Hi,
Read the latest update regarding NEM. Would like to read more about what are the plans regarding Namespaces.
Is there any info available already? Anything even basic?
Cheers
At the time it's still under development so it's really hard to know as the devs are still making up their minds. But basically it will be a naming system on NEM. It should apply to Mosiacs, not a lot of information if/where else it could apply.
At the time it's still under development so it's really hard to know as the devs are still making up their minds. But basically it will be a naming system on NEM. It should apply to Mosiacs, not a lot of information if/where else it could apply.
Cool! What's Mosiacs feature? Can I see some list of planned NEM features anywhere, if there's any? I think it would be nice to have some expected features list of such kind.
Mosiacs will be the asset feature on NEM. Nick Szabo coined the term tiles or property tiles. [url=http://unenumerated.blogspot.kr/2014/12/the-dawn-of-trustworthy-computing.html]http://unenumerated.blogspot.kr/2014/12/the-dawn-of-trustworthy-computing.html Mosiacs refer to people who have more than one tile.
About the planned features, there is a general roadmap to V1
[font=roboto][color=rgb(51, 51, 51)]Roadmap to V1[/font]Completion of all the features in the existing wallet
Coloured Coins (property tiles)
Business Rules (a.k.a. Smart Contracts)
Decentralized Asset Exchange
Integration of multisignature into the AE and Business Rules
Snapshotting for quick syncing of nodes
Mosiacs will be the asset feature on NEM. Nick Szabo coined the term tiles or property tiles. [url=http://unenumerated.blogspot.kr/2014/12/the-dawn-of-trustworthy-computing.html]http://unenumerated.blogspot.kr/2014/12/the-dawn-of-trustworthy-computing.html Mosiacs refer to people who have more than one tile.
...
For those that don't wanna read the whole thing I think this is the gist:
* Property titles (registered assets), where the on-chain registry is either the legally official registry for off-chain assets or controls on-chain ones, thus providing reliable and secure custody of them. One can think of a cryptocurrency such as Bitcoin as property titles (or at least custody enforced by the block chain consensus protocol) to bits recognized as being a fixed portion of a currency, or as controlling unforgeably costly bits, or both. Block chains could also control hardware which controls the function of and access to physical property.