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University of Tokyo Launches Blockchain Course with Ethereum Foundation Backing

University of tokyo launches blockchain course with ethereum foundation backing

University of Tokyo Launches Blockchain Course with Ethereum Foundation Backing


University of tokyo blockchain ethereum
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The University of Tokyo began offering a blockchain course at its graduate engineering school, thanks to an $800,000 donation from a consortium that includes the Ethereum Foundation and Japanese banking juggernaut Sumitomo Mitsui.

The class — called the “Blockсhain Innovation Donation Course” — was rolled out on November 1 and will run through October 2021, according to a statement by Sumitomo Mitsui.

Other corporate donors included Good Luck Three, JSS Corp., Zipper Corp., Hotlink Co., and Money Forward Inc.

Goal is to Cultivate Blockchain Entrepreneurs

The purpose of the blockchain course is to educate highly motivated, business-minded students with “outstanding talent in information mathematics” about fintech and the game-changing technology underpinning cryptocurrencies.

The University of Tokyo hopes to nurture future blockchain entrepreneurs by teaching them about decentralized networks and how to implement them socially.

The university of tokyo will launch a blockchain course. (image: pixabay)
The university of tokyo is offering a blockchain course at its graduate engineering school. (image: pixabay)

Blockchain is a hot, trendy field of study right now, and many corporations are investing substantial amounts of money to promote the development and widespread adoption of blockchain.

Experts say the innovative technology could transform healthcare, banking, supply-chain management, and the entertainment industry.

Ripple Donated $50 Million To Multi-Uni Program

In June 2018, Ripple, the blockchain-based payment network, donated $50 million to 17 universities around the world to launch a partnership called the University Blockchain Research Initiative. As CCN reported, Ripple made the donations in US dollars, not cryptocurrency.

The company said interest in blockchain is soaring as more people are discovering the vast potential of distributed ledger technology, including facilitating speedier cross-border payments.

In April 2018, Ripple also invested $25 million of its XRP cryptocurrency into Blockchain Capital Parallel IV, a $150 million fund that will invest in blockchain ventures.

Even “Old Money” like the Rockefeller family is investing in blockchain startups, as CCN reported.

Many top business schools around the world, including Wharton and Stanford, have expanded their MBA course offerings to include classes on bitcoin and blockchain, as CCN reported.

According to a recent Coinbase study, almost half of the world’s top universities now offer at least one cryptocurrency-related class.

Top Business Schools Add Crypto Classes

Kevin Werbach, a professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, is currently teaching a class this semester called “Blockchain, Cryptocurrency, and Distributed Ledger Technology.”

“We’re at the point where there’s a critical mass to teach this domain,” Werbach told CNBC. “There will be a real phenomenon in business for the foreseeable future. And five years down the road, there won’t be too many major business schools that don’t offer similar classes.”

Similarly, John Jacobs — executive director of the Georgetown University Business School — said he has been inundated with calls from corporate recruiters asking for applicants who understand blockchain technology.

“Any world-class program is going to have to equip students in this field to compete,” Jacobs said. “It’s everywhere we turn around.”

Featured Image from Shutterstock

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Published at Thu, 22 Nov 2018 03:05:18 +0000

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#187 Alex Leverington & Julian Zawistowski: Golem – The Worldwide Decentralized Supercomputer

With most of the world’s computing power concentrated in Internet companies’ data centers, the Internet has become a very centralized place. The Golem project aims to build the sharing economy of computing power. This “”global, open sourced, decentralized supercomputer”” will function thanks to the combined power of a massive network of machines, from personal laptops to whole data centers.

We’re joined by Julian Zawistowski and Alex Leverington, CEO and P2P engineer at Golem. We discuss how Golem hopes to create a more balanced distribution of computing power for the Internet.

Topics discussed in this episode:

  • What is Golem and the problem it is addressing
  • What may people and companies use Golem for
  • How Golem compares to other projects like iExec or TrueBit
  • Who are the different participants in the Golem network
  • How Golem executes computations
  • The role Ethereum has to play in Golem
  • How payments work in Golem
  • The economic model for Golem’s decentralized marketplace
  • The project’s current status and roadmap

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Watch or listen, Epicenter is available wherever you get your podcasts.

Epicenter is hosted by Brian Fabian Crain, S?ƒbastien Couture & Meher Roy.