►
From YouTube: Baseline Summit 2020 Track0 Plenary - Edited
Description
The complete footage of this track from the Baseline Protocol Summit, from November 12-13, 2020, edited to remove blank sections from the livestream.
For more information on the Baseline Protocol, go to https://baseline-protocol.org
To compete in the Baseline Gitcoin Hackathon (Dec 9 2020 through January 6, 2021), sign up here: https://gitcoin.co/hackathon/baseline/onboard
A
We'll
give
it
two
more
minutes
just
to
keep
it
at
the
nice,
even
705,
for
anyone
that's
having
trouble
finding
their
their
cuigo
chat,
invitation,
their
personalized
link
and
getting
into
the
conference
it's
great
to
see
the
turnout.
A
A
You
know
we
thought
we'd
get
maybe
50,
maybe
75
registrations
and
now
we're
we're
pushing
400.
So
the
turnout
is
great.
We're
very
appreciative
of
the
support
and
we're
we're
very
focused
on
making
sure
the
baseline
protocol
can
add
value
to
your
business
and
ultimately
to
the
computing
landscape
at
large.
A
The
live
stream
is
rolling.
That
must
be
my
cue
to
to
get
the
party
started
so
to
speak.
So
welcome
everybody,
and
thank
you
for
joining
us
here
at
the
baseline
protocol
summit
2020,
I'm
your
host
nick
kritikos,
the
hashtag
for
the
summit,
is
hashtag
2020
baseline
summit.
So
please,
if
you're
going
to
communicate
on
social
media,
please
leverage
that
hashtag.
A
It
just
really
makes
it
a
lot
easier
for
us
to
kind
of
track
overall
reach
and
engagement,
and
it's
fun
to
see
if
we
can
get
some
of
these
things
trending
on
some
of
these
platforms.
So,
as
I
mentioned,
I
am
nick
kritikos,
I'm
your
host,
certainly
for
for
this
session.
A
A
I
have
been
a
part
of
the
computer
industry,
either
directly
or
indirectly,
since
the
early
80s,
when
I
was
a
young
child
going
to
high
school
in
athens,
greece,
my
father,
who
was
an
american
diplomat
at
the
time
technically
smuggled
in
a
trs-80,
color
computer,
so
two
grease
in
a
diplomatic
pouch,
so
that
I
could
begin
my
computer
journey
taught
myself
basic
from
the
early
days
back
in
the
old.
A
You
know
ms
basic
days
expanded,
that
to
include
assembly
in
pascal
and
logo
and
other
languages
actually
taught
a
pascal
class
or
supported
the
teaching
of
a
pascal
class
in
my
in
my
high
school
moved
on.
Of
course,
as
I
I
grew
up
when
I
went
to
college,
I
started
out
as
a
systems
student
really
kind
of
focused
on
you
know:
computer
information
systems
at
the
time.
You
know
this
was
back
in
the
early
90s
late
80s.
The
curriculum
in
most
colleges
was
somewhat
remedial
right.
A
They
had,
they
had
to
go
off
the
assumption
that
you
didn't
have
any
foundation,
so
they
started
with
you,
know
basic
algorithms
and
and
that
sort
of
thing-
and
it
was
somewhat
remedial.
So
I
realized
that
you
know
there
was
more
action
in
the
business
realm
at
the
time.
Certainly
it
was
a
little
bit
more
lively
at
my
college
than
the
computer
lab.
A
So
I
switched
my
major
to
economics
where
now
I
technically
have
a
couple
economics
degrees,
but
it's
interesting
that
when
I
discovered
blockchain
about
five
and
a
half
almost
six
years
ago,
it
brought
these
two
things
together
in
a
way
that
I
think
we're
just
now
as
a
culture
starting
to
appreciate,
I
started
my
career
after
college
at
a
company
called
borland.
A
Many
of
you,
depending
on
how
old
you
are
perhaps
may
not
remember
borland
at
the
time
it
was
the
other
microsoft
they
had
a
similar
suite
of
products.
Paradox
quattro
pro
et
cetera,
as
well
as
development
tools,
and
that
was
kind
of
their
their
claim
to
fame
so
delphi
c,
plus
plus
builder,
and
things
like
that.
Well,
borland,
you
know,
competition
is
tough
and
borland
didn't
really
survive
and,
as
it
was
kind
of
you
know,
revenues
were
shrinking
and
the
the
customer
base
was
shrinking.
A
First,
within
an
enterprise,
my
slides
move
very
quickly
and
then
more
and
more
increasingly
across
enterprises.
So
you
know
at
the
the
you
know:
late
90s,
early
2000s.
You
know
big
movement
toward
outsourcing
right.
If,
if
a
business
process
wasn't
part
of
your
core
value
chain,
then
a
company
should
really
consider
whether
they
should
do
it
themselves
or
whether
they
should
use
a
trusted
third
party
in
order
to
enable
those
systems.
A
You
shouldn't
spend
the
money
and
the
resources
on
these
these
common
processes,
things
like
hr
customer
support
things
that
could
be
outsourced
and
done
in
a
much
more
economically
efficient
fashion
through
a
third
party,
and
this
led
to
a
big
effort
to
integrate
business
processes
across
companies
right
first
with
the
partners
that
were
providing
your
outsourcing
capability,
but
more
and
more
with
your
trading
partners,
whether
they
were
in
the
supply
chain
or
or
even
downstream,
with
your
your
distributors,
contractors
and
others
today,
according
to
idc,
75
percent
of
companies
have
two
or
more
business
processes
that
are
external
to
their
organization.
A
However,
many
of
them
are
still
using
manual
processes
in
order
to
execute
those
transactions.
In
order
to
conduct
that
business,
you
know
sending
emails
with
pdfs
or
spreadsheets
faxing,
believe
it
or
not.
Faxing
is
still
a
thing,
and
in
many
times
that
is
the
mechanism
by
which
this
information
is
flowing,
and
it's
imperfect.
It's
slow.
A
It's
fraught
with
errors
again
that
the
same
idc
report
found
that
as
many
as
35
of
those
transactions
had
errors
that
required
additional
work
after
the
fact
oftentimes
costing
almost
you
know,
tens
of
dollars
50
to
60,
I
believe,
is
what
they
they
actually
estimated
the
average
transaction
it
took
to
reconcile,
which
is
fine.
You
know
if,
if
you're
a
big
company
and
you're
doing
huge
volumes,
but
oftentimes
these
business
processes
also
engage
smaller
companies
that
don't
have
the
resources
or
the
robust
I.t
staff
in
order
to
have
their
own
erp
system.
A
Or
you
know
the
erp
system
that
they're
using
because
their
budget
is
smaller,
is
not
compatible
with
the
erp
system
of
their
large
trading
partner.
So
companies
started
to
build
these
really
fantastic
enterprise
application,
integration
systems,
spending,
hundreds
and
millions
of
dollars,
hundreds
of
thousands
and
millions
of
dollars
on
computer
hardware
and
software
in
professional
services.
A
So,
with
the
advent
of
blockchain,
more
of
these
things
are
becoming
easier
right.
Blockchain
is
good
at
many
things,
it's
bad
at
many
things
as
well.
It's
I
like
to
say
it's
not
bacon
right.
I
love
bacon,
bacon's
great
with
everything
it's
great
on
shrimp.
It's
great
on.
You
know
on
a
burger,
it's
great
by
itself,
it's
great
with
breakfast,
it's
great
with
lunch.
You
can
have
bacon
at
any
time,
there's
even
bacon,
flavored
vodka,
which
arguably
shouldn't
exist.
A
However,
blockchain
is
not
bacon.
It's
not
good
for
everything.
There
are
certain
applications
like
cryptocurrency
or
settlement
provenance
identity
that
blockchain
really
excels
at,
but
it's
not
good
for
everything
and
so
companies
early
on
in
the
blockchain
revolution,
we're
starting
to
experiment
with
blockchains
and
seeking
to
understand
how
they
can
apply
this
really
wonderful
technology
in
this
tool,
and
they
did
a
lot
of
work
with
private
gotta,
make
sure
my
slides
work.
There
we
go
with
private
blockchain
implementations,
however,
those
private
networks
would
run
into
challenges
they
weren't
perfect.
A
You
still
had
a
transparency
issue
where,
on
the
public
blockchain
on
a
mainnet,
everybody
can
see
your
business.
If
you
will
on
a
private
network
only
your
invited
network
participants
can
see
the
data.
However,
they
can
still
see
the
information
they
can
still
understand.
What's
going
on
through
reading,
the
tea
leaves,
if
you
will
about
your
business
processes
or
your
logic,
and
that
becomes
problematic,
especially
as
you
look
to
open
these
networks
up
and
gain
the
network
effects
that
the
promise
of
this
technology
really
delivers
on.
A
So
forester
did
a
study
again
about
a
year
ago,
and
they
found
that
many
companies
that
are
investigating
blockchain
are
realizing
that
private
networks
are
a
bit
of
a
dead
end
they're
great
and
they
can
be
valuable,
but
they
ultimately
create
another
silo
of
information
that
then
needs
to
be
integrated
in
order
to
get
the
best
network
effects
out
of
a
blockchain
system
they're
recognizing
that
a
public
blockchain
is
the
way
to
go
so
more
and
more
companies,
as
you
can
see
here,
75
percent
of
those
surveyed
recognize
the
benefits
of
a
public
blockchain
and
are
moving
in
that
direction.
A
However,
and
this
is
a
big
gotcha,
80
percent
of
that
data
is
still
confidential
or
considered
too
sensitive
to
expose
on
a
public
or
even
a
private
blockchain
again,
you
know
the
idea
that
anybody
can
see
your
business.
Anybody
can
understand,
what's
going
on
in
a
purchase
order
or
how
that
purchase
order
flows
through
your
supply
chain,
that
you
know
that
kind
of
data
is
invaluable
to
companies
they're
looking
to
to
enter
a
market
or
or
to
ultimately
compete
or
and
compete
in
a
way
that
might
not
be
the
most
fair.
A
A
Not
only
is
the
data
public,
as
I
mentioned,
your
business
logic
is
also
exposed
to
your
trading
partners.
How
do
you
find
the
trading
partners
and
do
it
in
a
way
that
is
reliable
and
safe,
and
you
know
mitigates
risk
as
opposed
to
adding
additional
risk
factors?
A
The
baseline
protocol,
as
we'll
talk
about
as
an
open
standard
public
domain
initiative
to
help
companies
work
better
together
and
do
it
in
a
fashion
that
is
private
and
doesn't
expose
sensitive
information
to
to
other.
You
know,
trading
partners
or
trading
partners
that
shouldn't
have
access
to
it
and
do
it
in
a
fashion
that
breaks
down
those
silos
that
ultimately
creates
the
last
silo.
A
If
you
will
whereby
just
plugging
into
this
infrastructure,
you
get
access
to
a
wealth
of
capability
that
you
wouldn't
have
had
otherwise,
almost
like
electricity
or
or
the
telephone
network
right,
if
you
just
plug
into
this
business
network
and
begin
to
integrate
your
systems
in
a
way
without
all
this
additional
overhead,
without
all
this
additional
expense
of
these
eai
systems,
wouldn't
that
be
a
great
thing
right,
you
think
about
these
distributed
applications
where
each
application
independent
of
function
is
contributing
a
node
to
the
network
and
is
opening
up
new
doors
and
breaking
down
barriers
to
doing
business
much
more
efficiently.
A
Now
the
baseline
protocol
came
about.
I
remember
it
very
well
myself,
paul
brody,
john
wolpert
york.
Rhodes.
Were
sitting
at
a
table
having
lunch
at
the
ethereum
ethereal
conference
in
may
of
2019.,
we
were
sitting
in
a
little
diner
in
red
hook.
Ultimately,
we
were
there
to
prepare
for
a
session
that
that
paul
and
john
were
doing
about
public
networks
and
the
adoption
of
public
networks,
and
I
believe
it
was
paul
that
looked
at
us
and
said
you
know
what
I
would
like.
A
So
you
know
a
few
weeks
later,
paul
john
york
and
a
few
key
others
karthik
you'll
meet
many
of
these
people
through
the
course
of
the
summit
started
to
to
put
down
in
a
list,
and
it's
now
published
john
has
published
this
on
medium.
You
know
why
the
csos
will
not
choose
public
blockchain
and
came
up
with
about
10
to
12
different
things
right.
A
A
On
march
4th
2020.,
we
were
very,
very
fortunate
that
we
had
14
companies
involved
in
that
initial
launch
and
really
kind
of
at
that
point
open
the
project
up
through
oasis
and
at
the
ethereum
foundation
and
eea
and
open
that
up,
because
we
recognize
that,
in
order
for
this
to
be
successful,
we
couldn't
go
it
alone.
A
It's
not
about
being
the
one
blockchain
it's
about
developing
blockchain
capabilities
and
techniques
that
companies
can
use
independent
of
their
blockchain
of
choice
to
ultimately
build
better
systems
and
get
better
information
and
automate
so
much
more
of
these
transactions.
That
could
be
done
at
a
much
lower
cost
and
a
much
higher
level
of
security
and
efficiency.
A
Quite
frankly,
so
coming
back
to
the
timeline,
we
did
the
launch
on
march
4th
back
in
june,
many
of
our
members,
envision
unibright,
provide
lime
chain,
published
a
couple
of
additional
demos,
microsoft
dynamics
accessing
sap,
using
public
blockchain
infrastructure
to
integrate
those
systems
for
a
purchase,
order
or
using
dynamics
with
the
google
sheets
in
a
similar
fashion.
A
The
idea
being
that
if
you
have
a
small
enterprise
or
a
small
participant
in
your
business
process,
one
that
doesn't
have
the
the
it
infrastructure
or
the
budget
to
afford
a
dynamics
which
is
still
very
cost,
affordable
or
an
sap
or
an
oracle.
Or
what
have
you
that
they
can
still
participate
in
these
business
processes
by
simply
leveraging
google
sheets
or
a
mobile
phone
or
you
know
excel
or
whatever
their
tool
of
choice
is
again.
The
business
process
doesn't
dictate
the
tools,
the
end
points
but
allows
companies
to
work
together.
A
We
achieved
a
pretty
big
milestone
in
august
toward
the
end
of
august,
when
we
released
the
0.1
implementation
of
the
specification.
A
Along
with
that
came
the
the
first
baseline
reference
implementation
from
provide
unibrite
nethermind
great
great
work
september.
At
the
end
of
september,
we
hosted
our
second
election
for
technical
steering
committee
members
and
there
are
11
of
them.
These
are
folks
that
actually
contribute
to
the
code
that
are
eligible
and
only
maintainers
get
to
vote.
