
<a target="_blank" href="A Web3 browser is a browser with a crypto wallet built into it. That's really the whole thing.The reason it matters is that most dapps (decentralised applications) need to talk to a wallet to do anything useful. On desktop people install MetaMask as a browser extension and that's the bridge. On mobile that extension layer doesn't exist in Safari or Chrome, so without a browser that has wallet functionality natively built in, you're either stuck or you're jumping between apps in a way that breaks the experience constantly.A Web3 browser handles that connection automatically. You navigate to a dapp, it asks to connect to your wallet, you approve once, and from there it can read your address, request transaction signatures, and interact with whatever the dapp does. You stay in one place.The Bitcoin.com wallet has one built in. Here's what's actually worth using it for:DeFi protocols. Uniswap, Aave, Curve, and most other DeFi frontends work through WalletConnect or direct injected provider. Open the dapp URL in the Web3 browser, connect your wallet, and you can swap tokens, supply liquidity, or manage positions without touching a centralised exchange.NFT marketplaces. OpenSea, Blur, and similar platforms require a connected wallet to show your holdings, make offers, or list items. The Web3 browser handles the connection.Blockchain games and apps. Anything that needs to verify ownership of an on-chain asset or write a transaction works through the same connection.ENS and on-chain identity. If you have an ENS name or any on-chain profile, dapps that support it will read it through your connected wallet automatically.The practical difference from using a regular mobile browser is that you're not constantly being told to install an extension that doesn't exist, and your wallet isn't a separate app you have to switch back and forth to for every signature request. For anything you're doing regularly on-chain it's worth using." title="What a Web3 browser actually is and what you can do with it">full image</a>
<strong> - Repost: What a Web3 browser actually is and what you can do with it</strong> (<i>from Reddit.com, What a Web3 browser actually is and what you can do with it</i>)
<br><blockquote> A Web3 browser is a browser with a crypto wallet built into it. That's really the whole thing.The reason it matters is that most dapps (decentralised applications) need to talk to a wallet to do anything useful. On desktop people install MetaMask as a browser extension and that's the bridge. On mobile that extension layer doesn't exist in Safari or Chrome, so without a browser that has wallet functionality natively built in, you're either stuck or you're jumping between apps in a way that breaks the experience constantly.A Web3 browser handles that connection automatically. You navigate to a dapp, it asks to connect to your wallet, you approve once, and from there it can read your address, request transaction signatures, and interact with whatever the dapp does. You stay in one place.The Bitcoin.com wallet has one built in. Here's what's actually worth using it for:DeFi protocols. Uniswap, Aave, Curve, and most other DeFi frontends work through WalletConnect or direct injected provider. Open the dapp URL in the Web3 browser, connect your wallet, and you can swap tokens, supply liquidity, or manage positions without touching a centralised exchange.NFT marketplaces. OpenSea, Blur, and similar platforms require a connected wallet to show your holdings, make offers, or list items. The Web3 browser handles the connection.Blockchain games and apps. Anything that needs to verify ownership of an on-chain asset or write a transaction works through the same connection.ENS and on-chain identity. If you have an ENS name or any on-chain profile, dapps that support it will read it through your connected wallet automatically.The practical difference from using a regular mobile browser is that you're not constantly being told to install an extension that doesn't exist, and your wallet isn't a separate app you have to switch back and forth to for every signature request. For anything you're doing regularly on-chain it's worth using. </blockquote>
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<hr><strong>Mining:</strong> <br>
<a title="Cryptotab browser" target="_blank" href="https://cryptotabbrowser.com/12/4000343"><u>Bitcoin</u>, Cryptotab browser</a>
- <a title="Pi Network, CLOUD PHONEMINING" target="_blank" href="https://minepi.com/cusidore"><u>Pi Network</u> cloud PHONE MINING</a>
<br><a title="Fone, CLOUD PHONE MINING" target="_blank" href="https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.cloud.earning"><u>Fone</u>, cloud PHONE MINING</a> cod. dhvd1dkx
- <a title="Mintme, PC PHONE MINING" target="_blank" href="https://www.coinimp.com/invite/86d61388-18f9-4f8b-8561-8962c67e7166">Mintme, PC PHONE MINING</a>
<hr><strong>Exchanges:</strong> <br>
<a title="Coinbase.com" target="_blank" href="http://coinbase.com/join/occhip_8?src=android-link">Coinbase.com</a>
- <a title="Stex.com" target="_blank" href="https://stex.com/?ref=27877494">Stex.com</a>
- <a title="Probit.com" target="_blank" href="https://www.probit.com/r/46858290">Probit.com</a>
<hr><strong>Donations:</strong> <br>
<a title="Done crypto" target="_blank" href="https://commerce.coinbase.com/checkout/140e9bb6-c4ef-4156-92cf-9c87a88fd259">Done crypto</a>
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