'm going through. It's super simple. I actually got my mom to go look at
the form and she's 65 years old, has no idea what crypto or blockchains are. She was able to fill it
out. So we made it as simple, easy as possible. She's always my test for tack reforms right
there. If I'm building a website, can my mom do it? And she can and her idea was okay.
But hopefully, you'll all be able to beat her out and submit some great ideas and
be able to help promote Sui and help us help them.
Wow. Beat Carlos' mom. Got it. Okay. So hey, Carlos, do you mind sharing with us as well?
Just a couple of the ideas that maybe have stuck out for you that you personally
might be pretty excited to see go live with Sui?
Yeah, for sure. So there's been a few. I'm going to give you a share of a couple of
different examples across the different content and also the builder submission elements.
So one of them is from Climate Race. I thought this was super cool because they're going to be
running a bunch of different X threads on the different types of climate solution and projects
that could be built on Sui. Because they're looking into how people are building climate
solutions, projects on Sui blockchain, leveraging its good UI, UX, decentralizing nature,
and smart contract capabilities in order to implement various initiatives in addressing
climate change. So super huge, especially in the blockchain and crypto space of how much energy and
power is used. It's great to see Sui's focused on that. And we have something that's going to be
highlighting that in various different content on X threads and in various other media. We have Shelly
Maeve, who's going to be focusing on DeFi and GameFi. We'll be creating high quality video content
to increase the scope of the Sui audience by leveraging their own network and some others.
The goal of videos is to provide awareness on Sui projects, their benefits, and to
informate and educate on ways for people to hop into Sui. So super cool, a bunch of different content
there which will help promote Sui, but also introduce people to it and have people learn
more about it. Then we have Rage of Potato, who's looking at creating medium articles on the
Sui network to introduce Sui, creating a wallet, exploring dApps in the ecosystem, and then also
introducing people to the Sui Foundation and how to learn how to earn Sui via ThinkSui. So a little
shot there to help us out in promoting as well. So as you can see on the content side, we have videos,
we have X threads, we have medium articles. Really the door is open for you to hop in there.
The one that has been done yet, if anybody wants an idea as a podcast or something along
those lines, try to promote that on my side because I think it'd be cool to see a podcast
on some of the different topics and ideas that Sui is hoping to hit up. Now on the builder side,
we have Krena Post. Sorry, I'll tell all these handles. I'm hoping I'm pronouncing these right.
He's looking at bringing the Arrivers to the Sui network. So Arrivers is an original
10K NFT collection created and developed by a community of artists, developers, dreamers,
crypto enthusiasts, entrepreneurs, athletes, and many others around the world. The legend
of Arriver, it tells the story of a peaceful civilization obliterated by a black hole leading
to profound quests and the creation of a new home through the power of the mind. So looking
to bring this to the Sui network and leveraging the tech there and bring it in front of people.
So super excited about that because I love space and things like that and story of civilizations
that caught my eye. And the last one we're going to hop in is from drillpid111. They'll be creating
a gaming dev called SuiQuest. It's a SuiQuest crafting realms, which is a groundbreaking
MMORPG set within the innovative Sui network ecosystem, offering a new unique blend of
exploration, crafting, and dynamic player-driven economy. The game comprises of an immersive
experience for players seeking adventure and economic prowess. So a ton of different
varying projects across the different boards, a lot of different ideas there.
There's still a lot of untapped ones, so take a look at the list or send us a message and be like,
hey, would this be a good idea for us to approach it? Fill in the form, get it in,
and then we can see where we're at. Yeah, pass it off to Daniel next.
That sounds great. Thanks, man. Yeah, I'll throw it back to you, Moby. Sorry,
sorry for asking the question. I forgot I'm not the host.
Hey, I wanted to give everyone that's here a quick bit of alpha because people must be wondering,
how do you get started with ThinkSuite? You might not have the content creator or builder project
ID in your head right now in this instance. Note that you have two days to figure that out.
But if you want to start right now, all you got to do is go to the pinned tweet I just pinned.
Click on it. Take a look. It has links to ThinkSuite, Thrivequin, H2, and Sui Network. It
has the link to the directthinksuite.com website. Do two things and earn yourself a dollar just for
clicking a few buttons. Follow ThinkSuite, Thrivequin HQ, and Sui Network. Retweet this tweet.
Make sure and then go to connect your wallet and go to thinksuite.com. Connect your Sui wallet.