A
So
we
have
sponsors
and
we're
very
gracious
and
grateful
for
our
sponsors
we're
up
to
eleven
welcome,
splunk
and
accenture
to
the
to
the
latest,
rapidly
growing
list,
the
money
that
they
provide
goes
into
paying
for
infrastructure,
for
conferences
like
this,
for
zoom
for
oasis
and
things
like
that,
but
it
doesn't
buy
them
a
vote
in
order
for
them
to
vote
to
help
sway
the
direction.
A
There's
really
only
one
way
to
do
that
by
getting
involved
rolling
up
their
sleeves
contributing
code
directly
to
the
repository
it's
through
this
code
contribution
that
you
earn
your
right
to
vote
and
to
help
select
the
next
possible
slate
of
technical
steering
committee
members
so
think
about
that
today.
Here
we
are
november,
12th
kicking
off
our
first
baseline
summit.
This
is
a
working
summit.
This
is
not
a
webinar
outside
of
outside
of
my
few
comments
here,
where
I'm
sharing,
slides
and
somewhat
lecturing
to
you,
and
I
apologize
for
that.
A
This
is
a
working
conference.
You
know
we're
intended
to
roll
up
our
sleeves.
Keep
our
coffee
fresh
and
dig
into
the
technical
details.
When
we
hit
an
obstacle,
let's
bring
our
best
minds
together
to
to
seek
to
understand
why
that
obstacle
exists
and
what
it
means
and
and
how
we
overcome
it
or
work
around
it
or
simply
break
through
depending
on
what
it
is.
So
this
is
really
meant
to
be
a
engineering
working
session.
So
we'll
talk
more
about
that,
but
this
is
our
first
one
again.
A
I
mentioned
that
we
originally
thought
we'd
have
you
know
50
to
75
registrants
and
we're
now
pushing
400.
So
that's
great.
We've
got
really
many
of
the
best
minds
in
the
blockchain
ecosystem
here
today
across
chains
right,
whether
it's
ethereum
or
dfinity
or
fabric.
A
So
not
only
are
you
here
to
roll
up
your
sleeves
and
help
further
the
technical
work,
but
you're
also
here
to
identify
targets
and
projects
that
you
may
be
able
to
work
on
to
help
earn
a
little
bit
of
coin.
If
you
will
to
help
pay
for
christmas
to
help
buy
that
new
xbox
series
x
or
whatever
the
system
of
choice,
it
is
maybe
buy
some
ethereum
for
staking
or
what
have
you
but
again
we're
here
for
two
main
reasons.
A
First
and
foremost,
all
jokes
and
all
light-heartedness
aside,
we're
here
to
further
the
baseline
protocol,
the
specification
and
standards
work
which
we'll
hear
about
in
a
minute
the
technical
work
around
the
core
apis.
How
we
approach
tokenizations,
oracles
and
external
data,
zk,
snarks
or
zeros
knowledge
circuits.
A
It's
all
here
and
it's
a
very
full
impact
agenda,
we'll
go
through
it
in
just
a
few
minutes,
but
again
we're
also
seeking
to
identify
hackathon
targets
and
projects
relevant
to
number
one
so
that
we
can
continue
to
further
this
work,
john
wilpert
likens
the
work
that
we're
doing
to
launching
a
rocket
into
space
or
to
the
moon
if
you're
a
blockchain,
meme
person.
The
idea
with
you
know
the
march
launch
and
this
initial
work
was
kind
of
our
our
initial
stage.
A
It's
heavy
lifting
took
a
lot
of
effort
just
to
build
the
initial
momentum
and
get
the
rocket
off
the
ground
and
we're
doing
well
right
we're
tracking
toward
orbit.
A
But
it's
really
time
to
kind
of
you
know,
disengage
from
stage
one
and,
and
you
know
fire
up
stage
two
and
send
the
rocket
into
its
next
level
of
orbit
and-
and
that's
our
hope,
through
this
summit,
through
the
efforts
of
the
community,
we'll
be
able
to
bring
more
people
together,
more
the
great
and
greatest
engineering
minds
on
earth
to
really
you
know
further
the
protocol
and
make
it
more
valuable
for
enterprises.
A
A
big
piece
of
that,
of
course,
are
the
standards
and
we're
very
fortunate
to
have
anisso
frank,
joining
us
to
talk
about
standards
and
our
work
there
and
and
kind
of
what
you
can
expect
over
the
next
few
weeks
and
months.
Hi
anis
are
you
there.
B
Great
hi
everyone
thank
you
for
joining
us
today,
so
I
am
an
iso
frank.
I
am
a
member
of
the
baseline
protocol,
technical
steering
committee
and
I
lead
the
standard
and
specification
working
group,
so
we
thought
it
will
be
useful
and
valuable
to
provide
an
overview
and
an
update
on
where
we
are
on
the
standard
and
specification
nick.
If
you
could
go
to
the
next
slide,
please.
A
One
of
the
benefits
of
using
this
great
qigo
chat
platform
is
it
has
it
uses
zoom
under
the
covers?
Oh
and.
B
Okay,
great
yep
sure
so
on
the
as
nick
mentioned,
so
the
baseline
protocol
is
an
oasis,
open
source
initiative
and
what
really
triggered
the
big,
the
beginning
of
the
oasis
standard
development,
was
the
release
of
the
v01
implementation
at
the
end
of
august.
So
the
team
has
been
working
over
the
last
two
months
on
two
standards.
So
on
one
side,
the
baseline
core
specification
and,
on
the
other
side,
the
baseline
api
and
data
model
specification.
B
B
Yeah,
so
one
of
our
key
priorities
over
the
last
couple
of
weeks
has
been
to
abstract
and
define
the
key
component
and
the
high
level
requirements
for
both
standouts
and
I'm
very
happy
to
say
today
that
we
have
achieved
that
milestone
last
week.
So
we
are
now
in
a
good
position
to
start
tackling
the
more
detailed
requirement.
B
So
I
will
take
some
time
to
really
provide
a
brief
overview
of
the
seven
building
block
of
blocks
of
the
first
standard.
So,
as
you
can
see
here,
of
course,
we
have
the
api
itself
and
then
we
have
our
communication
component
and
this
component
really
captures
the
requirement
on
our
parties
that
engage
in
baselining
send
and
receive
message
securely.
So
we
are
talking
about
authentication
requirements,
authorization,
message,
delivery
requirements,
etc.
B
So
we
also
have
the
agreement
execution
component
that
covers
the
functionalities
provided
by
smart
contract.
So
what
we
are
really
talking
about
here
are
business
logic,
execution,
workflow
verification
requirements,
for
example
on
the
governance
side.
So
this
item
the
fifth
item:
it's
really,
we
really
define
what
should
be
or
what
are
the
conv,
the
governance,
words
and
processes
for
each
component
and
layer
of
the
protocol.
B
So,
on
the
security
consideration
side,
it's
a
bit
of
a
interesting
one.
So
actually
we
won't
be
provided
requirements,
but
we
will
present
and
discuss
the
key
security
items
that
we
have
identified
as
important
when
deploying
a
baseline
implementation
and,
last
but
definitely
not
least,
the
conformance
component,
so
that
will
include
conformance
clauses
tests
required
for
an
implementation
to
achieve
baseline
compliance.
B
We
also
have
done
exactly
the
same
on
the
api
side,
but
I
won't
go
into
the
details
so
for
time
to
be
considerate
of
your
time.
So
I
will
head
over
back
to
uniq.
A
Thanks
denise,
that
was
great
and
again
more
and
more
work
on
the
specification
is
happening
every
week.
So
if
you
want
to
get
involved,
please
do
so
jump
into
slack
and
we'll
talk
about
how
to
do
that
in
a
moment.
Make
sure
you
share
your
github
id
and
let's
get
to
work
all
right.
Next,
we
were
very
fortunate
to
be
joined
by
our
chairperson.
A
John
wolpert
probably
needs
no
introduction
to
this
audience.
Former
ibm,
employee
grandfather.
Well,
sorry,
john,
didn't
mean
to
age.
You
co-father
co-parent,.
A
Realized
after
a
brief
period
of
time
like
like
many
companies,
do
that
start
with
private
networks
realize
that
the
real
future
and
the
real
value
is
in
public
networks
and
then
got
with
the
a
team
dropped
that
zero
and
got
with
the
hero
so
to
speak.
Welcome
john
wilpert.
C
Oh
hi,
everybody,
it's
good
to
be
here,
it's
good
to
see
so
many
people
look
if
you're
here,
it's
because
you're
here
for
the
work
for
the
teamwork.
C
That's
what
baselining
is
all
about.
We've
come
a
long
way
since
2015,
when
ethereum
gave
us
more
than
a
few
of
us.
The
idea
that
blockchain
technology
was
about
more
than
just
coins
and
we
had
a
few
years
of
thinking
that
blockchains
were
fancy
databases
and
then,
as
nick
said
chance
encounter
in
2019
at
ethereal,
led
to
a
summer
and
winter
of
hard
work,
ey,
consensus
and
microsoft.
C
And
then
we
joined
with
an
announcement
from
the
baseline
protocol
itself
by
oasis
ethereum
foundation.
The
eea,
all
working
together
along
with
companies
like
amd
chain
link
core
convergence
duke
university,
envision
blockchain,
make
your
dao
neokova
unibrite,
provide
web3
cloud
and
then
more
followed,
and
now
we
have
more
sponsors.
Big
companies
like
accenture
silicon
valley,
leaders
like
splunk
and
upstarts,
like
nethermind
and
morpheus
and
more
are
coming.
C
What's
more
notable
is
that
all
is
all
the
folks
that
are
directly
involved
from
high
ranking
executives
to
bench
developers
and
companies
that
make
up
the
best
of
the
enterprise
mid-size
businesses
startups
and
universities
and
independent
individuals
following
volunteering.
Their
time,
that's
what
backbone
is
and
here's
what
we've
achieved.
C
C
We
made
room
lots
of
room.
Many
rooms
right
here,
live
on
zoom
and
on
youtube
for
30
hours
straight,
so
you
can
dip
in
and
out
get
your
hands
dirty.
Have
terrific
discussions,
work
in
small
groups
and
even
break
out
into
just
a
couple
people
so
that
you
can
go
as
deep
as
you
like.
Without
someone
saying,
let's
move
on
or
move
on
to
the
next
subject.
C
C
That's
it
and
you'll
notice
that
we
that
we
had.
We
have
both
asynchronous
and
synchronous
sessions.
So
the
summit
can
share
docs
and
chat
you
can
you
can
break
out
into
any
kind
of
group
you
want.
C
I
hope
that
helps
you
a
lot.
Nick
criticos
has
a
whole
screen
full
of
people
to
thank
for
making
this
happen.
C
So
like
an
amish
bar
and
raising.
Let's
make
the
baseline
protocol
something
built
by
all
of
us
for
all
of
us.
Thanks
nick.
A
Thanks
john
really
appreciate
that
you're
very
kind
words
again,
we'll
we'll
talk
about
everyone
that
was
involved
and
just
like
anytime,
you,
you
start
to
list
people
or
you
know
you
always
run
the
risk
of
missing
someone.
So
it
is
definitely
a
team
effort.
Okay,
so
back
to
work.
If
I
haven't
mentioned
it,
if
you
haven't
read
your
welcome
emails,
there
are
two
things
that
you
should
be
doing
immediately:
one
if
you're,
not
already
on
the
baseline
slack
instance,
get
on
the
baseline
slack
instance.
A
Super
easy
doesn't
cost
you
anything
and
it's
a
great
way
to
engage
on
an
ongoing
basis
with
all
of
the
engineering
and
development
leaders
and
thought
leaders
that
you're
going
to
meet
this
week.
If
you
haven't,
met
them
already,
it's
very
easy
to
do.
There's
an
invitation,
link
or
an
inviter
link
on
the
baseline
protocol
site
and
there's.
A
Actually,
I
put
that
link
also
in
the
conference
schedule,
tab
which
I'll
show
you
in
just
a
minute
and
then,
of
course,
once
you're
on
slack
and
you're
able
to
communicate
with
with
the
community
at
large,
make
sure
you
send
your
your
github
id
to
mr
wolpert
to
jay
wilpert
there,
as
you
can
see,
so
that
we
can
get
you
added
to
the
repository.
A
So
you
can
take
a
look
at
those
things.
Look
at
the
epics
look
at
the
code,
depending
on
on
what
your
your
expertise
is
again,
really
roll
up
your
sleeves
dive
in
and
contribute
ultimately
to
the
cause,
we're
going
to
take
a
little
tour
of
the
conference.
Now
I
want
to
make
sure
everyone
understands
kind
of
the
conference
hall
if
you
will
how
to
update
your
profile.
Let
me
find
my
screen
here
how
to
update
your
profile.
A
All
right
in
case
you
didn't
see
it
because
my
screen
wasn't
shared,
join
slack
and
send
john
your
github
ids
I'll,
show
you
where
the
invitation
link
is
in
a
minute
all
right.
This
is
the
cuigo
chat,
interface
you're
in
the
plenary.
So
you
made
it
this
far.
Congratulations.
A
You
know
in
the
interface
what
you'll
see
is
you'll
see
the
breakout
rooms
over
here
on
the
left,
and
you
can
see-
and
this
is
again
why
I
encourage
people
to
add
their
profile
pic.
You
can
see
where
people
are
actively
working
in
breakouts.
A
This
is
a
really
beautiful
interface
you
can
be
in
a
session
like
we
are
now
and
click
on
another
session
without
leaving
where
you
are
and
still
refer
to,
the
notes
and
diagrams
and
kind
of
what's
going
on,
so
it
can
help
you
decide
kind
of
when
to
move
from
one
session
to
the
next
notice.
As
I
come
back
to
the
plenary,
you
will
see
that
there
are
tabs
at
the
top
here.
A
The
first
tab
in
every
room
are
instructions
that
give
you
the
you
know:
the
basics,
of
course
as
to
when
the
sessions
are
starting
or
who
your
leads
are
and
how
to
use
cuigochat
and
things
like
that,
but
they
have
other
tabs
as
well,
whether
it's
for
slides
or
spreadsheets
or
notes
or
diagrams,
or
what
have
you
in
the
plenary
tab?
We
have
the
conference
schedule
and
I
just
want
to
highlight
this
for
everybody.
You
can
go
in
and
take
a
look
on
your
own
time.
Of
course,
these
are
effectively
the
sessions.
A
A
So
if
you're
a
core
dev,
if
you're
part
of
the
maintainers-
and
you
know,
you're-
really
working
on
message
formats,
persistent
zk
circuits
and
all
of
that-
you
can
stay
in
one
place-
you
don't
have
to
do
as
much
jumping
around,
but
the
topics
are
broad
we're
very
fortunate
to
have
dan
norton
and
avia,
and
stefan
talking
about
the
baseline
protocol,
how
to
experience
it
you'll
see
the
demos
there.
