A quick romp around the A.I. playgrounds
Sherpa is back for a romp around the AI playground. He shows us around chatGPT and its uses like code, story prompts and more.
Sherpa is back for a romp around the AI playground. He shows us around chatGPT and its uses like code, story prompts and more.
Sherpa takes us back to basics with a Metamask overview. Covering best practices and how to stay safe while using Metamask.
Won’t be fooled again! The importance of self custody with tips and tricks to avoid common mistakes.
Sherpa discusses the history of Merged Mining, altcoins, and crypto collaboration – an idea that goes back to early bitcoin discussions
Whether you’re trying to earn beer money or stack easy sats for some ‘bear money’, Sherpa goes over how reddit is #stackingsats
Syscoin is building Web3 on the security of Bitcoin with smart contracts like Ethereum and Rollups to scale entire smart cities.
How can you live on crypto? Sherpa tells his true story of actually LIVING off of crypto, using Bitrefill and gift cards
Sherpa takes a dive back into bridge hacks and exploits. His first article for the Whitepaper was on bridges nearly a year and a half ago!
Sherpa experiments with AI-assisted fundamental analysis using OpenAI’s Playground. This week’s offering is a bit more light hearted.
With increased ease of access comes a new wave of innovation, but also a lower barrier-to-entry for scammers
What is staking? What incentives users to lock up tokens? This and more as we dive into staking and tokens and how it relates to NFT’s
With only a few days to go, there’s still a lot of confusion surrounding the Ethereum Merge to Proof of Stake.
For better or worse, it has never been easier to create art on the blockchain. This is part four of our deep dive on NFT’s
ERC-721 revolutionized how we made NFTs. Now ERC-1155 allows for functional gaming using both fungible & non-fungible tokens & assets.
Everyone else is putting their art on the blockchain – why not you? Learn how to make your own NFT Collection, the easy way, on Openseas.
With some 8,000 wallets compromised in the immediate aftermath, it wasn’t clear where to place the blame and