You and I brainstormed a lot of ideas that ended up becoming the competition at Ethanber in 2022. You ultimately were an architect for one of the prizes related to Poseidon hashing. Can you give us your perspective on how Z prize went from an idea to through through the execution to the final results? Absolutely. I think it was a great success. Um, maybe it is not, you know, the particular area of expertise or just because it wasn't locked into but when looking at the whole holistic end to end, a lot of people's and in applied engineering focus moved onto the hardware.
In this 2-part series exploring ZK Hardware, Anna Rose interviews various participants from the ZPrize competition, alongside the creator of ZPrize and co-host of this episode Alex Pruden from Aleo. Through these interviews, they dig into the different types of hardware, such as GPUs and FPGAs, that can be used to accelerate ZKP computation. They also discuss the underlying mathematical techniques in ZKPs that can be optimized for and the tricks and strategies that ZPrize competitors used to achieve these optimizations.
In Part 1 of the series, Anna and Alex first interview Luke Pearson from Polychain Capital, who was an architect on the ZPrize. They then interview Ben Devlin and Rahul Yesantharao from Jane Street who were members of one of the winning teams, Hardcaml.
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Ever wish you could use existing rust libraries in ZK?
This is a friendly reminder from the team at RISC Zero that you can!
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Follow them on twitter @risczero to make sure you don’t miss their upcoming 1.0 launch and the alpha launch of the Bonsai Network.
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