Google Cloud’s BigQuery has included 11 major blockchain chains to its publicly available data. This plugin helps users analyze multiple chains to learn about crypto and blockchain. Blockchain technology foundations, Web3 analytics firms, partners, developers, and customers seek to understand crypto.
BigQuery Enhances Public Datasets to Quantify NFTs and Blockchain Metrics
Solving hard problems and validating subjective claims is the fundamental purpose to quantify NFTs minted across blockchain networks, compare transaction costs, and count active wallets on large EVM-based chains. These demands and blockchain data need are met by improving BigQuery’s public datasets.
These new datasets allow Web3 to handle these and other issues without node or indexer modification. This enables asset movement, token popularity, and smart contract usage data across blockchain networks easier to access and evaluate. BigQuery public datasets now contain 11 famous chains including Avalche, Cronos, NEAR, Optimism, Polkadot, and Polygon.
Avalanches result from heavy snowfall/ice, and “Arbitrum” and “Cronos” are blockchain and computer science concepts. Decentralized finance uses Ethereum (Görli testnet) and Fantom (Opera mainnet).
Polkadot promotes blockchain interoperability. Two-dimensional polygon nets represent three-dimensional connected polygon objects. The multiplicity of chains gives blockchain data for comprehensive ecosystem research.
Google Cloud Expanding Collaborations to Boost Blockchain Data Accessibility
Managed datasets from Google Cloud enhance community-controlled datasets, making public databases more complete. The Ethereum controlled Ethereum dataset on Google Cloud displays Ethereum data. The data contains wallet balances, ERC20, ERC721, and ERC1155 token transactions, and smart contract interactions.
Number precision and crypto price accuracy are also being addressed by Google Cloud. To combine UNIT256 and BIGNUMERIC1, UDFs are being introduced. Users may get blockchain data with better numerical precision, decreasing calculation rounding mistakes and boosting data analysis.
Users have to connect to appropriate nodes and maintain indexers to access blockchain data. Google Cloud simplifies this by getting on-chain data off-chain. Data access and analysis are simplified by eliminating node operation.
For years, Google Cloud has provided public blockchain datasets and data accessible to the blockchain community. Group data sources include Google and community-controlled databases.
Google Cloud seeks collaborations with startups, data providers, and partners to increase blockchain data accessibility and value for developers, analysts, and cryptocurrency enthusiasts.
Google Cloud’s BigQuery public datasets now contain 11 more blockchain chains, promoting blockchain data equality. Users may better understand cryptocurrencies, undertake sophisticated investigations, and get blockchain data quantitatively and precisely with this version.