Open one up if you haven't already. Connect your wallet, ThinkSuite. Connect your X account to
your ThinkSuite account, and then you'll finish your first contribution
to ThinkSuite and earn a dollar in the Suite tokens. There's tons of stuff like this
that range from a dollar to $26,000. There's a ton of stuff that's up here.
There'll be new stuff every week. This is your first chance to get started.
Get on it and retweet this tweet, but make sure you connect your wallet to thinksuite.com
and connect your X account to thinksuite.com, because we need to be able to link your X account
to your ThinkSuite profile to credit you for the stuff that you do on X.
Yeah, a lot to unpack here, and it looks like we went through quite a few questions
that I ended up not having to ask, so that's great as well. I want to circle back to one of
the points that was made earlier in the space about how NFTs have become a focal point,
not just in the blockchain space, but I see people talking about NFTs that aren't even
in crypto. They're a big talking point, and I think they're big catalysts to mass adoption,
whether you like them or not. We mentioned that Suite is prime for NFTs, and we didn't
really dive into it, so how can individuals, one, with NFT ideas get involved with things Suite, but
more so, and this is probably a better question for SaveOn, why is Suite such a good environment
for NFTs and the projects that they're powered by? Yes, thank you. So I'll start with,
go back to the 404 example. So there's been a desire for people as we see the meta shift a bit
around NFTs where in the last cycle you had an NFT in the right community, it would give you a
white list to invent another NFT from a different project, and that became very valuable.
And now what we're seeing is NFTs act as a eligibility factor for airdrops,
or projects themselves, they begin to create fungible tokens and they want to give that out to
their community. But historically speaking, the only way that you could really go about doing
that would be to look for who holds one of these NFTs and then drop the tokens to their wallet.
And so now people are seeing that instead of dropping it to somebody's wallet,
they actually want to drop it directly to the NFT itself. Because even if you do it this way,
you can make it so that NFTs that are currently listed on a marketplace or so on and so forth,
or trade, that they live with that asset as opposed to just going to the wallet of the
person who held it at the snapshot. They need a whole new token standard to pull this off on
Ethereum. You can do that today on suite, because everything is an object, and you can program
rules around these objects, and you can make it so that an NFT asset, whether it's a PFP or an
item in a video game, whatever it is, that it is made the owner of these fungible tokens.
We didn't need to come out with some standard to allow for that,
because the flexibility already exists there. Another example is that oftentimes you'll see
where a project wants to upgrade or adjust the asset over time based on behaviors,
whether that be, okay, you had a stake for this amount of time, or you reached this level
in a game, so on and so forth, and then the asset changes. Most projects, the way they go
about doing this, is they have a threshold, and then they will burn an NFT, and then they'll
mitt the new one that's leveled up. Similarly, if you were in a video game, that's like, okay,
you have a sword, but then it's a level one sword, or you have a gun rather, and then you
want to have a gun with an attachment, or a scope on it, or so on and so forth. You burn
the first asset, and then you remit the second one. Mechanically speaking, people have gotten by
doing this, but because of how most of these other smart contract platforms are designed,
it can become operationally burdensome to do it, and it can become cost prohibitive
to do this at scale. You have a few thousand people doing it, it's not an issue, but you're
talking about hundreds of thousands of millions of people doing this, it can become cost prohibitive
going back to the fact that these are not actually unique objects, but this is all account
abstraction happening. Whereas on SWE, you can very fluidly take an asset and upgrade it
and make it visually distinct and composable. So I'll give you a prime example. Let's just say,
and we have a project live called SWE Friends that showcases this. It's modeled after this
really popular cartoon over in Asia. You either know about it or you don't. I forget the name right
now, but it's modeled in reference to that, but it's really a showcase for the technology.
So you look at one, you get one of these characters, and it's just a base character.
Now they all look different. You know, some have this color fur, a nose looks like this,
whatever, but they're base assets, and what we have are a ton of accessories. So you have shirts,
you have hats, pants, this, that, and a third. And if you hold one of these base assets
and you buy one of these accessories, those are two distinct assets, two different NFTs,
the base character and the accessory. And then if you go to equip that accessory onto
the base asset, they become one composed NFT. And now let's say you want to add on,
let's say we put on a shirt and now we want to put on a hat. Now you add the hat to the asset that
already, to the base character that's already wearing the shirt, you add the hat on top.
Now again, this is one NFT. Although it is made of three distinct NFTs, it is represented
and you interact with it as a single NFT. And then the moment that you want to unequip it,
you unequip it, and it goes back to being separate NFTs. At no point in this process did we have
to burn the NFT and mint something else or do any of this convoluted stuff. It was very simple.
