
Anchor, Pinocchio, and the state of Solana open source
Leo from Blueshift breaks down the Anchor vs Pinocchio decision for Solana program development. When each framework makes sense, what the tradeoffs are, and what Pinocchio means for on-chain throughput and cost.
Plus the token standards landscape, client diversity with Firedancer, and the open source culture on Solana.
Anchor, Pinocchio, and the state of Solana open source
Building wallets and payment flows on Solana
15 years in crypto: from Bitcoin remittances to tokenising RWA on Solana
More from Pirates Parley

How Colosseum turned Solana hackathons into a $250K venture pipeline
Matty Taylor and Clay Robbins, co-founders of Colosseum, join Pirates Parley to break down how they spun out Solana's hackathon program into an independent venture platform -- right when everyone thought Solana was dead.They cover:- Why 85% of VC-backed Solana startups trace back to hackathons- How the accelerator works (8 weeks, $250K, SF office, demo day)- Their new AI-powered Copilot tool for idea refinement- Why Frontier dropped all predefined categories- The rise of non-technical "vibe-coded" founders- Gaming on-chain: why it hasn't worked yet and what might change- Post-quantum crypto submissions and timing risk- Finding co-founders through the Colosseum platform

Why financial systems shouldn't run on public internet
TradFi runs on private, dedicated networks and has always done so — firms like Jump, DRW, and Citadel run their own fibre. Double Zero brings that infrastructure to blockchain, plus multicast — hardware-accelerated packet replication that doesn't exist on the public internet.

Migrating an entire blockchain to Solana in 6 months: Helium
Noah explains how Helium migrated an entire wireless network from its own chain onto Solana. The technical challenges, the Merkle tree architecture that made it possible, and the incentive design that got nearly a million hotspots deployed by regular people.