pwshub.com

Solana tries to establish a pipeline of new graduates


Today, enjoy the Lightspeed newsletter on Blockworks.co. Tomorrow, get the news delivered directly to your inbox. Subscribe to the Lightspeed newsletter

A block north of the Charles River and on the sixth floor of MIT’s media lab, Solana investors, founders, and community members were handed Red Sox-themed t-shirts and sipped Dunkin’ coffee during “Solana Boston,” the latest in crypto’s never-ending conference cycle.

This particular conference was much less ambitious than its predecessor in Solana Breakpoint. The venue consisted of two rooms for talks connected by a networking space. The most talked-about speaker seemed to be John Deaton, the crypto-friendly lawyer challenging Elizabeth Warren for her senate seat. There was also a voting-focused afterparty sponsored by the Coinbase-started advocacy organization Stand With Crypto.

I had conversations with multiple founders creating Solana-native apps outside the realm of memecoin trading. This perhaps gives some credence to the theory that after a prolonged stretch of building seemingly endless technological infrastructure for blockchains to use, crypto may finally be entering an era of usable apps chasing broad adoption.

But what the conference highlighted most of all for me was an effort to court students from highly-regarded schools like MIT following the industry’s high-profile PR debacles of the past couple years and the allure of other fields like AI.

Jake Lynch, one of the event’s organizers, told me that of the 250 registrants for Solana Boston, 90 described themselves as students. Boston University, Northeastern, Boston College, MIT, and Dartmouth were the five schools with the highest representation, Lynch added.

But when I met one current MIT student and one recent graduate, the pair seemed underwhelmed by their peers’ interest in crypto. Many of the school’s undergraduates are infatuated with AI, they said, and there seem to only be a few students in each graduating class who want to work in crypto. 

A search of MIT’s course catalog for this semester turned up just a few crypto-related results, mostly in the business school, while I found more than a dozen AI-related classes. 

As for the crypto industry, Lynch said he thinks there are too few entry level jobs in an industry that has a “massive learning curve” and called for “better funnels” to bring in new graduates.

Crypto likes to eschew credentialism, but for better or worse, a lot of the tech industry’s whiz kids end up graduating from a short list of well-resourced universities. (Crypto’s very own Sam Bankman-Fried famously went to Stanford, after all).

College kids, especially at elite universities, are likely to be drawn by what’s getting buzz from their professors and peers. For now, that seems to be AI. 

Perhaps Solana, with its intangible advantage in coolness, can insert itself — and crypto — into the bright Gen-Z coder’s brain once again.

Start your day with top crypto insights from David Canellis and Katherine Ross. Subscribe to the Empire newsletter.

Explore the growing intersection between crypto, macroeconomics, policy and finance with Ben Strack, Casey Wagner and Felix Jauvin. Subscribe to the Forward Guidance newsletter.

Get alpha directly in your inbox with the 0xResearch newsletter — market highlights, charts, degen trade ideas, governance updates, and more.

The Lightspeed newsletter is all things Solana, in your inbox, every day. Subscribe to daily Solana news from Jack Kubinec and Jeff Albus.

Tags
  • Jobs
  • Lightspeed Newsletter
  • Solana

Source: blockworks.co

Related stories
3 weeks ago - The Ethereum DeFi giant formerly known as MakerDAO is weighing a deployment of its native tokens on Solana, said co-founder Rune Christensen.
1 month ago - Former U.S. President Donald Trump used to slam Bitcoin as "a scam." Now, hoping for a second shot as America's leader, he's all for crypto.
1 month ago - The SEC may be looking to take OpenSea to court.  Though, to be clear, nothing’s set in stone yet. And it’s not clear what the SEC would target. All...
1 month ago - Hemi Labs has secured $15 million in a funding round led by Binance Labs, Breyer Capital and Big Brain Holdings.
1 month ago - Plus, if the SEC really does sue OpenSea, then it would be over two years too late.
Other stories
7 minutes ago - Ripple co-founder Chris Larsen said that he has donated another $10 million in XRP to help boost Kamala Harris in the U.S. election.
7 minutes ago - Crypto exchange Coinbase is seeking documents from the FDIC over whether the bank regulator privately prohibited depository institutions from holding digital assets.
31 minutes ago - Stacks Network, the Bitcoin layer-2, is one of the largest DeFi protocols on the world’s most secure platform. DeFiLlama says the platform manages over $109 million worth of assets. It continues to expand and improve as decentralized...
1 hour ago - With the SEC's approval of options for spot Bitcoin ETFs, analysts expect another wave of institutional adoption and associated volatility.
1 hour ago - Attorneys for Alcon Entertainment said the company did not want to be associated with Musk’s capricious behavior, “which veers into hate speech.”