It was much like you do it in the physical realm. You have a body, you put a shirt on,
you put a hat on, you take them off. This is really how these things should work,
but the technology has not quite existed to make this as simple as it is to do it on suite.
And again, there are not a ton of people who are actually taking advantage of this
shit right now. So I implore y'all, if y'all have interest, to go ahead, man,
because there's a lot of green pasture out there. But that's just one of the examples.
And I know I used the suite as the reference example, but you can take the same logic and
apply it to a weapon in a game where you have a base gun and you add a scope on it,
then you add a silencer, then you add a stabilizer, so on and so forth.
And then you unequip these assets, put them back on, so on and so forth.
So there's some display standards. It's something you can look up on suite.io website. And it
talks about how we actually go about templatizing it so that when an asset hits certain levels or
reaches a certain threshold that you program into it, the way it is visually represented changes and
adapts based on that. The display standard goes into more detail on that. We have these things
called dynamic fields and dynamic objects, so on and so forth. But all the literature is there
to pour through. But trying to get back to why I think suite was important.
I can sit up here and I've done this many times and explain all of these things at a
technical level. But for most people, that shit doesn't matter. It doesn't help. It doesn't
connect. What connects is an experience, is actually going using something, touching it,
and then saying, oh, okay, that makes sense. And because we're not even 12 months out from
mainnet, and obviously this is a very competitive space, there's a lot that goes on,
we find it necessary to get the attention and force the attention so that people can actually
experience these things and build these experiences so we can really get a flywheel going.
And so that's where leaning on the Thrive Quarantine to kick off this Think Suite program
was really a way for us to say, how do we put targeted focus and energy to really drive
that attention by incentivizing people to explore the ecosystem, to share content, news, and
education around the ecosystem, and to build new things within the ecosystem so that we can stop
talking about the tech and just point people to applications and use cases.
Because we can't build everything.
Jeez, we have to get Saevon up here for just the one-on-one space and talk about
Sui, because that was music to my ears. A lot of hands went up. Yes, three hands went up.
So I'm going to actually circle over to some of these audience questions and let them get
some words in. Guys, feel free to ask too many questions, but a good number of questions. And
I can circle back here in a bit.
Oh, sorry, I should have picked someone. What's wrong with me? Okay,
let's go with Aisha first. And then we'll go to Tino's and then Rahmat.
Yeah, thanks, Noah. Okay. Is the Sui network secured against quantum threats? I mean,
could you provide insights into the security measures implemented within the Sui network?
Oh, you took it to quantum secure. I love it. So I'll be right up front and let you know that
I don't have a definitive answer off the top of my head. That angle is not something I interface
with daily. What I can say, though, is that our chief cryptography officer, well, for one,
we have one. I don't know of a ton of other layer ones that have a chief cryptography officer,
ours, his name is Costas. He actually has a PhD in cryptography and his whole life.
That's what he's been studying and focusing on. He actually shared something recently about being able
to conduct transactions on both sides, sender and receiver without an internet connection.
And that's something he's going to talk more about at our conference in April at Basecamp,
because it's not the same as like a paper wallet that people often kind of point back to. Oh,
Bitcoin, you can do this. It's not the same thing. So we have a really, really strong cryptography
and R&D team that publish a lot of research papers in academia. They give talks on conferences,
these sort of things. So it's definitely top of mind for them security.
But I won't sit here and definitively say that I have an answer for you on how
Quantum Secure, sweet network is, but it is something that is top of mind for everybody,
given that after this AI wave, Quantum is going to be the next thing that people are
really chatting about, in my humble opinion. But the other thing that I want to call out
is that security isn't just at the protocol level. So some things and considerations there
is that there's a really common misnomer and I'm guilty as well, just for the sake of ease of
communication. I don't really point it out, but SWE is not a blockchain. It's a DAG,
directed acyclical graph. Hedera is also a DAG. It's the first one I ever heard about back in
2017. But there are some important nuances there, because just from the consensus standpoint,
and how security is done, and confirmations, things like this, it's different from how
blockchains work, because it's not the same thing. So that's outside the scope of this
conversation. I encourage everybody to go look into that more deeply, if you don't know what a DAG is.
The other thing is that at the programming language itself with SWE move in particular,
because there's a couple variants of move, and ours is the canonical one. But there are certain
security measures that are inherent in how the programming language works. And what I mean is
that, for instance, one of the main problems, I actually had a conversation with a really prominent
team. It was actually the safe team, formerly Gnosis Safe. They secure a lot of funds in the
space, like a tremendous amount, and I was chatting with them about supporting SWE.
