Few people know that the Ordinals protocol has a native DID system, which is the SATS Name. In the protocol, Casey creatively gave each Satoshi a name, which is a permutation and combination of letters A to Z. As Satoshi is mined, the name increases. The longer, the shorter the name. In reverse order, this is because if they started short and then got longer, all the good, short names would be stuck in an unusable genesis block.

For example, the name of 1905530482684727°' is "iaiufjszmoba". The name of the last Satoshi to be mined will be "a" (I think the last Satoshi A in the name of Ordinals is a similar existence). Combinations of 10 letters or less exist, or will someday exist.

This can be queried in the Ordinals browser. If it has a meaningful sats name, I believe it is very rare and worth collecting.

In addition to the native DID, there is also Ordinals DID in JSON format, which can be said to be the ancestor of JSON. The birth of BRC20 was also inspired by JSON DID, including .sats, .btc, .x, etc., which use json format to Domain names are engraved in Ordinals. This is commonly known as Ordinals DID. However, this kind of DID is open and relies heavily on imagination. There are very few scenarios where it can be truly empowered and applied, let alone its versatility. For example, Water Margin 108 will be used by Gosats as an OG card, which means that in the Gosats ecosystem, Water Margin is valuable and a pass. Water Margin 108 will not work in unisats. This JSON format DID becomes a community pass. The versatility is worth observing. Why, because it is determined by the distribution method. Everyone can easily issue a DID, then announce that it is empowered, and then form a certain market and benefit from it. This issuance method makes infrastructure providers have no incentive to support the universality of json, but only focus on to the construction of their own communities.

The Realms "field" that the Atomics agreement party has been promoting, some people also suggested to translate it into "tribe", is a system with a more complete and clear design. Many people may not understand Atomics’ obsession with Realms. Anyone can register a "domain" name that has not yet been registered. When you successfully register a valid name in a domain, you can own and manage the rights to the domain name by yourself. There is no middleman making a profit, and there is no centralized registration. business.

Here is a demonstration:

For example, if I register a top-level domain of OSH, I can set the registration of the sub-domain by myself. For example, if I limit the sub-domain name to 3 characters, I will pay a registration fee of 0.001btc, and if I limit the sub-domain name to 3 characters, it will be free, and similar rules will apply. The fields are arranged from left to right, e.g.

+OSH.TEAM.TECH

+OSH.TEAM.BD

+OSH.TEAM.ADMIN

The application in the sub-field can be a DAO, it can be a club, web hosting, member services, social media organization, creation fees, etc. The current deployment of ARC20 also requires a top-level domain before it can be deployed. This forces the token to the community, emphasizing the properties of Atomics as non-arbitrary tokens.

As the Atomics documentation says: The naming system supported by the Atomics protocol allows users to regain sovereignty over their digital lives. The protocol is powerful enough to be used for receiving cryptocurrency, hosting websites, publishing social profiles, and more novel new uses such as social communities and decentralized autonomous organizations. The protocol is intentionally kept very lightweight, thus allowing marketplace service providers and users to add their own conventions for the various use cases they need.

It seems that the field of Atomics is powerful enough to be attacked by dimensionality reduction? Would you be interested?