What I'm doing now
🚀 Active Development
Exploring RGB++ protocol capabilities beyond marketplace trading — currently working with Bitcoin-CKB asset binding and experimenting with token and staking mechanics. The way these features can bypass traditional bridge risks while enabling cross-chain value flow is both technically challenging and exciting to build.
📚 Learning & Growth
Casually learning Rust through building and experimenting with CKB smart contracts. I'm more focused on getting hands-on with practical contract patterns than racing through the language itself, but Rust's strictness is helping sharpen how I think about safe, efficient code.
Continuing to deepen my Vitest testing skills in TypeScript. Testing blockchain interactions means mocking plenty of external dependencies while still capturing realistic contract state changes, which keeps things interesting.
🏗️ Exploring rabbitt labs
Playing with the idea of evolving "just rabbitt" into rabbitt labs — more of a personal brand experiment than anything official right now. Thinking about how it could act as an umbrella for freelance work, side projects, and a space to share research-driven builds.
Early thoughts are around offering focused development in Vue.js/Nuxt.js and Web3 integration — bridging solid, mobile-first web development with the unique demands of decentralized applications.
🔧 Technical Deep Dives
- CKBFS vs Spores — Refining storage strategies for different NFT use cases
- CoTA protocol — Ongoing alpha testing with a focus on improving user experience
- Portfolio SEO — Implementing structured data (Schema) for better discoverability
🌐 Community & Ecosystem
Part of the original developer team behind Nervos Nation, the English-language hub for the CKB ecosystem. While I'm not actively running the community, I keep up with protocol developments and occasionally contribute to RGB++ technical discussions where I can add value.
🎮 Side Quests
Still gaming when I can — often the odd mobile game I can keep by my side — though "research" sometimes turns into 3 AM documentation dives instead of actual play. The WhiteR4bbitt gaming days feel far away, but that same puzzle-solving drive translates well into debugging smart contracts.
Considering writing more technical content about my RGB++ experiments. Explaining complex features in plain language would help both the community and my own understanding.