Weekly Review
This week at CommDAO, the community is buzzing internally. There are two metaphors that I would like to use to describe this situation as I can currently perceive it: hummingbirds and plants. A strange combo, one might think, however, let me elaborate. I used to live in Santa Barbara. By all accounts, it is a wonderful, happy destination vacation place. Surfing, the Beach Boys, Polo Clubs, Ritz Carlton, and so on…But on the other side of the mountain from the idyllic coastal area, it’s a bit more arid and desert-like, horse/cattle/wine country, which can be hot and harsh during the summers, susceptible to fires and drought. There are significant live oak tree forests and lush green shade in the Santa Ynez River Valley, but, for the most part, when one starts to ascend the heights there, one is met with the chaparral brush of an unforgiving climate and environment.
Yet humans can offset these conditions by installing various components that enable the ecosystem to thrive. I discovered this when I was invited to monitor a property for an anthropologist who lived in a cabin in the Los Padres National Forest back in ‘13. The anthropologist and his wife wanted to go back east to see some fam, and the main reason they needed me was as a supplier of nectar for the hummingbirds they had come to love and support, who depended on there being sugar water galore in adequate stations on the scene…
This was no small feat as it took constant care and cultivation to provide adequate stations for the hummingbirds to feed and score some nectar and also enough to share so that the whole flock would participate rather than just a few bold players. This taught me the main lesson of marketing: structure rewards in diverse locations and through a variety of approaches so that you attract the whole flock.
The other metaphor involves the plant. When a plant starts growing, sometimes it is not clear why or how exactly. It just starts happening, and sometimes you have to act spontaneously in order to maintain the new needs and requirements of that plant. You have to keep watering it and tending it and looking at it and talking to it and just all-around, being a monitor. Because, after all, that would be better than letting it die. That, in a nutshell, is what a working start-up business feels like. It can be painful and draining, but something new is taking life, and deep down, you want to see what it becomes. Don’t you?
So, next time you eat an avocado, take the seed out, wash it off, turn it upside down, poke 4 toothpicks in it, and set it in a glass full of water. Then wait. That is the primary principle of all business start-ups: Keep watering the well-positioned seed. Let it grow!
The magic is in observing its autonomy emerge.
And that’s what’s going on at CommDAO at the moment, metaphorically. Literally, we translate into 3 primary categories…
On the Foundation level, this has been our current focus over the past week. Follow us as we initiate a new NFT drive centered around the “Core Particle Ring”:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1A3DvbzL45Huf9FSMRYKUswcPRhgBVFkUgyEAfUbWXyo/edit?usp=sharing
At the Marketing level, our captain Danoskie continues to marshall the field towards weekly goals. This week 32, we focused on “Exploring Bull and Bear Markets.” As of 8 pm on Sunday, October 2nd, 2022, over 100 designs have been recognized as a weekly submission! :
https://docs.google.com/document/d/18m_J-pVXjqmxqqgWC5Cuv4JD6Ky79O6amMXlalnYL0g/edit?usp=sharing
And at the Research level, Dr. Alina Okun continues mapping out a comprehensive database indexing our various protocols. We continue in the second week of our collab with the Listen Up DAO, stacking 100-200 word features on landmarks in Arizona. Check our showcase in this issue of 19 features from the expanded Scottsdale/Phoenix/Glendale area as we build momentum leading up to the Super Bowl:
https://www.notion.so/d76ac19b10a4402cbbb50d690eab81d0?v=f97ccaafdab5460695bab826691bc1f4
Beyond that, I encourage you to read on and enjoy the show! The hummingbirds are flocking, and the plant is growing!
Best,
Dow
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Taliesin West
Taliesin West is a 110-acre estate located in the heart of Arizona’s Sonoran Desert designed and/or rebuilt by Architect Frank Lloyd Wright. A picturesque landscape drawing inspiration from ancient Celtic ruins, modern architecture, and tribal cultures, the estate features an expansive courtyard with a reflecting pool, multiple gardens, and trails connecting to chaparral-covered mountains.
An amphitheater gazes across two neighborhoods of homes and offers spectacular views of both Phoenix and the Rocky Mountains. In addition to its incredible architecture and gardens, Taliesin West also boasts original furnishings and other collector’s items, such as Tiffany stained glass lamps that once graced Louis XIV’s Versailles Palace in France. It’s indeed a nice place to visit and tour around!