And one thing that their team mentioned to me is that the reason that they have only supported
EVM change, like they don't support Solana, they don't support anything outside of EVM right now,
is because of the security concerns they have with porting their contracts over to these different
languages. And that made inherent sense to me, because obviously you have a platform that's
securing hundreds of billions of dollars, you don't want to introduce new attack vectors.
But the curious thing is that part of that concern is a direct result of how
convoluted Solidity is, and how easy it is to create attack vectors and loopholes when you're
writing smart contracts based in Solidity. There are certain mistakes that frequently happen in
Solidity that literally aren't even possible on SWE because of how the language is built.
And so these are things that can really only be taken into consideration after there's been
enough time to see Solidity in the wild, to see Ethereum in the wild, and recognize some of its
shortcomings. Again, I'm not here shitting on Ethereum, but I am acknowledging that usually the
first technology that comes around in a new industry or a new vertical is not the one that
wins long term, because it was just too new. And when it came out, it was groundbreaking,
but then there were a ton of things that they were just not really built to pivot around,
regardless of how many damn roadmap updates the Ethereum Foundation continued to push through.
They will continue to do that because of its core level, its flaw. So this is one of the security
advantages of the SWE network and building on top of SWE move. On the quantum part, like I said,
I'll have to get back to you on that, because I don't have a ton of extra insights to provide on that.
All right, it makes sense. Okay, one more thing. To ensure genuine content creators are
rightfully rewarded by Tribecoin, can you elaborate on the measures in place to distinguish authentic
contributors from those who engage in content copying or artificially boost engagement through
pre-corporating means? Additionally, could you provide insights into the methods employed by the
Tribe protocol to track user activity and validate their contributions for rewarding purposes?
I'll save my two cents, and then Daniel, Lexicon, if either of you want to speak on it.
So to be very candid, we are acutely aware of how people can try to game systems and
bot systems. So do be mindful. There's a certain level of detail we can't go in because then
people, you know, okay, this is what you're looking for, bet. Now I know how to skirt around it.
It's like people say, oh, what's the eligibility requirements for airdrop?
Oftentimes they're asking that so that they can perform an attack and not be flagged as a civil.
So what I can say is everything at the end of the day will be validated by a person.
So no matter what other systems are in place to speed things up,
there's ultimately going to be a person whose judgment will be used if there's ever anything
in question. Yeah, thanks a lot for that, Saevon. And I'm happy to talk a little bit about it on
our side as well. So we think a lot about this stuff. In fact, you know, the guy who led the
civil protection working group for Gitcoin is, you know, now on our team, you know, we've built
the protocol and Thrivecoin sort of with bot bad actors, civil protection in mind.
We have five layers of protection. I'm just going to give you an example of one. So for
every contribution type, there are both known validations and unknown validations. So for example,
you know, if it's the case that we're asking you to make a Twitter thread, you know, it might be,
you know, really clear that there is a set of requirements to sort of make that thread.
There's another set of requirements that are unknown that we have to ensure that it's not
bots, bad actors, or symbols being rewarded. And that set of requirements can change if it's the
case that somehow randomly bots, bad actors, symbols had guests. But the reality is, is that
we have been rewarding contributors at scale across some of the biggest ecosystems in the space. So
over 180,000 people, just to give you a sense. And, you know, so far, we haven't had
any significant issues with this at all. And I just gave you an example of one of those layers.
Additionally, when we're talking about complex contributions, as Siobhan alluded to,
we have a human validator capability that's really unique and different. And basically,
we are able to send anything that's complex to a set of human beings who can validate
that whatever the contribution requirements are, have been met. And once they validate,
then the contribution can be rewarded. And again, in that way, it allows us to have a level of
security that's fundamentally different from what you might see on, let's say, as an example,
questing platforms that, you know, may even be encouraging bot, bad actor, farming activity.
In our case, the kind of contributor that we're looking for is somebody who is really excited,
frankly, to work full-time in Web3 if they could. But the reality is that there's been no good way
for them to contribute value and get rewarded equitably, get rewarded proportionate to the value
that they contribute. You know, we're looking for people who are really excited about move,
about SUI, about everything that they possibly could do. They just didn't know that they
actually could and get rewarded. And, you know, we're looking to provide a pathway if you're that
person, right, for you to go from zero to being a daily contributor to the SUI ecosystem,
somebody who creates more and more value and gets rewarded proportionate to the value you create.
Awesome. Thank you. Thank you so much for answering.
