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https://www.loom.com/embed/9328e0509bb64f91912924d3ae415d20
First Deliverable Video with full ASMR explanation
MURMUR is creating technology for ASMR. We put new tools in the hands of ASMRtists.
Our Tableland Pilot Program project is a demo of a collectible ASMR video platform. In addition to watching and collecting videos, the platform also enables users to create and mint sample packs from the audio tracks of ASMR videos. These samples can be remixed into ambient soundscapes for electronic music and game soundtrack production. This represents one potential product direction for MURMUR: collectible videos paired with extended audio tooling.
More information about MURMUR in its current state was presented at EthDenver this year during the Tableland/Filecoin day:
Diagrams and additional business information in Figma
We use Tableland to store the metadata for each of our three categories of NFTs: videos, sample packs, and samples. These NFTs are minted as ERC-721 tokens on Polygon. The Tableland metadata is queried via each NFT’s token URI, which pairs the Tableland gateway with SQL statements that retrieve the appropriate Tableland data.
Video.sol and Pack.sol contain a Token URI function that performs a simple Tableland database retrieval based upon the Tableland row id that was submitted to the contract on mint. Sample.sol performs a slightly more complicated retrieval, creating a dynamic join on the video and sample pack tables via the appropriate Tableland ids, which are submitted as additional parameters to Sample.sol on mint.
In the future, the attribute section of each NFT’s metadata should be spun out into its own Tableland table for ease of query, as in the Tableland Two Tables NFT example. The metadata attributes should remain mutable, whereas the core metadata such as image, name, video, and audio should be protected and immutable.

Here’s a narrative about what we’re building that we’ve developed during the Tableland Pilot Program: