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A community for the latest discussions about the cutting edge of crypto design, it's culture and significant crypto news. Decentralize everything. Check out our [Community Guidelines](https://relevant.community/crypto/post/6122269e61d1cd005a877277/62427d3ed587ad005b647828)
53382 Members
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© 2020 Relevant Protocols Inc.
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New innovative online platforms are not too common and those that truly push the boundaries and give us a glimpse of the future are even more scarce. If you are in the crypto space, you’ll certainly notice that experiments on the bleeding edge are more plentiful. It can even seem overwhelming at times. However, many of these projects are either generally suspicious or simply struggle with the vision and practicality of the design and architecture. Often, the ideas and vision clash with the feasibility and market readiness.
New innovative online platforms are not too common and those that truly push the boundaries and give us a glimpse of the future are even more scarce. If you are in the crypto space, you’ll certainly notice that experiments on the bleeding edge are more plentiful. It can even seem overwhelming at times. However, many of these projects are either generally suspicious or simply struggle with the vision and practicality of the design and architecture. Often, the ideas and vision clash with the feasibility and market readiness.
When we think of websites and apps that focus on art, sure, there can be social elements such as comments, likes, share etc but these sites are not judged based on those aspects as much as how many artists and how much art is posted and displayed in user “galleries.” If we look at some NFT marketplaces there may not even be any social features beyond sharing the item out to other social platforms. A good example of this is Foundation.
When we think of websites and apps that focus on art, sure, there can be social elements such as comments, likes, share etc but these sites are not judged based on those aspects as much as how many artists and how much art is posted and displayed in user “galleries.” If we look at some NFT marketplaces there may not even be any social features beyond sharing the item out to other social platforms. A good example of this is Foundation.
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Some low-ranking comments may have been hidden.