Enhance Crypto Wallet Security with Pharos DashboardEnhance Crypto Wallet Security with Pharos Dashboard
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Pharos Wallet Security Console I built a security dashboard for crypto wallets on the Pharos Network. Live Prototype link: https://pharos-security-console.netlify.app/ The idea is simple. Most wallets get drained because of token approvals — you click "Approve" on some DEX once, and that contract has permission to spend your tokens forever. People accumulate these silently over years and have no idea what they've signed off on. So I built a dashboard that shows you. It uses real on-chain data — every number on the screen is actually pulled from Pharos mainnet using a few agent skills I'd written earlier that scan approval events and decode transactions. What's on the screen: A health score that pulses. 82 means the wallet is mostly okay. A diamond chart showing the breakdown of dangerous vs safe approvals. A real critical approval card — unlimited USDC sent to 0x78466A...0a1C on a real Pharos wallet. One-click revoke button. A decoded transaction in the right panel. Function name (dagSwapByOrderId), gas, status, event count. Pharos Pacific Ocean Mainnet footer (chain 1672).
How I used Stitch Wrote one prompt. Pretty detailed — color palette, layout, content, language. Hit submit. Stitch streamed the layout in under a minute. From there I iterated about four times: Pulse the health score Swap dummy data for the real captures from my skills Fix the footer (it said Ethereum Mainnet by default, had to make it Pharos) Tweak the motion Then I selected the screen, hit Export → Netlify (PREVIEW). Two clicks later, live URL. Total time from blank canvas to deployed dashboard: maybe 90 minutes.
Feedback on Stitch The streaming generation is the magic moment. You write a prompt and watch the layout build itself in real time. The follow-up suggestion chips ("Animate the health score to pulse") were genuinely useful — I clicked one and got the animation without having to write a new prompt. The Netlify export flipped a switch for me. I was expecting "design tool, then take the code somewhere." It just deploys. Canvas to public URL in two clicks isn't something I've seen before. One small annoyance: I clicked Export and got "No screens selected." Took me a moment to realize I had to click the screen first. A subtle hint there would help.
Denis's avatar
Not a single thing I’d change — it’s perfect.
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