- From: Joe Andrieu <joe@legreq.com>
- Date: Fri, 01 Apr 2022 14:22:41 -0700
- To: "W3C DID Working Group" <public-did-wg@w3.org>
- Cc: "Erica Connell" <erica@legreq.com>
- Message-Id: <f4d391bf-bdec-4b80-b2ed-5f83278319a8@www.fastmail.com>
Howdy folks, Some of you may know about the podcast we (Legendary Requirements) run about DID methods, *The Rubric*, at https://rubric.cc. We've interviewed the folks behind did:btcr, did:v1, did:key, did:ipid, and did:ether (and coming soon did:ion and did:peer). We don't normally blast our releases into the DID Working Group, but today is a special day. In support of its PR requesting recognition in W3C DID Spec Registry (https://github.com/w3c/did-spec-registries/pull/429), we are happy to share with you our interview with creator Amy Guy and co-author Dmitri Zagidulin about *did:snail*. *A Pace Apart *(did:snail) *did:snail *is hands-down the most innovative DID method we know of. It connects the world’s most modern identification architecture with the oldest, most widely adopted long distance communications channel known to man, the international postal system. Available at https://rubric.cc/podcast/a-pace-apart-didsnail/ as well as on iTunes, Audible, Spotify, Amazon Music and other podcast distribution channels. Apologies for the interruption. I hope you'll forgive us. If we're lucky, you might get a smile out of it. =) -j -- Joe Andrieu, PMP joe@legreq.com LEGENDARY REQUIREMENTS +1(805)705-8651 Do what matters. http://legreq.com <http://www.legendaryrequirements.com/>
Received on Friday, 1 April 2022 21:23:17 UTC