►
From YouTube: Baseline Protocol Live Stream
Description
Q&A and special guests on the Baseline Protocol and the use of the public blockchain Mainnet in enterprise IT.
C
A
Hey
everyone
welcome
again
to
the
baseline
show.
This
is.
This
is
an
exciting
one,
I'm
hosting
for
the
first
time
in
the
absence
of
the
great
john
walpole,
so
yeah
kudos
to
that
I
don't
have
the
music
yet
so
I
can't
play
the
music
but
yeah.
We
can
all
give
a
kudos
to
john
for
doing
a
fantastic
job
so
far
on
running
the
show
getting
us
all
together,
bringing
together
this
community.
D
A
And
we
have
some
fantastic
guests,
some
usual
suspects
and
some
new
faces
being
who've.
E
A
Joining
consensus,
the
great
team
at
mesh
and
working
on
the
baseline
protocol,
this
so
I'll
start
with
kyle
hi
kyle,
hey
nick
hi,
mark
crowe,
andreas
hi,
tyler,
hey
jack,
this
mushroom
thanks
for
making
it
hey,
sam,
hey,
hello,
ryan,
hi,
hi,
mohan
and
taylor:
hey
thanks!
Thanks
all
of
you
for
making
it
and
the
people
who
are
joining
on
youtube.
It's
it's
really
fantastic.
To
always.
A
Every
wednesday
come
to
these
office
hours
talk
about
or
it's
sort
of
roosting
for
believers
of
baseline,
where
we
exchange
notes
on
what
we
are
doing
on
baseline
and
how
we've
been
assigning
everything.
You
know.
I
think
we
should.
We
should
come
up
with
a
tagline.
We
worked,
we
were
getting
creatives
done
for
the
india
show
and
that's
the
design.
That's
what
the
designer
asked
me
that
can
we
can?
We
have
a
tagline,
we
don't
have
a
tagline
and
they
came
up
with
because
they
were
designers.
They
came
up
with.
A
Oh
no,
it's
redefining
blockchain,
it's
the
blockchain
without
cryptocurrency.
So
I
think
that's
the
first
order
of
business
we
discussed
today,
which
is
let's
come
up
with
a
with
the
tagline
for
baseline.
Well,.
A
So
so
yeah,
I
think,
for
today's
show
we're
gonna
be
talking
about
some
updates
on
on
the
standard.
I
think
that's
the
most
active
thing
for
june,
so
we
have
andreas.
We
also
have
kyle.
Let's
talk
about,
you
know
what
provider
is
doing.
You
know
the
great
stuff
which
is
happening
at
provide.
A
We
also
have
vishwashri
she's
gonna
talk
about
updates
on
on
how
she's
progressing,
with
the
grant
that
she
had
got.
Last
time
I
checked
with
her.
She
was
mentioning
that
it's
not
as
easy
as
I
thought.
E
So,
as
you
guys
know
that
I'm
working
on
the
excel
plugin
so
currently
what
the
plugin
can
do,
so
the
main
two
functionalities
that
I'm
trying
to
achieve
is
that
it
should
be
able
to
send
outbound
messages
to
the
baseline
in
case.
There
are
any
changes
made
on
the
excel
sheets
and
it
should
be
able
to
receive
any
inbound
messages
from
the
baseline
stack
and
then
reflect
those
changes
on
the
excel
sheet.
E
So
currently,
the
plugin
is
able
to
detect
the
changes
on
the
excel
sheet,
pick
up
the
primary
keys
and
the
column
and
the
data
where
the
changes
have
been
made
and
send
it
out
as
a
outbound
message,
so
that
that
work
has
been
done.
I'm
still
like
working
on
refining
it.
E
It's
very
like
basic
work
features
that
have
been
developed
and
now
next
step
for
the
development
for
me
is
to
work
on
the
creating
the
inbound
message,
how
we
receive
the
inbound
message
and
then
map
it
out
to
the
proper
data
and
then
update
the
excel
sheet
accordingly.
So
that's.
E
A
That's
that's
going
great.
She
and
I
hope
that
we
are
all
able
to
use
your
plugin
pretty
soon.
Anyone
else
wants
to
go
up
here.
Nick.
F
I've
got
a
question
for
bishwashri.
What
are
your
plans
for
publishing
that
or
are
making
that
available
to
the
community?
Is
there
are
in
github
if
people
are
interested
in
exploring
it?
Should
they
reach
out
to
you
that
kind
of
thing.