A
You
know
you'll
experience,
how
to
work
with
sap,
how
to
work
with
dynamics
et
cetera
and
how
to
to
go
about
approaching
adding
baseline
capabilities
to
existing
products.
They've
done
a
lot
of
work
in
this
area
and
their
guidance
is,
is
going
to
be
invaluable
to
ultimately
documenting
a
recipe.
If
you
will
for
others
to
follow.
You
know
one
of
the
great
things
about
about
forging
a
new
path.
Is
it's
exciting?
A
It's
it's
adventurous,
but
it's
also
risky.
So
don't
forget
your
own
path.
Follow
the
paths
that
these
trailblazers
have
already
cut
and
really
mitigate
that
risk.
We're
also
very
fortunate
to
be
joined
by
patrick
collins,
johanned
and
devin
mitchum
to
talk
about
oracles
and
external
data.
The
group
collaborating
from
google
and
chain
link
to
talk
about
how
you
can
leverage
external
data
in
your
baseline
circuits
or
your
baseline
processes.
A
The
global
phone
book
project
is
something
near
and
dear
to
my
heart.
I've
done
a
lot
of
work.
I've
sold
a
lot
of
identity
software
when
I
was
at
oracle
and
it's
really
one
of
the
foundational
pieces
for
a
lot
of
these
business
processes.
How
do
you
find
trading
partners?
How
do
you
know
that
they're
they're
they
are
who
they
say
they
are.
How
do
you
know
that
they're,
reliable
and
all
of
that
kind
of
thing
right?
The
phone
book
starts
us
down
that
path.
A
Right,
if
you
know
who
your
trading
partners
are,
you
know
you
can
shake
hands
directly
and
manually
connect
stuff,
but
in
a
future
world
of
network
business
processes,
wouldn't
it
be
great
if
you
just
find
microsoft
or
google
or
or
chain
link
or
whoever
your
your
trading
partners,
are
dell
coke,
etc
and
just
use
whatever
system
or
tool
you're,
using
whether
it's
sap
oracle
or
a
bespoke
system
or
even
google
sheets,
and
be
able
to
interact
with
them
at
a
much
more
robust
and
meaningful
way
where
the
data
is
shared
and
and
verified
and
consistent,
and
you
reduce
errors
and
it
cuts
down
the
cost
I'll
get
off
my
soapbox,
the
core
interface
track
again,
as
you
can
see
here,
message
formats
you
know:
do
we
need
common
standards
around
message?
A
A
A
lot
of
that
privacy
comes
through
the
use
of
zero
knowledge
circuits,
and
you
know
other
privacy
enhancing
tools
so
come
in
into
that
session.
Learn
where
we
are
with
respect
to
the
zk
circuits,
the
improvements
we
need
to
make
and
again
roll
up
your
sleeves
and
get
into
this.
Don't
don't
sit
on
the
sidelines,
especially
if
you're
an
engineer
you
know
bring
your
it's
going
to
say,
bring
your
slide
rule,
but
that
would
even
date
myself
even
further.
A
One
thing
that
I
want
to
call
out
is
we're
running
new
feature
sessions
as
part
of
the
core
interfaces
track.
These
are
just
a
couple
check-in
points
just
to
see
kind
of.
If
there
are
feature
enhancements
or
you
know,
new
products,
you
know
new
things.
We
need
new
tools
whatever
it
is,
we're
going
to
collect
that
as
a
list
and
take
that
back
to
the
technical
steering
committee
after
the
conference,
so
they'd
be
appropriately
reviewed
and
prioritized
connor,
spencer
and
kyle
are
going
to
talk
about
blockchain
client
improvements.
A
You
know
nethermind
was
again
a
trailblazer
and
adding
rpc
capabilities
to
their
blockchain
client
to
really
enable
baselining,
there's
more
work
coming
in
that
area,
and
you
can
join
that
session
to
learn
more.
Of
course,
as
you
start
talking
about,
network
business
processes
and
growing,
these
beautiful
ecosystems
scale
becomes
an
issue
right.
A
It's
one
of
the
core
use
cases
for
blockchain
being
able
to
digitally
represent
something
of
value
and
transfer
that
in
a
non-repudiated
way,
avoiding
double
spend
and
all
of
that
baseline
promises
to
enable
a
whole
new
world
of
tokenization.
Imagine
right
where
you've
you've
got
an
invoice
from
a
reputable
buyer.
A
You
know
aaa
rated
buyer,
you
know
you're
double
a
rated
or
aaa
rated
yourself,
but
you
need
to
to
unlock
the
cash
flow
of
that
being
able
to
tokenize
that
and
use
some
of
the
d5
capabilities
that
are
available
to
unlock
that
cash
flow
earlier
or
as
time
expands
going
even
further
right
purchase
orders
being
able
to
take
a
purchase
order
again
from
a
triple-a,
rated
buyer
and
being
able
to
finance
that
purchase
order
to
get
you
the
funding.
A
You
need
to
begin
the
manufacturing
process
to
begin
the
hiring
you
need
in
order
to
deliver
the
service
whatever
it
might
be
right
anyway,
I'll
I'll
get
off
my
soapbox
there
just
a
quick
run
through
the
agenda.
As
you
look
at
the
times,
these
times
are
when
session
leaders
have
indicated
that
they're
going
to
be
in
the
room
and
be
available,
but
that
doesn't
mean
that's
the
only
time
you
need
to
be
there.
You
can
jump
in
at
any
time.
A
If
you
have
a
group
of
people
that
are
coalescing
around
a
certain
topic
feel
free
to
use.
One
of
these
open
spaces
or
we've
even
made
available
meeting
rooms.
If
you
look
at
the
bottom
of
the
the
breakout
list,
meeting
room
a
through
e,
these
are
just
open
rooms
that
you
could
jump
into.
They
are
not
live
streamed
in
the
meeting
rooms.
They
are
not
recorded,
so
you
jump
in
there
at
your
leisure
and
then
come
back
at
any
time.
You,
like
all
of
these
times,
are
in
eastern
time
zone.
A
I
know
I
I
fortunately
being
a
west
coaster.
I'm
easy
with!
You
know,
subtracting
three!
If
it's
more
complex
for
you
based
on
you
know
where
you
are
in
the
world,
I've
added
a
link
to
a
time
zone
converter
to
make
it
easy
for
you
and
I'd
be
remiss
if
I
didn't
point
out
that
the
slack
inviter
is
right
here
in
the
schedule
and
summit.
A
If
you
would
take
a
moment
to
do
that,
add
a
picture
that
ultimately
will
help
make
the
the
conference
floor
feel
more
engaging,
and
you
know
again
we
can
see
all
of
our
peers
and
our
friends
working
together
in
this
session,
all
right,
I'm
trying
to
think
in
my
head.
If
I've
forgotten
anything
conference
schedule
got
it
profile,
schedule
breakout
chat.
Yes,
there
is
chat
within
zoom,
of
course,
right.
The
standard
zoom
chat
like
right
here,
hello
that
happens
within
a
session.
A
If
you
have
a
question
about
the
conference,
if
you're
running
into
issues
or
or
you
know
just
want
to
reach
out
to
conference
organizers
like
myself
or
jane
dee,
jory
or
any
john,
any
of
the
other
kind
of
really
team
of
folks
that
are
helping
support
this
down
here
in
the
lower
right,
you'll
see
a
contact
host.
This
is
chat.
A
Absolutely
if
you
come
across
a
topic
in
insight,
or
something
like
that
feel
free
to
use
that
you
will
also
notice
in
virtually
every
breakout,
I'm
just
going
to
pick
a
random
one
here.
A
All
right.
This
one
is
loading
up
that
you
have
the
tabs
across
the
top.
Each
breakout
has
a
notes
tab
so
that,
as
a
participant,
you
can
add
your
notes
here
you
can
capture
ideas
and
these
things
will
be
saved
and
reviewed
after
the
fact.
There
is
a
whole
separate
planning
cycle
for
post-conference,
debriefs
and
and
digestion,
and
all
of
that
so
so
please
make
sure
you
use
all
of
that.
If
you
have
any
questions,
you
know
where
the
chat
is,
let's
see
what
else?
A
Yes,
we
are
recording,
if
that's
not
obvious
and
we
are
live
streaming.
So
keep
that
in
mind
as
you
attend
sessions,
these
streams
are
going
out
on
youtube.
The
idea
is
that
we
want
to
be
able
to
record
these
and
and
allow
people
that
can't
attend
live
to
come
in
and
catch
up.
If
you
will
john
did
you
want
to
add
a
couple
comments
about
that.
C
Yeah,
I
just
want
to
be
sure
everybody
remembers
what
they
got
in
their
invite
email,
that
this
is
all
public
domain.
Anything
you
say
or
write.
Is
you
know
you
don't
don't
put
your
trade
secrets
in
there
and
make
sure
that
your
etiquette
is
such
that
you
know
decades
from
now.
You're,
not
your
grandchildren
aren't
embarrassed
by
what
you
say.
A
It
lives
on
the
internet
forever,
so
so,
let's
do
our
best
to
put
our
best
foot
forward.
Please
observe
proper
zoom
etiquette.
Everyone's
been
great
on
this
right,
mute
yourself
to
mitigate
background
noise.
You
know,
if
you're
in
a
particularly
big
session
with
a
lot
of
people,
it
would
be
helpful
and
your
session
leaders
will
give
you
guidance
on
this
as
to
how
they
want
to
run
their
sessions.
You
can
use
the
raise
hand
feature
so
you
know
you
can
raise
your
hand
unless
you're
the
host,
of
course,
and
and
away.
A
We
go
alright.
So
without
further
ado,
let
me
take
a
moment
to
thank
our
maintainers.
These
are
the
github
ids
of
the
individuals
that
have
actively
submitted
code.
These
are
also
the
individuals
and
these
are
individuals.
These
are
not
companies
that
have
voting
rights
with
respect
to
selecting
technical
steering
committee
members,
things
like
that,
you
can
be
one
of
these
people
super
easy
to
do.
If
I
haven't
mentioned
it
yet
share
your
github
id
with
john,
so
we
can
get
you
in
the
repo.
A
Awesome,
you
know,
bring
your
engineering
capabilities,
bring
your
experience,
bring
your
your
your
interests
and
your
ambitions
and
get
involved
again.
Couldn't
thank
these
people
enough,
a
great
group
of
folks.
It's
really
wonderful
to
work
with
them
very
kind
of
open-minded
and
inclusive,
and
you
know
it's
not
always.
You
know
sunshine
and
rainbows
right
there.
There
are
some
good
tough
pointed
discussions,
but
that's
just
natural
right
and
it's
and
it's
healthy.
So
that's.
C
C
I
know
we
didn't
rehearse
this,
but
I'd
like
to
say
I
had
a
very
interesting
conversation
last
night
with
patricio
who's
right
there
in
the
in
the
stream,
patricia
with
all
it
was
really
a
nice
conversation
and
he's
the
one
of
the
co-founders
of
poep,
which
was
great
at
his
east
denver
in
2019.,
yeah
and
he's.
C
C
So
do
your
pull
requests
and
if
you
get
a
pull
request
in
there
and
merged
during
the
summit,
and
maybe
a
little
bit
after
you'll
get
a
poep
badge
on
the
on
the
main
net
and
we'll
we'll
award
those
to
you
as
they're
as
they're
put
in
so
and
patricio
has
a
vision
to
have
co-apps
in
in
every
ethereum
conference
in
the
world.
So
thanks
patricio.
A
East
ender
east
denver,
defcon
baseline
summit.
You
know
the
the
your
po
app
wallet
will
get
full
with
these
wonderful
digital
tokens.
Nfts
that
you
know,
maybe
one
day
will
be
worth
some
sushi.
A
Sorry
bad
lame
defy
joke
there.
C
A
So
before
we
get
started-
and
I
I
you
know-
we
we
kill
the
plenary
and
we
let
you
go
to
the
breakout
sessions.
I
just
want
to
take
a
moment
john.
It
was
I'm
very
grateful
for
your
recognition,
but
you
know
this
doesn't
happen
alone.
This
really
has
been
a
a
passionate
work
of
effort
from
a
large
group
of
people
and
I'm
gonna
apologize
right
up
front
because
I
probably
don't
have
everybody
on
here
and
if
you've
contributed
in
your
names
on
on
not
on
here.
Please
accept
my
apologies.
A
It
was
not
my
intent
to
single
anyone
out
or
not
recognize
anyone.
I
did
my
best
to
try
to
capture
just
everybody
that
was
involved.
A
Absolutely
jane
couldn't
say
enough
about
the
the
work
that
you've
done
over
the
last
few
weeks.
Right
we've
gone
from.
You
know
an
idea
of
a
conference
to
having
this
full-fledged,
really
beautiful,
cuico
chat
platform
that
really,
I
think,
as
you
start
to
use
it
you'll
find
it.
It
kind
of
lends
itself
to
the
working
style
in
in
this
sort
of
collaborative
environment
really
could
not
have
done
it
without
you
day
in
day
out,
of
course,
the
eventbrite
stuff.
A
You
know
I
could
go
through
every
one
of
these
individuals
and
tell
you
a
little
personal
story
about
how
they
supported
me
over
the
last
few
weeks,
let
alone
you
know
the
work
that
they're
doing
day
in
day
out
to
make
this
conference
as
valuable
and
productive
as
possible
for
you,
the
attendees,
so
quick
round
of
applause
thanks,
everybody
really
appreciate
it.
You
know
we're
we're,
that's
it
from
a
prepared
content
perspective.
Do
we
have
any
questions?
D
A
C
Hey
one
other
thing,
just
one
more
thing:
if
you,
if
you
want
to
be
a
maintainer
sam
stokes,
is
sort
of
the
ringleader
of
that,
but
there's
several
maintainers
in
the
summit
right
now:
brian
chamberlain,
karthik
and
many
others
reach
out
to
myself
or
any
of
them
and
we'll
we'll
start
talking
about
being.
You
know
if
you'd
like
to
become
a
part
of
the
maintainer
team,
anybody
can
do
it.
C
All
you
need
to
do
is
do
a
pull
request
and
and
there's
in
fact,
on
the
docs.baselinehyphenprotocol.org
site,
you'll
see
all
the
requirements
for
being
a
maintainer.
A
Oh
and
again,
one
more
thing:
there
are
a
number
of
folks,
myself
included
that
are
that
are
going
to
be
shuttling
around
shuttle
bugs
we
like
to
call
them
between
sessions.
