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From YouTube: Dmitry Shklovsky (QuickNode) - A One-Stop Shop
Description
How new developers can power their blockchain applications and scale up as they grow. From elastic APIs & dedicated nodes, to powerful tools & analytics, all at your command through a simple control panel.
A
Sure
jeff,
thank
you
for
having
me
on
the
spaces.
Nier
great
talk
difficult
to
follow
up
after
such
an
amazing
amazing
talk
but
yeah.
My
name
is
dmitry
co-founder
of
quick
node.
We
are
a
web3
infrastructure
and
developer
platform.
A
Our
team
comes
from
nearly
two
decades
experience
in
the
web
hosting
and
data
center
and
distributed
system
space.
So
a
couple
years
ago
we
decided
to
like
how
do
we
apply
the
experience
and
knowledge
to
this
next
iteration,
this
next
layer
of
the
web,
which
is
the
web
three,
and
we
noticed
back
in
2017
that
there
was
a
lack
of
options
and,
frankly,
lack
of
robust
infrastructure
to
provide
data
to
applications
that
were
building
with
with
the
data
being
on
the
blockchain.
So
that's
how
quicknote
got
started.
B
And,
and
so
what?
What?
How
is
this
journey
been
for
you
and
you
know
how,
based
on
the
the
vision
that
you
first
saw
versus
the
practical
reality
of
where
you're
at
you
know
what
what
is
your
learning
been
along?
The
way.
A
It's
it's
beyond
anything
we
could
have
imagined,
especially
last
year,
has
been
tremendous
for
for
for
all
of
blockchain
for
the
entire
web
3
space,
I
mean
we
noticed
that
they
were
smoke
and
that
they
would
eventually
be
fired,
because
there
was
that
there
was
promise
in
smart
contracts
and
what
blockchain
enabled
from
things
like
dows
and
business
models
that
were
simply
were
not
possible
before
tokenization
and
having
decentralized
finance.
Like
we've,
seen
a
lot
of
pain
points
in
2020
in
2021,
where
blockchain
makes
total
sense.
A
It's
just
that.
Maybe
it
was
a
little
primitive
a
little
early
and
I'm
glad
that
quicknote
and
our
team
here
are
able
to
contribute
to
the
growth
of
the
web3
space
and
enable
developers
and
enable
businesses
to
adopt
blockchain
technology
at
a
much
faster
pace.
And
so,
when
you
see
these,
these
bigger
corporations
today
embracing
it
today,
I
feel
like
it's
because
of
these
experiments
is
because
of
these
sparks
that
tool.
Tools
like
what
we've
built
enabled
that
blockchain
and
web
3
is
going
mainstream.
B
Well,
it
certainly
seems
to
be
going
mainstream,
although
where,
if
it's
a
baseball
game,
I
think
we're
still
in
the
first
inning
in
many
ways
absolutely,
but
you
know
the
thing
is
I
thought
you're
going
to
say
a
different
word.
You
know
smoke
and
fire
means
you
know
it's
much
more
powerful
than
smoking
mirrors.
So
oh,
been
there.
B
B
Could
you
go
a
little
detail
and
share?
You
know
if
someone
has
is
living
in
the
web
2
world
today
and
they
want
to
be
in
you
know
they
want
to
make
that
transition
to
to
to
be
where
the
future
is
evolving
towards.
B
What
specifically
do
you
do
at
quick
note
that
helps
move
that
process
along.
A
Yeah
absolutely
and
I
had
pre
prepared
some
slides.
Unfortunately,
the
twitter
spaces
doesn't
work
with
slides,
but.
B
If
you
want
to
tweet
them
I'll
be
happy
to
retweet,
and
perhaps
you
know
people
can
follow
along
on
the
replay
as
well
as
now.
If
you
want.
A
Okay,
sure
I'll
do
that,
but
basically,
let's
say
on
your
web3
journey
at
some
point:
whether
you're
working
with
a
javascript
library
or
a
python
library
or
a
java
library
whatever
it
is,
you
will
encounter
a
point
where
you'll
need
to
connect
to
a
node
and
nodes
are
essentially
gateways
to
the
web.
Three.
This
is
the
peer-to-peer
software.
That's
used
to
access
and
append
data
to
the
ledger.
A
So,
if
you
think
of
this
as
a
pyramid
at
the
very
top,
you
have
your
users,
which
then
interact
with
wallet
softwares
like
metamask,
rainbow
phantom
or
mobile
applications
like
cryptokitties
or
openc,
which
then
talk
to
something
like
a
back
end
like
I
mentioned
web3.js
or
through
j
webto,
pi
ethersjs,
and
then
those
those
libraries
then
talk
to
nodes
and
and
nodes
are
the
keepers
of
blockchain
data,
whether
that's
the
latest
block
data
or
that's
historical
data.
