Your Cardano onboarding guide
Josh F
August 27, 2022
New to Cardano? No worries, here’s a list of essentials to get you started
Disclaimer: Nothing in this article is intended to be professional advice, including without limitation, financial, investment, legal or tax advice. IO Global is not responsible for your use of or reliance on any information in this article.
Blockchain is one of the most influential technologies of the 21st century. It provides solutions for more efficient business processes, data traceability, and, of course, decentralized digital payments.
The platform’s evolution has attracted massive amounts of new users into the Cardano ecosystem. Specifically, Cardano has delivered some of the most promising features that position the platform as a secure and versatile environment for application development and enterprise deployment.
However, despite the increasing numbers joining the space, getting onboard remains challenging for the average user. Onboarding often involves complex processes that lack visibility or clear information for the new user.
Getting started with Cardano
So let’s say you heard about the benefits of blockchain technology and about Cardano in particular. You’re now interested to see how it works and how you can benefit from it. Where to start? To streamline your Cardano journey, we have compiled a list of essential resources and some tips to get you started.
Learn some basics
Let’s start with the blockchain basics:
Now that you know how a blockchain works and what a cryptocurrency is, it is time to learn more about Cardano.
Cardano aims to provide an opportunity for global communities to easily access and use the blockchain in their daily lives. Using blockchain, you can for example send funds to your friends, pay for products or services, or use decentralized applications (DApps). Yet, blockchain is much more than just a financial system. But first things first, here is everything you need to know about Cardano:
- Cardano 101: introduces the team behind Cardano, explains Cardano’s commitment to decentralization, covers technology aspects, programming languages, and everything else you might be interested in.
You can also go over Essential Cardano FAQs or ‘New to Cardano’ section on Cardano Docs to learn more about Ouroboros, ada, and what makes Cardano a third-generation blockchain:
Getting involved
Having read about the basics you’re now ready to try Cardano out.
Let’s start with some simple payments. You will first need to choose and create a Cardano wallet and get some ada.
Explore different Cardano wallet products and get the one that best suits your needs.
Here is an article on the various types of cryptocurrency wallets and examples of wallet products/providers for Cardano to choose from: Types of Wallets.
Nami and Eternl are two most recommended wallets by the community to start with, for desktop users. For mobile users, Eternl and Flint Wallet are the go-to options that are largely adopted by the community.
Explore and choose a cryptocurrency exchange (in your jurisdiction) to get some ada: How to purchase ada?
Try out the wallet: ask a fellow Cardano community member for their wallet address and try exchanging (sending/receiving) small amounts of ada with them.
You’re now a Cardano user experiencing the world of Web3 and crypto! You can track your transactions and account activities using Cardano Explorer. Learn how to use the tracking tools to do this: Cardano tracking tools.
Understanding staking and delegation
As an ada holder, you own a stake that is the amount of ada you have. This means that you are now part of the Cardano network and can help maintain it. A developer or a tech-savvy person can set up a stake pool and run it to help verify transactions, create blocks, and get rewards.
If you are not interested in running your own pool, you can instead choose to delegate your stake to an existing pool and share its rewards. There is no risk to this as no ada leaves your wallet and you can spend your funds at anytime while they are delegated to a stake pool.
Ada holders can delegate stake using their wallets. Here are some useful articles to review:
Being part of decision making and innovation
One of the key pillars for Cardano’s long-term sustainability is active community engagement and participation. The Voltaire phase of the Cardano roadmap will introduce community voting mechanisms to democratize decision-making so every ada holder can vote on Cardano’s changes and upgrades.
The process of decentralized governance has already started. Project Catalyst is one of the world’s largest decentralized innovation funds, where ada holders can vote on the most promising projects to get funded from the treasury.
There are many ways to get involved with Project Catalyst – as an innovator, voter, commenter, proposer, proposal reviewer, community advisor, or even a mentor. The first step is creating an account on the Catalyst collaboration platform, Ideascale.
Find out more:
Ready for more? Discover decentralized finance (DeFi)
Decentralized finance or DeFi is a blockchain-based form of finance that addresses the same needs as traditional finance. The goal of DeFi is to help individuals and companies engage in financial activity without going through a central, expensive middleman such as a bank.
The DeFi explainer unpacks the complexity of some blockchain notions. Head over and take a look at what terms like DeFi, RealFi, DApp, DEX, liquidity, and so on mean:
You can now experiment with some DApps. Just like a mobile app runs on your iOS or Android device, a Cardano DApp runs on the Cardano blockchain. There are various categories of DApps, from gaming and health to finance and government applications.
There are a number of community-driven resources gathering information about the latest projects launched on Cardano:
Non-fungible tokens
Every ada is the same as another. You can trade one ada for another and get the same value i.e. 1:1; this means that ada is fungible.
Non-fungible tokens (NFTs), on the other hand, are unique and can carry special information (metadata) that represents digital ownership rights of real-world and digital assets such as a real-estate or a 3D animation. Anyone can create their own NFTs on Cardano natively with minimal work i.e. without needing a smart contract. This is a huge difference from the error-prone complexity found on Ethereum, for example. This makes Cardano NFTs more secure, cheaper, and faster to transact with.
NFTs have been booming recently. You can create, buy, and sell digital representations of anything – drawings, video clips, music, tweets, articles, trading cards, game items, and more. Make sure to explore:
What do you need to know about smart contracts?
Smart Contracts are programs that run on blockchains to perform complex (and simple) tasks. You can think of them as sophisticated ATMs or Vending machines. Smart contracts act as digital agreements that track, verify, and execute the binding parts of a deal between various parties. The contract stages are automatically executed when predetermined conditions are met.
As a beginner, you don’t need to dive straight into how to write a smart contract. What’s important to know is that DApps use smart contracts for you to experience safe deal execution.
Cardano provides the possibility to work with Plutus and Marlowe contracts:
Plutus is a set of programming tools for developers to write smart contracts on Cardano.
Marlowe is a ‘domain specific’ language designed specially for writing financial smart contracts. It is limited to financial applications and its ‘low-code’ approach means it is perfect for experts in finance rather than in programming.
If you’re interested in learning how to write Plutus and Marlowe contracts, you can take part in the Plutus Pioneer and Marlowe Pioneer training courses.
Digital identity
Identity is key to accessing a range of private and public services. From opening a bank account to obtaining loans or a driver’s license, access to education, etc., the need to prove to others who we are is almost omnipresent in everyday life.
Atala PRISM is a decentralized identity solution on Cardano. It enables people to own their personal data and identity to interact with organizations seamlessly, privately, and securely. Visit the Atala PRISM website for more information.
Continue exploring
To conclude we should state that this is just the beginning. You have probably chosen the topics that interest you most about Cardano. Here’s a handy list of resources to keep going:
Source: https://www.essentialcardano.io/
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