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From YouTube: The Road to IBC - Office Hours (Aug 26, 2022)
Description
Dan Connolly and Kenny Rowe discuss the ongoing process of enabling IBC transfers for the Agoric ecosystem.
B
What's
going
on
kenny
all
right?
Well,
on
monday,
we
had
an
upgrade
to
the
network,
agoric
7,
I
believe-
and
that
happened
somewhere
around
about
9
a.m-
monday
morning,
pacific
time
that
all
happened
quite
nicely.
B
No,
no
issues
that
I
could
see
the
the
big
update
from
this
particular
upgrade
is
that
it
now
enables
ibc,
and
so
there
is
a
new
proposal
on
commonwealth
to
get
that
all
configured
and
I
think
the
the
most
important
point
here
on
ibc-
and
this
was
brought
up
by
oh,
I
can't
remember
his
name
but
he's
ari-
that
it
is
very
important
that
we
coordinate
well
around
opening
one
and
only
one
channel
from
us
to
wherever
we're,
headed
and
also
there's
some
complications
with,
or
at
least
some
things
to
be
considered
with
relayers.
B
So
while
I
think
it
is
technically
possible
to
to
do
right
now
with
the
upgrade,
there
does
absolutely
need
to
be
some
coordination
to
make
sure
that
that
all
happens
smoothly.
Yes
right,
there
is
very
important
so,
but
after
this
after
this
process,
then
we
should
be
able
to
open
up
channels
to
other
cosmos
change,
which
is
a
big
milestone
for
the
for
us.
That's
it's
really
really
cool.
B
Osmosis
well
yeah
any
chain
is
possible
with
ibc
that
well,
any
two
chains
with
ibc
can
sort
of
connected,
but
the
one
that's
most
relevant
likely
will
be.
The
one
to
osmosis
is.
B
Just
because
it
then
allows
for
pools
to
be
created
for
any
tokens
that
exist
on
work.
A
A
B
B
Yeah,
the
new
chains
tend
to
get
a
lot
of
attention
quickly,
as
well,
so
you'll
see
like
evie,
like
that's
a
ethereum
virtual
machine
chain
that
is
relatively
new.
I
think
elixir
is
I'm
not
sure
how
new
that
is,
but
and
crescent
is
within
the
last
six
months.
I
think
too,.
A
A
a
bridge
to
cerium.
B
A
A
Numbers
yeah
this
one
tends
to
have
good
stuff
about
how
close
we
are
to
quorum
and
stuff.
B
A
A
A
A
That
turns
on
the
governance
parameter
in
the
in
the
network
and
the
result
of
this
governance
proposal
is
that
the
bit
will
just
automatically
get
flipped
at
the
end
of
the
voting
period,
and
then
people
have
to
start
doing
ibc
transactions
on
our
chain
to
create
connections,
and
this
is
the
part
that
has
to
be
really
carefully
coordinated
so
that
we
don't
have
duplicate,
build
tokens
on
other
chains
and
then
likewise,
clients
the
whole.
A
I'm
not
really
clear
on
the
whole
ibc
protocol,
so
I'm
not
really
sure
what
a
client
is,
but
anyway,
and
then
there's
this
cosmos
chain
registry,
which
is
sort
of
off-chain
coordination,
stuff,
that's
just
handy
and
then
then
yeah
whatever
you
have
to
do
on
the
on
the
chain
on
the
other
end,
to
make
it
really
work.
A
So
there's
a
process
first
for
getting
stuff
set
up
in
osmosis.
I
guess
the
osmosis
sort
of
has
a
wild
west
thing
with
its
permissionless
and
then
a
more
of
a
process
to
get
it
on
their
front
page
or
whatever,
and
then
we
need
relayers
to
actually
run
the
software
that
listens
to
one
chain
and
send
stuff
to
the
other.
A
And
it's
one,
important
distinction
about
ibc
versus
other
sort
of
inner
blockchain
kinds
of
things
is
that
we
don't
have
to
trust
the
relayers
anybody
can
set
one
up.
They
are
responsible
for
availability.
A
A
What
they
do
is
they.
They
take
all
of
the
signatures
from
the
validators
on
this
side
and
they
then
relay
them
to
this
to
the
other
side
and
the
other
side
checks
all
those
signatures.
So
there's
nothing
that
the
relayer
can
do
to
screw
things
up
to
to
corrupt
things.
They
can
make
things
unavailable,
but
if
they
you
know,
if
one
relay
goes
down,
you
can
just
spin
up
another
one.
You
know
somebody
else
can
spin
up
another
one
and
then
after
the
relays
are
all
going
and
everything,
then
we
throw
a
party.
A
Closes
what.
B
And
then
I
thought
the
or
correct
seven
was
step
zero.