Partner at Pantera Capital: How Tokenization Could Reshape the Private Equity and Early-Stage Investment Ecosystem?

链捕手Pubblicato 2026-06-10Pubblicato ultima volta 2026-06-10

Introduzione

The article discusses how tokenization could reshape private equity and early-stage investment. Historically, public markets allowed early access to high-growth companies, but today's leading tech firms (e.g., Stripe, SpaceX) remain private for over a decade, with private capital capturing their growth phase. Temporary fixes like SPVs and secondary markets have emerged but are not fundamental solutions. Tokenized venture assets present a potential solution, converging three trends: the explosive growth of SPVs, the rapid expansion of tokenized real-world assets (RWA), and the breakdown of the "token vs. equity" consensus, where project tokens have become subordinate to equity in value capture. This creates an opportunity for tokenized startups to offer public, liquid exposure to venture-scale returns. The landscape includes various models: equity-backed tokens via SPVs or funds (e.g., PreStocks, Robinhood Ventures) and synthetic perpetual futures offering only price exposure (e.g., TradeXYZ, Ventuals). Trading volume is heavily concentrated in late-stage, pre-IPO companies like SpaceX and Anthropic and shows a power-law distribution across platforms. Key challenges and opportunities include aligning with founder/team interests, which can be addressed through models like tokenized startup baskets, accelerator models, or community token distributions. Expanding into non-U.S. jurisdictions with less efficient capital markets offers another path. For perpetual futures models, ...

Author: Jay Yu

Compiled by: Jiahuan, ChainCatcher

For the world's fastest-growing tech companies, the public markets are not what they used to be. Thirty years ago, Amazon went public three years after its founding, valued at $438 million. Netscape went public in its first IPO just eighteen months after being founded.

But today, the fastest-growing companies (Stripe, SpaceX, OpenAI, Ramp) typically remain private for over a decade. The exposure to high-growth periods that investors could once easily access in public markets has now been quietly intercepted by private capital at ever-increasing paper valuations.

"To put it cynically, [venture capital] intercepted the growth stage of early public companies. Amazon went public with a market cap of less than $1 billion. That's unimaginable today." – Bill Gurley

The market has reacted with some patchwork fixes: Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs), secondary market platforms, tender offers, and other tools designed to satisfy investors' appetite for growth-stage risk assets. But these are patches, not fundamental solutions.

What investors truly crave may be the vision that tech IPOs carried thirty years ago: broad, liquid exposure to generational companies, sharing in venture-scale returns.

Tokenized risk assets could be part of the answer. This article explores how tokenized startups could help rebalance these disconnected markets, centered on three questions:

(1) Why now is the right time for tokenized startups to develop

(2) What the landscape of tokenized startups looks like

(3) What are the key opportunities, challenges, and unresolved tensions hindering the scaling of this field.

Part 1: Why Tokenized Startups Are Timely?

Tokenized startups are at the crossroads of three major trends:

(1) The explosive growth of patchwork tools like SPVs as the de facto liquidity mechanism for generational tech companies

(2) The rapid growth of tokenized real-world assets (RWAs), covering money markets, public stocks, commodities, and more

(3) The breakdown of the "token vs. equity" consensus, where project tokens are increasingly becoming second-class citizens compared to venture equity.

1.1 The Rise of SPVs

Ten years ago, SPVs were a niche tool, a way to pool capital outside traditional venture capital or public financing structures. But over the last two years, they have become a key part of capital strategy, with platforms like AngelList, Carta, and Assure making setting up SPVs for specific opportunities and companies easier than ever.

Secondary SPVs, in particular, have grown over 545% in the last two years, with capital raised increasing more than 10x. These makeshift market structures capture significant market growth: the weighted basket of Hiive's top 50 secondary assets achieved 49.1% growth in 2025, significantly outperforming the S&P 500.

This suggests investors are using makeshift private market structures to restore functions public markets once performed more smoothly: access, liquidity, and price discovery. As companies stay private longer, SPVs have become one of the primary alternatives.

1.2 RWA, Tokenization, and the Perpetualization of Everything

The second trend is the rise of tokenization and perpetual markets across asset classes.

In Q1 2026, the value of on-chain RWAs reached approximately $320 billion. While the largest RWA asset class remains US Treasuries (used as collateral for stablecoins), significant growth has also been seen in asset classes like commodities, stocks, and asset-backed credit (e.g., Figure's home equity loans).

As RWAs gain adoption, we can see the tokenization supply chain maturing: spanning from issuers, custodians, to regulatory frameworks.

Simultaneously, perpetual futures have gained immense traction over the past two years with the rise of perpetual decentralized exchanges (perp-DEXes) like Hyperliquid. Compared to derivatives with expiration dates, perpetual futures have no expiration, offering practical advantages in execution, easier risk understanding, and native 24/7 trading support.

