1 Year on Steem!!! - And Why We Need Communities

in #steem6 years ago (edited)

I joined Steem just a few days ago last year, and wow has it been quite a journey.

I had heard about Steem for a few weeks from @boxmining and decided to try it out for myself. I got an account on Steemit, waited a week and a half and started blogging about cryptocurrency. I can say for sure that my writing skills improved a ton with my challenge of writing 5-6 300-600 word posts per week. @mejustandrew was a great person to see who supported me and was one of my first follows. He’s not very active nowadays but still has been around some.

I did this writing challenge for many weeks until around May when I was being discouraged by the lack of engagement in my posts even though I had 300+ followers the rampant bidbots and fake accounts, and more. I then left Steem for a long time...

And came back! Throughout the time I was away I had checked in every once in a while but didn’t really interact. But when I watched Steemit Inc’s interview with @aggroed and @yabapmatt about SteemMonsters and the power of soft consensus, I was inspired to work on Steem. After struggling with working with Ethereum (I could never get Geth or Truffle to work and the fees were terrible) and Loom Network (only works on Linux or Mac and is very centralized and still hard to use), I got back on Steem to try to do some development!

And wow, was I met with so much more engagement, votes, and resteems by doing development on Steem. If I was to say the biggest things that stopped my progress before it would be a) not going on Discord or steem.chat and b) not doing development. Especially with @utopian-io, I was greeted with instantly more vote value than the rest of my 3 daily writing months on the platform combined and some of the highest engagement for any post I’ve made.

I started by working on a turn-based game with Steem, but then realized that I had brought way too much complexity into the project and that in fact it would be better to make a tool that did the things that I had already made: being able to stream transactions and have them trigger events to update the state. This tool became steem-state, which reused a lot of the code and knowledge from the turn-based game project. So far steem-state has been utilized in DLUX (@dlux-io) and Stratos as well as will be utilized in the future for a marketplace in Chibera I believe.

After bringing steem-state into a usable and useful state with the ability to build essentially any DApp on Steem I moved on to work on more projects utilizing this package. That’s where I started Stratos which has become a Communities implementation. I believe communities are essential to solving the many problems which plagued me during my first try at Steem when I first joined. They can be used in multiple ways: as publications like on Medium or more like subreddits (or I guess substeemits).

They allow moderation of posts and easier group curation (if in substeemit form) while also keeping posts immutable and secure on the Steem blockchain. Communities are ways for communities of shared interests to join together in one place rather than the ambiguous boundaries that are tags.

They can be used as publications, or group curated collections of similarly interested posters. On sites like Medium publications such as The Atlantic, Hackernoon, The Mission, The Startup, The Economist, and FreeCodeCamp have grown to become full-scale companies and each one has hundreds of thousands of subscribers, some over half a million, with many more daily readers that have not already subscribed. Hackernoon itself is wanting to set up a Steem-like cryptocurrency of its own in the future based around its publication.

I believe my experience, and others’ too, would be wholly better than before once communities have been implemented.

In the next year on Steem, I hope to improve the quality of the ecosystem as a whole, become a large minnow and maybe even a dolphin, and continue development with Stratos to maybe even use Stratos to link Stratos and Steem with a multitude of blockchains such as EOS, BitShares, Ethereum, and other Steem forks such as WhaleShares.

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Good to have you here @shredz7 and congrats to your 1.year anniversary. You are one of the most active developers right now and building real value for the community. Keep up the great work!

We've been developing on here for just shy of a year now. Glad to be building a great community here!

It's certainly been an interesting year. Always some drama on Steem. I've been awaiting communities for a while. It's the next logical step. Not everyone is a blogger, but they can form around any interest. Steem is still fun for me :)

I definitely agree!

I just joined your discord and curious where this is going. As I said in the discord the whole reason I'm here is for communities.

Well, I for one, am just damn glad you came back. Happy Anniversary!

:D Thanks!

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happy birthday in steem