Likewise, I don't think a generalized technical motivation alone will drive adoption. Many software engineers know the phrase "worse is better." Better tech doesn't win on its own. Timing, market forces, and ease of use play a large roll.
This doesn't meant that it should be easy to recreate. For example, only the minimum amount of logic and data should be tracked in your smart contracts. IPFS should hold the data that you want to guarantee wont change.
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For example, our user invite system for
@BloomToken tries to be easy to use while also fundamentally using the smart contract. For the user, they just put in their friend's email and submit an Ethereum tx. Behind the scenes, a one time shared secret is used in the contractShow this thread -
For our voting system, anyone can vote but we filter for Bloom users off chain. Votes are weighted by amount of BLT, but that weighting happens off chain. Determining the current weighted vote totals per block requires a lot of syncing work. You can recreate it though.
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