Projects like TradeXYZ are also expanding perpetual futures beyond pure cryptocurrency pairs (like BTC-USDC) to other asset classes, including US and Korean stocks, commodities, and equity indices, offering a standardized approach like HIP-3 for creating new perpetual markets.

1.3 The Breakdown of the "Token vs. Equity" Consensus

The third growing trend is the value capture dilemma between tokens and equity.

Decentralized finance project tokens like UNI and AAVE explicitly stated at issuance that they do not represent equity, addressing regulatory concerns. This created a "token vs. equity consensus," where project tokens should act as synthetic instruments, granting owners "governance rights" over protocol aspects, with promises of fee capture as a value capture mechanism.

However, this created a two-tier system with zero-sum value capture, making token holders second-class citizens compared to equity holders.

This problem became clear in recent events, such as the Aave DAO vs. Labs standoff and the controversial Circle acquisition of Axelar, where token holder interests were subordinated to equity interests.

All this prompts a rethinking of the existing "token vs. equity consensus": how can we design tokens that better reflect a project's upside potential?

The convergence of these three trends may pave the way for the rise of "tokenized startups": providing tokenized exposure to companies with venture-scale upside, allowing the general public early access to generational companies as they once did in public markets.

In this way, tokens become a re-architecture of traditional IPO mechanisms, opening access to the hottest giant companies for a broader public.

Part 2: The Landscape of Tokenized Startups

2.1 Current Design Approaches and Trading Volumes

Today, tokenized startups feature a variety of approaches and designs across two main dimensions: investment mechanisms and startup stages.

Investment mechanisms for tokenized startups range from SPV instruments holding equity (like PreStocks), closed-end funds offering access to company equity (like Robinhood Ventures), to pure perpetual futures offering price exposure without underlying equity ownership (like TradeXYZ and Ventuals).

Startup stages range from early-stage companies (like those on MetaDAO's platform) to growth-stage assets, and household-name pre-IPO companies (like SpaceX, Anthropic, and OpenAI).

Mapping the major players in this space and their scale (24-hour trading volume as of May 30), we notice several evident patterns.

First, the biggest trend is that late-stage (especially pre-IPO startup) platforms have trading volumes over 10x higher than early-stage ones. In particular, users seem to gravitate towards investing in well-known companies like SpaceX, Anthropic, Anduril, and OpenAI, regardless of which platform provides these assets.

Second, equity-based tokenized startups (e.g., via Robinhood Ventures and PreStocks) typically have higher trading volumes than their perpetual counterpart platforms. Part of this may simply be due to Robinhood's distribution advantage as a platform, and TradeXYZ's conservative strategy of rolling out perpetuals one by one.

Notably, TradeXYZ's launch of a perpetual for Cerebras Systems has been an outsized success, with daily trading volume exceeding $30 million and providing accurate price discovery within less than a 3% margin from the debut price.

Third, there is a strong power law concentration effect across this landscape, with platform volumes often dominated by less than three assets. For example, MetaDAO's volume is dominated by META, Avici, and Umbra; Street's volume is dominated by KLED.

Currently (as of May 30, 2026), TradeXYZ only offers SpaceX pairs, and SpaceX also accounts for roughly half of PreStock's weekly volume. This outsized power law effect likely indicates that, for most platforms, traders are more loyal to high-quality, high-recognition assets than to the underlying platform itself.

2.2 Project Design Architectures

We can also dive into individual projects within this landscape map to closely examine the trade-offs of various design schemes in this field, from perpetual exposure to SPV-backed equity structures.

Note: The platform comparisons and characteristic descriptions in this analysis represent the author's views based on publicly available information as of May 30, 2026. Descriptions of platform strengths and weaknesses do not constitute investment advice.

Part 3: Challenges and Opportunities for Tokenized Startups

Today, tokenized startups are still in their infancy, with a design space full of opportunities and challenges.

3.1 Transfer Consent and Team Alignment

Currently, one of the most pressing questions for spot tokenized startup platforms is whether these projects align with or go against the interests of company founding teams, especially given that platform volumes are disproportionately concentrated in 1 to 3 high-quality assets.

This is particularly true for high-profile, pre-IPO companies like SpaceX, Anthropic, and OpenAI, which carry the bulk of pre-market demand and trading volume.

Without team consent, a company may publicly announce opposition to tokenization, causing a sale to be invalidated and subsequently leading to a token value crash, as seen with Anthropic's opposition to secondary SPVs and OpenAI's opposition to Robinhood's stock tokens.

Typically, growth-stage companies pursuing an IPO have four apparent motivations: (1) access to public market capital; (2) real-time pricing; (3) liquidity exit for founding teams and investors; (4) prestige signaling.

Today, the proliferation of growth-stage "mega funds" provides a remarkably robust and abundant financing environment for the hottest startups, often at extremely high valuations. This landscape weakens motivations (1) and (2) for growth-stage companies to go public: they no longer need to turn to public markets for capital, and real-time pricing carries the risk of downward price corrections.