You
know,
so
please
keep
your
eyes
open
for
them.
If
you
have
questions
in
a
particular
session,
yet
at
the
same
time,
if
you
see
me
show
up,
please
don't
interrupt
your
session
or
john
show
up.
A
Please
don't
interrupt
your
conversation
to
say
hi
and
all
of
that,
let's,
let's
keep
it
focused
on
the
task
at
hand
and
really
focus
on
driving
the
future
of
the
baseline
protocol,
our
standards,
our
technical
maturity
and
everything
associated
with
the
community,
all
right
everybody.
Thank
you
very
much
have
a
great
conference
and
we'll
see
you
on
the
show
floor.
C
See
everybody
and
if,
if
anything,
goes
wrong
with
your
live
streams
or
with
the
av
I
I
am
performing
av
services.
So
it's
all
my
fault
so
reach
out
to
me.
If
anything
goes
wrong
with
your
session
or
if
you
don't
have
access
to
something.
A
I
was
just
getting
ready
to
to
point
out
to
people
that
are
still
in
the
plenary
that
the
experience
baseline
protocol
session-
oh
and
I
got
my
audio
on
the
other
side,
so
we
are
still
live
streaming,
just
reminding
folks
that
the
sessions
are
beginning
the
experience
baseline
protocol
session
and
the
blockchain
clients.
Improvements
for
baseline
is
starting
here
at
the
top
of
the
hour
right
about
now.
A
So,
if
you're
still
in
the
plenary
and
you're
looking
for
a
session
to
join,
I'd,
recommend
either
breakout
one
or
what's
the
other
number
breakout
seven
again,
you
can
click
on
the
breakout,
see
the
materials
and
click
the
video
to
join.
The
video
zoom
will
remind
you
that
you're
leaving
one
zoom
room
and
moving
to
the
other
that's
kind
of
standard
zoom
functionality.
A
A
Everyone
and
thanks
for
joining
the
baseline
protocol
summit.
This
is
the
plenary
session.
It
stays
open
and
we'll
be
running
through
the
course
of
the
conference
about
30
hours,
and
this
is
live
streamed
that
allows
people
that
are
late
to
come
and
check
out
the
live
stream.
The
recording
catch
up
asynchronously.
If
you
will
to
join
another
breakout,
you
go
into
the
cuigo
chat
interface.
Maybe
I
should
share
my
screen.
A
There
we
go.
This
is
the
cuigo
chat.
Interface.
You've
got
the
breakouts
here
over
on
the
left.
You
can
click
into
any
of
the
breakouts
and
look
at
the
materials
without
leaving
the
session
that
you're
in
in
order
to
join
the
actual
breakout.
You
click
the
join
video
button
in
the
upper
left
hand
corner
that
will
switch
zoom
rooms,
you'll
be
prompted.
A
You
know,
it'll
notify
you
that
you're
you're
leaving
one
video
chat
and
adding
another,
so
you
can
just
go
ahead
and
and
do
that
when,
whenever
you
like
I'll
be
back
periodically
throughout
the
day,
we
have
some
checkpoint
sessions
scheduled
later
in
the
day,
just
to
check
in
and
see
how
things
are
going.
It's
not
mandatory
to
attend
any
of
that,
but
if
you
have
input
or
would
like
to
participate,
you're
always
welcome.
A
A
If
you
look
in
the
plenary
session,
there's
a
conference
schedule
tab
and
it
shows
you
the
sessions
that
are
actively
scheduled
and
when
they're
going
to
be
running
down
in
the
lower
right
hand,
corner
there's
chat
conference
chat.
So
if
you
have
questions
during
the
conference
about
the
conference
how
to
get
somewhere
looking
for
something
feel
free
to
ask
there
and
of
course
there
is
also
chat
within
the
zoom
rooms
themselves,
and
I'm
just
checking
to
see
if
we
have
any
questions
awesome.
A
Thank
you.
Everyone
and
I'm.
Your
host
nick
criticos
have
a
wonderful
day,
hello,
everyone.
It's
me
your
host
nick
criticos,
just
checking
back
in
letting
you
know
that
we
are
fully
underway.
Now
we
have
three
active
sessions
outside
of
the
plenary
breakout
one
experiencing
the
baseline
protocol
and
the
end
the
product
cookbook,
the
zero
knowledge
circuit
improvement
session
as
part
of
the
core
interfaces
in
breakout,
two
and
blockchain
client
improvements
or
supportive
baselining
in
breakout.
Seven
stephen
did
you
have
a
question.
A
Nope
all
right
just
wanted
to
check
back
in
here
see
if
there
were
any
questions
or
if
anybody
needed
any
help
we'll
be
back
later
today
for
a
check-in.
A
You
can,
if
you
miss
the
early
opening
comments,
if
you
click
on
the
plenary
session
and
then
the
conference
schedule
tab
kind
of
right
in
the
middle
upper
middle
of
the
page,
you
can
see
the
entire
conference
schedule,
so
you
can
find
sessions
to
hop
into
and
please
keep
in
mind
that
the
plenary
sessions
and
breakouts
one
through
seven
are
all
being
live,
streamed
and
recorded.
A
So
thanks,
everyone
have
a
wonderful
day
coming
into
the
plenary
to
let
you
know
it
is
now
one
minute
after
one
o'clock
on
the
east
coast
and
the
global
phone
book
project
session
is
now
kicking
off.
So
if
you
are
interested
in
that
or
another
session,
there
are.
A
Three
sessions
in
in
progress
or
four
sessions
in
progress.
Excuse
me
the
experience,
the
baseline
protocol
and
the
product
cookbook
session,
the
global
phone
book
project,
which
again
is
just
kicking
off
zero
knowledge
circuit
improvements,
which
is
in
its
second
going
into
its
second
hour
as
well
as
the
beginning
of
the
scaling
of
the
baseline
work,
work
step
throughput
session
wow,
that's
a
handful,
a
mouthful!
So
again,
we've
got
a
lot
for
you
to
choose
from,
depending
on
your
area
of
technical
expertise
and
hope,
you're
finding
the
sessions
valuable.
A
A
It's
got
all
baseline
all
the
time
awesome.
So
thanks
everybody
for
joining
us.
This
is
our
kind
of
midway
checkpoint.
If
you
will,
the
idea
was
to
just
come
together
in
the
plenary.
A
We
do
have
a
couple
of
sessions
that
are
still
running
great
conversations
being
had
so
you
know
this
is
on
the
live
stream
and
it's
being
recorded,
but
I
thought
it
would
be
great
just
to
you
know,
hear
from
one
our
our
chairperson,
as
well
as
anyone
else
that
wants
to
just
kind
of
give
impressions
of
today.
Maybe
what
we
could
do
better
tomorrow
and
you
know,
and
and
ultimately
work
together
to
make
tomorrow
an
even
more
productive
day.
A
So
john,
do
you
you've
been
jumping
in
and
out
of
sessions?
Do
you
have
perspective
on
how
it's
going.
C
Yeah
and
it
came
out-
and
I
was
just
jumping
over
to
fix
a
another
stream-
I've
been
the
av
person
for
the
day.
It's
been
fun,
it's
great
to
see
all
the
action
activity,
and
I
I
don't
know
if
if
anybody
else
tried
this,
but
it
was
super
fun
to
turn
on.
I
went
into
our
into
the
playlist.
If
you
haven't
seen
this
it
should.
I
think
it's
on
a
link
on
the
main
session
board.
C
There's
a
playlist
of
all
the
youtube
videos
live
streams,
running
concurrently,
we're
on
it
right
now
and
what's
great
about
these-
is
that,
first
of
all,
when
people
are
not
active
in
the
in
a
channel
in
a
track,
there's
a
bunch
of
like
dead
space,
but
those
are
going
to
be
really
easy
to
edit
out
into
a
really
nice
tight
set
of
videos
at
the
end
of
all
of
this,
so
amazing
that
we
have
this
technology,
and
so
I
just
had
fun
by
turning
on
the
sound
of
multiple
ones
of
these,
and
I
got
I
got.
C
C
Yeah,
no,
that
was
really
really
a
great
experience
to
to
see
that
happening.
C
I
don't
know
about
you
guys,
but
this
for
eight
months
I've
been
attending
webinars
and
conferences
online,
and
I
sit
here
in
this
studio
and
I
do
that
and
it's
exhausting-
and
I
think
part
of
the
reason
is
that
I'm
missing
something
in
those
conferences,
I'm
missing
bumping
into
somebody
and
having
a
one-on-one
conversation
that
gets
real.
C
You
know
that
where
not
only
did
I
learn
something,
but
I
got
to
know
somebody
and
in
either
better
or
somebody
brand
new,
and
that
happened
to
me
twice
solidly
twice
almost
basically
three
three
times
today,
where
I
found
myself
in
a
in
a
a
track
with
somebody.
Nobody
else
was
there.
We
got
talking
or
somebody
pinged
me
on
on
our
slack
and
said:
hey
I've
really
got
this
question
and
I'm
missing
this
kind
of
information
from
this
track
can.
C
Me
and
I'm
like
yeah,
let's
jump
into
session
we
get
talking.
I
think
that
was
the
best
thing
that
that
moment
when
I
was
having
real
conversations
one-on-one
or
a
couple
people
on
one
and
I'm
hoping
that
now
that
we've
gotten
through
a
whole
day
of
most
I'd
say
maybe
60
70,
wouldn't
you
say,
nick
of
of
of
the
tracks
have
been
sort
of
in
in
that
track
of
of
presenting
some
information
to
people,
and
that's
really.
The
education
track
is
mostly
about
that.
C
So
it's
fine
there
and
I
haven't
seen
all
of
the
tracks
all
the
time.
So
I
I
think
some
have
done
better
than
others
on
this
in
terms
of
instead
getting
quickly
passed,
here's
what
you
need
to
know
and
now
here's
a
problem.
Let's
work
on
that
problem
right,
and
so
I
think
now
we
still
have
many.
D
A
C
So
I'm
quite
excited,
I'm
quite
hopeful
of
the
result,
and
there
have
been
some
already
a
number
of
issues
been
created
by
different
tracks
where
the
issues
being
you
know,
github
issues
that
we
can
bounty.
There
are
some
wholly
new
ideas
that
I've
heard
from
people
last.
One
I
heard
was
from
you
know:
mark
adele,
who's
right
there,
just
by
you
know
putting
in
the
time
and
having
a
long
conversation,
it's
kind
of
like
we're,
so
tweet
oriented
nowadays,
we've
forgotten
how
to
read
a
long
form
book.
C
This
is
the
long-form
conference
that
we
haven't
had
in
eight
months,
and
it's
I
don't
know.
Maybe
we've
got
a
new
genre
here.
I
definitely
think
that
we've
at
least
for
ourselves,
cracked,
the
code
in
part-
hopefully
tomorrow,
will
really
prove
it
out
that
we've
cracked
the
code
on
on
having
a
truly
interpersonal
conference.
C
Nick.
Thank
you
for
that
time.
A
Yeah
one
of
the
things
that
that
we
need
to
remind
folks
of
is
that
you
know
it's
great
to
level
set
people
with
some
lecture
or
presentation
if
you
will
but
to
get
to
those
conversations
and
really
kind
of
peel
the
onion
and
identify
opportunities
for
our
hackathon
in
december,
so
that
we
can
have
a
good
set
of
projects.
We've
been
very
graciously
funded
by
our
leadership
at
consensus
to
help
fund
some
of
those.
A
So
you
know
we
really
want
to
make
sure
that
they
are
as
impactful
as
possible
for
the
community.
So
you
know
as
you're
going
through
your
sessions
tomorrow,
keep
that
in
mind
yeah
and
for
me
it's
been
a
great
day.
It's
fantastic,
the
day's
not
over.
There's
still.
A
I
think
andreas
is
still
scaling
away
in
the
scaling
session,
but
we
do
have
some
of
our
session
leaders
here,
dan
obvious,
if
you
guys
would
care
to
make
a
couple
of
comments
about
you
know
your
findings
and
and
kind
of
what
you're
seeing
that
would
be
really
welcome.
F
Sure
I
can
go
first
yeah.
I
thought
that
the
discussions
we've
had
over
the
past
couple
of
hours
in
the
experience
track
and
with
the
cookbook.
Those
have
been
fantastic.
I
think
we've
really,
you
know,
covered
a
lot
of
ground
and
highlighted
some
great
areas
where
you
know
a
cookbook
can
be
designed
so
that
in
the
future,
people
can
just
jump
in
and
get
involved.
I'm
really
looking
forward
to
the
rest
of
tomorrow's
discussion.
F
If
anyone's
interested,
please
definitely
check
out
the
track
and
also
the
notes
page
where
we
have
that
big
excel
spreadsheet.
Please
continue
putting
ideas
in
there.
We
have
a
ton
of
stuff
that
we're
going
to
continue
to
talk
about
it's
just
really
exciting
and
add
as
much
detail
and
also
discuss
yeah.
It's
just
pretty
amazing.
So
thank
you.
Everyone
and
thank
you
daniel.
You
did
such
an
amazing
job
and
stefan
and
everyone
who's
presented.
It's
been
so
great.
So
thank
you.
G
Yes,
thank
you,
so
the
expectation
from
our
side
that
it's
going
to
be
a
a
lot
of
people
for
tokenization
that
need
that
didn't
fulfill.
But
actually
the
sessions
were
quite
good.
We,
the
maybe
expected
a
little
bit
too
much
knowledge
while
we
were
preparing
the
sessions
and
it
ended
up
being
more
of
a
high
level
discussion,
but
people
who
did
participate.
They
did
ask
some
really
good
questions
and
there
I
see
some
feature
requests
that
are
going
to
pop
up
out
out
of
this.
C
C
That's
a
wonderful
number
and
I
I
will
say
that
your
track
in
particular,
if
you
think
about
it,
where,
where
open
source
meets
competition
and
in
order
for
open
source
to
be
relevant,
it
needs
to
meet
opportunities
for
competition,
some
some
point
otherwise
useless,
right
yeah.
I
I
should
think
that
the
tokenization
say
of
of
a
baseline
invoice.
That's
where
you're
going
to
see
a
lot
of
competitors
so
and
you
one
would
be
well
advised
not
to
show
up
in
an
open
source,
public
domain
environment,
telling
everybody
how
you're
going
to
solve
that
particular
problem.
B
Yeah
but,
but
also
the
point
was
not
only
to
address
you
know,
are
we
going
to
tokenize,
but
to
find
can
we
abstract
enough
that
we
have
a
standard
or
specificator
a
specification,
a
baseline
specification
on
how
to
tokenize
baseline
record,
and
this
is
really
where
we,
the
value,
was
and
having
everybody
on
the
call
in
all
the
inputs
from
the
contributors
on
the
call
because
they
came
with
their
own
knowledge
of
their
own
industry.