Tina, you're up next.
Hey, thank you for having me. And hey, Siobhan,
will you allow me to say something about the quantum? Because I had the same question
yesterday while I was talking about SUI in the space.
Yeah, go for it. I mean, like I mentioned, I may not have the answer you're looking for,
but shoot shot. Okay. Thank you. Thank you. I don't, tell me if I'm wrong, by the way,
I'm not like a very savvy dev. So I just go. So, so the quantum itself have like,
you know, what we call like the quibics and then the quibics can only hack through like
an object, like one object. So if you look at Bitcoin, for example,
like the quantum cannot hack Bitcoin because it has like 1000, 100,000, you know, line of codes,
right? That's why it makes it hard to hack it. But the only reason it can hack Ethereum is
because you only have 30,000 line of codes, if that makes sense. But if the move language
is like an object, like every code is like an object, then that brings so, so, so many layers
to hack it. So because every time you have to use the quantum, you use like one quibic for every
single object. So if the, if, if moves have like way many objects and the most like the highest
number of quibic we had so far is 1000 of them that say they can go any more than that. So
that was the kind of explanation I gave yesterday. Just because if it would take many quibics,
and then each quibics like to use them, it's like somewhere around like five, five to seven
million dollars for each of them. Very expensive. So, so yeah, yeah, yeah, I don't know. Maybe
I might be wrong, but I'm just doing the research myself as well to figure that out.
Okay, no, that's super helpful. I didn't realize that you could, it required a whole qubit to
hack a single thing because, you know, ideal quantum, you just run an infinite amount of
computation at once, quote unquote infinite. So that actually is a lot of learning you just
helped me do right there. What I can say I was searching through our slack channel right now,
just trying to see what sort of conversations the engineering and the technical co-founders have been
having around quantum proofing the network. And there are definitely conversations about it. I
can't say anything about it, but just know when the time is right, all will be revealed.
Awesome. Thank you. So my other question, my actual question is for Carlos,
I don't know if I misunderstood you, what you were saying. Did you say each project,
not for the content creator, but for the project, did you say it would take, they have four weeks
to finish the project or something? Because I personally submit something, but there's
no way it would take me like four weeks, probably like six months minimum, because
I just got a little nervous about that.
Yeah, because I think I actually am reviewing your project today. I'm taking a look at it. So
when we're looking at especially the builder projects is getting an MVP out within the
four weeks. So it doesn't have to be something crazy. It doesn't have to be anything full-fledged
or built out. There just needs to see a path that you're going on to have something done
in X amount of time. So even if it's just a page or even it's just a baseline code,
that's what we're looking for during the completion phase of the project.
Definitely understand the builder elements take long, it can take some extended period of time,
but we're looking for an MVP concept or at least something that can be shown to the community,
be shown to the things that we board, and something that can represent what you're
building towards. Does that answer your question?
Yeah, so if it's the line of code and all that stuff, I already have all that stuff
ready, so I'm not worried. Thank you. Cool, yeah.
Thank you, Tinas. I'll throw it over to Rahmat. Yeah, thank you. Okay, in your medium article,
I came up with some information about a firmware and shared objects. So I was wondering how does
this work on the SUI network and how can maybe developers leverage this feature in their
application and are there any specific use cases and benefits associated with this feature?
Apologies, can you repeat the question?
Yeah, so my question is that can you provide maybe more details on the thermal shared objects?
I've read about this feature on your medium article and how can maybe developers
leverage this feature in their applications?
Okay, here versus single owned objects. So again, caveat here, I love technical stuff,
but I am not an engineer or developer day by day. I'm more like a synthesizer of these different
pieces, but a couple just notes on it right off top. Shared objects, they are going to be
slower to reach finality and consensus because they have to run through different paths because
they're owned by multiple folks or accounts, users, or objects. Hence why it's a shared object
and single owner objects are going to be able to take what's known as the fast path.
So that way you think about it is if you have a action in your application that is not dependent
upon something else happening, or it's not dependent upon something else happening
within another contract on the chain or some other action on the ecosystem, then it's highly
likely you can allow that to be a single owned object and then you can utilize the fast path for
it. Now with shared objects, this for instance, you could create a kiosk where let's say you are
a record label and or you're starting a record label and it's three of you all who own the
label and you have several artists underneath you and you want to manage their royalties
on chain. Well, you could create a shared object that's a kiosk that allows you to
change or adjust the rule sets around the songs that the artist is putting out through your label.
