Post
Topic
Board Altcoin Discussion
Re: EOS - Asynchronous Smart Contract Platform - (Dan Larimer of Bitshares/Steem)
by
zeeman
on 03/11/2017, 21:22:46 UTC
Quote
The EOS testnet is here in 1 month. Here’s what to expect


A surprising topic showed up yesterday on the EOS-subreddit. The devs are ahead of schedule and user “knowbean” spotted this on their GitHub and made a topic about it:
EOS Public Testnet coming on 4th December — 4 weeks ahead of schedule!
Of course this got a lot of upvotes because everyone who follows a crypto-project is used to delays. But here we are. The devs are weeks ahead of schedule when it comes to starting a test-network and multi-core support.
What to expect
From a user perspective the testnet won’t probably bring that much to the table right at the beginning. At least, that is what I expect. It’s great to know that there’s a blockchain running but unless you interact with it there’s not that much to see. For the Block Producers (BPs) there is a lot to learn though. EOS is quite a new concept and a new block every second (or even every 500 ms!) is completely unknown in the world of smart contracts.

Full article:

https://medium.com/@eosforumorg/the-eos-testnet-is-here-in-1-month-heres-what-to-expect-2ef546cac6f1




First time token buyer here. Just getting in the game now. What’s the safest wallet for holding EOS? And should I even claim it now if I have no intention of selling until the distribution is over?

Just use a Ethereum-address where you own the private key. MyEtherWallet will do the job. Make sure to get a good backup of the private key. Most easy thing is to buy them on an exchange. That way there's no need to claim anything. You can just store EOS as the ERC-20 token that it is.

Hope that helps.