Therefore, in today's financing environment, a hot growth-stage startup would only enter the public market if a large number of early employees and investors desire immediate liquidity (as with Facebook's 2012 IPO) or as a prestige symbol representing maturity.

For a spot tokenized startup platform seeking board approval for direct ownership pathways in today's financing environment, these latter two motivations carry much more weight.

Traditional secondary market brokers like Forge and Hiive cater more to the liquidity motivation, while high-profile closed-end funds like Robinhood Ventures and USVC arguably cater to the prestige motivation.

Nevertheless, beyond traditional IPO motivations, a series of emerging designs have appeared, such as tokenized startup baskets, tokenized accelerator models, and tokenized community offerings, which could address this founder alignment issue:

Tokenized startup baskets refer to tradable portfolios of growth-stage startups, rather than a single tokenized company.

This is an avenue provided by closed-end funds like Robinhood Ventures. This mechanism can fulfill liquidity, prestige, and even capital access motivations while mitigating the downward revaluation pressure from "real-time pricing" by using Net Asset Value (NAV) multiples (somewhat similar to DAT).

The tokenized accelerator model applies the traditional accelerator and incubator model (e.g., YC, HF0, South Park Commons), helping startups go from 0 to 1 in exchange for their consent to tokenize their equity.

We see platforms like Street and MetaDAO effectively providing this model; they address the founder alignment issue by being on the founders' side and tangibly helping them grow.

Tokenized community offerings may be the most interesting and worthwhile model to explore for tokenized startups. As demonstrated by Uniswap's 2020 airdrop, tokens can be excellent incentives for daily users using a product every day.

If executed well, token airdrops can lower Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) by subsidizing natural user activity, facilitating project marketing, and increasing user satisfaction, especially for consumer-facing projects.

For example, Revolut conducted a community equity financing round, raising $1.3 million from early users at a $40 million valuation. This served a marketing function, turning users into owners and advocates, with those early supporters seeing 400x returns.

However, token airdrops can also be a double-edged sword; many crypto project airdrops have been plagued by farming behaviors, insider allocation accusations, and immediate sell pressure.

3.2 Non-US Jurisdictions

Another path to bypass the founder alignment issue is to go global. Much of the current discussion (and trading volume) around tokenized startups takes a US-centric view, focusing on the hottest US companies and assuming a US public market listing.

But US public and private capital markets already serve growth-stage companies exceptionally well, making it difficult to justify the additional benefits of a tokenized offering to a company.

This may not be the case in other regions, where local capital markets may be inefficient, failing to provide the best liquidity or pricing for the fastest-growing companies. For example, Wise initially listed on the London Stock Exchange in 2021.

However, in May 2026, it moved its primary listing to Nasdaq in the US, believing it could attract a more liquid market, reach a broader retail and institutional investor base, and receive more generous valuation multiples.

This geographical divergence in valuation and capital access is also evident in the difference in valuation multiples between US and Chinese AI companies.

US AI leaders typically command Price-to-Sales (P/S) ratios of 15 to 40x, while Chinese AI firms have much more conservative P/S ratios, around 5 to 15x. This discount may be partly attributed to capital access; Chinese capital markets are generally harder to enter than US markets.

This geographical valuation arbitrage becomes particularly interesting as different parts of cutting-edge supply chains in AI, robotics, semiconductors, and biotech disperse globally, with related companies listing on Asian and European markets.

Despite this structural advantage for non-US jurisdictions in tokenized startups, current empirical experiments and trading volumes remain limited. This may be due to the difficulty of finding high-demand startups willing to experiment on their cap tables, coupled with complex local regulatory environments regarding foreign investment and tokenization.

Korea is a particularly interesting non-US market for tokenized startups.

Korea has:

(1) Several nationally-leading companies within the AI supply chain with global investor demand, such as Samsung and SK Hynix

(2) A new legal framework for "stock tokens";

(3) Brokerages actively focusing on pre-IPO investments;

(4) More cryptocurrency investors than stock investors.

This is perhaps part of why TradeXYZ has actively begun listing perpetuals on Korean stocks.

One of tokenization's greatest strengths is its ability to geographically arbitrage, providing global audiences with underlying access to invest in companies worldwide.

With their global liquidity base and potential to open to broader retail and institutional investors, tokenized startup platforms are likely to become part of the upgraded listing strategy for the next generation of fast-growing companies outside the US, like Wise, which lack strong domestic capital markets.

3.3 Price Discovery Design for Perpetuals

Another route for tokenized startup platforms is to employ a perpetual strategy. If what's owned is merely a synthetic instrument not representing underlying equity, then there's nothing for the board to invalidate. This sidesteps the need for team intervention and board consent. However, synthetic assets trade legality issues for price discovery challenges.

Existing perpetual markets (e.g., for crypto tokens, stocks, commodities) typically rely on liquid spot markets and reliable price oracles to manage funding rates and synthetic prices. However, by definition, private startups do not have liquid public markets.