So
a
lot
of
the
questions
were
really
focused
on
okay,
but
in
my
industry,
that's
how
that
works.
B
So
we
need
a
verification
step
for
this
and
then
the
question
was:
oh:
is
there
verification
step
required
for
all
your
other
use
cases,
or
is
it
very
specific
to
that
use
case,
and
this
is
really
the
type
of
requirement
that
we
try
to
gather
what
is
use
case
and
industry
specific
versus
what
can
be
applicable
regardless
of
the
type
of
asset,
regardless
of
the
type
of
use
case,
and
this
is
where
specification
requirements
come
from.
So
from
that
perspective
it
was
a
really
insightful.
A
Awesome
thanks
denise
thanks
hanjin
dan.
I
know
you've
been
talking
all
day.
So
if
you
have
some
comments
and
want
to
jump
in
you're
welcome
to,
if
you
want
to
rest
your
voice,
I
would
totally
understand.
D
No,
no,
it's
good
yeah.
Look,
I
mean
from
from
our
session
over
here.
You
know,
I'm
just
echoing
everything
that
avia
said.
I
mean
the
conversations
have
been
awesome
getting
into
it
right.
It's
like
you,
never
know.
If
anyone's
going
to
be
participating
or
not,
but
you
know
everyone
is
participating.
We
were
able
to
fill
up.
You
know
30
30,
something
potential,
cookbook,
use
cases,
ideas,
features
of
you
know
we
have
to
scrub
them
through,
of
course,
but
look
you
know
tomorrow
should
be
really
interesting.
Looking
forward
to
it.
A
Yeah
one
of
my
favorite
quotes
came
out
of
your
session
from
justin
gaffney.
D
A
Daphne
wrong,
but
I'll
I'll
get
it
I'll
fix
the
here.
I'll
fix
it
right
here.
The
beauty
of
live
entertainment.
You
know
baseline
in
short,
baseline,
is
a
secure
private
validator
for
objects
and
json
packages
for
enterprises
who
use
different
data
sets
it's
so
succinct.
It's
pretty
nice.
A
Yeah,
you
know
we
talked
to
so
many
people.
You
know
external
people,
clients,
potential
clients,
potential
baseliners
about
their
businesses,
and
you
know
we
talk
about
baseline
and
there
is
no
yet
no
silver
bullet.
That
kind
of
you
know
grocks
it
for
everybody.
You
know
you
have
to
help
them
understand
it
within
the
context
of
their
own
business
and
their
own
requirements.
A
So
yes,
so
keep
the
testing
coming.
You
know
it's
certainly
welcome.
You
know
the
community
welcomes
it.
I
welcome
it
and
we
can
all
get
better
through
that.
A
Any
other
comments
before
I
jump
in
I
just
want
to
cover
quickly
kind
of
some
of
the
schedule
stuff
for
tomorrow.
A
All
right
going
into
the
conference.
C
Okay,
real
quick
one.
One
thing
I
probably
forgot
to
mention
was
this
needs
to
be
on
the
record
every
and
I
didn't
do
it
in
the
beginning.
So,
but
I
think
it's
fine,
you
know
there.
Anybody
in
this
conference
or
in
the
summit
is
representing
themselves.
No
one
should
assume
that
somebody's
participation
who
might
have
you
know
who
you
might
link,
find
on
linkedin
and
say:
hey
there,
it's
company
x,
don't
assume
that
that
company
has
any
intentions.
It's
you
know
it's
something
that
you
know
for
the
record.
C
We
want
to
make
sure
everybody
knows
so
that
everybody
who
is
participating
is
safe,
because
not
every
company
has,
you
know,
gone
to
the
ceo
and
made
it
an
official
thing
yet
so
kind
of
like
early
days
of
java
when
we
were
all
helping
out
with
java,
but
nobody
told
us
we
could
yet.
So
I
want
everybody
to
know.
Just
that's
on
the
record
and
I've
said
those
words.
A
Thanks
john
and
real
quick,
just
I'm
freezing
that
pain,
so
I
can
scroll
over
a
little
bit.
Look
at
that!
That's
amazing!
Sometimes
I
do
know
how
google
sheets
works
so
tomorrow
we're
gonna
pick
it
back
up
starting
at
8
a.m:
east
coast
time
with
oracles
and
external
data,
we're
pretty
excited!
That's
going
to
be
essentially
session,
led
by
patrick
collins
and
johan
eed
from
chainlink
and
supported
by
devon
mitchum
from
google.
A
I
think
they've
got
some
pretty
exciting
things
to
to
share
with
with
everyone,
and
it
should
be
a
great
conversation,
even
if
it
is
a
little
early
for
us
west
coasters,
that's
okay,
and
then
you
know
back
into
the
swing
we'll
we'll
do
a
little
morning,
kickoff
session
at
10
a.m,
again
just
kind
of
get
people
back
in
their
seats
and
make
sure
everyone's
comfortable.
You
know
other
sessions
will
be
going
on
the
core
interfaces
session,
with
persistence
and
messaging
kyle
and
gina
are
going
to
do
a
session.
A
You
see
it
between
one
and
two
tomorrow
east
coast
time,
and
I
put
it
across
all
blocks
because
you
know
it's
in
that
breakout
room
break
out
two
on
the
nether
mind
and
provide
essentially
baseline
as
a
service.
A
The
the
provide
stack
a
number
of
sessions
today,
whether
you
heard
from
don
steele
or
dan
or
anybody
else,
you've
heard
a
lot
about
kind
of
the
the
providey
bright
as
kyle
calls
it
stack
and
just
thought
it
would
be
helpful
for
people
to
get
a
view
of
that
and
maybe
get
some
hands
on.
You
know.
Kyle
has
the
intent
of
making
it
as
technical
as
possible,
and
if
anybody
can
do
it,
kyle
can
so
just
call
that
out.
C
Maybe
kyle
in
that
session
can
also
help
take
people
through
the
core
interfaces
as
well,
and
I've
heard
a
couple.
People
would
like
to
get
okay
more
details
on
that.
A
Cool,
I
will.
I
will
get
that
to
him
with
that.
It's
been
a
pretty
full
day
been
online.
A
lot
john,
it's
very
entertaining
with
all
of
the
streams
going.
I've
got
it
going
as
well.
On
my
other
machine,
I've
got
the
audio
turned
off,
so
I
can
pay
attention.
I
you
know
I
may
multitask
as
part
of
my
day
job,
but
I
still
haven't
gotten
to
the
point
where
I
can
multi-task
my
audio.
If
I
can
do
that,
then
I'll
be
a
much
more
efficient
learner.
C
Installed
like
six
nvidia
cores
into
my
head
before
we
started
the
conference,
so
I'm
multi-streaming.
A
Just
last
night
I
was
watching
tv
looking
at
my
ipad.
Listening
to
my
wife
and
my
son
was
asking
me
something,
and
I
had
to
ask
him
to
repeat
it-
he's
like
what
you
weren't
listening
to
me.
I'm
like
well
come
on
how
many
inputs
can
you
can
I
deal
with
here
anyway,
all
jokes
aside,
if
anybody
has
any
questions,
now's
a
great
time
to
ask,
if
not
we'll
just
kind
of
thank
everybody
for
your
participation
and
we'll
see
you
tomorrow
morning.
A
Oh,
if
you
do
have
some
inspiration
or
there's
a
small
group
of
you
or
perhaps
you're,
watching
the
live
stream
from
asia,
pacific
and
you
want
to
get
into
the
sessions
and
have
more
discussion.
You're
welcome
to
do
that.
The
conference
floor
will
remain
open.
The
streams
are
active,
so
you
know.
C
We
might,
we
might
take
the
streams
down
for
a
few
minutes,
recycle
them
that
which
would
generate
new
streams,
but
that's
okay,
you,
it
they'll
all
be
in
the
playlist
that
that
you
have
the
link
for
so
just
be
aware
of
that
we
might
take
it
out.
We
may
not,
but
we're
just
we're
working
through
that.
Also.
C
Yes,
yes,
absolutely,
oh,
and
I
don't
even
need
to
do
that
to
to
recycle
them.
C
Right,
you
know
we'll
make
sure
not
to
do
that
and-
and
I'd
just
like
to
say
once
once
more.
If
you
don't
mind
me
saying
nick
from
from
now
to
the
end
of
this
session
tomorrow,
at
five
four
or
five
o'clock
find
a
person
that
interests
you
and
pull
them
aside.
Have
a
conversation.
C
Do
yourself
that
favor,
I
think
that's
the
most
important
thing
to
take
away
from
this
conference.
A
Yeah
some
really
great
attendees
and
participants-
and
you
know
this
is
a
great
forum
for
doing
that-
been
pleasantly
surprised
with
the
quality
of
the
conference
platform.
You
know
all
the
jumping
in
and
out
of
zoom
the
fact
that
we've
got
our
documents
really
pleased
with
the
level
of
professionalism,
and
you
know
focus
that
everybody
has
has.
You
know
brought
to
the
conference
to
the
summit,
and
it's
just
it's
it's
great.
It
feels
you
know
like,
like
I
mentioned
earlier
right.
John.
A
Has
this
metaphor
about
the
rocket
and
we're
launching
this
rocket
to
the
moon,
and
you
know
we're
just
about
done
with
the
first
stage,
getting
ready
to
separate
and
light
the
second
stage,
and
I
can
really
kind
of
feel
that
energy
and
it's
it's
very
gratifying,
it's
I
look
forward
to
making
the
world
a
better
place
through
our
technical
work,
even
though
it's
boring
or
maybe
boring
boring
is
the
new
exciting
right.
We
don't
need
to
rip
and
replace
your
system
of
record.
A
We
can
integrate
it
using
public
infrastructure
and
do
it
in
a
fashion,
that's
more
accessible
to
more
of
your
trading
partners.
You
know
what
could
be
more
valuable
than
that.
C
C
And
and
again
this
isn't
the
end
of
the
conference.
It's
just
that
we
have
to
eat
and
I
have
to
put
some
kids
to
bed,
but
everything
stays
live.
Andreas
is
probably
just
on
his
first
first
win,
he's
probably
ready
to
go
another
10
rounds.
I
saw
him
just
jump
in
by
the
way
people
go
to
that
track
on
the
live
stream,
scrub
back
and
and
listen
to
the
geniuses
work.
C
I
think
that
was
a
pretty
amazing
track
and
so
we'll
see
you
I'll
be
popping
in
and
out
most
of
the
evening
and
and
see
you
tomorrow.
H
Yeah
we
have
we
have
some
made
so
scaling
was
was
was
a
small
group,
but
we
we
made
some
some
some
great
some
great
progress.
If
people
want
to
review
what
was
done,
you
can
do
that
directly
in
the
we
documented
everything
in
the
in
the
in
the
diagrams
dot
net
file
so
go
go,
go
check
it
out.
We
made
some
real
great
progress.
You
now
know
that
we
need
workflow
ids
workflow
in
workflow
instance,
ids
and
nunces,
and
all
the
good
all
the
good
stuff.
H
J
E
A
A
Good
real
good,
all
the
sessions
are
popping
and
you
know
people
are
engaged
and
yeah
it's
going
and
I'm
I
I
shouldn't
say
this
because
I'll
we'll
crush
ourselves
tomorrow,
but
it's.
A
But
it's
going
it's
more
smooth,
I'm
seeing
the
platform
and
the
zoom
rooms
and
all
of
that
right.
You
know
when
we
talked
about
some
of
the
risks
of
you
know
this
this
whole
setup
earlier
in
the
week
in
the
planning.
You
know
we
talked
about.
Oh
you
know
people
losing
internet
or
whatever,
and
of
course,
yesterday
youtube
went
out.
Oh.
A
C
K
C
That
those
azure
instances.
H
Yeah
otherwise,
otherwise,
everything
would
be
resting
on
on
john
being
able
to
balance
a
laptop
on
a
boat
underneath
an
umbrella
yeah.
A
C
Running
those
out
of
a
cloud
next
to
a
hub
is
probably
a
good
idea.
There's
a
business
in
that
man,
I'm
telling
you.
I
think
that
we
got
to
talk
to
lucas
and
kiko.
I
think
there's
business
in
in
in
doing
that,
you
know
how
hard
it
was
to
figure
out
how
to
do
this
dude
hard.
I
couldn't
find
anything
I
mean.
Usually
you
know
give
me
10
minutes
in
a
youtube,
video
and
I'll
find
something,
but
there
was
nothing
on
doing
it.
C
This
way,
ev
anywhere
down
to
the
point
where
I
had
to
you
know,
I
only
tripped
over
figuring
out
how
to
run
we
were.
I
was
going
to
run
it
all
out.
Sono,
you
probably
know
I
was
gonna
run
it
all
on
my
map,
my
spare
mac,
and
you
know-
and
I
figured
out
how
to
hack
the
terminal
with
dash
n
to
bring
up
multiple
instances
of
zoom,
not
even
that
was
out
there
in
you
know
where
I
could
find
it
easily.
C
Yeah,
yes!
Finally,
so
I
remember
when
it
wasn't
so
yeah,
so
I
guess
we're
we're
good
yeah
we
have
to
just,
I
guess,
we'll
go
offline
and
we'll
talk
about
yeah.
The
only
thing
I
have
anxiety
about
is
is
what
happens
when
we
shut
those
live
streams
down
and
something
goes
wrong
and
we
don't
get
the
recording.
C
H
I
don't
think
so
because
I
think
once
you
shut
it
down,
it's
it's
just
the
I
mean
the
the
the
it's
just
processing,
the
the
the
it's
just
converting
the
video
right.
It's
just
into
into
into
I
mean
the
file's
there
right.
Zoom
has
the
files.
Just
it's
just
processing.
Is
it's
just
like
google
right
yeah?
H
Well,
let's,
let's,
let's
vacate.
I
Stopping
points
my
hope
here
is:
I
hope
that,
after
after
playing
all
the
big,
you
know,
video,
montage
and
everything
like
that,
or
at
least
the
audio
montage,
that
I'm
not
going
to
be
known
as
the
colonoscopy
guy.
A
Yeah-
and
you
know.
A
Good
and
it's
kevin
turner.
A
C
E
A
Kevin
kerner
was,
like
you
know,
the
almost
ceo
of
microsoft,
so
I
used
to
be
at
walmart
and
all
of
that
stuff.
So
a
very
wonderful
businessman.
C
Right
on
andreas,
you
weren't,
I
think
you
weren't,
you
were
still
wrapping
your
session
up,
but
I
mean
the
the
coolest
thing.
