惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

AI
AI
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
H
Hacker News: Front Page
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
S
Schneier on Security
H
Heimdal Security Blog
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
F
Fortinet All Blogs
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
腾讯CDC
O
OpenAI News
V
Visual Studio Blog
The Cloudflare Blog
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
T
Tor Project blog
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
C
Cisco Blogs
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
S
Securelist
小众软件
小众软件
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
H
Help Net Security
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
爱范儿
爱范儿
T
Threatpost
P
Privacy & Cybersecurity Law Blog
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
B
Blog
A
About on SuperTechFans
I
Intezer
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
博客园 - 聂微东
Security Latest
Security Latest
Project Zero
Project Zero
V
V2EX
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta

HackerNoon

Who inherits your bitcoin when you die? Kresus wants an answer built into the wallet | HackerNoon AI Is Changing Schema Matching in Ways Rule-Based Systems Couldn't | HackerNoon UKey Unveils The Seed Ring: Bringing Hardware Signing Into Everyday Life | HackerNoon Krea-2-Realism-LoRA Brings Candid Photorealism to Krea 2 | HackerNoon I Built a Framework to Keep Coding Agents Disciplined | HackerNoon DeepSeek’s Inference Chips Push AI Power Into the Deployment Stack | HackerNoon The Hidden Cost of Overriding Your Trading Plan | HackerNoon The Economic Forces That Turned Chicken Wings Into a National Obsession | HackerNoon Why London Must Model Density Before Building It | HackerNoon From Automation to Autonomous Operations: Designing Trustworthy AI Infrastructure for Enterprise AI | HackerNoon Fable 5 Was Jailbroken Again. The Bigger Story Is AI Safety at Scale | HackerNoon Your AI Film Is Beautiful and Invisible. Distribution Is the New Pre-Production. | HackerNoon Hyperithm Curates New USDC Vault on Leading Solana Protocol Kamino | HackerNoon Why Cost Per Token Is the Wrong AI Metric | HackerNoon Why Behavioural Data Matters More Than User Feedback | HackerNoon How We Built a Dynamic Notion Sprint Backlog Manager using Model Context Protocol | HackerNoon I Said One Sentence, and My Agent Did the Rest | HackerNoon Rising Need for Intelligent Fraud Protection Using Generative AI, Agentic AI, and Real-Time Decision | HackerNoon How Modern Browsers Crop Images Without Uploading Them | HackerNoon How to Build a Highly Available AWS Architecture Using Terraform | HackerNoon Home Assistant’s Config: Two Nasty Surprises to Be Aware of | HackerNoon Advanced Redis Architecture Patterns for High-Throughput Applications | HackerNoon How to Reduce Digital Fatigue in Interfaces | HackerNoon Educational Byte: Can Someone Guess Your Crypto Seed Phrase? | HackerNoon Best AI Editors of 2026: Which WYSIWYG Editor Has the Smartest AI Assist? | HackerNoon 50 Blog Posts To Learn About Aspnet | HackerNoon Refactoring 012 - Convert Your Key/value Into Full Behavioral Objects Stop Measuring Test Automation by the Bugs It Finds | HackerNoon Beyond Chatbots: How "Agentic AI" Will Revolutionize Tech Marketing in 2026 | HackerNoon The HackerNoon Newsletter: The Open Chip Revolution Has Reached the Real World (7/9/2026) | HackerNoon Telegram Now Has 1 Billion Users. Telebiz Just Built The First Real Business Layer On Top Of It | HackerNoon The 2030 Post-Algorithm Reset | HackerNoon The TechBeat: NetNut Shut Down by the FBI? Here’s What Happened and What to Do Next (7/9/2026) | HackerNoon Everyone Has the Same AI Now, How Do You Stand Out From the Crowd? | HackerNoon 195 Blog Posts To Learn About Architecture | HackerNoon Uphold and XDC Launch the First On-Chain XDC Staking Offering on a Major U.S. Digital Asset Trading | HackerNoon Discord Teases Immersive “Living Room” Beta to Revamp Voice Hangouts Why Are Tech Giants Spending $700 Billion on AI Infrastructure If the Race Is About Models? Before Your Business Appears in Google LSAs, Three Decisions Have Already Been Made Where Context Lives in a Cascading Voice Agent — and Why the STT Layer Quietly Decides Your Accuracy AI Made Marketing Bland. Creativity Is the Moat Now, Says WalletConnect's Dayana Aleksandrova Is Bitbanker a Scam? A Fact-Based Review After Testing the Platform AI is failing because of Energy gatekeeping How Agentic AI Is Starting to Fix the Disconnect Between Field and Office in 2026 How We Automated Xcode Organizer Performance Monitoring The Open Chip Revolution Has Reached the Real World Fable 5 Global Revival! 7-Day Limited Window, Usage Quota Slashed by 50% Secure MCP Server Deployment Using Docker Containers You Don't Need Temporal Yet: Durable Execution for AI Agents in 150 Lines Open Source Maintainers Are Burning Out Under User Hostility The Tech Hype Cycle Is Making Developers Feel Behind AI Is Killing the Training Ground for Entry-Level Workers Building a Zero-Cost ICS/OT Security Lab: Overriding a PLC with 10 Lines of Python 5 Mindset Shifts That Turn Good Leaders Into Great Ones What Entity Component Systems Can Teach Us About Ego, Identity, and Emptiness Turning Internal Link Audits From a 3-Week Project Into a Command
Build A Blockchain That Survives The Crypto Winter: Lessons From A Technical Founder | HackerNoon
Kadan Stadelmann · 2026-07-10 · via HackerNoon

