Web 3.0 Studybook
Web 3.0 Studybook maintains my personal learning path of studying the decentralized web from the ground up. The site is motivated by the observation that technological and social innovations become harmfull unless we meet them with deliberate and concerted stewardship. The aim of maintaining a studybook is to exercise stewardship, as both learner and builder in the self-hosted digital age.
The Ethereum series dives into Ethereum.org’s official documentation, Vitalik Buterin’s writings, Mastering Ethereum (https://github.com/ethereumbook/ethereumbook) , and the original 2014 whitepaper. The module assists in working through these canonical sources, treating them both as historical records and as living blueprints for the Ethereum ecosystem.
The ENS series builds from the idea of shaping decentralized identity (https://docs.ens.domains/). The series begins with the **core architecture of ENS—names, registries, and resolvers—** and then moves into advanced topics such as governance, Layer 2 integration, and cross-chain resolution. Each note is designed to build a rigorous understanding of the technical, cultural, and political dimensions of ENS, equipping participants to critically engage with ENS as the identity, naming, and usability infrastructure of Web3.
The IPFS series dives into the official docs.ipfs.tech (https://docs.ipfs.tech/) and the broader ecosystem of decentralized protocols. The module serves as a guide through the documentation and specifications, beginning with the foundations of decentralized systems and the vision of IPFS. The notes progress from basic concepts like content addressing, Merkle DAGs, and CIDs toward higher-level constructs such as naming systems, routing, and data exchange protocols.