Group / AI Coding Experiences & Productivity
The call opened with a candid discussion about AI-assisted coding habits. Lance described his renewed coding intensity since working with Claude — moving from VS Code with GitHub Copilot to Claude in the terminal, which dramatically improved context awareness. Max shared a similar arc: intensive coding through February (8-10 hours/day), tapering in March, and recommended Agile-style sprint planning and daily retrospectives to manage the workflow and avoid burnout.
Lance & Christian / REGEN Token Burn Status
Lance asked about the status of REGEN buy-and-burn tied to off-chain credit retirements. Christian clarified that while a signaling proposal supporting a fixed-cap dynamic supply direction had passed, no specific governance proposal mandating burns exists yet. The burn message feature has been available on REGEN Ledger since late 2025, but no burns have occurred outside of Regen Compute. Christian explained that R&D first needs to complete a full eco-credit accounting overhaul — tracking every credit sold, to whom, for how much, commissions received, and payments to project developers — before executing burns tied to historical off-chain sales. On Regen Compute, the buyback-and-burn is already live: when someone pays on Stripe, a portion goes to an R&D Osmosis wallet that buys REGEN, IBC-transfers it to REGEN Ledger, and executes a burn message (~$11-17 in total burns so far at a 5% rate). The group discussed strategic timing of burn announcements and the potential for a Telegram bot reporting burns similar to Osmosis’s daily burn notifications. Christian noted that an automatic burn for on-chain marketplace sales is in the backlog but R&D resources are extremely limited.
Magdalena / New Member Introduction
Magdalena joined the group, introducing herself as a cultural anthropologist, game developer (running a studio in Poland for 11 years), and life coach based in Spain. She has spent the past 3.5 years doing regenerative systems R&D across Mexico, Iceland, Guatemala, and Egypt. She expressed interest in reconnecting with blockchain/crypto technology and contributing to work that grounds economic value in living ecological and human realities.
Max / Ukraine Eco-Village Impact Dashboard
Max demoed a dashboard he built for Ukrainian eco-villages that aggregates impact data from multiple on-chain sources into a single real-time view for donors and partners. The dashboard covers several domains: energy production from solar panels tracked via smart meters (with Arc Green), water infrastructure and restoration projects (via HyperCerts), tree planting verified through Sylvie (with individual tree photos and claims on a map), community economy voucher pools via Sarafu (where field reports generate tokens exchangeable for funds), iNaturalist-based eco-credits, and fundraising tracked through Gitcoin with reporting on Karma GAP. Each domain links to on-chain data sources, and the dashboard maps locations of participating eco-villages across Ukraine.
Max / Digital Twin Brainstorming Results
Max shared results from his digital twin experiment mentioned in the previous call. He created AI personas for advisory board members and a prospective partner, then simulated a brainstorming session before the real meeting occurred a few days later. Key findings: the simulation didn’t predict exact outcomes but helped identify which advisors were most relevant for the specific case, and surfaced useful professional opinions. The main limitation was that digital twins lack knowledge of current market conditions, personal networks, and active opportunity pipelines. Max concluded the approach is most useful for preparation — crafting tailored briefs for each advisor and deciding who to invite to specific discussions.