Scottsdale Xeriscape Garden
The Scottsdale Xeriscape Garden is a beautiful garden that is nestled in the foothills of the McDowell Mountains. The garden has a variety of plants and flowers that are native to Arizona.
This garden was built in 1988 by the Scottsdale City Council as an example of what can be done with desert plants.
It was designed by two landscape architects, Robert Pincus and Dan Hinkley, who used to work for Scottsdale’s Parks and Recreation Department.
The idea behind this garden was to show residents how they could use native plants to grow their own gardens in their yards.
The Scottsdale Xeriscape Garden is a sustainable garden that has been designed to reduce water consumption. The garden is located in Scottsdale, Arizona, and is open to the public.
The Scottsdale Xeriscape Garden includes a variety of plants and flowers that are native to the Sonoran Desert. It also includes an educational kiosk that provides information about the plants and sustainability practices.
Francis Quarles Story Neighborhood
In the heart of Phoenix, Arizona, the Francis Quarles Story Neighborhood is one of the amazing historical landmarks. It extends from McDowell Road to Roosevelt Street in the south and from Seventh Avenue to Grand Avenue in the west. The neighborhood is included on the National Register of Historic Places, as are many of the individual homes.
The 602 houses that make up the Francis Quarles Story neighborhood were built between the late 1920s and the late 1940s. The area contains examples of a number of architectural movements, including transitional ranch, English Tudor, Spanish Colonial Revival, and Craftsman bungalows.
Vulture City Ghost Town
A gold mine and community called the Vulture Mine existed in Maricopa County, Arizona. The mine opened in 1863 and quickly rose to prominence as Arizona's most-producing gold mine. The mine produced 260,000 ounces of silver and 340,000 ounces of gold between 1863 and 1942. The mine is said to have brought more than 5,000 people to the region and is credited with establishing Wickenburg, Arizona. Vulture City was the name of the mine's service town.
Henry Wickenburg, a prospector from the California gold rush, found a quartz outcrop that contained gold, and he started mining it himself. This is how the Vulture mine got its start. After Henry Wickenburg found the Vulture mine, a tiny mining settlement called Vulture City was founded nearby in 1863. There were 5,000 people living in the town at one time. The city was abandoned and turned into a "ghost town" once the mine closed. The deposit was then sold to Benjamin Phelps, a representative of a group of investors who ultimately incorporated the Vulture Mining Company.
Desert Laboratory
The Desert Laboratory, located at 1675 West Anklam Road in Tucson, Arizona, is a storied biological research facility. It was the first privately funded project in the country and was established by the Carnegie Institution in 1903 to investigate how plants adapt to the heat and aridity of deserts and thrive there.
On the 860 acres (3.5 km2) of Tumamoc Hill's scientific domain, many long-term ecological observation locations were established by Volney Spalding & Forrest Shreve beginning in 1906. Nine of them are the oldest permanent ecological study quadrats in existence. By taking part in the founding of the Ecological Society of America in 1915 and the Ecology magazine, the institution and its staff made significant contributions to what is now known as the field of ecology.
They also made advancements in conservation under the direction of Spalding & Shreve. The remainder was added in 1987, and a portion of it was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1965. In February 1903, the USDA's Frederick Vernon Coville and the New York Botanical Garden's Daniel T. McDougal made the decision to locate the Desert Laboratory on Tumamoc Hill under the auspices of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. It was inaugurated in October of that year.
Japanese Friendship Garden of Phoenix
The Japanese Friendship Garden is a strolling Japanese garden that is found in Phoenix, Arizona. The 3.5-acre area has a tea house and tea garden. It is a collaborative effort between Phoenix, Arizona, and Himeji, Japan, which are sister cities.
It was designated as one of the Phoenix Points of Pride in 2004 by the City of Phoenix.
Three Japanese words are put together to form the garden's name in Japanese, Roh-en. The bird that serves as Himeji City's emblem, the heron, is known by the name Ro. A 300-year-old medieval castle in Himeji is called Shirasagi-j, or the White Heron Castle. The mythological Phoenix bird Fenghuang is referred to in Japanese as h. En translates as "garden."