The closest markets available are tender offers and secondary buys, which platforms like Ventuals use to anchor their funding rates. But these are often unreliable and frequently underprice the underlying asset.

For example, on Ventuals, funding rates within a +/- 5% range of the oracle price are around 15% annualized, increasing exponentially outside that range, imposing punitive fees on longs.

TradeXYZ takes the opposite approach, relying on oracle-free price discovery. For example, in the Cerebras Systems offering, TradeXYZ simply set up a Hyperp mechanism, using the market's recent marks to derive a reference price, allowing the contract to discover its own price within the narrow window between the S-1 filing and the official listing. It outperformed any other mechanism in the market.

The CBRS perpetual launched on May 1 with a $175 reference price, trading between $288 and $320 for two weeks, reaching around $340 an hour before opening, less than 3% from the actual Nasdaq opening price of $350.

This estimate was about 84% higher than the investment bank pricing of $185 and significantly more accurate than prices from secondary brokers like Hiive ($225) and Forge ($113.50). This fully demonstrates the outsized success of perpetuals as a tool.

However, this process is not necessarily scalable, as clear price discovery relies on an imminent, verifiable convergence event. If Cerebras hadn't listed within a specific timeframe, the contract would have settled at its own time-weighted average price.

In this sense, the "perpetual price discovery" mechanism ultimately looks more like a traditional futures contract and also may not necessarily apply to early-stage assets with no near-term public offering.

Therefore, the design space for perpetual-based tokenized startups remains very broad. A scalable model has not yet been established, and it will likely be a hybrid combining crypto perpetuals with traditional futures, prediction markets, secondary spot markets, Contracts for Difference (CFDs), and other primitives.

With Kalshi's recent entry into perpetuals and Hyperliquid's entry into outcome prediction markets with HIP-4, we are seeing a significant convergence between all these different pricing instruments. Pricing pre-IPO tokenized startups could become a catalyst for a new kind of derivatives space, one more efficient and usable for everyday users.

3.4 Legal Structures and Regulation

From a legal structure perspective, many of these tokenized startup instruments, such as Street's ERC-S, MetaDAO's DAO LLC, and SPV-backed tokens, are novel experiments that have yet to withstand the test of time with regulators possessing strict enforcement intent.

Even with the recent US Clarity Act for digital commodities, it did not address this issue for tokenized equity.

Judging from public statements, the SEC appears to divide these tokenized startups into two distinct categories based on whether tokens are issued directly by the company or by a third party.

Issuer-sponsored tokens are securities themselves, just in a different form, and thus subject to traditional securities laws. Whether the official ledger is on-chain (transferring the token transfers the share) or off-chain (the token triggers a ledger update), it's treated exactly like regular stock: must be registered or exempt, with all standard disclosure and reporting obligations.

Third-party tokens are handled based on what they actually convey. Custodial tokens are Article 8 security entitlements under the US Uniform Commercial Code, i.e., real securities transactions, but they are claims to custodial shares, not the shares themselves, meaning you also bear custodian bankruptcy risk.

Synthetic tokens are entirely separate securities issued by third parties, carrying no rights to the reference company, and require separate registration or exemption: linked securities (notes or SPVs tracking the target's value) fall here; while security-based swaps (e.g., Ventuals-style perpetuals) are most restricted, prohibited from being offered to ordinary US retail unless registered and traded on a national exchange.

Conclusion

Whether pre-IPO perpetuals or SPVs, closed-end funds or secondary tender offers, each tool is an attempt to win back what public markets once freely gave to the masses: the chance to get early, liquid exposure to companies during their highest-growth phases, rather than letting it be monopolized by growth equity funds.

Today, we know this demand exists, but the infrastructure remains incomplete. For tokens, the implications run deeper. The past few years have been an identity crisis: project tokens relegated to second-class citizens, governance becoming a charade, and value accumulating elsewhere.

Re-architecting the issuance mechanism, giving tokens genuine claims to risk-scale upside, may be the generational mission that could liberate them. Armed with infrastructure the first wave never had, tokens might finally deliver on the core promise they once made in their early fervor.

Domande pertinenti

QAccording to the article, what are the three major trends converging at the crossroads of tokenized startups?

AThe three major trends are: (1) The explosive growth of makeshift tools like SPVs as de facto liquidity mechanisms for epoch-defining tech companies. (2) The rapid growth of tokenized real-world assets (RWA), spanning areas like money markets, public stocks, and commodities. (3) The breakdown of the 'token vs. equity' consensus, where project tokens are increasingly treated as second-class citizens compared to venture equity stakes.

QWhat key problem does the 'token vs. equity consensus' create, as described in the article?

AIt creates a two-tier system with zero-sum value capture, where token holders become second-class citizens to equity holders. The value accrual from a project's success often benefits equity holders more directly, leaving token holders with governance rights that may not capture equivalent economic upside, as seen in cases like Aave DAO vs. Labs or the controversial Circle acquisition of Axelar.

