Building the Next Generation of Blockchain Architects
Where decentralized networks meet enterprise scalability
Hybrid blockchains aren't just the future. They're happening right now in Taiwanese tech companies. And most development teams still treat them like they're either public or private — which completely misses the point. Our program focuses on the architectural decisions that actually matter when you're building systems that need both transparency and control.
Explore Our Curriculum
Three Technical Pillars That Define Modern Blockchain Work
You can't build effective hybrid systems without understanding how public and private chains actually interact at the protocol level. Here's what we focus on instead of generic blockchain theory.
Cross-Chain State Management
Most developers struggle with state synchronization between public and private layers. We work through real scenarios where you need atomic operations across both — and why most documentation gets this wrong.
Selective Data Disclosure
It's not about hiding everything or exposing everything. The challenge is designing systems where specific data becomes public while maintaining privacy for operational details. This requires understanding zero-knowledge proofs beyond the marketing hype.
Governance Layer Design
Who decides what stays private? How do you handle protocol upgrades when different stakeholders have different access levels? These aren't philosophical questions — they're architectural constraints you'll face in month two of any serious project.
How We Actually Structure the Learning
Starting September 2025, we're running two cohorts. The approach is collaborative because that's how blockchain development actually works — you need perspectives from people thinking about different parts of the system.

Protocol Deep Dives
We spend the first eight weeks going deep on how different hybrid implementations actually work. Not surface-level overview stuff — you'll be reading source code and understanding why specific design decisions were made in projects like Dragonchain and XinFin.

Collaborative Architecture Sessions
You'll work in small groups designing systems for realistic business requirements. Think supply chain verification or financial settlement where some data needs public auditability while maintaining competitive privacy. The arguments you'll have about these designs are where real learning happens.

Implementation Projects
Final twelve weeks are spent building something real. Past cohorts have created customs tracking systems, medical record verification tools, and supply chain audit platforms. You'll hit actual problems that documentation doesn't cover.

Industry Mentorship
Gerrit Lindholm, who's been working on hybrid blockchain implementations since 2019, provides code reviews and architectural guidance. He's currently building a cross-border payment system and brings those real-world constraints into how he evaluates your work.
Join a Network of Builders Actually Working in This Space
The Taiwan blockchain development community is small enough that you'll actually get to know people, but active enough that there are regular meetups and project collaborations happening.
Weekly technical sessions where people present problems they're stuck on and we work through solutions together
Direct connections to companies actively hiring blockchain developers — though we don't promise jobs because that would be dishonest
Access to our alumni network of 140+ developers working at blockchain companies across Asia
