DEFI Happy Hour @ DAS London
Cap off your DAS London experience with an exclusive Happy Hour brought to you by Orbs, H&T, and Chronicle Protocol. Immerse yourself in an evening of enriching conversations and invaluable networking opportunities with the forefront minds in DeFi. Enjoy handpicked gourmet treats and drinks as we toast to innovation together. Don't miss this chance to connect and unwind with the leaders shaping the future of decentralized finance.
About the hosts:
Orbs is a “Layer-3” public blockchain infrastructure project powered by PoS, pioneering on-chain innovation since 2017.
Orbs is set up as a separate execution layer between L1/L2 solutions and the application layer, as part of a tiered blockchain stack, enhancing the capabilities of smart contracts and powering protocols such as dLIMIT, dTWAP, and Liquidity Hub.
Harris & Trotter LLP, established in 1940, is a London-based accountancy firm that specializes in Digital Assets. They work with some of the most prominent entities in the crypto industry including 1inch, Wintermute, and Blockchain.com, supporting them with audit, advisory, accounting, bookkeeping, compliance, and taxation services. With expertise in crypto and audit, they can support companies with diverse cases, shape regulatory frameworks and collaborate globally as an independent member of BKR and community-led interest groups like Web3CFO. Harris & Trotter LLP's innovative Proof of Reserve service powered by Chainlink, ensures transparency in clients' on-chain and off-chain reserves, bolstering their financial credibility.
Chronicle Protocol is a novel Oracle solution that has exclusively secured over $10B in assets for MakerDAO and its ecosystem since 2017. With a history of innovation, including the invention of the first Oracle on Ethereum, Chronicle Protocol continues to redefine Oracle networks. A blockchain-agnostic protocol, Chronicle overcomes the current limitations of transferring data on-chain by developing the first truly scalable, cost-efficient, decentralized, and verifiable Oracles, rewriting the rulebook on data transparency and accessibility.