The garden includes about 1,500 tons of carefully selected rock, stone footbridges, lanterns, and more than 50 different plant species. A 12-foot waterfall, streams, and a koi pond with more than 300 koi fish are all included. The Japanese Tea House is one of the Japanese Friendship Garden's key draws. 3.5 acres in total, including a koi pond of 5/8 of an acre.
More than 50 different plant species, including two kinds of bamboo, are on display at the Garden. The architects selected plant species that can endure the harsh conditions of a desert climate while still evoking the tranquility of a Japanese garden. The stream beds, hiking trails, lakeshore, and main lake are lined with 1,500 tons of hand-picked rock from quarries close to Jerome, Superior, Congress, and Florence.
Orpheum Theater
The Orpheum Theatre, designed in the Spanish Baroque style, was built in Phoenix, Arizona, in 1929.
It still carries the legacy of being a silent movie theater in the shape of a Wurlitzer organ that can be played. Even passersby who stop by the building occasionally might hear it in use.
When it comes to ballet, family events, live music performances, podcast recordings, and Broadway musicals, Phoenix's Orpheum Theatre is the place to be.
This makes the theater ideal for people who want a pleasant night out, yet visitors may want to go see the building itself merely to marvel at its unique design and background.
The structure is a lavish work of art with complex moldings, Solomonic columns, and stunning murals that are intended to recreate the view of the sky from a Spanish palace.
Rosson House Museum
The Rosson House Museum is a Queen Anne-style Victorian home that was first built in 1895 for surgeon and doctor Dr. Roland Rosson. It is one of Phoenix, Arizona's oldest examples of non-adobe architecture.
Because the house is a time capsule that has preserved 18th-century furnishings, wallpaper, woodwork, and even beautiful art, visitors will find this top attraction to be a source of enjoyment for any and all history fans.
Eisendrath House
Eisendrath House is a paradise created in response to antisemitism.
Rich Chicagoan Rose Eisendrath built her own private desert oasis on 44 acres in Phoenix after being turned away from a resort in Arizona.
The residence, which boasted a citrus grove, a pool in the desert, and a living area measuring an astonishing 5,500 square feet, was a lovely location to visit.
The 1930s winter retreat was sold multiple times after Eisendrath's death in 1936, and it gradually fell into disrepair.
Since then, it has been fully restored to its original splendor and serves as a center for research on water conservation.
Eisendrath House offers a variety of conservation seminars, displays, and galleries, all targeted toward informing visitors about the water crisis Phoenix is currently facing as the population of the desert region keeps expanding.
Wrigley Mansion
Given that it is the name associated with the renowned chewing gum company, Wrigley is a name that the majority of people will be familiar with.
It turns out that William Wrigley Jr. owned the mansion that overlooked Phoenix in addition to being a chewing gum entrepreneur.
Its magnificent tile work, which includes tiles that were originally made at Wrigley's tile factory on Catalina Island, may be the reason why visitors find it to look more Californian than Arizonian.
Phoenix Bat Cave
The Phoenix Bat Cave is not a real, natural cave, despite its name.
Instead, 10,000–20,000 Mexican Free-Tailed bats in need of a temporary home often occupy the flood control tunnel. This bat "cave" is a resting place for bats flying south to Mexico, and it is open to visitors from May through October.
It is best to arrive at dusk because that is when these bats fly out and cover the sky as they hunt for insects and bugs.
The bats don't seem to be very terrified of people, so be on the lookout for some close calls as they glide right past you.
Biltmore Fashion Park
When Biltmore Fashion Park first opened in 1963, it was the ideal place to spot John Wayne and Princess Grace, among other A-listers and celebrities who were visiting Phoenix.
Despite its antiquity, Phoenix's open-air mall never fully lost its reputation as an affluent destination, but it did improve after some trees, lawns, and fountains were added there in the 1990s.
The location is a shoppers' paradise, with stores like Sephora, Ralph Lauren, and L'Occitane all conveniently located nearby.
Musical Instrument Museum
Lots of instruments from around the world can be seen at the Musical Instrument Museum, the world's only Global Musical Instrument Museum. High-tech headphones and multimedia displays soak one in a global musical tradition, while the hands-on Experience Gallery lets aspiring musicians of all ages try their hands at instruments like guitars, gongs, and gamelans.
Wonderspaces Arizona
This is a fascinating exploration of the idea that art is for everyone. The captivating, interacting displays here allow one to experience art through sight, touch, sound, movement, and even virtual reality.