Was
you
know
having
these
one-on-one
breakouts?
So
I
hope
you
value
yourself
of
that
tomorrow
and
just
it's
so
great
to
just
kind
of
you
start.
You
know
talking
to
somebody,
you
pull
them
aside
and,
and
you
jump
into
something
I
think
it
jumped
into
a
couple
of
side
rooms
and
talk
it.
You
know
talk
you
just
get
to
know
people.
It's
really
great.
H
C
C
Hey,
I
don't
know
that
it's
the
the
the
plenary
was
well
advertised
this
morning
for
the
for
today.
Okay,.
A
C
A
We
have
an
updated
playlist.
C
Yes,
if
yeah,
if
you
go
into
the
playlist,
all
the
new,
oh
there
we
go
tracks
are
there.
I
might
have
to
read
yeah.
A
A
A
I
was,
I
was
wondering
what
that
bell
was
for
jane.
L
A
C
Yeah,
let
me
real
quick
I'll
I'll
do
an
announcement
on
the
general
session.
Somebody
else
may
have
already
done
it:
okay,
yeah
at
everyone
or
at
channel.
C
Gotta
say
I'm
really
liking
how
this
all
this
is
turning
out.
It's
I
mean
it's
very
intimate
people
get
to
tune
in
and
really
see
people
talking
things
through
this
morning
there
has
been
an
amazing,
oh
by
the
way
we
just
hit
800
people
in
actives
in
in
our
slack
channel
nice,
yeah
yeah,
so
the
this
morning
we
had
two
really
good
sessions
and
they
were
all
down
into
the
code.
C
C
C
C
I've
just
got
a
couple
of
announcements
nick,
so
this
is
this
feels
like
more
like
can't.
You
know,
camp
day,
two
where
you
know
it's
like:
okay,
the
the
the
we're
having
spaghetti
for
dinner
today
tonight
and
the
sadie
hawkins
dances
at
four.
A
Yeah,
that's
the
beautiful
thing
it
doesn't
take
much
to
to
tame
this
hair.
Just
a
lot
of
gel,
so.
C
You're
going
to
start
to
look
like
paul
horn,
the
ex
head
of
ibm
research.
He
had
exactly
that
that
do
going
on.
A
Exactly
hopefully,
the
early
stephen
seagal,
not
the
you,
know
the
late
stephens
ago,.
C
Yeah
he
might
be
watching
watch
out
all
right.
Shall
we
shall
we
kick
her
off
yeah.
A
We
could
give
it
a
little
more
time.
Yeah,
we
are
we're,
only
it's
1004
so,
and
I
see
brian
and
sam
are
still
deep
in
it.
In
the.
C
Yeah
and
that's
that's
really
encouraging,
because
yesterday
was
a
lot
more
about
like
presenting
stuff
yeah.
It
seems
like
already
we're.
You
know
today
is
about
yeah
and
I
think
the
numbers
will
go
down,
but
the
the
real
work
is
gonna.
Absolutely.
C
I
think
we're
going
to
need
to
like
write
an
ai
to
handle
going
through
and
extracting
the
value
from
all
this
footage.
A
Yeah,
but
you
should
be
able
to
use
the
conference
schedule
to
to
at
least
narrow
it
down
right
and
then
quickly,
scrub
the
rest
to
see
if
there
was
sidebar
conversations.
Things
like
that
yep
all
right
good
morning,
avia
aaron.
A
Good
morning,
nick
great
show:
oh
it's
just
halfway
through
erin,
we've
got
another
full
day
of
of
greatness.
Let
me
go
ahead
and
share
my
screen.
Make
sure
I've
got
something
to
share
all
right
there.
We
go
oops
wrong
button.
A
You
know
when
doing
something
like
this
and
doing
it
from
home
one.
It's
very
helpful
when
you
have
a
separate
office
like
my
own
right,
so
I
can.
I
can
leave
my
house
and
come
anytime
day
or
night
and
be
relatively
loud
and
not
wake
up
the
family,
while
they're
still
sleeping
right.
The
kids
have
school
today
or
work,
but
they
don't
have
to
be
up
for
another
hour
and
a
half.
How
lucky
are
they.
A
A
You
know
the
downside
is,
is
that
in
the
evenings,
the
kids
who
are
18
and
15,
but
they're,
still
children,
you
know
they.
They
expect
all
the
same
usual
stuff.
So
you
know
they're
they're
living
their
lives,
and
you
know
blending
the
two
together
sometimes
can
be
fun
anyway
enough
about
me
good
morning.
Everybody
thank
you
for
joining
us
for
day,
two
of
the
baseline
protocol
summit
2020..
I
am,
of
course
I'm
your
host
nick
criticos
joined
by
john
walpur,
jane
harnaud,
avia
and
he's
many
others
right.
A
It
takes
a
village
and
we're
excited
about
the
second
day.
Here.
We've
got
a
couple
of
things.
The
conference
is
really
already
underway
had
if
you
were
not
aware
and
look
you
gotta
adjust
this
a
little
bit
there.
We
go
we'll
see
how
the
scrolling
the
scrolling
got
fixed.
C
Oh,
that's
why
yeah
folks
were
confused
about
the
oracle
start
to
date,
some
folks
thought
it
was
gonna
start
at
eight.
So.
A
I
could
have
sworn
I
had
that
greened
out
all
right
anyway,
so
we
had
oracles
that
started
at
seven
a.m.
On
the
east
coast,
the
core
interfaces
persistence
session
is
going
on,
even
as
we
speak,
we've
got
another
check
in
on
the
blockchain
client
improvements.
It
looks
like
that
they
they
dropped
it
in
there,
so
they
may
be.
A
Yeah
yeah-
I'm
here
guys
yeah
that
just
might
be
a
snap
through.
Let
me
I'll
just
color
in
another
green
spot,
so
people
know
to
look
for
you
connor.
Other
things
to
note
is
the
experience
baseline
protocol
and
product
cookbook
session
is
gonna
swing
back
into
action
for
another
full
day
of
use,
case
exploration,
demo
exploration
and
ultimately
trying
to
bring
us
together
to
put
together
the
recipe
book.
A
If
you
will
for
product
companies
or
isps
that
are
looking
to
add
baseline
capabilities
to
their
own
products
after
the
persistence
session,
there's
a
core
interfaces
messaging
session,
led
by
kyle
thomas
make
sure
to
check
that
out.
It's
going
to
be
a
lot
of
discussion.
I
expect
around
message
formats
and
trying
to
determine
if
we
should
be
proactive
in
specifying
what
those
those
formats
should
be
for
interoperability
and
things
like
that.
A
The
global
phonebook
project
is
going
to
check
in
again
from
one
to
two
or
one
to
three
really
just
kind
of
taking
that
the
next
step
another
mind
and
provide
are
going
to
do
a
quick
overview
of
their
baseline
as
a
service
platform.
If
you've
listened
to
many
of
the
sessions,
whether
it's
the
experience
baseline
protocol,
where
the
envision
team
talked
about
the
sap
and
dynamics
demo
done
with
unibright
and
provide
or
dom
steel
talking
about,
you
know
his
dap
on
on
the
app
exchange
on
salesforce.
A
Also
using
the
provide
platform,
you
know
thought
it
would
just
be
a
great
opportunity
and
it's
supposed
to
be
a
very
technical
session.
So
you
know
to
get
your
eyes
on
that
and
kind
of
see
if
it
could
add
value
for
you
and
then,
of
course,
the
scaling
baseline
work
step.
Throughput
session
with
andreas
is
coming
back
as
well
this
afternoon
to
kind
of
tie
up
loose
ends,
so
we've
got
another
full
day
of
content
planned.
It's
gonna
be
a
great
great
day.
A
A
I
heard
this
yesterday
I
didn't
know
what
it
was
so
if,
if
we
could
get
jane
to
hit
the
bell
again
there,
you.
A
Bell
that
means
we're
gonna,
be
getting
started
in
the
plenary
session,
so
it
should
be
good
to
go
and,
as
you
can
see,
our
friends
at
wego
chat.
Lucas
has
added
chat
rocket
chat
directly
into
our
interface.
So
if
you
want
to
be
able
to
chat
directly
with
other
participants,.
A
I
don't
know
if
we
have
everyone
loaded,
we'll
have
to
check
on
that
anyway,
we'll
get
to
the
bottom
of
that,
but
but
look
for
it.
Something
else
to
point
out
that
that
jane
showed
me
yesterday
that
I
thought
was
kind
of
neat
if
you're
interested
in
such
things.
If
you
go
to
the
rsvp
page,
get
my
connection
working
and
you
see
here
that
we
have
present
and
rsvps.
It
should
reload
here
in
a
sec.
C
A
Yeah
but
you
can
go
to
a
map
view
it's
not
working
this
morning.
Maybe
it's
my
connection.
A
You
go
to
the
map
view
there
we
go
and
you
can
see
where
the
registrants
are
from
pretty
impressive.
We've
got
a
great
group
of
folks
from
the
us
and
europe
a
little
bit
of
apac.
You
know,
as
I
look
at
this
thinking
about
the
community,
I
think
we
need
to
do
more
in
the
future
to
engage.
You
know
the
india,
chinese,
philippines,
singapore
really
the
whole
hong
kong
asia,
pacific
area.
A
C
We
might
want
to
create
a
if
you
don't
mind
me
breaking
into
yeah.
This
is
kind
of
more
of
a
this,
isn't
quite
as
an
official
plenary.
I
suppose,
as
yesterday
was
right,
but
don't
let
me
run
you
down.
C
It
strikes
me
that
we
might
be
able
to
create
a
a
chapter
over
there
where,
where
you
know
we're
starting
to
get
to
the
point
where
we're
maturing
into
something
where
we
could
have
chapters
in
different
time
zones,
where
the
the
the
main
sessions
are
happening
at
different
times
time
zone
is
a
is
a
terrible
tyrant.
A
Yes,
it
is,
but
anyway,
nonetheless,
you
know
we
got
a
full
day
of
content.
We're
going
to
be
rolling
up
our
sleeves.
Please
keep
the
focus
on
trying
to
identify
hackathon
projects
for
our
december
hackathon.
A
C
Sure
thanks
no,
I
just
I
wanted
to
be
sure
that
everybody
knows
that.
There's
a
nugget
of
really
good
information
and
knowledge,
patrick
collins,
from
from
chainlink
came
by
to
this
morning,
and
and
did
a
whole
demos
got
code.
You
can
download
the
code
and
we
got
really
quite
anais.
Was
there
and
some
others,
those
of
us
who
got
up
early
in
the
us
eastern
time
zone
and
I'm
pretty
sure
there
were
no
californians
there
that
was
really
early
for
them,
but
yeah.
C
We
had
some
some
folks
from
europe
and
east
east
coast
and
then
singapore
and
yeah
it
was.
It
was
a
good
session
and
it
really
got
into
what
do
you
do
with
exogenous
data
and
how
do
we
get
that
into?
How
do
we
manage
it
in
a
in
a
baseline
workflow?
C
And
we
got
into
what
you
know
where,
whether
you
set
it
up
as
as
a
validation
for
zk
snarks
but
zero
knowledge,
the
zero
knowledge
circuit
to
say
you
know.
C
If,
if
this
doesn't
comport
with
this
oracle,
then
I'm
gonna
fail
that
proof
that
sort
of
thing
we
got
really
into
it
and
it's
a
nice
piece
of
work
and
you
can
scrub
back
to
it
if
you
go
into
the
oracle's
live
stream
and
for
day
two
and-
and
I
would
strongly
encourage
doing
that-
also
go
back
earlier
this
morning
to
the
core
interfaces,
live
stream
and
and
scrub
through
what
sam,
stokes
and
folks
were
talking
about
before
the
plenary
started.
C
That
said,
you
know,
I
think,
all
of
the
live
streams
yesterday
have
some
real
nuggets
in
there,
and
today
I
think,
what's
going
to
be
the
the
thing
to
do
is
build
is
really
just
had
to
come
down
and
have
real
conversations
like
the
one,
the
the
core
interfaces
conversation
they
were.
C
C
Github.Com
ethereum,
hyphen
oasis,
slash
baseline
repo,
get
your
name
on
that
list.
Get
your
get
yourself
a
pull
request
and
and
and
and
become
an
active
part
of
the
community.
A
Yeah-
and
you
know,
there's
there's
benefit
in
doing
that,
john,
and
not
only
is
it
it's
a
great
for
the
baseline
protocol
and
and
great
for
personal
recognition,
perhaps
depending
on
you
know
the
degree
of
work
that
you're
doing
and
how
engaged
you
get.
But
you
also
get
a
vote
right
by
contributing
to
the
repo
you
become
a
voting
member
of
this
community,
so
you
can
participate
in
things
like
tsc
elections,
and
you
know
things
of
that
nature.
So
that's.
C
That's
really
right,
I
should
say
a
lot
of
companies
are
still
getting.
Actually
a
lot
of
companies
have
now
made
it
official
that
they're
members
or
sponsors
or
or
what
have
you
of
baseline
protocol
community.
C
We
are
very
grateful
and-
and
it's
very
cool
to
see
them
all
coming
in
and
now
we're
seeing
very
conservative
companies
that
that
really
have
to
go
through
up
and
down
the
chain
to
make
sure
that
they're,
they're,
okay
with
being
officially
supportive
but
really
membership,
is
simply
what
what
nick
said.
C
It's
you
know,
did
you
contribute
or
not,
and
and,
and
we
think
of
you
know,
you
could
have
2500
people
from
a
company
contributing
and
we're
thinking
about
those
2
500
people
more
than
we
are
necessarily
about
what
what
company
they
work
for,
although
we
we're
we're,
also
very
grateful
for
the
sponsorship
from
the
companies
yeah
so
feel
free
to
come
in
all
everything
is
a
public
domain,
and
if
you
are
in
a
company
that
has
an
open
source
software
committee,
of
course,
you
you
want
to
make
sure
to
consult
them
and
I'll
say
again
for
the
record
that
anyone
showing
up
on
any
of
the
live
streams
in.
C
In
this
event,
it
should
be
assumed
that
they
are
representing
themselves
and
not
one
should
not
assume
anything
about
the
intentions
of
their
company
by
their
participation.
A
Thanks
john
and
just
another
quick
reminder,
john
mentioned
this
briefly,
but
I
just
want
to
make
sure
we
call
it
out
if
you're
looking
at
the
youtube,
playlist
and
leveraging
that
for
the
streams
we
refreshed
the
streams
last
night
to
make
it
a
little
bit
easier
for
our
recording
and
editing
so
make
sure
you're
looking
for
the
day
two
sessions,
otherwise
well
you're
welcome
to
go
to
the
day
one
sessions
and
scrub
through
them
if
you're
catching
up.