C
So
I'll
I'll
tag
on
there,
I
can
add
to
that
answer
a
little
bit
so
so
right
before
the
the
baseline,
the
grant
for
the
dishwasher
you
received
provided
engaged
envision
blockchain
for
a
month
to
do
a
spike
on
the
excel
project.
We
built
that
in
a
private
repo,
but
we're
like
I'm
right.
We're
gonna,
open
sources,
yeah.
A
E
G
A
Oh
yeah,
oh
yeah
and
yeah,
that
might
be
the
grants
which
are
which
is
still
sitting
unclaimed.
So
john
keeps
talking
about
that
each
time
and
I
think
there's
been
no
movement
on
that
this
week
as
well.
So
I
think
I
can
comfortably
say
that
the
grants
still
stand.
The
hello
world
run
still
stands
huntling,
so
so
yeah,
it's
it's
open.
It's
right.
I
am
talking
to
somebody
later
today
about
that
grunt
jointly,
participate
and
grab
that.
So
so,
let's
see,
let's
see
how
that
goes.
So.
Andreas.
D
A
G
Contributions
are
always
welcome.
Contributions
are
always
welcome,
so
we
got.
We
got
of
the
of
the
seven
sections
that
we
that
we
have
seven
or
eight
we
have
the
design
and
architecture
section
two
is
done
is
in
the
bag.
We
do
have
the
consensus
controlled
state
machine
spec,
also
known
as
blockchain,
for
the
for
the
base
for
baseline
protocol
implementation.
G
That's
also
in
what's
currently
being
reviewed
in
and
hacked
on
is
the
api
spec
kyle
and
his
team
is,
is
is
being
driven
insane
by
by
hundreds
of
comments
and
and
yeah.
So
that's,
that's!
That's
good.
There
is
a
there's,
also
a
current
work
or
pr
another
pr,
that's
outstanding
on
the
agreement,
processing
agreement
execution.
G
So
actually
what
helps
what
what
happens
in
that
in
the
gut
of
the
of
the
baseline
stack
and
then
most
recently,
there's
now
a
pr
on
identifiers,
identity
and
credentials
that
are
going
to
be
used
within
a
baseline
within
a
baseline
protocol
implementation.
So
please
check
that
out.
There's
there's
another
pr
in
the
hopper
for
early
next
week,
finally
get
an
introduction
and
then
do
some
specifications
around
the
abstraction,
slash
integration
layers
that
go.
G
The
integration
from
the
baseline
stack
into
the
consensus,
control
state
machine,
aka,
blockchain
and
from
the
baseline
stack
into
any
other,
consuming
applications
such
as
excel.
So
that's
that's
so
bishop.
So
then
your
next
challenge
is,
you
need
to
add
oauth2
to
your
to
your
to
your
communication
between
excel
and
the
baseline
stack
just
kidding,
that's
kind.
G
B
G
Yeah
yeah
yeah,
yeah
and
then
and
then,
as
a
next
step.
There
is
there's
going
to
be
so
so
what
they'll,
they'll
they'll
be
soon.
Some
some
rfps
around
adding
specific,
did
methods
to
to
the
baseline
reference
implementations
and
as
well
as
to
to
to
some
some
work,
to
make
those
to
make
that
that
the
particular
bring
that
did
method
up
to
up
to
up
to
speed.
G
H
G
So
base
ledger
is
a
base.
Ledger
is
a
version
of
basically
the
the
the
agreement
execution
layer
if
you're,
if
you're,
if
you're
looking
at
that
at
that
at
that
stack
just
that
there
is
more
than
one
instance
or
if
you,
if
you,
if
you
want
to
go,
if
you,
depending
on
how
you
want
to
look
at
it,
it's
actually
a
it's
actually
a
also
a
ccsm
underlying
there.
That
is
then
sitting
by
itself,
and
then
you
can
obviously
always
pin
any
private
chain
onto
onto
ethereum.
G
So,
but
you
can,
just
you
know,
can
can
can
think
of
base
ledger
as
an
as
an
as
a
network
version
of
the
agreement,
execution.
C
G
C
Said
I
think,
yeah
I
also,
I
think
it's
actually
more,
like
a
public
permission
model,
not
a
private
model,
but
the
way
we're
sort
of
looking
at
base
ledger.
Is
you
have
you
know
these
these
components
of
the
provide
stack
that
are
running
in
certain
places
like
kona
and
you
know
serving
servicenow.