Thunderbird Conservation Park
A 1,185-hectare park in Hedgepeth Hills, Thunderbird Conservation Park is a conservation park designed to protect the desert environment. The hill is named after Robert Hedgepes, an early settler in the area. The park is named after a World War II pilot training facility located four miles south of the park.
The city of Glendale acquired the park in 1951 through a lease with the federal government. Ownership was granted in 1956 with the support of the Glendale Women's Club and the Rotary Club of Glendale. Maricopa County operated the park from 1963 to 1984, during which time many park improvements were made.
In 1984 the park was returned to the city. Park activities include picnicking, hiking, horseback riding, mountain biking, jogging, and bird watching. About 15 miles of multi-use trails have been built courtesy of the efforts of many volunteer groups.
Westgate Entertainment District
Westgate entertainment district in Glendale, Arizona, is described as a super-regional destination for shopping, dining, entertainment, and commercial offices. It is funded by millionaire New York architect Ron Elsensohn.
Westgate entertainment district is where families find joy, happiness, and relaxation. Not only is it an attractive open-air, but its setting also has a distinctive water feature, outdoor courtyard, and palm trees.
It's a place where almost everything entertaining is found, including live music on Friday and Saturday nights at fountain park.
Mystery Castle
Located in the South Mountain Park and Preserve’s foothills, this well-known castle was built by a father named Boyce Luther Gulley to realize his daughter, Mary Lou's dream. It is a three-story castle completed in 1945. Using a strange mix of building supplies, including telephone poles, plow discs, tiles, stones, bricks, and metals, Luther Gulley constructed this amazing structure which was held together by a cement mixture including goat milk.
This beautiful stone-built structure is described as the PHOENIX POINT OF PRIDE. It has a wedding chapel and intricate stonework designed with varying colored rocks.
The Marshall Gallery
The Marshall Gallery is centrally located near downtown Scottsdale, near the important landmarks of Great Wolf Water Park, Talking Stick Resort, and OdySea Aquarium. It is located at the center of the Main Street galleries, which features many hundred-year-old buildings and extensive high-end galleries, retail establishments, restaurants, and entertainment venues. This makes the Marshall Gallery a centrally located professional art gallery, offering stunning exhibition space by the art world's leading contemporary oil painters and sculptors.
USS Arizona Memorial Gardens at Salt River
The memorial includes more than 1,500 pillars representing the sailors and Marines killed on the USS Arizona during the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. Completed in March 2021, the memorial reveals the perimeter of the sunken battleship.
There are gardens reminiscent of the vertical mast of a ship, and benches along the path are inscribed with the words of those who lived through the events of the time. The blocks are engraved with the names and ranks of everyone on board. Authentic relics of the ship are prominently displayed on the shores of the lake.
Memories of Hometown
Introduction
My name is Kokoette, and I am popularly known as Koksi. I am from Akwa Ibom State, Nigeria. My hometown is Uyo. Uyo is the capital of Akwa Ibom State, South South Nigeria. The major language spoken in Uyo is called 'Ibibio'. My hometown is made up of people from all walks of life. It is one of the peaceful places in Nigeria and Africa as a whole. For the purpose of this article, I would be narrating my three memories of my hometown. I trust you will have fun and learn from my experiences.
How I almost died on my way to a stream in my hometown
This is a true life story and the scariest experience of my life. My near death experience actually happened on my first visit to my hometown. I didn't grow up in my hometown because my parents were based in Calabar. As a kid, I was always hoping that one day I would go to the village to visit my paternal grandmother. My wish finally came when I was barely 10 years old. I didn't go alone. My younger sister came along with me.
As young kids, we were very happy to leave the confines of our parents to where we had never been. We arrived in the evening and were happily received by the villagers and grandma specifically. Although grandma used to visit us in Calabar, she was very excited to have us in the village. She didn't hesitate to prepare dinner. In fact, she served us three kinds of meals that evening. After meals, we had our baths, and grandma took time to tell us moonlight stories.
The following day, we helped with the house chores, and we got to discover that in the village, there was no tap water. They had streams instead. Grandma told us not to join others in fetching water at the stream. According to her, the stream was miles away from the house and very risky for young children of our age. She emphasized that our safety was paramount. My sister and I were kind of sad because we had never been to a stream, and it was actually a rare opportunity to get to see one. We had no choice but to stick to instructions.