Late at night. So late you could feel the sun approaching the hemisphere where I stared at the computer screen. We had built and launched a blockchain. Blocks were rolling in one by one.

Block 1... Block 2…

I’d refresh the explorer, check logs, and run diagnostics.

I was now on-call 24/7.

It wasn’t like we just got the idea to build a blockchain. We began building on top of other blockchains. It didn’t work out. In 2015, a blockchain platform upon which early versions of our platform were being built required a mandatory update. It wasn’t the first.

It was a non-backward-compatible update that increased fees and broke the APIs being used. The projects were made economically unviable overnight. It changed the way we thought about blockchains.

We published a manifesto declaring independence from any single blockchain.

'We the asset holders hereby declare our independence from any single blockchain.' From those ashes rose a sovereign multi-chain network secured by Bitcoin itself."

Mario GoghMario Gogh

Constant Iterations

In the early days, we started small, experimenting with building on top of existing blockchain platforms, like NXT platform. That platform’s non-backward compatible updates, which sometimes came with fee hikes and API breaks, rendered the apps we built economically unviable.

Next, we experimented with Bitcoin Dark, which aligned with our team’s values. Nonetheless, we hit limitations as our focus shifted from a single privacy coin to developing a broader open-source ecosystem upon which independent blockchains can launch.

We prioritized a forkable, sovereign chain. To never build critical infrastructure dependent upon an outside team and their roadmap.

This lesson and others inspired the “Blockchain Declaration of Independence) Feb 2016 on Bitcointalk, in which digital asset holders declared sovereignty from any particular blockchain.

The declaration explicitly mentioned atomic asset transfers, BTC-native trading, and blockchain-agnostic interoperability. A movement for cross-chain atomic swaps and interoperability standards followed.

It was the moment the space pivoted to multi-chain architecture. Our technical insight as a team, such as understanding atomic swaps before they became a household term, helped us in the long-term. Our first focuses were security. Once we forked Zcash-adjacent code, our GitHub commits exploded.

We began to go public with some of our identities, which helped us attract talent and credibility. With it, came increased scrutiny. We had to stay focused on the mission. A technical-first team, with clear specs, kept us on track. Meticulously-kept forums and docs prevented drift.