C
We
have
some
a
handful
of
pocs
that
are
sort
of
in
the
pipeline
there
and
some
other
ones
that
are
that
are
interesting,
and
we
we,
the
open
source
strategy,
provide,
has
always
been
to
wait
and
and
see
right
instead
of
just
open
sourcing
things
into
a
vacuum
and
giving
things
away
it
was.
The
strategy
has
always
been
to
mature.
C
Over
some
number
of
years
now,
and
once
it's
been
ready,
you
know
when
there's
enough
demand
from
the
community
to
open
source,
the
parts
that
are
in
demand
and
so
the
way
that
we
sort
of
see
base
ledger
as
an
enabling
opportunity
for
the
community
is
really
to
begin
that
open
source
story
like
we're
sort
of
really
the
beginning.
C
It's
the
beginning
of
the
end
of
that
open
source
story,
really
where
we
can
start
to
pinpoint
a
few
of
our
micro
services
in
our
architecture,
to
that
are
that
have
reached
maturity
and
that
are
in
high
demand
and
open
source
them
as
ass
base
ledger,
but
also
taking
into
account
the
great
work
that
martin
and
stefan
and
team
at
unibride
have
been
doing
around
the
consensus
model.
It's
in
staking
rewards
and
that
sort
of
thing
and
we're
really
looking
at
base
ledger
it's
a
place.
You
can.
C
So,
like
the
way
that
I
look
at
bri,
one
in
this
context
is
almost
like
a
layer
2.1
when
you
have-
and
I
know
I
just
made
that
up
so
control
me
if
you
want,
but
what
I
mean
by
that
is
organizations
can't
just
dump
their
proofs
and
or
their
their
data
into
into
l2.
There
has
to
be
a
middleware
that
marshals,
you
know
the
proofs
and
and
handles
the
you
know
implements
the
baseline,
it's
the
bpi
right
so
yeah.
C
So
I
think
that
together,
you
know
that
sort
of
this
sort
of
completes
my
my
thoughts.
I
guess,
but
you
know
it's,
it's
there's
some
a
handful.
You
know
a
handful
of
our
services
that
we're
really
targeting
for
for
open
source
as
part
of
the
base
ledger,
release
or
testing
up
this
that's
coming
up
here
pretty
soon.
F
So
question
on
timing:
kyle,
I
think
you
hit
on
at
the
end
you're
planning
that
open
source
release
kind
of
aligned
with
base
ledger
right.
C
Yeah
yeah,
of
course,
and
it's
it's
coming
fast.
You
know
it's
like
it's.
It's
it'll,
be
here
like
this
summer
toward
the
latter
part
of
summer,
but
yeah.
I
think
it
makes
a
lot
of
sense
and
we'll
enable
bri
one
and
that
reference
implementation
even
further
and
enable
base
ledger,
and
I
think
it
makes
a
lot
of
sense.
A
Thanks
kyle,
I
think
that
was
pretty
fantastic.
It's
always
good
to
have
you
talking
about
the
projects
we're
working
on
actually
the
most
interesting
updates.
A
Moving
on.
I
think
there
was
a
question
on
servicenow
integration,
so
you
want
to
address
that
one.
A
C
C
Oh,
oh
yeah,
so
it's
it's
it's
baked
into
our
our
stack
and
it's
it's
actually
working.
We
actually
we
demoed
it
here
on
the
show.
You
know
some
months
ago,
I
guess
with
nicola
and
we've
been
working
with
a
couple
of
servicenow
customers,
big
ones,
some
financial
institutions
and
and
some
other
ones
notable
and
they're,
building
they're,
building
on
it,
they're
building
pocs
and
by
poc.
When
I
say
poc
I
mean
production
poc,
you
know,
I
don't
mean
poc
like
it
used
to
mean
yeah.
C
More
of
a
pilot,
but
we
still
we
got
to
be
able
to
say
the
word
poc
and
have
it
mean
the
right
thing?
I
guess
I
think
that
there's
a
lot
of
stigma
around
that
word
in
blockchain,
yeah.
A
B
Yes,
yes,
what's
been
interesting.
Furthermore,
from
the
servicenow
perspective
is
some
of
the
clients
that
we're
engaging
with
them
on
they're,
looking
not
only
internal
operational
processes
to
improve
upon
those
but
actual
customer
facing
applications,
line
of
business,
delivering
applications
that
are
producing
deeper
value
and
revenue
within
internal
to
the
business
or
to
the
bank,
for
example.
So
that's
been
something
that
we've
been
really
excited
about
in
the
engagements
thus
far.