QBased on the data presented, what are two observable patterns in the current landscape of tokenized startup platforms?

ATwo observable patterns are: 1) Later-stage (especially pre-IPO) platforms see trading volumes over 10x higher than early-stage ones, with highly sought-after companies like SpaceX, Anthropic, and OpenAI dominating demand. 2) There is a strong power-law concentration effect where a platform's volume is typically dominated by fewer than three assets.

QWhat are the three emerging designs mentioned in the article that could address the founder-incentive alignment problem for tokenized startups?

AThe three emerging designs are: 1) Tokenized startup baskets (tradable portfolios of growth-stage startups). 2) Tokenized accelerator models (helping startups grow from 0 to 1 in exchange for agreeing to tokenize shares). 3) Tokenized community issuance (using tokens to incentivize everyday users, akin to airdrops, to reduce customer acquisition costs and turn users into owners).

QWhat is a significant legal/structural challenge highlighted for tokenized startup equity platforms, and how do 'synthetic' or perpetual futures approaches relate to it?

AA significant challenge is navigating securities regulations and the need for board/company approval for tokenizing actual equity. Synthetic assets or perpetual futures (like those on TradeXYZ or Ventuals) circumvent the need for company consent because they do not represent actual ownership in the underlying equity. However, this trade-off introduces the challenge of reliable price discovery without a liquid public market for the private asset to anchor the derivative's value.

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"Tokenized Startups: Rebalancing Access to High-Growth Companies" by Jay Yu, compiled by Jiahuan, ChainCatcher The article explores how tokenization could democratize access to high-growth private companies, addressing a market gap created as firms like Stripe and SpaceX stay private for over a decade, depriving public investors of early growth returns. It identifies three converging trends enabling this shift: the explosive growth of Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs) as makeshift liquidity tools, the rise of tokenized real-world assets (RWA), and the breakdown of the "token vs. equity" consensus where project tokens often fail to capture value. The landscape of tokenized startup platforms is analyzed across two dimensions: investment mechanisms (from equity-holding SPVs like PreStocks to perpetual futures like TradeXYZ) and company stage (early-stage to pre-IPO giants). A key finding is a strong power-law concentration, with most platform volume driven by a few high-profile pre-IPO names like SpaceX and Anthropic. Platforms providing direct equity exposure (e.g., Robinhood Ventures) currently see higher volumes than pure synthetic/perpetual platforms. The discussion highlights major challenges and opportunities: 1. **Founder/Team Alignment:** Gaining company consent for tokenization is critical, as seen when Anthropic and OpenAI objected. Proposed solutions include tokenized startup baskets, accelerator models (e.g., Street, MetaDAO helping startups grow), and community token distributions to align incentives. 2. **Non-U.S. Jurisdictions:** Tokenization offers significant potential in regions with less efficient capital markets (e.g., South Korea), providing global liquidity and better valuations for local champions. 3. **Price Discovery for Perpetuals:** Synthetic/perpetual platforms avoid consent issues but face price discovery challenges for illiquid private assets. TradeXYZ's success with Cerebras Systems' pre-IPO perpetual, which accurately predicted the IPO price, showcases potential but scalability remains unproven. 4. **Legal & Regulatory Structure:** Regulatory treatment varies. Issuer-sponsored tokens are treated as traditional securities. Third-party tokens face complex classifications—custodial tokens represent claims on held shares, while synthetic tokens (perpetuals, linked notes) are separate securities subject to strict rules, often restricting U.S. retail access. In conclusion, tokenized startup mechanisms represent an attempt to restore the public market's historical function of providing early, liquid exposure to high-growth companies. For crypto tokens, successfully capturing real economic upside in startups could resolve their current identity crisis and fulfill their original promise.