Days passed, and our departure date was fast approaching. One day, my grandma had left for the market, and the usual instructions were given. A few hours later, some children with whom we normally played together were about to go to the stream to bathe. My sister and I, being anxious and desperate, joined them. On our way, we saw a mango tree with ripe mangoes. Almost all the village children climbed the tree and plucked the fruits. As a young boy, I couldn't resist the temptation of climbing too. I wanted to act like other children.
I finally climbed with the help of an older child while my sister was down catching the fruits. While plucking the fruits, my left foot slipped, and that was how I fell from the mango tree to the ground. At that point, I was totally unconscious and lifeless. According to my sister, I was not breathing. Some children ran to inform my grandma, and I was immediately rushed to the hospital. In the hospital, I became conscious and lively again. The following day, my mother came to the village and took us back to Calabar.
How I got bitten by a snake in my hometown
Since farming was the main source of livelihood in villages then, the people in my hometown depended on farming for their source of income, including my grandma. This memory of how I got bitten by a snake happened on my third visit to my hometown. This time around, I went with my mother and elder sister. I was 16 years old then. We went to process garri to take to Calabar.
The incident happened on our fifth day in the village. We left very early in the morning for the farm. We did not eat at the house since we were going to harvest cassava that morning. My sister was asked to carry the food to the farm. It took us an hour or more to get to the farm. At the farm, my mum, grandma, and sister started harvesting the cassava while I stood observing them. I kept on watching until they finished the first round. Everybody had retired to one spot, under a tree to rest. While my sister was preparing the meal, I went to harvest cassava alone. As I was struggling to uproot one stem, I felt a sharp bite on my right foot and started screaming. Before my mom and others reached, the snake had disappeared, and blood started gushing out of my foot. They left everything at the farm and rushed me to a herbalist who treated me immediately. I felt better two days after the treatment before we went back to Calabar. I was not happy because I did not join them to process the garri.
Memories of before and after civilization in my hometown
Before civilization took place in my village, life was difficult. I can vividly recall how tough it was when I visited the village at age 17. My elder brother and I would trek miles away from the house to go fetch water for grandma. Since there was neither a stove nor a gas cooker to cook, we usually journeyed inside the forest to fetch firewood for grandma to cook with. On one of those occasions, I almost fell into a pit if wasn’t for the help of my brother. As kids, we were always very reluctant to visit our hometown because of the different experiences in the village. The idea and stress of having to fetch water and firewood always scared us.
Life became very easy and interesting when civilization set in. By then, my parents had gotten my grandma a stove which made cooking very easy for us any time we visited our hometown. There were boreholes around, which made water easily accessible. There were means of transportation. Getting to the farm and market became interesting and fun. We no longer trekked for hours. There was electricity too. Life became so much better for the villagers after civilization came in. We no longer felt reluctant to visit the village. In fact, we always looked forward to the holidays to visit our hometown. My village is the best place anybody can dream of visiting.
3 Memories of the Future
I wrote to the JAMB (Joint Admission and Matriculation Board) that I wanted to have a career as a lawyer. JAMB conducts entrance Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination for prospective undergraduates into Nigerian universities. I had visions of making a partner one day and being wealthy beyond my dreams, but on that fateful morning, what I heard (Barristers are buried with their faces down) pissed me off from moving further and everything changed.
My dad's TV was one of the first ones in the neighborhood. It was always on, and people would stop by all the time to chat and watch the news. I remember one lady in particular who used to come by every day to talk to my dad. She was always so pleasant, and I used to love sitting on her lap and listening to their conversations.
Times have changed now, and TVs are a lot smaller and more portable. But the one thing that hasn't changed is their ability to bring people together and share news and stories.
In this article, I'll explore three memories of the future that have helped me stay on track and achieve my goals.
How Water Entered Inside Coconut
When I was a teenager, I always imagined how water could enter a coconut. I wondered: how do they open the coconut fruit and put water in it and close it back? Until that moment, I couldn't figure it out.
It started with a chance encounter with a coconut. I was on the beach, and I saw someone cutting open a coconut and drinking the water inside. I was curious, so I asked them what it was like and how water entered the coconut. They told me that the water inside coconuts is refreshing and hydrating and that the water inside is natural. That is God's miracle, so I decided to give it a try. That's when my life changed forever. I tasted the water inside that coconut.