If we're assuming that you're putting these songs out as NFTs. So again, like I thought of earlier,
that could be you stipulate the floor price, you stipulate the ceiling on it. You could put,
for some reason, you could say, hey, you need to hold this in your wallet to buy one of these
assets or so on and so forth. But by making the kiosk itself a shared object in certain ways,
you can almost, and this is not necessarily what a shared object means, but in certain
applications, creating a shared object almost creates and turns it into something like a
multi-sig, if you will, or at least gives different people access to be the admin over
that kiosk as an example. But deeper than that, I'm going to stop talking because I don't want
to say something that's not accurate or correct, simply because as I mentioned, I have not written
a line of code in this language up to this point, but would definitely encourage you if you do have
other questions on it, to tag Sam Black here. He's the CTO. Juzy, he works a lot on the FUD
project. He's also great. Brian from Studio Mirai has a lot of experience working with Move.
Damir, I think his handle is the Move guy. He is phenomenally experienced in the language as well,
but that's why I would certainly encourage you to lean on the devs in the community to give you
some more context there. Yeah, sure. I can ask them and thank you for the clarification.
Okay, I have one more question. Could you elaborate on the intellectual property status
of the technologies and the codes that are utilized by the C-Network? I mean, specifically,
are the proprietary technologies and code patented or C-Network operates primarily on an open source
basis? Great question. So, if you go on to the suite.io website and you reference the
code used there with the implementations, then assume that you can use and build on those and
you're going to be fine. The thing to bear in mind is that when creating this network,
as we all know, there are routes you can go the public permissionless route or you can go
the permissioned route, right? Like a lot of people don't know this. Amazon has a blockchain.
No one ever talks about it because it's not something that retail consumers or devs use
because it's a permissioned network. There are very few people on earth who are building on
their network. But all that just to say, I think that the core of your question is somehow
dancing around. If I'm building things on top of suite, is there any risk in the future
that I'm unable to use the code that I built because in some way, shape, or form it is owned
by some sort of corporate entity? No, you don't need to worry about that. Do keep in mind,
Suite Foundation is a not-for-profit organization and entity. And when you go and you look at all
this developer resourcing code example, so on and so forth, that's where that lives.
Mr. Labs is a for-profit infrastructure company. And so, because there are different
things that we have patents working on, right? Again, I'm not going to disclose any of that,
but know that we're very mindful of this and we understand how code propagates on the internet and
open source ideology. So we're always mindful of this before we place anything
out into the public domain. So we have already parsed through those considerations and those
sort of things before we put anything out in the public so that we're never in a situation
where devs are feeling like they got the rug pulled on them because we decided we wanted to
patent something. God, thank you so much for your time. Okay.
Man, Saevon, I'm also like you, not a developer, but I'm intrigued by the tech and
wish I could explain it half as well as you can. You had me fooled. I could have swore that
you were a developer just based on the way that you were speaking about Sui. Captain Levi,
let's go to you next, sir. Yeah, thanks, Noah. I actually second what you just said, Noah,
because I was about to, you know, asking some developer-based questions myself,
but I'm still going to ask, regardless. So, Saevon, you seem to be able to explain stuff
and your pattern of explanation sounds like you have some proficiency in Java development. Am I correct?
So I appreciate that. So here's the thing. I am incredibly autodidactic and have been my whole
life. So when I want to know how something works, I go as close to the source as I can.
So I've read through a lot of the documentation for Sui and for other networks as well. You know,
at one point I was really following what Polkadot was doing really closely and several other networks.
I've built computers, you know, I've done a lot of things that are rudimentary and tech focused,
but not actually specifically necessarily writing code, but still technical in nature. I produce
music and a DAW that's highly technical. It's kind of like code, but it's in a different way.
So I can appreciate the way in which developers think, though actually writing lines of code,
it has never really been my strong suit up to this point. So, nope, don't have proficiency in Java,
don't have proficiency really in any of these other coding languages, but I do know how to
research things and how to process information and grateful that I have an ability to try and
share that information with people, even if I don't have the most direct context for it.
Then I feel second what Noah said. I actually wish I had half of what you could do.
So I'll be going straight to my question, but before then I'd like to, you know,
give some feedback on what Tino said. Of course, Tino's a really quick brief explanation regarding
the vulnerability of Bitcoin and quantum computing. It's actually a threat, but not an immediate one.
And the threat is actually being currently heavily researched and addressed by the Bitcoin community
with the most significant one being the threat to Shor's algorithm to Bitcoin's EDCSA. Please feel
free to go check it out. The elliptical design is vulnerable to Shor's algorithm because of
the huge computation of number that is required. But unfortunately, we do not have the tech to do
to run such mass computing. That's what makes Bitcoin currently the dominant one.