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Questa mancanza di trasparenza può derivare dall'impegno del progetto per la decentralizzazione—un ethos che molti progetti web3 condividono, dando priorità ai contributi collettivi rispetto al riconoscimento individuale. Centrando le discussioni attorno alla comunità e ai suoi obiettivi collettivi, SPERO,$$s$ incarna l'essenza dell'empowerment senza mettere in evidenza individui specifici. Pertanto, comprendere l'etica e la missione di SPERO rimane più importante che identificare un creatore singolo. Chi sono gli Investitori di SPERO,$$s$? SPERO,$$s$ è supportato da una varietà di investitori che vanno dai capitalisti di rischio agli investitori angelici dedicati a promuovere l'innovazione nel settore crypto. Il focus di questi investitori generalmente si allinea con la missione di SPERO—dando priorità a progetti che promettono avanzamenti tecnologici sociali, inclusività finanziaria e governance decentralizzata. Queste fondazioni di investitori sono tipicamente interessate a progetti che non solo offrono prodotti innovativi, ma contribuiscono anche positivamente alla comunità blockchain e ai suoi ecosistemi. Il supporto di questi investitori rafforza SPERO,$$s$ come un concorrente degno di nota nel dominio in rapida evoluzione dei progetti crypto. Come Funziona SPERO,$$s$? SPERO,$$s$ impiega un framework multifunzionale che lo distingue dai progetti di criptovaluta convenzionali. Ecco alcune delle caratteristiche chiave che sottolineano la sua unicità e innovazione: Governance Decentralizzata: SPERO,$$s$ integra modelli di governance decentralizzati, responsabilizzando gli utenti a partecipare attivamente ai processi decisionali riguardanti il futuro del progetto. Questo approccio favorisce un senso di proprietà e responsabilità tra i membri della comunità. Utilità del Token: SPERO,$$s$ utilizza il proprio token di criptovaluta, progettato per servire varie funzioni all'interno dell'ecosistema. Questi token abilitano transazioni, premi e la facilitazione dei servizi offerti sulla piattaforma, migliorando l'impegno e l'utilità complessivi. Architettura Stratificata: L'architettura tecnica di SPERO,$$s$ supporta la modularità e la scalabilità, consentendo un'integrazione fluida di funzionalità e applicazioni aggiuntive man mano che il progetto evolve. Questa adattabilità è fondamentale per mantenere la rilevanza nel panorama crypto in continua evoluzione. Coinvolgimento della Comunità: Il progetto enfatizza iniziative guidate dalla comunità, impiegando meccanismi che incentivano la collaborazione e il feedback. Nutrendo una comunità forte, SPERO,$$s$ può affrontare meglio le esigenze degli utenti e adattarsi alle tendenze di mercato. Focus sull'Inclusione: Offrendo basse commissioni di transazione e interfacce user-friendly, SPERO,$$s$ mira ad attrarre una base utenti diversificata, inclusi individui che potrebbero non aver precedentemente interagito nello spazio crypto. Questo impegno per l'inclusione si allinea con la sua missione generale di empowerment attraverso l'accessibilità. Cronologia di SPERO,$$s$ Comprendere la storia di un progetto fornisce preziose intuizioni sulla sua traiettoria di sviluppo e sui traguardi. Di seguito è riportata una cronologia suggerita che mappa eventi significativi nell'evoluzione di SPERO,$$s$: Fase di Concettualizzazione e Ideazione: Le idee iniziali che formano la base di SPERO,$$s$ sono state concepite, allineandosi strettamente con i principi di decentralizzazione e focus sulla comunità all'interno dell'industria blockchain. Lancio del Whitepaper del Progetto: Dopo la fase concettuale, è stato rilasciato un whitepaper completo che dettaglia la visione, gli obiettivi e l'infrastruttura tecnologica di SPERO,$$s$ per suscitare interesse e feedback dalla comunità. Costruzione della Comunità e Prime Interazioni: Sono stati effettuati sforzi attivi di outreach per costruire una comunità di early adopters e potenziali investitori, facilitando discussioni attorno agli obiettivi del progetto e ottenendo supporto. Evento di Generazione del Token: SPERO,$$s$ ha condotto un evento di generazione del token (TGE) per distribuire i propri token nativi ai primi sostenitori e stabilire una liquidità iniziale all'interno dell'ecosistema. Lancio della Prima dApp: La prima applicazione decentralizzata (dApp) associata a SPERO,$$s$ è stata attivata, consentendo agli utenti di interagire con le funzionalità principali della piattaforma. Sviluppo Continuo e Partnership: Aggiornamenti e miglioramenti continui alle offerte del progetto, inclusi partnership strategiche con altri attori nello spazio blockchain, hanno plasmato SPERO,$$s$ in un concorrente competitivo e in evoluzione nel mercato crypto. Conclusione SPERO,$$s$ rappresenta una testimonianza del potenziale del web3 e delle criptovalute di rivoluzionare i sistemi finanziari e responsabilizzare gli individui. Con un impegno per la governance decentralizzata, il coinvolgimento della comunità e funzionalità progettate in modo innovativo, apre la strada verso un panorama finanziario più inclusivo. Come per qualsiasi investimento nello spazio crypto in rapida evoluzione, si incoraggiano potenziali investitori e utenti a ricercare approfonditamente e a impegnarsi in modo riflessivo con gli sviluppi in corso all'interno di SPERO,$$s$. Il progetto mostra lo spirito innovativo dell'industria crypto, invitando a ulteriori esplorazioni delle sue innumerevoli possibilità. Mentre il percorso di SPERO,$$s$ è ancora in fase di sviluppo, i suoi principi fondamentali potrebbero effettivamente influenzare il futuro di come interagiamo con la tecnologia, la finanza e tra di noi in ecosistemi digitali interconnessi.