B
Yeah
yeah-
I
mentioned
this
previously
like
it's
been
very
interesting:
the
amount
of
feedback
that
we've
had
with
a
number
of
customers
that
we're
engaging
with
in
which
not
only
the
operational
efficiencies
that
can
be
gained
as
a
result
of
baselining
and
the
ability
to
align
incentives
amongst
the
ecosystem
participants,
but
the
opportunity
for
customers
to
build
services
and
new
revenue.
On
top
of
this
as
well,
you
know,
being
such
an
open
network.
Very
modular
network
that
can
be
built
upon.
B
That's
been
just
something
that
a
lot
of
the
customers
that
we're
engaging
with,
have
been
very
excited
about
and
have
seen
value
in
doing.
Awesome.
F
A
bit
of
a
realization
of
the
the
decentralized
promise
right:
that's
that's
beautiful
great
work.
A
D
No
always
looking
to
add
new
maintainers
to
the
team.
If
anybody's
interested,
please
feel
free
to
to
reach
out
yeah.
C
D
Yeah
yeah
feel
free
to
reach
out,
via
the
slack
is
probably
the
the
best
way
to
start
a
conversation
but
happy
to
get
any
contributions
we
can
and
if
yeah
people
can
can
talk
to
me
or
kyle
or
there's
a
there's,
a
maintainers
list
on
the
baseline
repo
so
feel
free
to
reach
out
to
any
of
us.
A
Excellent,
so
yeah
we
are
actively
recruiting
maintainers
on
the
baseline.
So
I
think
that's
what
we
had
for
the
planned
updates.
Anybody
else
would
want
to
go
ahead.
Yeah.
F
Did
you
talk
about
your
your
india
show.
A
Come
on
the
big,
the
big
announcements,
I
was
actually
sort
of
thinking
of
closing
with
that,
so
there's
going
to
be
an
india
show.
So
if
people
watching
on
youtube,
if
you're
tuning
in
from
india
do
look
out
for
the
india
version
of
the
show
it's
coming
on
the
first
of
july,
I
just
pushed
it
by
some
time
so
that
we
could
gather
the
right
steam.
A
I'm
talking
to
sponsors
from
india,
the
big
names
I
would
leave
it
to
to
john
when
he
comes
back
to
announce
the
names
one
by
one
as
they
come
on
and
we're
gonna
be
inviting
people.
So
it's
gonna
be
structured
in
a
way
that
every
week
we
meet
but
every
two
weeks
we
also
showcase
projects.
So
so
that
way,
we
also
maintain
some
kind
of
regular
cadence
on
what
what
is
happening
with
the
big
ones
and
also
with
startups.
A
So
so
that's
something
which
is
which
is
which
is
in
the
works.
F
July
1st,
what
time
in
india?
If
people
are
watching
the
recording-
and
they
want
to
put
this
in
their
calendar,
what
should
they
pencil
in.
A
And
and
yeah
mohan
you
want
to
talk
about
something
which
you're
doing.
H
Yeah
we've
I've
been
I've
been
anonymous
thus
far,
so
because
we've
been
trying
to
look
at
some
some
projects
that
we
could
work
on,
we
were
previously
in
a
social
travel
startup
which
we
had
to
abandon
last
year
or
early
this
year,
and
so
we
have
essentially
now
sort
of
gotten
on
to
a
zero
waste
project
in
asia
and
africa.
H
It's
basically
around
neighborhoods
in
terms
of
capturing,
and
you
know,
waste
at
the
the
neighborhood
level
and
then
in
helping
communities
upcycle
and
recycle
those,
so
that
you
know
you
can
kind
of
build,
what's
called
as
the
circular
economies
rather
than
ending
up
in
in
in
heaps
and
there's
a
lot
of
export
of
waste
from
developed
nations
to
developing
nations
as
well,
so
we're
trying
to
build.
You
know
it's.
H
It's
kind
of
it's
called
reverse
supply
chain,
but
we
we
believe
that
if,
when
we're
coming
in
from
the
consumer
street
level,
if
you
want
to
call
it
that,
but
then
at
some
point
it
will
touch
point
with
corporates
in
terms
of
corporate
social
responsibility,
commerce,
one
way
or
the
other.
So
for
us
you
know
we
look
at
baseline
as
being
sort
of
a
key
aspect,
probably
of
our
foundation
as
a
blockchain,
as
well
as
being
able
to
interoperate
with
corporate
blockchains.
So
you
know
I've
talked
to
kyle
about
this.
H
It's
been
a
bit
vague.
We
still
we
have
a
team
now
that's
growing
fast
in
in
india
and
and
so
we're
pulling
in
a
lot
of
ngos
there
that
are
interested
in
getting
onto
our
platform.
