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$PI Here is a concise, coherent, and engaging summary of the entrepreneurial stories of Fan Chengdiao & Dr. Nicholas, streamlined for readability.
1. Encounter: Stanford’s “Technology + Humanity” Combo
Fan Chengdiao was born in Anshun, Guizhou. He studied at Minzu University of China for his undergraduate degree, then went to Stanford for a Ph.D. in Human-Centered Computing, focusing on the relationship between people, society, trust, group behavior, and technology.
Nicholas is of Greek descent, holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science from Stanford, specializing in distributed systems, blockchain, and smart contracts. He researched similar smart contracts before Ethereum’s emergence and taught a blockchain course CS359B at Stanford.
They met, fell in love, and married at Stanford. People around them say:
- Nicholas: a technical idealist, understands code, systems, and how to make technology stable.
- Fan Chengdiao: a human-centered designer, understands users, culture, and how to make technology accessible to ordinary people.
Their shared pain point:
“Blockchain is too energy-consuming, too elitist, too speculative—ordinary people simply can’t get in.”
2. Original Aspiration: Creating a “Blockchain Usable by Ordinary People” (2017–2018)
In 2017, Bitcoin surged, but Nicholas saw:
- Mining rigs roaring, enormous electricity consumption
- Only the wealthy and tech-savvy could participate
- Ordinary people being shut out
Fan Chengdiao proposed from an anthropological perspective:
“Why not replace expensive mining rigs with mobile phones + social trust?”
Over late-night talks at Stanford cafes and labs, they gradually formed an idea:
- No mining rigs, mobile phone mining
- No energy-intensive computation, trust built through social circles
- Not just for speculation, but for inclusive, fair, and accessible digital identities for everyone
In 2018, they officially decided to start a project named Pi Network (π), symbolizing “Pi: universal, infinite, decentralized.”
3. Starting Out: No Money, No People, Not Promising (2018–2019)
Early days were tough:
- No big capital, relying on Stanford’s StartX incubator and their savings
- Investors questioned: “Social mining? Violates blockchain’s anonymity spirit, won’t grow big.”
- Small team: the couple plus 1–2 Stanford alumni, sketching models on shared office whiteboards
Fan Chengdiao handled:
- Product design, user mechanisms, trust circles (trust mining)
- Turning anthropological theories into executable rules: preventing monopolies, cheating, ensuring fair distribution
Nicholas handled:
- Underlying blockchain architecture, consensus algorithms, security
- Insisted on no backdoors, no pre-mining, no large team holdings
On March 14, 2019 (“Pi Day”), Pi Network launched with a simple mobile app:
- Tap once daily for free mining
- No data usage, no energy, no hardware needed
4. Explosion: From Zero to Tens of Millions of Users (2019–2021)
Post-launch, growth relied solely on word-of-mouth:
- No advertising, no marketing expenses
- Viral spread from the US to China, Southeast Asia, Africa, Latin America
Fan Chengdiao’s social design played a huge role:
- Inviting friends, building trust, forming security circles
- More users = safer network, more stable mining
- Turning “social connections” into “network security,” not pyramid schemes
Nicholas withstood pressure:
- Rejected short-term profit collaborations
- Rejected capital control demands: “We want decentralization, not capital centralization.”
By 2021, global users exceeded 30 million across 200+ countries, becoming one of the world’s largest inclusive blockchain communities.
5. Holding Firm: The Tug Between Ideals and Reality (2021–2026)
After going viral, controversy and temptations arose:
Temptations:
- Many exchanges and capitalists approached: “Get listed, cash out, make a quick profit”
- The team could instantly become wealthy
Their choices:
- Refused to list on exchanges, private placements, fundraising, pre-mining
- Stuck to: build the ecosystem, prioritize decentralization, develop practical applications before discussing value
Fan Chengdiao often says:
“We’re not here to issue tokens; we’re here to build an internet value layer that ordinary people can use.”
Nicholas emphasizes:
“If blockchain is just a casino, it loses its meaning. What we want is technological democracy, digital fairness, everyone’s participation.”
Over these years, they focused on:
- KYC (identity verification)
- Wallets, browsers, DApp ecosystems
- Transition from closed mainnet to open network
- Decentralized governance and community autonomy
6. Today: A Long-term Vision of Scholar Couple
By 2026:
- Over 33 million Pi users worldwide
- Still not listed on mainstream exchanges
- The team remains committed: no exit scams, no hype, no promises of quick riches
- Goal unchanged: a truly decentralized public chain owned by ordinary people
Their entrepreneurial story boils down to one core idea:
Two Stanford PhDs, abandoning the elite shortcut, choosing the hardest path—restoring blockchain to the hands of ordinary people.