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OverviewActivity

Add all active grant programs

Publish structured data on active crypto grant programs — what they fund, how to apply, budget, past recipients, and deadlines. ## Why it matters Grant programs are one of the main ways builders get funded in crypto, but finding them is a mess. Every ecosystem, foundation, and DAO runs their own program with different criteria, application processes, and timelines. A structured catalog in Geo that connects grant programs to the projects offering them, the topics they fund, and examples of past recipients gives builders a single place to find funding opportunities. ## What to publish - Create Grant Program entities for every active crypto grant program - For each program, publish: - Name and description - Organization running it — link to Project/Company/DAO entity - Total budget or funding pool if disclosed - Grant size range (min/max per grant) - Focus areas (what they fund — infrastructure, DeFi, education, public goods, etc.) - Application URL - Application process (rolling, cohort-based, RFP) - Current status (open, closed, paused) - Notable past recipients — link to Project entities - Link each program to: - The parent organization - Topics describing what they fund - Ecosystem (Ethereum, Solana, Cosmos, etc.) - Cover all major programs: - e.g. Ethereum Foundation grants, Optimism RPGF, Arbitrum grants, Uniswap Foundation, Gitcoin, Solana Foundation, Cosmos grants, Protocol Labs, Base grants, Starknet grants ## Scope All active programs — likely 40–60. Include foundation grants, DAO-funded programs, and ecosystem funds. ## Potential sources Foundation and DAO websites, grants.xyz, Gitcoin, ecosystem grant portals, DAO forum announcements, Twitter/X announcements from grant committees.

Adam Fischer

Building the future of knowledge infrastructure @Geo

Add cover images to 100 exercises

Find or create distinctive cover images for 100 exercise entities in the health space. ## Why it matters Exercise entities are only useful if people can quickly tell them apart. A cover image showing the movement or the muscles involved makes browsing a catalog of exercises intuitive — you can scan a list and immediately recognize a deadlift versus a lat pulldown versus a plank. It also makes the knowledge graph feel like a real fitness reference rather than a text database. ## What to publish - A Cover image for 100 exercise entities - Images should be: - Show the movement being performed or a clear anatomical illustration of muscles worked - High resolution (minimum 1200px wide) - Landscape aspect ratio (roughly 3:1 or 4:1) - Clean and instructional — not overly stylized gym marketing photos - Consistent style across the set so they feel cohesive together - Upload images to IPFS and set as the Cover property on each Exercise entity - Examples: - Squat → side view of proper squat form or muscle group overlay - Pull-up → action photo or anatomical back muscles illustration - Plank → demonstration photo showing proper alignment ## Scope 100 exercises. Prioritize the most commonly performed and searched-for movements across strength, bodyweight, and mobility. ## Potential sources Unsplash (fitness photography), anatomical illustration libraries, ACE or NSCA exercise image databases, openly licensed fitness content, generated artwork. Ensure images are public domain or openly licensed.

Job board URLs for top 100 projects

Find and publish the careers page or job board URL for 100 onchain projects already in the space. ## Why it matters People exploring crypto projects in Geo often want to know who's hiring. Having a direct link to each project's job board or careers page turns the knowledge graph into a practical tool for job seekers — no extra Googling required. ## What to publish - A Job Board URL property value for 100 existing project or company entities in the crypto space - URLs should point to the project's official careers or jobs page - e.g. `https://jobs.lever.co/uniswap`, `https://boards.greenhouse.io/consensys`, `https://aave.com/careers` - If a project uses a third-party board (Lever, Greenhouse, Ashby, etc.), use that direct link - If a project only lists jobs on their main site, use the most specific URL (e.g. `/careers` not `/`) - Skip projects that have no public job board or careers page ## Scope 100 projects. Prioritize the most active and well-known projects that are likely to be hiring. ## Potential sources Project websites, LinkedIn company pages, crypto job boards (e.g. crypto.jobs, web3.career), Greenhouse/Lever/Ashby public boards.

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Synthesis

Head of ecosystem

Geo

0x579bb51e587699B7F27B2A01250D53B8c491CBE5