You would be a fool to look down on the old men in your street — the ones who come out to play draughts every evening. You would be a fool to forget that no man simply loses the will to live overnight, yet someone will always say, “This can never be me.
Forgetting that every tattered cloth you see on a madman’s neck was once brand new.
No one is really all that. All you can do is pray for grace while remaining careful.
I am not a good man
and maybe I’ll never be
but the sky knows
that I try my hardest
to be better in every way.
That despite my sins
and my lowest ways
I try to be a better man
than the one I was yesterday.
Life is too short to worry about little things. Have fun. Fall in love. Regret nothing, and don't let people bring you down. Study, think, create, and grow. Teach yourself and teach others.
Canton Project Spotlight: @cancore_io
Cancore is a settlement layer built on Canton Network, meaning it’s responsible for finalising transactions between Canton and public blockchains like Ethereum.
At a high level, it solves a very real problem.
Right now, there are two financial systems running in parallel.
On one side, you have Canton, where institutions are already moving serious volume. Over $350B daily in repo alone, and trillions in tokenized assets across players like DTCC, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Nasdaq, and Euroclear.
On the other side, you have public chains, where liquidity lives. DeFi, stablecoins, lending markets, and where different apps and protocols can easily connect and build on top of each other.
The problem is simple.
These two worlds don’t really talk to each other.
Institutional capital is scaling on Canton, but it stays within private infrastructure. Public chains have deep liquidity, but no compliant, trust-minimized path to access that capital.
This is where Cancore comes in.
Cancore is not a bridge.
Bridges move tokens, but usually at a cost. They introduce custody risk, relayers, and trusted intermediaries, which brings back the same problems tokenization was meant to remove.
Cancore focuses on settlement instead.
Transactions are atomic, meaning they either fully complete or fully revert, so there’s no scenario where something only partially goes through. No broken states, no edge cases.
That matters because it reduces the risk that typically comes with moving value across systems.
It’s also designed to minimise trust assumptions.
There’s no custody layer holding funds, no relay networks, and no middlemen involved. You don’t have to rely on a third party to trust that the system works as expected.
Another key point is that Cancore isn’t tied to just one public blockchain.
Ethereum is the starting point, but the design allows it to expand wherever liquidity exists.
From our view, this is one of the missing pieces.
Canton is where institutions are building and tokenizing assets.
Public chains are where liquidity and composability live.
But without a proper settlement layer, they just continue growing separately.
Because without it, those two ecosystems just keep growing separately, never really interacting.
That’s where Cancore fits in.
It’s not something built on the outside trying to plug in later. It’s already part of the Canton ecosystem.
Cancore operates as a validator on Canton Network, run by Five North, and is recognised as a featured app within the ecosystem.
That matters.
It’s not an add-on or an experiment. It’s core infrastructure being built directly into the stack.
Mainnet goes live April 7.
Here’s what Cancore brings:
• A settlement layer connecting Canton to public blockchains
• Atomic settlement, so transactions either fully complete or fully revert
• No custody, no relayers, no middlemen, keeping it trust-minimized
• Not tied to a single chain, designed to expand across ecosystems
• Preserves Canton’s privacy and compliance model
• Validator on Canton Network (operated by Five North)
• Featured app within the Canton ecosystem
The idea is simple.
Canton is where institutional capital is forming.
Public chains are where liquidity lives.
Cancore is how that capital finally reaches it.