-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 85
A Brief History of MimbleWimble White Paper
In Aug. 2016, Someone called Tom Elvis Jedusor (Voldemort's French name in J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter book series) placed the original MimbleWimble white paper on a bitcoin research channel, and then disappeared.
Tom's white paper "Mimblewimble" (a tongue-tying curse used in "The Deathly Hallows") was a blockchain proposal that could theoretically increase privacy, scalability and fungibility.
In Oct. 2016, Andrew Poelstra, a mathematician at Blockstream, wrote a precise paper, made precise Tom's original idea, and added further scaling improvements on it.
A few days later, Ignotus Peverell (name also came from "Harry Potter", the original owner of the invisibility cloak, if you know the Harry Potter characters) started a Github project called Grin (Yes! This project.), and began turning the MimbleWimble paper into something real.
And in Mar. 2017, Ignotus Peverell posted a technical introduction to MimbleWimble and Grin on Github.
Since then, Grin has grown into a working blockchain developed by various members of the community, and after several stages of development, will launch Jan. 2019.
That's the interesting story of MimbleWimble/Grin white paper. Here are the three parts of them:
Basics
- Getting Started
- User Documentation
- MimbleWimble
- FAQ
- Planned releases (Roadmap)
- Code of Conduct
Contributing
- Contributing Guide
- Code Structure
- Code coverage and metrics
- Code Reviews and Audits
- Adding repos to /mimblewimble
Development
Mining
Infrastructure
Exchange integrations
R&D
Grin Community
Grin Governance
Risk Management
Grin Internals
- Block Header Data Structure
- Detailed validation logic
- P2P Protocol
Misc