A
So
if
your
app
is
looking
for
like
what's
what's
the
latest
block,
what's
the
latest
info,
I
want
to
send
this
update
to
our
to
my
user
asap.
Or
is
this
hey?
I
need
I
need
to
know
the
balance
of
this
smart
contract
or
this
account
a
million
blocks
ago
for
for
whatever
reason,
so
the
node
stores
things
like
block
and
transaction
info
account
balances.
A
Smart
contract
details,
smart
contract
events
like
token
transfers,
nft
transfers,
and
then
you
also
use
a
node
as
a
means
of
sending
transactions
and
submitting
transaction
to
the
blockchain
and
like
to
to
deploy
smart
contracts
and
the
challenge.
There
is,
let's
say:
you're
you're
a
front-end
developer
and
you
don't
really
know
the
command
line
really
well
or
you
don't
understand
or
like
you're,
not
a
sysadmin.
You
you
just
want
to
get
going.
You
want
to
build.
You
have
this
idea
in
your
head.
A
You
want
to
build
the
app
you
don't
want
to
go
through
the
whole
challenge
of
getting
cloud,
a
cloud
like
finding
a
cloud
provider
figuring
out
what
kind
of
specs
you
need
and
and
all
that
this
is
this
is
where
we
build
a
quick
node.
It
requires
a
lot
of
effort
to
set
up
like
ethereum
nodes,
a
lot
of
nodes,
polygon,
nodes,
etc,
and
that
wastes
a
lot
of
valuable
time
getting
to
market.
A
You,
probably
might
you
know,
depending
on
your
skill
level,
you
might
spend
a
day
setting
it
up,
it
might
take
you
longer
and
there's
also
things
you
got
to
consider
like
sync
time.
You
know
you
don't
just
get
the
blockchain
right
away,
especially
if
you're
thinking
about
archival
data
that
might
take
you
weeks
or
months
to
to
sync
with
the
state.
A
So
what
we
do
is
we
manage
all
that
for
you
and
you
get
instant
access
to
a
platform
where
you
can
get
access
to
11
today,
11
different
blockchains
and
you
can
start
building
right
away.
It's
one
line
of
one
line
of
code
that
you
plug
in
most
most
libraries
out
there.
Today
they
just
ask
for
like
a
rpc
provider,
our
rpc
url
and
we
take
we
take
care
of
the
heavy
lifting
on
the
back
end.
B
And
so
for
somebody
who
is,
you
know
literally,
let's
say
someone's
doing,
building
enterprise
applications
right
now,
they're
in
the
dev
side
of
a
medium-sized
enterprise
and
that's
their
part
of
their
systems
group.
How
many
you
know
you
know
and
now
they're
assigned
okay
figure
out
web
three
for
us.
I
I
you
know
I
I
I
having
been
in
that
world
a
long
time
ago.
There
is
part
of
me
that
says:
well.
We
have
to
experience
things
first,
to
appreciate
the
tools
out
there,
because
we
have
to
well
me
anyway.
B
I
want
to
go
out
and
see
where
I
get
see
where
the
boundaries
are,
but
on
the
other
hand,
we
want
to
be
as
efficient
as
possible.
B
So
you
know
for
for
for
your
platform,
and
you
know
more
generally
speaking,
you
know
how
much
knowledge
experience
does
one
need
to
deploy
the
right
person
to
start
building
these
tool
sets
to
then
help
solve
these
not
so
much
to
bring
the
applications
from
from
today
to
tomorrow,
but
to
really
rethink
the
problem
solving
so
that
we
get
to
leverage
the
benefits
of
web3
today
versus
just
propagating
a
solution,
that's
old,
which
maybe
there's
a
much
more
efficient
way
to
do.
It.
A
So
definitely
a
learning
curve
into
getting
web
3d
apps
obviously
have
to
get
familiar
with
within
the
new
languages
and
the
new
tooling,
but
at
an
enterprise
you
ultimately
have
to
build
yeah.
You
have
to
make
a
decision
at
some
point.
Okay,
so
you'll
go
and
try
to
run
a
node
and
you
pull
one
person.
Second
person
and
you'll
realize
that
it
takes
a
really
long
time
to
do
this
and
it's
not
just
like
a
one-time
thing.
There
are
hard
forks.
There
are
client
updates
things
break
all
the
time.
A
This
is
open
source
software,
it's
highly
experimental,
so
you're
looking
like
and
if
you're
trying
to
do
this
at
scale
like
if
you're
doing
billions
of
requests
per
day.
You
know
if
you're,
if
you
are
an
enterprise,
that's
looking
to
move
a
significant
chunk
of
your
operations
into
the
blockchain
you're.
Looking
at
a
full-time
debt,
devops
team
and.
B
For
sure
I
mean
for
sure
and
and
talk
about
production
environments,
I
mean
where
I
used
to
work
on
wall
street.