A
But
if
you're
trying
to
watch
the
live
meet
content,
you
know
the
live
content
make
sure
you're
on
day
two.
I
just
fell
into
that
myself
with
the
oracles.
I
was
scrubbing
through
the
oracles
trying
to
find
the
content,
and
then
I
looked
up-
and
I
realized
oh,
that
was
day
one,
and
there
was
a
good
reason
why
I
couldn't
find
it
so.
C
And
once
again,
it
should
probably
say
that
the
the
best
thing
that
happened
at
least
to
me
on
the
yesterday
and
I've
heard
it
from
a
couple.
Other
people
was
finding
themselves
in
private
conversations
with
people.
I
mean
seriously
pick
a
person
in
a
session,
say:
hey,
let's,
go
over
and
talk
about
this
and
some
somewhere
else
and
get
to
know
them.
It
is
the
best
thing
I
I
I
forgot
how
much
I
that
was
a
part
of
the
conference
experience
before
covid,
so
yeah
do
yourself
a
favor
and
do
that
I've.
C
I've
already
made
a
couple
of
friends,
and
I
hope
you
do
too.
A
You
know
I
was
reflecting
on
that
because
you
mentioned
it
last
night
in
the
the
closing
comments.
A
John
and
you
know,
at
with
conferences
of
old
right,
you
go
to
a
conference
all
day,
sit
in
in
wonderful
technical
sessions,
and
then
you
know
after
the
conference
you
break
and
get
together
with
some
friends,
for
you
know
pizza
or
a
dinner,
or
you
know,
maybe
a
couple
beers
or
something
depending
on
on
who
you
are,
and
you
know,
you'd
spend
two,
maybe
three
hours
really
kind
of
getting
to
know
each
other,
and
you
know
sharing
ideas,
and
you
know
oftentimes.
A
The
conversation
revolved
around
the
main
topic
of
whatever
you
were
there
to
talk
about,
but
you
also
got
to
know
people
individually
and
what
motivates
them
and
why
they're
doing
this,
and
it
just
makes
it
just
a
lot
more
collaborative
you
know,
and
anyway,
more
human.
It's
it's
difficult
when
we're
separated
by
distance,
even
though
you
know
we
may
be
close
in
heart
to
heart.
But
anyway
I.
C
Still
miss
the
bosey
dinners
but
I'm
not
sure.
A
Yeah
you
know
I
I
had
a
couple
glasses
of
wine
last
night
with
my
lovely
wife,
you
know
I
used
to
make
a
joke
when
we
were
doing
conference
runs
where
you
know
I
miss
sleeping
in
my
own
bed,
you
kind
of
thing,
and
now
I
get
the
best
of
both
worlds.
We
get
wonderfully
productive,
engaging
conferences
and
I
get
to
sleep
in
my
own
bed
anyway,
enough
idle
chitter
chatter.
Are
there
any
questions
from
the
audience?
Remember
there
is
always
contact
the
host.
A
C
I'm
not
sure
does
the
does
rocket
chat
when
you
chat
somebody
does
it
does
that
person
if
they
don't
have
that
open?
Do
they
see
that
they've
been
that
they've
received
a
chat.
A
A
And
you're,
I
presume
you're
jay
wolpert
right.
A
Yeah
so
anyway,
we
do
have
coming
back.
I
gotta
move
my
windows
around
here
a
conference
schedule.
We
do
have
the
closing
ceremony.
As
I
mentioned
the
closing
comments
today
at
four.
I
already
mentioned
that
trying
to
run
through
my
list,
in
my
mind,
check
my
notes,
get
your
github
ids
to
john.
If
you
haven't
done
that
join
slack,
if
you
haven't
done
that,
I
think
that's
it.
John.
C
Yeah,
I
think
it
is
awesome
all
right.
Campers
back
to
your
your
we're.
Gonna
have
rope
climbing
in
in
a
half
hour,
we'll
have
pizza
for
lunch
and
spaghetti
for
dinner
and.
A
That
that
reminds
me
of
a
time
sorry,
a
quick
side.
Kids
went
to
summer
camp.
Essentially,
you
know
with
school,
it
was
their.
You
know,
fifth
grade
away,
camp
kind
of
thing,
overnighter
and
they're
gone
for
a
week
and
at
some
point
during
the
camp
they
make
all
the
kids
write
a
letter
home
to
their
parents
and
dimitri.
My
oldest
wrote
a
letter
home
and
he's
like
hey
having
fun
at
camp.
They
made
me
write
this,
so
I
could
get
food.
A
That
was
the
extent
of
his
note.
You
know
no
love
to
meet
you
or
nothing.
You
know
they
made
me
right
this
side
to
get
food
so
anyway,
kids
are
great.
I
never
knew
what
happiness
was
until
I
had
children
now
it's
too
late,
so
everybody
have
a
wonderful
day.
If
you
have
questions
comments
concerns
you
know
where
to
find
us
and
we'll
see
you
in
the.
A
The
oracles
and
externals
data
is
wrapped
up
right.
John.
C
Patrick
had
had
you
know,
limited
time,
so
he
they
came
in
and
and
and
did
a
demo
you
know
and
and
we
got
it
in
the
can
so
I
mean
it's
right.
No.
C
But
that,
but
I'm
I'm
very
hopeful
that
that's
not
the
end
of
that
conversation.
There's
a
lot
of
I'm
gonna
be
watching
to
see
if,
if
there
are
engineers
and
architects
that
hop
in
there
and
self-organize
around
that
stuff,
because
mike
what
I'm
I'm
sorry
go
ahead,.
A
Well,
I
was
just
gonna
say
the
the
primary
reason
why
I
was
asking
is
because
I'm
trying
to
keep
the
schedule
up
to
date
to
make
it
easier
for
folks.
When
you
know
people
want
to
look
at
the
live
streams
like
oh,
when
was
that
you
know.
Was
it
day
one
day
two
in
the
beginning
of
the
day,
end
of
the
day
that
kind
of
thing
yeah
so
anyway,
coming
back
you
you,
your
hope
for
that
track.
Is
that
some
of
those
people
jump
back
in.
C
C
It's
a
camp,
that's
sort
of
it's
code,
camp
anyway,
engineering
camp,
whatever,
I
think
in
a
way
the
the
fact
that
we
have
the
semi-organic
self,
like,
like
the
the
the
zero
knowledge
stuff
self
organized
largely
outside
of
those
known,
the
the
the
grain
tracks
and
it
just
kept
going
and
going
there
was
just
mavens
in
there
that
cared
about
it.
C
The
phone
book
project
did
was,
did
that
largely
as
well,
but
but
less
so
right
and
I
think
it's
an
indication
of
timeliness,
although
the
phone
book
definitely
is
timely
yeah,
the
question
is:
are
we
at
a
maturity
level,
where
we're
figuring
out
how
to
get
that
exogenous
data
into
a
circuit
or
into
a
a
workflow
step?
C
Is?
Is
the
thing
that
people
are
worried
about?
It
might
be
the
next
camp
where
that,
eventually,
this
is
going
to
be
a
major
issue
right
now.
I
think
people
are
just
trying
to
figure
out
how
to
get
like
a
purchase
order
baseline,
but
when
you
have
to
say
well,
but
this
purchase
order,
is
you
know
it
costs?
You
know
this.
The
price
is
this:
if
it's
you.
E
C
At
11
59
and
this
in
another
value,
if
it's
at
12
o'clock
now,
you
have
to
be
sure
that
everybody
calculated
against
the
same
input
parameter
right,
but
it
might
be
that
you
know
we're
we're
not
to
the
point
where
that
is
boiling
yet
and
and
if
we
don't
see
a
lot
of
activity
in
that
channel,
that's
what
is
that
that'll
be
something
we'll
look
at
is
which
channels
which
tracks
got
activity
that
was
outside
of
the
green
zones.
Yep
and
that'll
tell
us
a
lot
about
prioritization.
I
think.
A
Right
now,
really
quick:
while
we
still
have
some
folks
in
the
plenary,
I
figured
out
how
to
use
rocket
chat.
So
I
shared
my
screen
again.
You
have
the
rocket
chat
button
up
here,
just
above
the
breakout
list.
If
you
open
that
up,
we
now
have
rocket
check
if
you
want
to
find
a
user.
This
is
where
I
went
wrong.
There's
actually
two
searches,
there's
a.
A
And
a
person
search,
you
click
on
the
person
search
and
you
could
type
up
here,
someone's
name,
let's
say,
mark
haddle
whoops
I've
got
to
get
my
keyboard
working
search.
L
C
I
don't
see
any
there,
it
is.
A
We
go
yeah,
we've
got
some
chat,
you
can
ping
people
now
in
the
conference
and
as
if
you
know,
I
heard
the
bell
that
jane
showed
us
earlier
that
you
know
come
to
the
plenary.
I
heard
that
yesterday
I
didn't
know
what
it
meant
so
we'll
we'll
get
better
at
this
next
time
and
I'm
already
starting
to
think
about
the
next
one
john
like
do
we
want
to
do
this
again?
Is
it
going
to
be
a
full.
A
Well,
I
don't
know
about
that,
but
do
we
want
to
do
it
twice
a
year?
Maybe
once
a
quarter,
I
don't
know
it's
other
than
the.
You
know
the
time
and
effort
that
goes
into
coordinating
and
that's
not
insignificant.
A
You
know
that
the
energy
around
the
conference
and
the
participation
and
just
the
ability
to
get
everybody
together
in
one
place.
It's
just
it's
awesome.
I.
C
A
C
A
Rock
and
roll
all
right,
everybody,
as
we
were
saying,
have
a
wonderful
conference
and
we'll
talk
to
you
today
at
four
o'clock
eastern.
When
we
do
our
closing
comments,
there
are
a
couple
sessions
that
look
like
they're,
scheduled
to
go
a
little
bit
beyond
that
which
is
totally
fine,
we'll
let
everybody
know
when
we
get
back
together,
how
long
the
streams
will
be
on
and
we'll
leave
it
at
that
thanks.
Everyone
have
a
have:
a
wonderful.
A
C
A
C
Yeah
we
need
that
we
need
the.
If
only
we
had
matter
materializers
we
would
basically
not
have
to.
We
could
just
send
you
a
materialize,
a
drink
over
there
for
you.
A
I
really
miss
our
wish.
We
had
the
replicators
from
star
trek
right.
C
A
A
I've
got
an
afternoon
project.
Actually
I
don't
have
to
do
much.
I
just
have
to
give
him
the
green
light
to
do
it
he'll.
Do
it
himself.
He
wanted
to
do
it
on
wednesday
and
I'm
like
yeah,
don't
do
any
messing
with
our
network
when
I've
got
this
conference.
Please.
A
Yeah,
that's
the
last
thing
I
need
he
was
on
a
jump
to
config
yeah.
He
was
on
a
grand
theft,
auto
lobby.
If
what
three
about
a
month
ago,
I
guess,
on
a
sunday
night,
my
wife
and
I
were
out
having
dinner,
we
came
home
and
he's
like
dad
the
network's
down.
A
I
guess
somebody
in
the
lobby
just
kind
of
knocked
everybody
in
the
lobby
off
the
network.
I
had
to
completely
reset
our
gateway,
the
whole
nine
yards
and
then
reset
everything
in
the
house.
It
was,
it
was
a
nightmare,
it
was
a
nightmare.
So
I
I
try
to
make
sure
he's
not
doing
anything
like
that
during
the
working
hours.
M
I
know
I
I'm
just
thinking.
E
M
A
H
E
H
A
E
A
Youngest
now
has
a
liquid
cooled.
Dual
video
card
rig.
That's
it's
quite
impressive,
but
you
know
that
liquid
cooling
stuff,
I
don't
know
more
trouble
than
it's
worth.
I
think.
H
A
We
we
actually
built
a
liquid-cooled
miner
when
I
first
started
consensus
about
three
years
ago,
and
it
really
was
heating
up
the
house,
even
though
it
was
liquid
cooled
pretty
well,.
K
Yeah
I
have,
I
have
a
corsair
liquid
cooling
ring,
I
mean
the
new
ones
are
now
really
great.
I
mean
I've,
never
had
an
issue
with
my
corsair
one,
my
i7,
but
you
bought
it
that
way.
Well,
yeah.
I
bought
it
self-contained
right.
It's
not
like
a
diy
right
yeah.
So
it's
designed
to
not
leak
much
or
it
hasn't.
No,
it's
been
great,
it's
been
great,
but
it
does
heat
up
the
room
quite
a
bit
yeah
the.
H
First,
one's
the
first,
the
first
liquid
cooling
cooled
cpus
that
were
not
supposed
to
be
liquid.
Cooled
made
it
possible
to
to
to
keep
tropical
tropical
fish
very,
very
comfortable,
because
the
change
was
was
that
was
a
aquarium.
Yeah.
A
A
A
M
A
Gonna,
I
was
gonna
call
that
out.
You
know
this
is
the
the
closing
session,
but
you
know
as
the
nature
of
this
conference,
with
our
somewhat
kind
of
organic
scheduling
and
letting
the
leaders
and-
and
you
know,
the
key
contributors
kind
of
define
and
find
times.
There
is
another
session
at
five
o'clock
eastern
at
the
the
top
of
the
next
hour,
two
o'clock
west
coast
time
on
zero
knowledge,
proofs
and
you're
gonna
go
into
more
deeper
than
you
went
before
right.
It's
around
I'm
trying
to
remember
what
lucas
was
saying
before.
M
We're
gonna
talk
about
bridges,
essentially
around
the
exit
proof
from
one
worker
to
another
and
there's
a
there's,
a
github
issue
that
we
created
yesterday
about
that.
M
Baseline
bridges
but
yeah
I
mean
using
using
your
knowledge
to
to
exit
a
work
group
and
allow
another
another
work
group
or
basically
allow
that
that
that
terminated
business
process
to
be
withdrawn.
So
to
speak
into
another
work
group.
A
Gotcha
cool
so
again
that
session
is
at
five
eastern,
so
at
the
top
of
the
hour.
But
you
know
this
is
our
previously
scheduled
kind
of
time
for
wrapping
up
and
and
taking
a
moment
to
come
together
and
to
recognize
all
the
hard
work
from
our
leaders,
not
only
john
and
kyle
and,
of
course,
andreas
and
jane
and
and
everybody
quite
frankly,
I'm
trying
to
see
who
else
is
on
this
list
here.
M
A
A
Sam,
I
mean
it's,
you
know
the
problem
with
these
things,
tj.
