SpaceChain Introduces
Programmable Hardware Board for Developing Blockchain
Applications that can be Deployed in Space
April 12, 2021
SpaceChain today introduced
SpaceChain Callisto - its first open-source demo
hardware board designed for developing blockchain
applications that can be used and deployed in space.
SpaceChain Callisto is pre-installed with and runs on
Linux and SpaceChain Operating System (SPC OS), to help
accelerate space technology development, and serves as
the backbone for SpaceChain's payload launches and
missions.
SpaceChain Callisto enables
developer communities worldwide to participate in
building out next-generation decentralized
infrastructures for blockchain and fintech applications
using space technologies. More importantly, it signifies
a strategic step forward towards democratizing the space
industry and fostering the commercialization of outer
space.
The Callisto is configured in a way
similar to the on-orbit payload currently installed in
the International Space Station. Developers will have
the chance to create game-changing applications that can
potentially leverage blockchain-related functions,
including running smart contracts and performing
multi-signature transactions, and running tests through
their computers to determine whether the applications
they created would work in space ultimately.
"The world is entering an age of
software-defined satellites that can be configured to
perform different tasks by simply uploading an
application or program, much akin to a mobile phone,"
said Zee Zheng, SpaceChain co-founder and CEO. "By
opening up access to space and satellite technologies
through increasing the number of players and
contributors, more opportunities for collaborative work
can be created and lead to new businesses and
socio-economic models that were once impossible."
SpaceChain's co-founder and CTO
Jeff Garzik executed the first multisignature blockchain
transaction in space in August 2020. Less than a year
later, SpaceChain is yet another step closer to removing
barriers and allowing a global community to access and
collaborate in space, all while remaining secure and
immutable through proven blockchain cryptography.
"We named our product - Callisto -
after the second largest moon or natural satellite of
Jupiter, to represent how a mass that is millions of
kilometers from Earth can be held within our grasp,"
said Jeff Garzik, SpaceChain co-founder and CTO.
"SpaceChain's open-source demo hardware board is proof
of our efforts to bring our disruptive technology to the
masses as we continue to discover more commercial use
cases for blockchain-based satellite networks in space.
We are one step closer to making the SpaceChain OS
available to anyone, anywhere in the world."
Fullerton (formerly
Westin) Hotel, Sydney
New Dates - 22 & 23 June 2021
Contact: kfrench(@)talksatellite.com
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