75 Totale visualizzazioniPubblicato il 2024.12.17Aggiornato il 2024.12.17

Cosa è $S$

Cosa è AGENT S

Agent S: Il Futuro dell'Interazione Autonoma in Web3 Introduzione Nel panorama in continua evoluzione di Web3 e criptovalute, le innovazioni stanno costantemente ridefinendo il modo in cui gli individui interagiscono con le piattaforme digitali. Uno di questi progetti pionieristici, Agent S, promette di rivoluzionare l'interazione uomo-computer attraverso il suo framework agentico aperto. Aprendo la strada a interazioni autonome, Agent S mira a semplificare compiti complessi, offrendo applicazioni trasformative nell'intelligenza artificiale (AI). Questa esplorazione dettagliata approfondirà le complessità del progetto, le sue caratteristiche uniche e le implicazioni per il dominio delle criptovalute. Cos'è Agent S? Agent S si presenta come un innovativo framework agentico aperto, progettato specificamente per affrontare tre sfide fondamentali nell'automazione dei compiti informatici: Acquisizione di Conoscenze Specifiche del Dominio: Il framework apprende in modo intelligente da varie fonti di conoscenza esterne ed esperienze interne. Questo approccio duale gli consente di costruire un ricco repository di conoscenze specifiche del dominio, migliorando le sue prestazioni nell'esecuzione dei compiti. Pianificazione su Lungo Orizzonte di Compiti: Agent S impiega una pianificazione gerarchica potenziata dall'esperienza, un approccio strategico che facilita la suddivisione e l'esecuzione efficiente di compiti complessi. Questa caratteristica migliora significativamente la sua capacità di gestire più sottocompiti in modo efficiente ed efficace. Gestione di Interfacce Dinamiche e Non Uniformi: Il progetto introduce l'Interfaccia Agente-Computer (ACI), una soluzione innovativa che migliora l'interazione tra agenti e utenti. Utilizzando Modelli Linguistici Multimodali di Grandi Dimensioni (MLLM), Agent S può navigare e manipolare senza sforzo diverse interfacce grafiche utente. Attraverso queste caratteristiche pionieristiche, Agent S fornisce un framework robusto che affronta le complessità coinvolte nell'automazione dell'interazione umana con le macchine, preparando il terreno per innumerevoli applicazioni nell'AI e oltre. Chi è il Creatore di Agent S? Sebbene il concetto di Agent S sia fondamentalmente innovativo, informazioni specifiche sul suo creatore rimangono elusive. Il creatore è attualmente sconosciuto, il che evidenzia sia la fase embrionale del progetto sia la scelta strategica di mantenere i membri fondatori sotto anonimato. Indipendentemente dall'anonimato, l'attenzione rimane sulle capacità e sul potenziale del framework. Chi sono gli Investitori di Agent S? Poiché Agent S è relativamente nuovo nell'ecosistema crittografico, informazioni dettagliate riguardanti i suoi investitori e sostenitori finanziari non sono documentate esplicitamente. La mancanza di approfondimenti pubblicamente disponibili sulle fondazioni di investimento o sulle organizzazioni che supportano il progetto solleva interrogativi sulla sua struttura di finanziamento e sulla roadmap di sviluppo. Comprendere il supporto è cruciale per valutare la sostenibilità del progetto e il suo potenziale impatto sul mercato. Come Funziona Agent S? Al centro di Agent S si trova una tecnologia all'avanguardia che gli consente di funzionare efficacemente in contesti diversi. Il suo modello operativo è costruito attorno a diverse caratteristiche chiave: Interazione Uomo-Computer Simile a Quella Umana: Il framework offre una pianificazione AI avanzata, cercando di rendere le interazioni con i computer più intuitive. Mimando il comportamento umano nell'esecuzione dei compiti, promette di elevare le esperienze degli utenti. Memoria Narrativa: Utilizzata per sfruttare esperienze di alto livello, Agent S utilizza la memoria narrativa per tenere traccia delle storie dei compiti, migliorando così i suoi processi decisionali. Memoria Episodica: Questa caratteristica fornisce agli utenti una guida passo-passo, consentendo al framework di offrire supporto contestuale mentre i compiti si sviluppano. Supporto per OpenACI: Con la capacità di funzionare localmente, Agent S consente agli utenti di mantenere il controllo sulle proprie interazioni e flussi di lavoro, allineandosi con l'etica decentralizzata di Web3. Facile Integrazione con API Esterne: La sua versatilità e compatibilità con varie piattaforme AI garantiscono che Agent S possa adattarsi senza problemi agli ecosistemi tecnologici esistenti, rendendolo una scelta attraente per sviluppatori e organizzazioni. Queste funzionalità contribuiscono collettivamente alla posizione unica di Agent S all'interno dello spazio crittografico, poiché automatizza compiti complessi e multi-fase con un intervento umano minimo. Man mano che il progetto evolve, le sue potenziali applicazioni in Web3 potrebbero ridefinire il modo in cui si svolgono le interazioni digitali. Cronologia di Agent S Lo sviluppo e le tappe di Agent S possono essere riassunti in una cronologia che evidenzia i suoi eventi significativi: 27 Settembre 2024: Il concetto di Agent S è stato lanciato in un documento di ricerca completo intitolato “Un Framework Agentico Aperto che Usa i Computer Come un Umano”, mostrando le basi per il progetto. 10 Ottobre 2024: Il documento di ricerca è stato reso pubblicamente disponibile su arXiv, offrendo un'esplorazione approfondita del framework e della sua valutazione delle prestazioni basata sul benchmark OSWorld. 12 Ottobre 2024: È stata rilasciata una presentazione video, fornendo un'idea visiva delle capacità e delle caratteristiche di Agent S, coinvolgendo ulteriormente potenziali utenti e investitori. Questi indicatori nella cronologia non solo illustrano i progressi di Agent S, ma indicano anche il suo impegno per la trasparenza e il coinvolgimento della comunità. Punti Chiave su Agent S Man mano che il framework Agent S continua a evolversi, diversi attributi chiave si distinguono, sottolineando la sua natura innovativa e il potenziale: Framework Innovativo: Progettato per fornire un uso intuitivo dei computer simile all'interazione umana, Agent S porta un approccio nuovo all'automazione dei compiti. Interazione Autonoma: La capacità di interagire autonomamente con i computer attraverso GUI segna un passo avanti verso soluzioni informatiche più intelligenti ed efficienti. Automazione di Compiti Complessi: Con la sua metodologia robusta, può automatizzare compiti complessi e multi-fase, rendendo i processi più veloci e meno soggetti a errori. Miglioramento Continuo: I meccanismi di apprendimento consentono ad Agent S di migliorare dalle esperienze passate, migliorando continuamente le sue prestazioni e la sua efficacia. Versatilità: La sua adattabilità attraverso diversi ambienti operativi come OSWorld e WindowsAgentArena garantisce che possa servire un'ampia gamma di applicazioni. Man mano che Agent S si posiziona nel panorama di Web3 e delle criptovalute, il suo potenziale per migliorare le capacità di interazione e automatizzare i processi segna un significativo avanzamento nelle tecnologie AI. Attraverso il suo framework innovativo, Agent S esemplifica il futuro delle interazioni digitali, promettendo un'esperienza più fluida ed efficiente per gli utenti in vari settori. Conclusione Agent S rappresenta un audace passo avanti nell'unione tra AI e Web3, con la capacità di ridefinire il modo in cui interagiamo con la tecnologia. Sebbene sia ancora nelle sue fasi iniziali, le possibilità per la sua applicazione sono vaste e coinvolgenti. Attraverso il suo framework completo che affronta sfide critiche, Agent S mira a portare le interazioni autonome al centro dell'esperienza digitale. Man mano che ci addentriamo nei regni delle criptovalute e della decentralizzazione, progetti come Agent S giocheranno senza dubbio un ruolo cruciale nel plasmare il futuro della tecnologia e della collaborazione uomo-computer.

