📢 Gate Square #Creator Campaign Phase 1# is now live – support the launch of the PUMP token sale!
The viral Solana-based project Pump.Fun ($PUMP) is now live on Gate for public sale!
Join the Gate Square Creator Campaign, unleash your content power, and earn rewards!
📅 Campaign Period: July 11, 18:00 – July 15, 22:00 (UTC+8)
🎁 Total Prize Pool: $500 token rewards
✅ Event 1: Create & Post – Win Content Rewards
📅 Timeframe: July 12, 22:00 – July 15, 22:00 (UTC+8)
📌 How to Join:
Post original content about the PUMP project on Gate Square:
Minimum 100 words
Include hashtags: #Creator Campaign
Social media users have discovered that Ledger will soon discontinue the Nano S application.
Gate News bot news, according to CoinTelegraph, social media users noticed that the major hardware Wallet provider Ledger announced last month that it would stop supporting the Nano S, which left them feeling frustrated.
In the original announcement on May 30, Ledger stated that it is discontinuing the Ledger Nano S, and therefore will no longer accept new applications, feature submissions, and application updates.
The Nano S was launched in 2016, so some devices are nearly 10 years old. The wallet provider also encourages users to "upgrade to another Ledger device" and check "if they have a 24-word secret recovery phrase to maintain support."
Ledger's initial statement was released last month. However, many users on social media seem to have just realized this, with their comments expressing both anger and disappointment, as well as a resigned acceptance of similar actions taken by other tech companies.
A user named Pcaversaccio working in the Ethereum ecosystem stated on Wednesday that Ledger's practice of "essentially forcing anyone to purchase and input their seed into a new device" is "very uncool."
"I know you are in business, but don’t play with those who are doing backward compatibility; many people rely on LNS. You are one of the few trusted institutions, and now you are starting to review new features and access permissions for commercial reasons," Pcaversaccio said.