We
had
the
production
environment
and
then
we
had
a
production
test
network
and
the
test
network
was
actually
just
as
production
as
a
production
network,
and
so
we
needed
a
third
network
to
actually
do
our
dev
work
and
because
you
don't
want
to
touch
stuff,
that's
being
demo
to
certain
people.
So
so
I
I
guess
I
was
just
asking
you
know.
B
I
appreciate
the
complexity
here,
but
at
the
same
time
it
seems
like
you
know,
you're
taking
things
that
are
otherwise
would
be
incredibly
time
consuming
and
you're.
Actually,
you
know
you're
breaking
you're
lowering
that
time,
and
you
know
I
sure
so
so,
there's
there's
that
and-
and
you
know,
for
someone
who
doesn't
have
the
the
depth
or
appreciation
for
the
scale.
B
What
you
guys
do
you
may
they
may
not
appreciate
the
subtlety
of
the
magic
that
you
guys
have
so
for
the
for
the
javascript
developers
here,
who
are
you
know
or
for
the
developers
in
here
who
are
looking
at?
You
know
sizing
projects.
B
A
Yeah,
well,
that's
the
great
thing
about
our
platform.
Is
you
get
enterprise-grade
infrastructure?
That's
globally
distributed
it's
highly
available,
it's
redundant
massively
scalable
and
you
just
focus
on
you
get
that
right
out
of
the
box
and
you
get
things
like
analytics.
You
get
security
tooling!
You
get
these
higher
level
apis
like
like
nft
apis,
pending
transaction
apis
web
hooks.
You
get
all
that
out
of
the
box
and
you
could
be
a
bedroom
developer.
A
So
the
same,
the
same
tools
that
are
being
used
by
these
larger
enterprises-
you
you
have
the
power
to
you.
Have
you
have
the
power
to
use
the
same,
the
same
platform
and
the
same
tooling?
So
this
helps
you
build
the
best
version
of
your
app.
It
helps
you
build
it
faster,
get
to
market
quicker
and
at
a
total,
lower
cost.
B
And
because
I
just
don't
know
the
answer
here
when
you
know
I
appreciate
building,
you
know,
I
have
a
startup
I'm
doing
in
web3
and
you
know
I'm
looking
at
tools-
and
you
know
I'm
always
looking
at
for
public
access
to
what
we're
doing
because
we're
our
survey,
our
you
know,
our
customers
are
ultimately
end
users
who
can
you
know,
get
to
our
website,
but
within
the
corporate
enterprise,
there's
always
that
security
firewall
and
a
lot
of
internet
people
who
you
know
a
lot.
B
A
lot
of
applications
never
see
the
light
of
day
in
the
sense
that
in
a
hundred
thousand
person
company,
that's
gla,
that's
I
won't
say
galactic
but
global.
They
have
tens
of
thousands
of
users,
but
it's
all
internal
on
their
networks
are
the
toolkits
that
are
coming
to
market.
You
know:
do
they
assume
public
access
to
the
internet
on
one
side
or
do
they?
Can
they
function
inside
an
internet?
You
know
a
large
corporate,
you
know:
firewalled
environment.
A
B
B
You
know,
looked
at
separately
and
I
didn't
want
to
get
into
that
very
gnarly
conversation
about
security
and
about
firewalls
and
opening
up
holes
and
doing
all
sorts
of
other
stuff,
and
so,
but
you
know,
as
my
old
a
friend
of
mine,
would
say,
theoretically
with
the
right
with
the
right
environment,
I'm
imagining
that
the
public,
you
know
one
could
take
a
public
blockchain
fork
it
and
run
it
inside
a
large
firewall,
and
you
know
it
would
be,
of
course
separate
from
the
rest
of
the
world,
but
it
could
possibly
function
on
its
own.
A
Absolutely-
and
I
can
imagine
that
you
can
retrofit
or
or
adopt
a
platform
like
ours
within
that
that's
that
would
be
like
a
custom
setup.
It's
it's!
Yes,
it
is
possible.
I
mean
the
thing
the
thing
about
blockchain
is
it:
it
has
its
own
security,
and
so
you
know
what
what
we
provide
is
is
access
to
that
data.
So
it's
it's.
It
still
inherits
the
the
security
features
of
of
the
blockchain
that
that
you're,
that
you're
accessing.
B
Although
you
know
in
fintech-
and
you
know
a
bunch
of
wall
street
houses
to
have
lots
of
stuff
internal,
so
do
you,
how
is
how
do
you
define
community
with
the
work
that
you
do?
How
do
people
you
know?
Are
you
working
directly
with
us
within
end
users
with
developers
who
is
your
core
community
yeah.
A
Absolutely-
and
this
is
one
of
the
greatest-
I
guess
things
about
being
at
the
infrastructure
level-
is
anyone
that
needs
access
to
the
blockchain
is
or
is
transacting
interacting
with
the
blockchain
we'll
we'll
use
our
service.