537 Totale visualizzazioniPubblicato il 2025.01.14Aggiornato il 2025.01.14

Cosa è AGENT S

Come comprare S

Benvenuto in HTX.com! Abbiamo reso l'acquisto di Sonic (S) semplice e conveniente. Segui la nostra guida passo passo per intraprendere il tuo viaggio nel mondo delle criptovalute.Step 1: Crea il tuo Account HTXUsa la tua email o numero di telefono per registrarti il tuo account gratuito su HTX. Vivi un'esperienza facile e sblocca tutte le funzionalità,Crea il mio accountStep 2: Vai in Acquista crypto e seleziona il tuo metodo di pagamentoCarta di credito/debito: utilizza la tua Visa o Mastercard per acquistare immediatamente SonicS.Bilancio: Usa i fondi dal bilancio del tuo account HTX per fare trading senza problemi.Terze parti: abbiamo aggiunto metodi di pagamento molto utilizzati come Google Pay e Apple Pay per maggiore comodità.P2P: Fai trading direttamente con altri utenti HTX.Over-the-Counter (OTC): Offriamo servizi su misura e tassi di cambio competitivi per i trader.Step 3: Conserva Sonic (S)Dopo aver acquistato Sonic (S), conserva nel tuo account HTX. In alternativa, puoi inviare tramite trasferimento blockchain o scambiare per altre criptovalute.Step 4: Scambia Sonic (S)Scambia facilmente Sonic (S) nel mercato spot di HTX. Accedi al tuo account, seleziona la tua coppia di trading, esegui le tue operazioni e monitora in tempo reale. Offriamo un'esperienza user-friendly sia per chi ha appena iniziato che per i trader più esperti.

1.1k Totale visualizzazioniPubblicato il 2025.01.15Aggiornato il 2026.06.02

Come comprare S

Discussioni

Benvenuto nella Community HTX. Qui puoi rimanere informato sugli ultimi sviluppi della piattaforma e accedere ad approfondimenti esperti sul mercato. Le opinioni degli utenti sul prezzo di S S sono presentate come di seguito.

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