There is a project called Unibase in the BNBChain ecosystem that recently held a sizable AI conference in South Korea. Looking at the logic of this project, it somewhat combines AI infrastructure and virtual agent platform elements, but leans more towards the foundational layer, with a more systematic and complete ecosystem construction.
Interestingly, they are learning to discover truly viable applications within the BSC community through hackathons. This indicates that they are not simply spending money on events, but using competition systems to filter for ecosystem quality. Such a large-scale international conference, combined with a systematic developer incentive program, clearly aims to prepare for the upcoming ecosystem explosion.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
19 Likes
Reward
19
9
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
NFT_Therapy_Group
· 01-22 12:56
Holding an AI conference in Korea is something I've seen before; the key is whether it can truly attract developers to stay afterward. Otherwise, it's just spending money to buy popularity.
View OriginalReply0
RetailTherapist
· 01-21 09:28
Hackathons are definitely more effective than just hosting regular conferences; they truly focus on screening project quality rather than just for the sake of excitement.
View OriginalReply0
LiquidationOracle
· 01-19 15:12
Hackathons are indeed a clever move; it's not just about throwing money around... Only the applications that truly stick around are meaningful.
View OriginalReply0
WalletDoomsDay
· 01-19 15:12
Hackathons are indeed a clever move, much better than projects that just throw money into events. This is truly about building an ecosystem rather than just harvesting profits.
View OriginalReply0
GasFeeLady
· 01-19 15:11
nah unibase's move lowkey makes sense — hackathons hit different than just throwing money at conference booths tbh... watching the gwei while they build infrastructure is chef's kiss
Reply0
ValidatorViking
· 01-19 15:07
hackathons actually matter when you're building real infra, not just throwing cash at conferences. unibase seems to get that—filtering signal from noise through competition structure. respectable approach for a layer that needs genuine builders.
Reply0
MoonMathMagic
· 01-19 15:03
Hackathons are indeed a tough move, not just about throwing money at problems, but truly capable of filtering out reliable teams.
View OriginalReply0
ZkSnarker
· 01-19 14:50
honestly the hackathon filtering mechanism is lowkey genius—actually separating signal from noise instead of just throwing grant money at whoever shows up. that's how you build sustainable ecosystems, not just hype cycles
Reply0
DataChief
· 01-19 14:47
Hackathon screening applications is indeed a clever move, unlike some projects that only hold events without delivering results.
There is a project called Unibase in the BNBChain ecosystem that recently held a sizable AI conference in South Korea. Looking at the logic of this project, it somewhat combines AI infrastructure and virtual agent platform elements, but leans more towards the foundational layer, with a more systematic and complete ecosystem construction.
Interestingly, they are learning to discover truly viable applications within the BSC community through hackathons. This indicates that they are not simply spending money on events, but using competition systems to filter for ecosystem quality. Such a large-scale international conference, combined with a systematic developer incentive program, clearly aims to prepare for the upcoming ecosystem explosion.