Today, @anoma opened 40 times, and I didn't win with 50,000 points, then I lost another 100,000 points in just over 15 seconds of long and short. Sigh, I did manage to open several with 10,000 today.
By the way, @anoma only has a points leaderboard; is there a consumption points leaderboard? If there is, I estimate I would be ranked high, mainly because I've lost too much. Hahaha.
Let's continue chatting today. The mainnet refers to a version of @anoma that allows developers to build and deploy real applications that can integrate with existing tokens (such as ETH, BTC, DAI, USDC). This phase of the mainnet has not yet launched any native Anoma tokens.
The most important interface in the entire Anoma protocol (and actually the only external interface) is the application programming interface, and our top priority is to enable developers to use it to build applications.
Using the @anoma mainnet:
Operators will be able to run Anoma nodes and participate in the intent gossip network, resolution, and settlement according to their preferences.
Solvers will be able to combine Anoma intent liquidity and EVM intent liquidity, and perform atomic settlement in a single transaction.
Developers will be able to use resource machines and Juvix to write intent-centric applications, providing transparent, concise, and zero-knowledge proof options.
Users will be able to define their own security models, choose service providers for network relaying, computation, storage, and ordering, and then the Anoma network will coordinate, enforcing the application logic.
Deployment of @anoma
Over the past few years, the @anoma ecosystem team has been conducting (and releasing) research and developing early prototypes. This has contributed to the overall system architecture of Anoma and the current phased deployment plan, aimed at facilitating the collection and integration of feedback from developers and the ecosystem through rapid iteration, and starting to build real applications.
The official announcement says the testnet will end on the 27th; does this mean the mainnet is not far off? Looking forward to it, friends.

I feel like @anoma's slot game has given out tens of thousands of points. The most I've won after playing for so long is 4,000 points @anoma.
As for the roulette, it really is a 50/50 chance to win 50,000 points, and today it actually happened. Recently, I've been getting a lot of 2,500 points.
I've heard some information that it seems the TGE is not far off? Let's talk about @anoma's mainnet roadmap, which includes three basic phases: development network, test network, and mainnet.
The Anoma protocol is a distributed operating system for intent-centric applications, while the Anoma network is the interconnection of computers running that protocol.
Operating System:
It abstracts different hardware into a common interface and provides an environment for applications to run.
Currently, there are three main types of operating systems:
Desktop operating systems, such as Windows, Linux, and Mac OS.
Mobile operating systems like iOS and Android.
Web browsers like Chrome and Safari.
All three types of operating systems fit this definition, but they differ in the types of hardware they seek to abstract and the types of environments they provide.
Desktop and mobile operating systems focus on abstracting physical hardware, while web browsers run on existing operating systems and can leverage the hardware abstraction provided by those operating systems.
Although all three types of operating systems aim to provide an environment where multiple applications can run securely, mobile operating systems and web browsers often focus more on restricting application permissions and clearly sandboxing application code.
Similar to web browsers, @anoma is an operating system that runs on top of existing "base" operating systems, abstracting the differences between physical hardware. Like mobile operating systems, Anoma provides a very clean sandbox for applications, ensuring that nodes can run the code received over the network securely and in an incentive-compatible manner.
Distributed operating systems like Anoma do not attempt to abstract the hardware of a single computer but aim to abstract the hardware of multiple interconnected computers so that applications can view the network as a single abstract machine: precisely, an intent machine.
Then, Anoma provides three functionalities:
A framework for writing intent-centric native applications, and
Allows these applications to immediately leverage existing services and liquidity in the network, and
A clear interface that makes it easy for service providers to support new categories of applications.
Later, we will also discuss @anoma's deployment status and usage, to be continued. Stay tuned, everyone.


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