Course Content
This course makes use of in-depth, visually appealing slides, videos, real-world examples, group discussions, small-group tasks, and presentations by the students.
- Recognize how public and permissioned blockchains operate.
- Identify and evaluate the viability of blockchain use cases
- Depending on the use case, pick the top blockchain platforms and service providers.
- Consider the effects of blockchain on business and regulation.
- Create blockchain solutions and define deployment methods.
- This course is intended for analysts, managers, or C-level executives who will regularly engage with blockchain technology or who need to learn about the technology in order to create a blockchain strategy. All participants should become blockchain professionals by the conclusion of the three days so they may excel as blockchain experts inside their organizations and careers.
- Basics of blockchain technology
- Why blockchains are used
- The distributed storage idea
- A quick explanation of the differences between private and public blockchains
- An explanation of blockchain regulations
- A deeper, more difficult dive (into Bitcoin or Ethereum)
- encryption principles (e.g., hashing, key pairs, digital signatures)
- Block arrangement
- Consensus-based techniques
- Exchanges and wallets
- The three types of blockchain applications with real-world examples from various industries
- storing data
- Value exchange
- Smart-contracting
- the most recent technological developments
- Future of blockchain technology
- The difficulties in putting blockchains into use
- Types and uses of tokens
- Rights and utility
- Token worth
- Distribution of values
- Demand and inflation
- specialized layer
- prevailing models
- handling of data
- Token echelon
- The goal of tokens
- Without tokens, permissioned blockchain incentive schemes
- governing structure
- management of identities
- establishing consortiums
- procedures for deciding decisions
- systems for off-chain governance
- financial assistance
- Insurance
- pharmacology and healthcare
- Community services
- Energy
- advertising and the media
- World Wide Web of Things
- An appropriate blockchain use case
- Control of tokens
- Possibly being taxed
- GDPR
- Business-relevant blockchain platforms
- Software companies that offer "blockchain as a service"
- The IBM Hyperledger
- Google Azure
- Amazon AWS
- Consensys Kaleido