Hi, I'm anonymous. I'm from the internet, you can trust me.
I'm happy to be part of one of the fastest blockchains in existence, one with no fees, one that's faster than VISA, one that allows on-chain communication missing from so many blockchains, one that was distributed fairly via PoW, one that corrected huge inflation with a hard fork and is more successful than ever because of it, one that allows to delegate your voting power to others as closest thing to representative democracy we have in crypto, one that makes sure to provide incentives to vote for the benefit of the chain by taking time to power down insuring that malicious votes will have negative effect on your own coins, one with built in on-chain exchange and fiat pegged currency.
I've never been more excited to hear the power of graphene will be used for custom smart contracts, ability to host applications on the blockchain and executed in parallel, ones that cost no fees just like steem, and I want to dedicate a lot of my time to developing on EOS. I think Dan's other graphene projects like bitshares, steem and some day EOS are the power houses of crypto.
3-4 tx/sec limits not enough. Dan Larimer introduces 100,000 - millions per second. Fees making it difficult for users to use apps? Dan solves that problem with completely new model and people don't even know they are using a blockchain. BFT can't be done in PoS they say? BAM. Done in dPoS!. This isn't random someone, this is someone who has been around since Satoshi working on these problems his entire time.
Now bitshares and steem are processing peak loads north of 900,000 and 800,000 transactions per day, dominating over bitcoin and eth sitting around 350,000 tx/day. They have been doing it all year. It's not even close.
I'm loving the new look of https://steemdb.com/ steem block explorer!
I'm loving other apps being built on steem blockchain like https://dtube.video/ and steepshot (fyi, most use cases do not need custom smart contracts or extra volatility from tokens, great example)
Dan Larimer is truly disruptive to disruptive technology