So you shouldn't be afraid of that. Well, please use it to check it.
Back to my question about, you know, I think so. I am on your website now,
and you know, one of the selling points, the strong selling points, I think you had seen
actually also talked about it, is the fact that you have scalable infrastructure that's
really fast, secure and affordable. Of course, Coinbase went down a couple of days ago.
Sol, Solana also went down a couple of months ago. And a few months ago, there was also a hack.
Of course, this actually incorporated a lot of hundreds of millions of dollars in losses
from the time to, you know, the business ecosystem and management. So the fact that
it's one thing to actually, you know, be really speedy. But of course, when real weight comes in,
by weight, I mean, I'm talking about heavy amounts of requests, we used to be able to,
you know, evolve on to build to accommodate that scalability as it comes.
Yes, great call out. So again, I also am a very blunt person and trying to be very rational.
The fact of the matter is, we have not yet reached a point where we're getting hundreds of millions
of requests in a dense period of time, right? That we've had moments of incredible surges, no doubt,
particularly late last year when ordinals were kicking off and chains outside of Bitcoin were
creating ordinals or inscriptions. And that same energy came over the suite. And outside of some
time, earlier on, during one of the first quest that went on after mainnet, this was one of the
the highest, the largest periods of requests coming into the network. And nothing went offline, nothing
fell over. I don't have it off top of my head. But if you look up, what was the name of it,
maybe it was just suite inscriptions, or something like that, I think it may have been built by the
Blue Move team. I don't recall exactly this second, but you should be able to pull up the data. And if
nothing else, you can go on sweet vision. And then that's one of the block explorers and just look
for when these the transaction volumes and these sort of things. And we haven't had an outage
at this point, you know, this is what I will say, right, because it's not good for them to
kick other people when they're down. If an outage happens, an outage in and of itself,
in theory, shouldn't really be the end of the world. And I don't think it means that a chain
is broken. What it means most likely is that there was some sort of bug or a bottleneck.
And it caused an issue. Now, of course, if you have an outage, not once, but twice,
but three, but four or five, 10 plus times, maybe at a fundamental level, something is not quite there
to sustain where it is at. But I think it's all about being intellectually honest about
what's happening at the root and disconnecting the performance of any of these networks tokens
from the raw performance of the actual technology. Because my humble opinion,
and I will be specific here for a second, right? Instead of being around the bush,
Solana, it outages are regular on Solana. But given that the price is performing,
and it has risen the way that it has, and so many people have money tied up in Solana,
not just retail investors, but institutional investors. If I were to guess, and this is
just speculation, I don't have any special information, I wouldn't be shocked if after
an Ethereum ETF gets approved, they try to push the Solana ETF through, right? And so all of this,
I just say that when you have a certain amount of money involved, sometimes people turn an eye,
they kind of pretend that these issues don't exist to buy time to fix it. And just like with
Solidity, there are certain issues at the core of how the language is built. From what I have looked
into, there are issues with how Solana is built. And this is part of the promise of what they're
doing with Firedancer and some of these other changes that remain to be seen. But this was
something top of mind when SWE was being created. And so the way in which this season goes back to
the fact that SWE is not a blockchain, that it's a DAG, and that there's a shared object and single
owner objects and fast paths and all these routes where there are technically transactions that
don't need to go through, quote unquote, full network consensus, because they're not dependent
on what else is happening on the network. And so if you own a single object, and it's a single
owned object, and you're the owner, and you decide to do something with it, it doesn't need to check
with everything else happening in the network before it can go through, necessarily, because you
authorized it. But anyhow, I'm meandering here a bit. All that to say, the way the network is built
right now, as demand increases, block space increases. And we have demonstrated that over
time, you can actually go look these sort of things up if you really care to smooth around.
And we have not had any outages based on influx, suddenly, in spikes of usage. So
that's where things are today.
Yeah, it's really, really impressive, you know, you actually just reminded me of a very annoying,
I'd say is an annoying but addictive game I usually play, where I need to literally rewrite
the entire network and, you know, restart everything over, then wait, if someone can
actually break the network, and if someone does, I go back and evolve. So I guess that, you know,
the fact that these companies have got into, you know, such a very big point of scale,
some things can actually be overlooked and then fixed data. But I'm guessing that that's
the policy that they use. So I'm just like you, I of course, I wish every single of you
that the best and I really hope that you do. I'm writing while we reach competing perfection.
