How Web 3.0 apps must adapt to become next-gen of tech, explained

Published at: April 22, 2022

How are blockchain development platforms addressing these concerns?

New blockchain development offerings are making it simple for Web 3.0 applications to implement push notifications.

A practical solution to these UX issues would need to be simple to implement and enable applications to monitor any address for incoming and outgoing token transactions (cryptocurrency, NFT or otherwise). Developers need to be able to set up push notifications in their own applications quickly and easily across multiple blockchains without learning code for each.

Tatum has emerged as a leading blockchain development platform, offering an answer to address these user experience concerns. With their new Notification Station feature, users can take advantage of a simple and effective way to implement push notifications into Web 3.0 apps for over 10 blockchains, including Celo (CELO), Solana (SOL), Ethereum, Bitcoin Cash (BCH), Dogecoin (DOGE) and Terra (LUNA).

The feature can be implemented seamlessly into any app with one API call to monitor any address on any supported blockchain. This way, applications can easily send instant alerts to end-users about any transaction.

With offerings like Notification Station, developers now have tools to build user-friendly and intuitive blockchain applications and bring users a Web 3.0 experience expected in 2022. The feature is planned to be expanded to over 50 blockchains, bringing a simple, effective and unified notification system to a multitude of decentralized networks.

Learn more about Tatum

Disclaimer. Cointelegraph does not endorse any content or product on this page. While we aim at providing you with all important information that we could obtain, readers should do their own research before taking any actions related to the company and carry full responsibility for their decisions, nor can this article be considered as investment advice.

What is holding back blockchain applications from meeting these UX standards?

Implementing features considered standard today is no easy task for the blockchain.

At present, there is no unified system that enables the notification of users in real-time on most blockchains. This lack of well-developed user experience on Web 3.0 has delayed end-user adoption, giving little incentive for Web 2.0 users to make the transition.

To address this gap, solutions have been developed for Ethereum (ETH) that work as third-party notification applications. Unfortunately, these separate services are not available as built-in features or as a standard developer tool.

Some blockchain development platforms allow creators to set up webhooks for Ethereum as an alternative. But many of these are still complicated to implement and require the creator to set up a series of alerts for each event and filter them manually.

While webhooks present a step in the right direction, these solutions still don’t account for the other blockchains where push notifications are largely non-existent and difficult to implement without a significantly knowledgeable developer. Deploying custom real-time alert systems is extremely complicated and can take weeks of development time on any blockchain. As a result, Web 3.0 applications, which were once positioned as the next generation of technology, exist without push notifications making them look like a step back on the internet rather than one forward.

What features are essential to modern applications?

When it comes to a user's experience (UX), people now seek convenience first.

Amazon, for instance, set a new standard for online shopping by making purchasing convenient and eliminating the time and effort needed to make a purchase.

With users coming to expect simplicity in their online interactions, the sleek user experience common in modern websites and apps must continue into Web 3.0 developments. Among these features are push notifications and real-time alerts, which keep a user informed without opening an application itself. This way, users can get a basic overview of what information should remain top of mind without repeatedly refreshing an app to see an incoming message.

Push notifications are now becoming so commonplace that the world has started to take these features for granted. Currently, applications that don't offer these features are viewed as too primitive to even consider using.

Why are Web 3.0 applications positioned as the next generation of technology?

Unlike Web 2.0 applications, offerings built on Web 3.0 are enabling users with true data ownership.

Web 2.0 brought about a major change to how the world views the internet, introducing online platforms like TikTok, Twitter, Meta (former Facebook) and Instagram, among others.

Although valuable in the number of opportunities made available, Web 2.0 has brought concerns about data ownership. With users spending more time online, their data, including what they like, the content they create and other details about themselves, are being shared with big tech companies, many of which have been caught in data scandals in the past and paid their way out of it.

Web 3.0 addresses these concerns by presenting a new reality for application usage. Leveraging verifiable, trustless, self-governing, permissionless, distributed and robust technology, application users can gain true ownership over their data.

Unfortunately, before this becomes a reality, developers must consider how to create apps that can be deployed to run on multiple servers as a decentralized application (DApp) while still maintaining the same user experience expected in 2022.

Tags
Related Posts
A decentralized app store might lead crypto toward more centralization
The estimated windfall Apple got from its App Store in 2020 is $67 billion. That’s up from $50 billion in 2019, a 28% increase. Even as the company has lowered its commissions for smaller developers, the App Store remains a major component of Apple’s bottom-line profits. And it’s not just Apple taking a cut of developer revenue: On Android, the world’s most popular mobile operating system, the Google Play Store netted $38.6 billion in 2020. That’s over $105 billion in revenue from the top two app stores combined. It’s no wonder that regulators in many countries are closely considering whether …
Decentralization / July 17, 2021
‘DeFi done right’: Layer-one protocol launches mainnet
A decentralized finance protocol has launched its mainnet — describing it as a crucial step on the journey to a frictionless financial future. Radix, which describes itself as a platform for smart money, is also launching Instapass with its Olympia mainnet — an optional user and developer service that delivers the world’s first single sign-on solution for building compliant DeFi. The Radix mainnet is being positioned as a generational improvement in the history of decentralized ledger computing — and one that delivers 100 times more executional efficiency than the Ethereum Virtual Machine. This comes hot on the heels of the …
Decentralization / July 29, 2021
Ethereum Is No Longer a Monopoly Platform for Stablecoins
Just a few years ago, it was hard to imagine that a stablecoin would come to represent a significant portion of the cryptocurrency industry. Market players tended to base their money-making strategies on a cryptocurrency’s volatility rather than its stability. There were only 11 stablecoins on the market in 2016, and another 10 were added in 2017. Nowadays, there are 66 stablecoins, and over 134 others still in development. The overwhelming majority of these stablecoins were running on Ethereum before 2018, without any indication suggesting that this might change. But the script has flipped, according to Blockchain.com’s “2019 State of …
Decentralization / Oct. 11, 2019
Crypto.com supports Cronos cross-bridge mainnet beta launch
Cronos has announced the launch of its mainnet beta in a bid to facilitate greater interoperability between the Cosmos and Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) ecosystems. The release will enable developers to port decentralized applications (dApps), and smart contracts from Ethereum and EMV-compatible chains to the Cronos network at a low-cost and fast speed due to its Inter-Blockchain Communications (IBC) protocol integration. This will offer accessibility to Crypto.com's 10 million-strong customer base. Built upon the Cosmos blockchain and powered by Ethermint — a proof-of-authority consensus mechanism — Cronos operates adjacent to the Crypto.org chain. Epic Day 1 at @cronos_chain ✅ Mainnet …
Decentralization / Nov. 8, 2021
What is an Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) and how does it work?
Ether (ETH), which is the second largest cryptocurrency in terms of market capitalization, is popular among cryptocurrency investors because of its native ETH token. However, its native Solidity programming language and Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) are instrumental in the adulation it receives from the developer community. In fact, the Ethereum blockchain continues to attract decentralized application (DApp) developers due to its flexibility, the vast range of developer tools available and the platform’s large user base. Forming the core of the blockchain’s architecture, the EVM is the program that executes its application code or smart contracts, as they are called, providing …
Blockchain / Nov. 27, 2022