Hey everyone, hope that you have had a good weekend! It is a late post today but I thought I should get something written up as otherwise it will be Tuesday before you hear from me again! Life is busy (and exhausting) at the moment,...

Notice - it is no longer recommended to use nember.art Please see the tweet below. A (better) replacement is being worked on. I will keep this article on the blog but please don't use it. https://twitter.com/0x6861746366574/status/1451992298162561027?s=20 Original article I have been meaning to write a short article about nember.art...

Welcome to Friday's edition of the Symbol Blog news update. It's another short post as I have been writing all day for work and my brain needs a rest! 😊 QUEST updates are coming Sounds like even more updates are coming to QUEST in the near future...

We have talked a lot about NFT-Drive before on Symbol Blog but it has always been a bit of a mystery to me as all of the information I have seen is in Japanese (I really wish that I could read Japanese, it would make...

Good morning! It's been a few days since the Symbol Blog last news update but we are back! Work is super busy at the moment and it's difficult to keep up with everything so posts may be less frequent at the moment but rest assured...

Hi everyone! I managed to find enough to report on to have a Symbol Blog news update today. As I mentioned previously I will miss things so if you spot interesting Symbol related news then just send me the link to the tweet, tag me...

July is over so this will be our first blog post for August. This means that Symbol Blog has now been up and running for more than a month - oh how time flies! It has been a lot of work but I have learned...

by @GeranKlim This article was written by @GeranKlim and was originally published here in Russian - thank you Klim for sending this in! "Closed State Piyupil" is an exhibition that is a project from Yusuke Takasaki (who wrote the code) and Hermippe (who recreated pixel art into...

by Maho What is Hanafuda? Hanafuda (花札, “flower cards”) are traditional Japanese playing cards. A deck contains 48 cards, with four suits divided into 12 ranks representing months of the year. The decorative playing cards are based on pictures of flora such as pine, Japanese apricot tree,...