The Thought of me Becoming a Renowned Lawyer in Nigeria and I end up becoming an economist today
When I was small, I used to dream of being a big lawyer one day. I loved the idea of going to court, wearing robes, and making speeches in front of huge crowds. I used to imagine myself winning cases and helping people who were in need. I loved the idea of fighting for justice and making a difference in Nigeria. Even though I am not a lawyer now, I still believe in those values. In fact, I've been fighting for them my whole life. I thought that becoming a lawyer would be a prestigious and lucrative career. But as time went on, I started to question my choice. I didn't like the idea of defending criminals or working for big corporations.
Secondly, my peer group always told me that when a lawyer died, he/she wouldn't be buried with his face up but rather buried with their face facing down. At this point, I started imagining what that could stand for, and no one could satisfy me with a convincing answer. So, I changed my mind about becoming a barrister. Then, one day, I came across an article about economics, and it changed my life forever. I realized that economics was a field where I could help people and make a real difference in the world. I decided to switch my subject combination, and I never looked back.
Today, I am a successful economist, and I am proud of the work that I do. I know that I made the right decision in changing careers, and I wouldn't want to be anything else but an economist.
How I Used to Think Human Beings Were Inside Radio And Television
I remember when I was a kid, I used to think that human beings were inside the radio, and when I turned it on, they would start talking to me. It's funny how my perspectives changed as I got older. Nowadays, I know that human beings aren't actually inside the radio. But back then, I thought that was the coolest thing ever.
When I was very small, my dad bought a black and white television. When we watched the news for the very first time in history, I saw people talking and moving. The first thing that came to my mind was how they opened my dad's television to enter it. That very night, I opened the TV to check how they managed to enter, but when I open it, I saw only wires inside. I couldn't put the TV back the way it was, and I was beaten by my dad.
I. How It Started
When my dad's TV started to open its door for people to enter and broadcast news, it was a pretty big deal. It was the early days of TV, and people were just starting to understand the power of this new technology. For my family, it was a moment of excitement. My Dad was fascinated by the idea of being able to share his thoughts with the world, and he quickly became one of the first people to own a TV. I can still remember watching him as he sat in front of that big box, eagerly waiting for his chance to be on the air.
It was interesting to see how TV evolved over the years. At first, it was mostly just people talking about the news. But eventually, it became a space for creative expression, and I started to see more and more people using it as a platform for their art.
II. What It Was Like
Do you remember that huge, boxy TV your dad had in the living room? The one that was always on? It was kind of an eyesore, but it served an important function in our family. That TV was the portal through which we received our news. Every day, my dad would sit down in his chair and turn on the TV to watch the latest reports. Sometimes, people would appear on the screen and say that we'd still be using our black-and-white TVs in 20 years. But thankfully, technology has changed the world to digital, where we have flat-screen televisions.
I remember one time a man with a big, bushy beard came on to talk about the latest news. He was so excited he was practically shouting into the microphone. It was fascinating to watch him and see how he could control all those people on the screen. That's one of my earliest memories of the power of the media, and how it can be used to share information with the world.
III. How It Ended
I'll never forget the day my dad's TV opened up. It was a beautiful, sunny day, and I was just hanging out in the living room, watching cartoons. Then, suddenly, the screen split in two, and a man's face appeared. He was wearing a suit, and he looked serious. He started talking in a loud, commanding voice and said that he was from the news. My heart raced as I realized that he was talking to me. He said that he had a message for your family and that he would be back the next day.
The next day, the man came back, and this time, his face was on the screen alone. He said that there was a coup d'etat in progress and that martial law had been declared. He urged our family to get to the safe house immediately. I'll never forget the way my dad looked as he scooped us up into his arms and started running to the car.
That was the day my life changed forever. I was filled with fear as I watched the news reports of people being rounded up and executed. It seemed like everything was falling apart around me. But we had each other, and I was determined to survive no matter what happened.
Ambassador Report
It's another great week of the massive output of designs. The marketing team, The Ambassador Squad, is never exhausted or out of what to present on a weekly basis, simply because we are on the right track and with the right DAO project. It's our pleasure to present before you a tabulated summary of our 4 weeks of engagements, i.e., weeks 29-32, which covered four different design themes and other listed activities as shown in the Task Table.