Of
course,
the
problem
with
these
things
is
that
you
know
you
need
to
thank
everybody,
and
we
want
to
thank
everybody,
and
you
know
when
we're
doing
it
sort
of
off
the
cuff,
and
we
don't
have
the
the
scrolls,
the
the
distributed
ledger
of
of
participants.
It's
hard
to
remember
everybody.
A
That's
the
key
right,
so
I
feel
pretty
good
about
this
summit.
I
think
you
know
it's
gone
off
really
well.
I've
been
very,
very
personally
very
pleased
with
the
performance
of
the
platform,
the
engagement
with
the
people
in
the
sessions.
You
know
the
level
of
conversation.
A
Well,
I've
noticed
thanks
to
your
prodding
that
today
it
you
know
it
definitely
upticked,
and
I
think
we
may
have
a
good
list.
A
Yeah,
the
new
feature
sessions
were
somewhat
lightly
attended.
I
don't
think
we
did
a
good
job
at
kind
of
positioning
what
those
were
yet
at
the
same
time
as
I
attended
other
sessions,
I
heard
ideas
for
new
features
and
enhancements
in
there,
so
we
will
be
holding
debrief
sessions
we'll
get
those
in
the
books
as
soon
as
possible.
It'll
probably
be
middle
of
next
week,
so
that
people
can
digest
stuff.
A
Give
us
a
chance
to
to
collect
all
the
artifacts-
and
just
you
know,
have
an
ongoing
discussion
about
where
we
go
from
here
with
that.
Let
me
turn
over
to
john
and
see
if
you've
got
any
words
of
wisdom
or
comments.
C
L
C
I
cannot
think
it
could
how
it
could
have
gone
better.
You
know
the
amount
of
effort
that
went
into
setting
it
up.
I
think
you
know
we
can
bring
that
down
by
10x
as
we
go
forward
to
the
next
ones.
We
can
automate
a
lot
of
things
that
we
had
to
do
manually.
C
C
I
don't
think
I
caught
any
any
activity
after
five
or
after
six
or
seven
last
night
and
before
six
or
seven
this
morning,
which
means
that
there's
a
whole
side
of
the
planet
that
needs
to
get
lit
up
and
that's
fine,
that's
going
to
happen,
we're
starting
to
see
some
people
pop
up,
there's
some
india
leaders
already
in
india
that
are,
you
know
that
are
popping
up
and
we're
just
going
to
need
to
empower
them
and
enable
them
to
to
set
their
course
on
that
on
those
time
zones.
C
So
I
think
that
that
is
clearly
happening.
The
thing
I
was
worried
about
the
most
walking
into
this
was
where
we're
going
to
have
so
much
dead
air
and
so
little
activity
that
people
could
look
right
there
on
the
on
the
web
in
front
of
everybody
and
know
that
we
were
making
a
big
deal
out
of
nothing,
and
that
has
not
happened
by
any
stretch.
C
The
real
work,
I
think,
I've
never
seen
anything
like
this.
In
my
experience
in
30
years,
where
we
did
it's
not
just
about
a
conference,
it's
not
just
about
summit,
it's
not
even
about
you
know,
even
an
architecture
summit.
It's
about.
We,
we
produced
novel
work
in
real
time
in
eight
eight
tracks
of
it
eight
track.
It's
like
eight
track
team
and
and
it
really
it
worked,
and
just
we
were.
C
I
was
almost
late
to
this
plenary
because
somebody
else
pulled
me
aside
and
we
had
an
amazing
conversation,
and
then
I
mentioned
it
on
on
the
chat
and,
like
seven
people
showed
up
to
talk
about
this
one
side
topic.
That
was
the
best.
That's
what
we're
here
for
so
I
couldn't.
I
couldn't
be
happier
with
how
the
this
last
two
days
and
the
week
has
gone,
and
you
know
I
think
the
the
proof
will
be.
C
We've
massively
expanded
the
number
of
people
that
can
get
into
the
roadmap
repo
who
have
actually
gotten
in
there
and
now
what
the
proof
will
be
in
the
pudding
of
cooking
out
how
many
people
have
been
energized
to
actually
produce
or
get
into
the
github
or
into
the
github,
slash
baseline,
repo
and
and
do
pull
requests
right.
C
Some
catalyzing
and
it's
not
supposed
to
happen
on
the
day.
So
as
we
see
as
we
go
forward,
do
we
see
you
know
like
the
the
folks
from
carnegie
mellon?
They
start
putting
poll
requests
in.
Do
other
people
start
pulling
pull
requests
in
just
other
people
start
building
forget
about
our
repo
building
their
own
products
and
services.
C
At
this
point,
there's
two
kinds
of
folks
that
are
needed
for
success
of
this
one
people
that
can
add
to
the
to
the
standard.
That's
us
and
the
other
is
people
that
make
their
own
products
wildly
successful
because
of
it
and
we're
we're
we're
here
for
both
of
those
groups
and
that
both
of
those
groups
showed
up
and
that's
the
only
thing
you
know,
I
think,
there's
great
there's
great
proof
in
the
opportunity
of
just
showing
up
kyle
thomas
can
attest
to
that.
The
netherlands.
C
C
Yeah
and
like
people,
people
were
like
sam
stokes
and
brian
chamberlain.
The
sam
came
back
from
you
know
from
from
something
he
was
doing,
and
people
were
waiting
for
him
right
in
the
hall
at
seven
this
morning
and
like
yeah.
We
have
to
talk
to
you
so.
A
C
Yeah
and
what
I
like
about
mark
is
he's
got
like
a
couple
other
folks
ron
and
others.
They
are
the
real.
They
live
real
stuff,
not
technology,
not
meta
stuff,
not
not
middleware,
they
live
real
logistics,
real
day-to-day
stuff
and
the
fact
that
mark
is
here
every
day
doing
you
know
around.
You
know
his
practical
world.
His
meat
and
potatoes
world
yeah
says
that
we
must
be
onto
something
right.
E
Yeah
yeah
well,
and
another
thing
is:
I
think,
that
you
know
this
session
kind
of
underscored.
The
fact
that
webinars
are
so
2018.
E
C
Speaking
of
which
I
don't
know,
if
I'm
ever
going
to
get
through
all
of
the
content
that
andreas
and
and
folks,
I
saw
tosh
deans
from
from
ethereum
foundation
earlier
today,
and
they
were
just
working
it
out.
They
were
just
like
working
it
out
on
l2
and
zero
knowledge,
suspect,
there's
a
there's
about
ten
products
and
all
that
for
somebody
to
mine
out
of
there
and
it's
all
on
the
web.
You
just
go
right
now.
A
And
a
lot
of
enhancement,
requests
and
new
features
and
new
ideas
coming
out
of
those
sessions.
You
know,
I
know
the
the
piece
of
the
session
that
I
could
sit
through
and
I
could
understand
because
it
wasn't
too
technical
for
me.
I
was
hearing
ideas
right
and
left
right
like
work,
step,
ids
and
work
group
ids
and
yeah.
It's
yeah.
It's
awesome
great.
C
H
C
A
John,
I
appreciate
that
I'll
I'll,
let
my
ceo,
my
lovely
wife,
know
she's.
C
A
A
A
So
we've
you
know
from
a
scheduled
time
perspective.
We've
got
plenty
of
time,
but
we
don't
necessarily
need
to
to
keep
people
here
and
let
us
chatter
socially.
Are
there
other
key
messages
that
you
know
attendees
should
take
away
from
this
john
right.
The
work
is
not
done,
we're
really
just
getting
started.
We've
got
to
distill
what
we've
collected
here
and
start
that
effort.
Next
week,
we've
got
the
hackathon
coming
up.
You
know
we
heard
about
some
great
product
announcements
that
are
coming
bill.
A
Gleim
is
going
to
go
into
a
zero
knowledge,
proof,
benchmarking
presentation,
he
mentions
he's
gonna,
do
it
in
the
ssc.
The
steering
committee.
A
Right,
so
you
know
that's
what
three
four
weeks
out,
depending
on
what
the
days
fall,
I'd
have
to
look
at
the
calendar.
You
know.
So
if
people
are
interested
in
that,
you
know
pay
attention
to
slack.
You
know
we
try
to
do
our
best
and
john
does
a
fantastic
job
at
making
sure
that
you
know
we
cross
post
on
channels,
and
things
like
that.
So
you
know
this
is
just
the
beginning.
Thanks
for
everybody
that
invited
joined
the
slack
this
week
gave
us
your
github
ids.
C
Right
now,
I've
got
nothing
else,
but
while
we
open
it
up,
I
mean:
are
there
any
any
last
words
from
folks
things
that
people
want
others
to
know,
or
you
know
that
are
watching
this
last
plenary
kyle,
you
have
anything
dan,
you
guys
were
doing
a
lot
of.
M
I
would,
I
would
just
say
thanks
again
to
you
guys
that
you
know
did
the
the
bulk
of
the
work
organizing
this.
It
has
certainly
like
it
has
far
exceeded
expectations.
I
think
for
everyone
I
mean
it
was.
It
was
pretty
awesome,
so
awesome
job
space
again.
H
I
just
wanted
to
to
to
to
echo
what
what
kyle
said
and
wanted
to
add.
I
think
there
is
there,
because
of
the
of
the
productivity
and
and
and
the
energy
there
there
is
there
it.
It
would
be
a
shame
if
the
momentum
and
the
different
tracks
that
have
shown
that
there
is
that
there
that
there's
a
you,
know,
people
who
are
willing
to
work
on
that
and
and
and
dig
deeper
and
and
and
advance
that.
H
I
think
there
is
something
in
there
around
like
a
regular
occurrence,
not
at
the
scale
but
but
for
for
for
tracks
to
continue
to
continue
work
and
and
continue
on
a
regular,
regular
basis
as
working
groups.
Or
you
know
it's
like.
I
don't
know
what
the
what
the,
what
the,
what
what
the
right
framework
is,
but
I
think
that
is
really
is
important
to
keep
the
momentum
going.
Otherwise,
it's
it's
sort
of
like
stop
and
go
yeah
and
and
and
based
on
availability.
H
But
if
there's
a
commitment
or
you've
made
commitments
now
you're
accountable
for
something
to
deliver,
then
I
think
that
that
that
will
that
will
drive
more
engagement
and,
and
it
gives
people
anchor
points
that
they
can,
that
they
can
go
to.
Based
on
what
they're
interested
in.
C
Yeah,
absolutely
can
you
imagine
if,
if
we
had
all
the
footage
from
when
the
ethereum
core
devs
also
went
and
lived
in
in
in
zug
for
in
that
house,
for
what
a
month
or
whatever
that's
what
we've
got
right
and
partly
it's
a
coveted
world,
but
the
upside
is
that
we
have
now
we've
captured
every
single
conversation.
C
All
the
way
through
the
challenge
now
is
going
to
be
mining
through
it
all,
but
I
I
think
that's
just
astounding.
A
You
know
the
the
quality
of
those
conversations
was
just
you
know,
as
you
mentioned
in
the
breakout,
it
was
the
same
kind
of
thing,
but
it
was
like
in
line.
It
was
just
really
fantastic
right,
kevin
and
sebastian
and
others
you
know
talking
about.
You
know
how
do
we
get
to
a
point
where
we
can
communicate?
A
F
A
My
notebooks
now
but
great
conversations
and
it
was
yeah
awesome.
E
C
That's
right
right
in
in
brooklyn.
C
I
was
hopeful,
but
you
know
things
evolve
and
I
think
the
most
important
thing
is
that
when
we
went
into
that
relationship
with
ernest
and
young,
the
first
thing
that
and
brian
will
remember.
First
thing
we
wrote
down
was
build
a
great
relationship
with
these
people
and
that
that
was
the
most.
That
was
the
highest
item
on
our
list,
build
a
great
relationship.
You
know
where
we
felt
like
we
were
one
team
and
we
achieved
that.
C
I
think
that
more
than
anything
is
why
we're
here,
because
if
we
hadn't
done
that
we
wouldn't
have,
we
probably
would
have
crashed
and
burned
before
you
guys
ever
found
out
about
it.
C
All
right
I'll
take
the
final
final
final
word,
and
this
is
a
a
message
from
for
our
sponsor.
The
nature
of
open
source
is
changing,
and
the
oasis
organization
is
shown
is
seeing
us
through
to.
C
Something
really
profound
in
in
how
open
source
and
open
standards
are
being
managed
and
run
back
in
the
90s
working
on
things
like
java,
open
source
was
something
that
you
did
with
with
a
you
know,
one
maven
one,
you
know
giant
head
or
one
company
and
they
would
throw
a
bunch
of
resources
at
it
and
then
other
people,
and
it
was
really
a
sales
opportunity
in
some
ways,
because
there
were
some
countries
and
others
that
would
not
buy
anything
that
was
proprietary
today.
C
C
I
think
we're
taking
this
to
a
whole
new
level.
I
think
that
oasis,
and
also
with
sister
organizations
like
the
eea,
are
taking
the
level
of
openness.
C
C
C
You
know
you
do
that,
because
you
care
and
because
you
know
that
it's
important
not
because
and
and
maybe
we
need
to
do
some
fun
drives,
but
you
know
that
doesn't
get
you
a
vote
on
how
that
how
the
technology
moves
forward,
that's
a
different
kind
of
thing
and
then
with
oasis
now
we're
combining
both
open
standards
and
open
source
with
that,
I
think
that's
a
very
exciting
prospect
for
the
future
of
open
source
and
open
standards,
and
I
think
that
what
we
did
the
last
two
days
is
emblematic
of
that
that
we,
this
radically
open
session,
where
everything
we
thought
was
on
the
table
and
transparent
and
it's
frankly,
brave,
amazingly
brave
of
everyone
to
do
that.
C
You're
all
you're,
all
tv
personalities.
Now
that
was
something
right
to
come
up
with
your
own,
with
novel
ideas
at
that
you
know
in
in
front
of
anybody
and
everybody
that
can
can
get
a
web
browser
up
so
kudos
to
all
of
you
for
that
and
kudos
to
jane
harnett
and
to
joey
person
and
the
and
and
and
and
carol
and
guy
and
all
the
folks
at
oasis.
You.
C
A
C
D
and
for
and
two
of
course,
lucas
and
the
kiko
chat
folks
who
made
that
I
don't
know,
jan
how
you
found
those
guys,
but
it
really
worked
out.
Well,
so
thank
you
and
thank
everybody
and
yeah
show
up
to
the
five
o'clock.
I
think
I'm
gonna,
I
might
run
out
of
gas
at
this
point,
so
you
might.
I
might
have
to
watch
that
game
tape
later,
but
thanks
everybody
for
coming
and
and
let's
all
become
very
successful
together.