We
actually
are
converting
our
a
social
network
platform
for
travel
into
a
platform
for
sustainability.
F
Mohan,
I
don't
know
if
you
haven't
already,
but
you
should
reach
out
to
dan
norton
and
jason
pansis
at
envision.
They've
done
a
lot
of
work
on
sustainability,
a
number
of
different
projects
and
not
so
they're,
very
knowledgeable
and
and
may
be
able
to
help
drive.
You
drive
your
business.
H
C
H
A
That's
a
very
exciting
project
mohan.
I
think-
and
I
would
also
want
to
be
personally
involved
with
this
one,
because
you
know
circular
economy
is
something
which
I've
been
researching
on
a
lot.
I
think,
since
the
past
eight
to
ten
years,
I
published
several
papers
as
well,
so
I
think
it
would
be
great,
and
you
know
I
think
the
last
two
papers
which
I
published
were
actually
how
we
can
use
blockchain
or
slash
dlts
to
to
to
to
recover
what
was
last.
A
So,
I
think,
yeah
extremely
exciting
space
to
be
fantastic
kudos
by
the
way
I'm
also
working
on
something
which
has
got
to
do
with
carbon.
I
don't
want
to
jinx
it
by
talking.
H
About
it
too
early,
no,
this
is
awesome
because
somewhere
the
thing
we
wanted
to
do,
in
fact,
I'm
I'm
starting
to
engage
with
columbia
university
because
they
are
working
with
ibm
on
what's
called
as
a
carbon
engine,
which
is
they
want
to
open
source.
I
mean
colombia
ibm
wants
to
open
sources,
but
what
we're
doing
is
not
so
much
carbon
footprint.
There's
a
carbon
supply
chain
right
there
that
which
is
kind
of
they
have
this.
You
know
I
was
just
listening
to
a
conversation
from
ibm.
H
You
know
they
have
private
blockchain,
so
they
have
a
bit
of
an
issue
trying
to
capture
sensitive.
You
know
sort
of
high
sensitive
data
in
the
in
the
tracking
of
you
know,
basically,
carbon
offsets
in
the
supply
chain
or
carbon
footprint
and
supply
chain.
What
we're
doing
is
we're
doing
green
offsets.
H
What
we
want
to
get
to
is
green,
offset
trading
where
you
know,
if
there's
a
sustainable
community
in
terms
of
recycling,
zero
waste
management,
then
there's
a
transfer
of
value
that
comes
from
the
developed
nations
into
the
developing
nations,
much
akin
to
carbon.
But
then,
obviously
carbon
has
got
policy
and
tax
exemptions
or
tax
incentives,
whereas
green
doesn't,
and
so
that's
the
next
thing
we
need
to
go
through,
but
it's
an
interesting
way
of
approaching
the
green
green
problem.
Much
unlike
the
carbon
problem.
A
Yeah
well,
I
was
just
trying
to
excite
a
couple
of
interns
in
my
team
about
working
on
this
project,
and
I
said
you
know
guys.
Do
you
want
to
work
for
an
industry
which
is
272
billion
worth?
Oh
yeah,
I
do
I
do,
and
then
it
was
like
you
know.
This
carbon
market
is
is
huge,
so
I
think
yeah
we
should.
We
should
talk
offline,
definitely
more.
Thank
you.
A
So
so
yeah
on
the
on
the
on
the
india
updates.
I
will.
I
will
keep
posting
on
slack
how
we
are
progressing.
There
are
some
beautiful
creatives
that
you've
got
made
just
to
make
the
announcements
and
also
plan
the
outreach.
So
all
of
those
will
also
be
shared
with
all
of
you,
so
I'm
banking
on
all
of
you
to
to
share
it
in
your
network
so
that
we
can
get
as
many
as
many
eyes
as
many
hands
on
the
keyboard
as
possible.
A
So
that's
it
from
my
side.
I
think
we
we
we
will
be
able
to
wrap
up
pretty
soon
today.
Any
other
updates
from
anyone.
F
F
Samurai
you,
this
is
wonderful.
Thank
you
for
stepping
in.
F
Being
tortured
by
his
children
and-
and
you
know
this
is
a
very
powerful
and
very
positive
community
and
we've
got
a
lot
of
leadership
and
a
lot
of
people
willing
to
step
up,
and
you
know
thank
you
very
much
for
for
doing
this
today.
A
Yeah,
I
agree.
I
really
appreciate
all
of
you
making
it
today
see
you
next
week.