The next question I actually do have is the fact that
someone made mention, I think it was you, that there are unknown validators that finally pass
through them validators. Are these validators, especially the unknown ones going to be monitored,
considering the fact that some of these unknown validators may choose to remain active
using the same validation sequence? Is there any way to reach out to the owners of these
validators? Or is there any way these unknown validators could reach out to you
so that they could, you know, run a vetting so that they could actually pass and make
that switch from an unknown validator to an unknown validator?
Okay, so I didn't hear a lot of that question. I'm actively watching my two-year-old son right
now and he's not feeling well. So I'm going to need to jump to take care of him.
But if you if you can DM me your question, then I can do my best to answer it. But I got to jump
y'all. Appreciate it. Thanks. Thanks. Thanks a lot for coming. Thanks. Yeah, my pleasure. Thank
you. Save on a couple more questions for me, then we can wrap it up. I wanted to,
we talked so much about Thrivecoin in the beginning. And then I feel like the second part of the space
is all about SUI, which is fine because the two are working in unison together. But circling back
and wrapping up with some questions about Thrivecoin, I think would be proper. Any
collaborations or partnerships on the horizon that you guys think could further bolster the
ThinkSUI and Thrivecoin initiatives? Well, that's a big question. Daniel,
I don't know. Yes, there's some really big partnerships as it relates to SUI that we'll
be announcing soon. I'm not sure yet that I'm allowed to share that alpha, so I won't. But
I will say this, like super big stuff on the horizon. And in terms of the impact that we
expect to make for ThinkSUI, it should be big, like really big. And to give you an example of
the kind of impact that we make in ecosystems, we've been working with Apecoin for over a year
now. And in the first year in the Apecoin ecosystem, they gave us about 2% of all of
the funds that they deployed to grow their ecosystem. And with that 2% of the funds,
we were able to fund and support the building of seven times more infrastructure than the entire
DAO combined. Seven times more culture projects, if there's a builder who's built in Apecoin,
they've likely done it through and in connection with us. 2.5 times more governance projects,
so the list goes on and on. And the impact of all of that was that Apecoin asked us to use
points of their treasury to really build at 20 times more tokens to build out their ecosystem.
That is the kind of impact that we're looking at creating together with SUI over the coming
months and over the coming year. The big question in SUI, right? Sévan has talked a lot about the
tech. Like it is powerful. Now we've got to get people using it, building infrastructure
that supports really scaling the community here. And we're really excited to be in the
thick of it and be a big part of that.
Beautiful. And I know that some of the team has to go, so I'm going to wrap things up here.
If anyone has any concluding thoughts for the audience, go ahead and share them now.
Otherwise, it's been a pleasure and hope to have you guys on again in the future.
Yeah, just one more thing here. Before we jump off, I just want to make sure folks
had that alpha to earn their first dollar in SUI by clicking that first pin tweet all the way to the
left, connecting your SUI wallet to thinksuite.com, retweeting that tweet, and then connecting your
X profile to your ThinkSuite profile so that we can connect your X activity to your ThinkSuite
account. This is your portal to all things ThinkSuite. That means you get all your various
ways to contribute at ThinkSuite.com. You have all your links to all your guidelines,
you have your submission form links there. It gets the information on how you can participate
as a content creator or a builder, which is sort of the big thing of what we want to take away
for folks today. If you're creating content on SUI, about SUI, relating to SUI, if you're
building on SUI, you're creating NFT projects on SUI, or thinking about doing any of the above.
We want you to click on thinksuite.com, get connected, message ThinkSuite, X account,
message the Thrive account, message me directly. You have two days to put in your project ideas in.
It's a seven question form, not a lot of time. Get it in so you can get your stuff in,
and you'll have two to four weeks to build and create.
That's sort of what I wanted to end with. Scott, anything from your end?
That was what I was going to end with too. Guys, there really is a lot of opportunity. One thing
that we didn't really talk about is SUI. It's not as big as Ethereum, but there's a
greenfield opportunity there. You can come in there, you can get the attention of ThinkSuite,
Mistin, and SUI Foundation to help you build your project, your ecosystem. It's incredible tech,
and it's a massive opportunity. Get those submissions in. You got a few days. March 7th
is your deadline. If you need help, you have questions, hit us up on Discord,
X messages, or feel free to reach out directly.
Awesome, and Mobile Media Community, remember that everything you hear on this broadcast is meant
for educational purposes only. Nothing is financial advice, so be safe out there,
and we'll see you all the next one soon. Take care.
Thanks, Noah.