Ivan On Tech's 'Good Morning Crypto'

My Introduction to Radix


I am currently writing a book about my journey to Radix and Scrypto but today I will answer the question I get a lot these days. How did you find out about Radix?

My journey with crypto goes all the way back to 2011 but contains significant gaps. Only during a wild period from late 2016 to late 2017 did I actively trade cryptocurrencies. Other than that I have been all about trying to understand the technology and see if it is far enough along that I feel ready to take the plunge into it as a full-time software developer. With over 40 years of experience I have the chops to contribute, but I am fussy and want good tools, good core tech and a project that is not only trying to accomplish something meaningful, but is on the track to succeed.

Without diving into the details I will just say that from the very beginning Ethereum and Solidity didn't do it for me. I have resisted that siren song to this day and it hasn't been particularly difficult to do so. For much of 2019 and 2020 I was into Ark and part of the attraction was that their multi-chain model didn't include smart contracts which I considered sketchy. The programming model was to build your business logic directly into your custom blockchain. I really liked this but the summer of DeFi, coupled with repeated delays in the Ark development roadmap, started to make me reexamine my assumptions. Then when Ark promoted a lawyer to CEO, that was the last straw. They seemed to lose the thread regarding the path to success which must include a strong element of building a successful cadre of professionals using and expanding upon your core technology.

So by late 2020 I was in search mode for a new crypto project to get involved with. I looked at a bunch and didn't see much that even warranted a deep dive and the deep dives that I did make all came up empty. I did make one discovery: Ivan on Tech. Finally here was a YouTube crypto trading geek who at least took on the world of crypto first and foremost with a programmer's mindset. Of course he used other factors to steer his trading strategy besides just technical merit, but that was fine. He wanted to be involved with a lot of growing projects. Me? I needed just one that could be the horse that I could really ride.

It was on January 2nd, 2021 that Ivan did 5 minutes on Radix. He talked primarily about scaling without losing atomic composability but also mentioned the novel idea that Radix floated for programming incentives via on-ledger royalties. That was enough to get me to do one more deep dive. This one came up positive. Ivan had, in fact, drastically undersold the Radix story. There was a lot more to like. There were also some major cautions including my concerns about the design of the planned Scrypto language, but I will save that story for another day.

Within about a month I decided to creep slowly into the space by starting a discord called "Rock's Functional Programming for Crypto Study Group". Despite the unwieldy name I manage to attract about 100 members pretty quickly. Even though I tried to get communities going behind Cardano and Zilliqa and other blockchains that sported functional languages, I only seemed to attract Radix enthusiasts.

Cut to today and that discord has been rebranded as the Rust & Scrypto Forum and now we have about 250 members who are all very much focused on the first public release of Scrypto that just occurred at the APE meetup. Since I have a small head start in terms of how Scrypto programming works, I am working hard to answer questions and get people rolling with the language.

If you have an interest in Scrypto and/or Rust, feel free to join us. Here is a permanent discord invite to the [Rust & Scrypto Forum]. The forum is free forever. Cheers!

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RockHoward
RockHoward

I am a software developer (among other things) that is focused on the Radix Network. I run a free discord for programmers who want to study Rust and/or Scrypto. I also run the Radix Programmer's Guild.


Radix Programmer's Guild
Radix Programmer's Guild

The Radix Programmer's Guild is a member-directed community of designers and developers who are building core infrastructure and tooling for developers of financial services using the Radix protocol. We also provide custom development, design, review, testing and auditing services.

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