Loading video...

Video Failed to Load

Go Home

Candid: ICP's interface description language that enables seamless interoperability between canisters and frontends written in different languages. The key innovation? Motoko actors automatically consume and produce Candid interfaces. Developers never need to read or write Candid code - it just works. This completes the picture: Motoko reimagines blockchain development...

39,283 views • 7 months ago •via X (Twitter)

0 Comments

No comments available

Comments from the original post will appear here

Related Videos

🤝 Join QANplatform as Senior Developer Relations Engineer (DevRel) We're hiring a Developer Relations Engineer who speaks fluent code, content, and community. Ready to shape the future of Web3? At QANplatform, we're building the quantum-resistant hybrid blockchain designed for the next generation of secure, scalable applications, putting developers first with multi-language smart contract support and built-in developer royalty fees. 👀 We’re looking for someone who can help developers: - Discover and understand our platform - Adopt our tools and SDKs - Build incredible, world-changing projects on QANplatform 🖥️ What you’ll do As a Senior Developer Relations Engineer, you’ll be the bridge between our engineering team and the wider developer ecosystem. You will: - Translate complex technology into actionable insights - Champion developer needs within the organization - Build meaningful relationships with the community - Write sample code, tutorials, and blogs - Run hackathons, deliver workshops, and host live SDK demos - Be the voice of developers internally — and our public voice to the community externally 🦄 Why this role is different This isn’t a traditional DevRel position. You’ll move fluidly between: - Writing and reviewing code - Creating technical and educational content - Engaging developers through events, demos, and collaboration Ready to make an impact? If you’re excited about bridging the gap between developers and next-generation blockchain technology, we’d love to hear from you. Apply now and let’s build something extraordinary together. Fill in this form to apply:

QANplatform

10,739 views • 7 months ago

Did you know there might be a second language on the Book of Mormon gold plates? Most Latter-day Saints have heard that the plates were written in Reformed Egyptian, but not as many people realize that the Book of Mormon started as essentially a different language first. And the relationship between these two languages, I believe, supports the authenticity of the Book of Mormon. What the Nephite language started as, is described in the first chapter of the book of Mormon as "the learning of the Jews and the language of the Egyptians." Scholars have theorized that this first language could contain a mix of Hebrew and Egyptian features. So the Book of Mormon writing may have started out looking something like this, a Judahite variety of Egyptian known as Palestinian Hieratic that is attested in Lehi and Nephi’s day. But languages don’t stay static. After hundreds of years, it seems this earlier Egyptian language evolved into a modified, or Reformed Egyptian, as Moroni calls it at the end of the book. So maybe something like this. Since the writings of Nephi and Mormon both appear to be included on plates that became the Book of Mormon, one would expect their languages to look different. And Martin Harris’s visit to Professor Charles Anthon may show evidence of this shift. New research reveals Anthon may have seen two different transcripts: one that resembled Egyptian—like at the beginning of the Book of Mormon— and another that was harder to identify, just like we’d expect from an evolving, reformed language. Language changing over time is totally natural—just look at how different English was a few hundred years ago! So this shift in the Book of Mormon’s language is exactly what we’d expect from an authentic, ancient record. If you want to learn more, read KnoWhy 774 at Scripture Central.

ScripturePlus

11,129 views • 1 year ago