WHAT YOU WILL GAIN FROM THIS COURSE… Course modules will enable you to Understand how blockchain technology is relevant for you and your enterprise business strategy. Build a strong foundation in blockchain technology: what it does, what the different components and potential variants are; and how it is evolving. Identify which aspects of blockchain technology are most important and relevant to you. Articulate the industry potential of blockchain technology and use cases specific to your enterprise. Set a strategy to prepare your business or your clients for the emerging “decentralized economy” Define projects that can best leverage blockchain technology and open source efforts such as Hyperledger in contexts of high value to your enterprise. In addition, working sessions are targeted at enabling you to: MODULES 1.What is a blockchain? 2.Why should you/your Enterprise be interested in blockchains? 3.Motivating Use Cases for Enterprises 4.Cryptographic Hashes & Digital Signatures 5.Blockchain structure 6.Flavors of blockchains 7.Public vs. Private blockchains 8.bitcoin and Altcoins 9.HyperLedger 10Evolution 11.Architecture 12.Business Models 13.HyperLedger Fabric 14.Demo & Exercise 15.Discussion and brainstorming Have more questions, Call us now @ 877-648-0004 (or) Email us @ contact@strategisminc.com
starting on 2018-08-18 09:00:00
Address:
39355,California Street , #300
Fremont
United States Traces / Martin Nadal (ES)
It is suggested that the future of money is crypto currencies and the most relevant of these is bitcoin. The main difference between fiat money and bitcoin is that money is not created by government regulation or law, but generated by a competitive and decentralized process called mining, and that all transactions are stored publicly in a common ledger called the blockchain.
*bitcoin Traces* draws an infographic data-visualization of a transaction from the moment the bitcoins involved were created by a miner. Not focusing on the role of money as a measure of value but rather exploring its history, in which other transactions have participated in the past, depriving the money of materiality. Considering money as a network where each node is a good or a service and each edge a transaction it participates in.
By Ars Electronica on 2017-08-02 02:05:33
