【Block Motion】 Recently, I came across something quite interesting. A leading crypto trading platform’s educational initiative in the Philippines has made a big move on a remote island — deploying satellite internet to connect 6 schools in the Surigao del Norte, Siquijor, and Davao del Norte provinces with high-speed, stable internet.
The numbers may seem small, but the impact is truly profound. Over 7,300 students and more than 100 teachers can finally say goodbye to days of relying on paper textbooks or intermittent internet connections. From a different perspective, what does this mean for children in mountainous areas? It means they can access information at the same speed as students in cities, online courses are no longer a luxury, and they can even access global educational resources.
Honestly, such initiatives are rare to see — it’s not corporate PR stunts or idle vision talks. It’s about genuinely deploying infrastructure and truly transforming the learning environment for a group of children. This is the kind of thing Web3 companies can accomplish.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
13 Likes
Reward
13
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
SchroedingerGas
· 5h ago
Satellite networks connecting mountainous areas to the internet—there's really no room for criticism. It's far better than some project pump-and-dump coins.
View OriginalReply0
PaperHandSister
· 6h ago
I have to say, this trading platform's operation is truly hardcore. Satellite networks are being deployed to mountain schools in the Philippines, which is real empowerment.
---
Over 7,300 children can access stable internet, much more reliable than some domestic projects that just shout slogans.
---
Education in the mountainous areas of the Philippines is probably a breakthrough point. There should be other regions following up later.
---
Wait, is this trading platform really just a setup for hype around the coin price? It feels like good deeds these days all have hidden motives.
---
That satellite network move is brilliant. It’s much more heartfelt than the cheesy on-chain education.
---
Over 7,000 students—this time, it’s truly about making a difference, not just show.
---
Interesting. Finally seeing crypto companies doing real work in Africa and Asia, not just ripping off investors.
---
Is the internet condition so bad over in the Philippines? Didn’t expect it to be just now being rolled out.
View OriginalReply0
FlyingLeek
· 6h ago
Satellite networks are now available, so children in the mountainous areas of the Philippines can now stand on equal footing with students in first-tier cities. Perhaps there are even more geniuses emerging than us.
View OriginalReply0
LayerHopper
· 6h ago
This is truly not a conventional move in the crypto world, and it's actually making things happen.
Web3 projects are really using satellites for infrastructure, which is much more reliable than mere promises on paper.
Over 7,000 children can now access the internet, and this number is more credible than the daily active users of some public blockchains.
Internet speed in the mountainous areas of the Philippines has stabilized, education has been bridged, and this is one of the few positive cases in the crypto space.
Basically, some people are really investing money to solve problems, not just making slogans.
If this story spreads, it could help improve the industry's reputation.
Satellite networks assist education in the mountainous regions of the Philippines; the trading platform education program benefits over 7,000 students
【Block Motion】 Recently, I came across something quite interesting. A leading crypto trading platform’s educational initiative in the Philippines has made a big move on a remote island — deploying satellite internet to connect 6 schools in the Surigao del Norte, Siquijor, and Davao del Norte provinces with high-speed, stable internet.
The numbers may seem small, but the impact is truly profound. Over 7,300 students and more than 100 teachers can finally say goodbye to days of relying on paper textbooks or intermittent internet connections. From a different perspective, what does this mean for children in mountainous areas? It means they can access information at the same speed as students in cities, online courses are no longer a luxury, and they can even access global educational resources.
Honestly, such initiatives are rare to see — it’s not corporate PR stunts or idle vision talks. It’s about genuinely deploying infrastructure and truly transforming the learning environment for a group of children. This is the kind of thing Web3 companies can accomplish.