Re: did:snail on The Rubric

Great podcast!

I ❤️ The Rubric.

I sent in my postcard as per the call-to-action.

Regards,
Charles

On Fri, 01 Apr 2022 14:22:41 -0700
"Joe Andrieu" <joe@legreq.com> wrote:

> 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

Received on Thursday, 14 April 2022 22:19:31 UTC