
Dan continued his Q&A from March 12 into the early morning hours of March 13 - by far his best interaction with the community since his SuperDan Q&A during the Superbowl in February.
Late night talk about decimal places in EOS and where to find this work:
Inter-blockchain communication for testing before June:
No more hardforking changes and other achievements:
Paying for votes:
More on margin trading:
How it relates to Steem and more on Bancor:
Black swan events:
EOS constitution changes:
On whether cross-chain communication will go both ways:
Back and forth between EOS chains:
Future plans and options:
How to catch vote buyers:
Bringing dapps over from Ethereum to EOS:
New definition of yes-man:
Clearing up security questions:
Big business on EOS:
Keeping up with questions:
Reasons for open source:
Bancor on EOS:
Opportunity for 3rd party developers:
Whether VC-backed airdrop tokens are a security:
Reassurance to investors and a block.one token rental dapp:
More assurance:
Finding solutions:
block.one and the EOS launch:
Ships:
Changes to the token lockup for voting:
Reasons for the change:
RAM and storage lockup stay separate:
Saving which world?:
Delegating stake:
Question from earlier is answered:
Later in the day, a question about transactions per second:
Over in BlockPros chat, Thomas Cox of block.one clarified the voting token lockup change from earlier:
And in EOS Developers, more from Daniel Larimer:
A community proposal:
And a Dan proposal:
Go EOS!
Who are we?
EOS Go is the first source for EOS.
Software company block.one is creating EOS.IO and releasing it as open source code; thousands of individuals will need to come together to bring this new "internet of value" to life. EOS Go is uniting the community for a stronger EOS.
How to Get Involved:
Community Announcements - YouTube - Twitter - Facebook - Forums