So
we
have
customers
anywhere
from
your.
You
know
single
developers
to
three
or
four
person
teams
to
funded
businesses
all
the
way
up
to
public
companies.
A
So
from
from
your
your
coinbase
paypal
and
twitter,
to
I
mean
one
of
our
one
of
our
partners
recently
announced
they
raised
like
69
million
dollars
doing
analytics,
and
we
we've
yeah,
we've
grown
with
them
from
you
know
for
for
well
over
a
year
they
believe
they
came
in
with
maybe
just
one
one
chain
I
think
they're
using
ethereum
to
begin
with
and
now
they're
they're.
A
I
believe
that
they're
using
all
the
chains
we
support,
which
is
ethereum,
polygon,
terra
phantom
solana,
x-tie,
arbitrary
optimism,
bsc
and
and
cello.
So
it's
really
it's
motivating
to
to
see
projects
that
sign
up
and
start
out.
As
you
know,
one
or
two
person
teams
then
grow
to
raise
mass
massive
amounts
of
money
and
really
make
make
a
difference
in
the
world.
A
The
the
fast
and
ever
changing
landscape.
It's
both
it's
it's
a
challenge,
it's
a
challenge,
but
it's
a
challenge
that
again.
This
is
this
is
why
our
team
wakes
up
every
day,
because
you
never
know
who's
gonna,
come
through
the
door
and
start
working
with
blockchain
like
we're.
We're
always
it's
crazy
to
see
that
the
kind
of
inbound
that
we're
seeing
from
companies
that
you
may
not
have
thought
would
even
consider
entering
the
space
but
they're.
A
You
know
this
is
the
direction
that
they
want
to
take,
and
you
know
you're
kind
of
seeing
this
play
out
with
facebook
and
microsoft
recently
like
really
really
taking
blockchain
and
the
whole
like
metaverse
seriously.
B
Yeah,
well,
I
think
for
some,
it's
a
matter
of
survival
that
if
you
don't
adopt
you
die,
and
you
know,
of
course
there
are
going
to
be
generations
of
people
that
are
used
to
doing
things
a
certain
way
and
for
some
people,
that's
all
they
care
about,
and
you
know
that's
what
makes
life
challenging
and
interesting
at
the
same
time.
But
I
you
know
it's
it's.
B
You
know
you're
kind
of
like
a
leading
indicator
as
far
as
what
to
look
forward
to
and
from
what
you're
saying
and
perhaps
not
saying
it
looks
like
the
it's,
a
blue
sky
opportunity
with
with
greatness
in
front
of
us
and
it's
truly
unbounded
as
far
as
how
far
it
can
go,
yeah
we're
just
going
to
before
I
run
out
of
time
other.
Have
you
run
into
someone
without
seeing
the
company
but
doing
something
outside
the
box
wanting
to
use
your?
A
Yeah,
like,
like
I
mentioned
in
in
the
beginning,
that,
like
blockchain
and
tokenization,
enables
governance
models
and
business
models
that
were
not
possible
before
so
like
there
was
this
one
project
that
was
doing
governance
on
the
blockchain
based
on
meritocracy.
So
if
you,
if
you
held
a
certain
nft
or
token,
whether
that
be
like
your
your
diploma
or
law
degree
or
whatever
you,
you
were
able
to
participate
in
certain
voting
on
certain
aspects
of
you
know
whatever
that
was
governing.
A
Let's
see
there
was
another
one
called
fairment
which,
which
also
started
with
us
a
number
of
years
back,
I
remember,
maybe
2018
or
2019,
so
they
they
developed
a
process
to
do
fundraising
legally
within
the
us
through
tokenization,
so
you'd.
Essentially
they
have
the
framework
and
the
ui
that
you
can
go
to
their
website
sign
up,
get
a
widget
put
it
on
your
website
and
any
visitor
that
uses
your
product
can
also
become
a
stakeholder
through
tokenization
yeah.
It's
it's
pretty
yeah.
It's
really
fascinating.
B
A
Sure,
well,
here,
on
twitter
sunday,
at
the
end,
dms
are
open
for
going
down
the
rabbit
hole
on
what
we
do
and
you
know
we
have
over
100
different
guides
that
educate
you
on,
like
sending
your
first
transaction
to
building
an
nft
marketplace
on
solana.
That's
quicknode.com
and
quicknote.com
guides.
Also
twitter.com
quicknote.
I
mean
it's
it's
all
in
my
it's
all
in
my
bio,
so
check
it
out.
A
Follow
me
keep
an
eye
on
what
we're
doing
the
future
is
bright,
super
exciting,
so
yeah,
it's
just
one
of
the
best
spaces
and
fastest
growing
spaces
to
be
in
right
now.