Share MashareShare Mashare

Releasing The Genesis Block And Fundraising


Our__genesis block__ was mined in Q4 2016. Although we were building critical infrastructure, we stuck to a modest, seven-figure funding level during the ICO with our tokenomics maintaining only 10 percent earmarked for ops.

The funds were mostly reserved for BTC notarization fees for our consensus method inspired by proof-of-work. We couldn’t overpromise. Developer team incentives, and those of the broader community, were aligned.

We stayed focused on delivering utility–at first, our consensus method for 51 percent protection via Bitcoin hashrate recycling.

This is where stepping outside of our comfort zone came in. We maintained strict community Q&A on BitcoinTalk. We shipped despite market volatility.

This disciplined us against overpromising.

Primary sources like the Bitcointalk ANN thread show intense community Q&A; we shipped despite volatility. Lesson for founders: Align incentives transparently (team allocation small/long-term).

Andrew - UnsplashAndrew - Unsplash


Open-Source Blockchain Development

As our community grew, coordination amongst open-source developers proved hard. We iterated relentlessly. We made thousands of commits over a period of years . We shipped code with usability hurdles, which ultimately led us to pivot to GUIs.

We learned to ship MVPs, receive feedback on BitcoinTalk, Reddit, and Discord, and conducted stress tests. Each experience hardened our security-first focus. If we tried to do too much, we would burn out. Iterating over time on secure and useful utility compounds.


As a decentralized team, communications proved critical. We gave updates every Tuesday, posted blogs regularly, and operated exclusively on GitHub so all updates were public. Market factors were always a roller coaster ride. With GitHub, we proved we were working even during bear winters.


We took a path from pseudonymity to transparency. Choosing to be transparent was key to gaining trust. We iterated relentlessly via primary sources, forums, and GitHub. Despite being a group of cypherpunks, we learned to delegate and document relentlessly like a Silicon Valley startup.

Blockchain networks must be antifragile. We adapted to breaks and hacks, which inspired ideas for further decentralization. Whenever we shipped, we were publicly scrutinized. We prioritized security and interoperability on the path to making theory reality in open-source fashion so that our work would outlive us.

Maximal FocusMaximal Focus

The Advantage of Technical Founding Teams

If you’re a team of developers thinking of starting your own company, you’re not alone. Successful companies are generally founded by technical founders.

Being a technical team means you can keep all product development in-house instead of outsourcing.

You also hold an advantage when creating product-market fit due to a pinpoint understanding of the technology, its capacity, and the ability to iterate quickly without needing to relay messages between engineering and businesses.

Builder to Leader Pipeline

The biggest challenge is moving from building to leading. There will be times when you need to code and times you need to lead. Leadership quality is as important as code quality.

You’ll have to evolve from being technical, and always behind the computer, to being a multiplier who builds systems, develops leaders, speaks to the media, and at conferences.

Our growth stalled if we slipped back into individual contributor mode for longer than necessary.

To avoid that, we had to divide responsibilities and develop complementary strengths. We had one developer-founder owning product vision, another focused strictly on big picture operations, while I owned deep technical architecture, and engineering culture. Specializing early allowed us to avoid making every decision by committee.

We learned to yield control and trust others to execute. You can’t stay on top of everything yourself. You must build an organization that operates without needing your constant involvement.


We were building a blockchain, which gave us a particular advantage as a technical founding team. Our first priority was to build premiere robust infrastructure.

We then focused on going to the market so as to not under-index on customer acquisition.

A Breakdown For A Technical Startup

1. Technical DNA for fast, high-quality building

2. Don’t be the bottleneck; adapt your leadership style

3. Divide roles among technical co-founders

4. Bring in non-technical skills (sales, marketing, operations) earlier than later.

5. Build systems and culture beyond the founder's involvement.

We continually reminded ourselves that we were building a company, not just a product. Think in terms of systems, delegation, and leading, and not pure coding. Never forget technical skills represent a core competitive advantage. Obsess over code quality and revenue growth.

What’s your biggest lesson building in Bitcoin and crypto? Drop it in the comments.