►
From YouTube: The Baseline Show - India
Description
The weekly office hours for the Baseline Protocol open source community. Learn more at https://baseline-protocol.org.
This is the India office hours hosted by Samrat Kishor | @samratkishor
B
B
Hey
everybody,
john:
can
you
quickly
play
that
bassline
song,
okay,.
B
Welcome
to
the
baseline
show,
india
we
are
live
from.
We're
live
from
new
delhi
and
we
do
this
every
saturday
at
6
pm.
It's
the
official
baseline
office
hours,
where
we
talk
about
synchronizing
everything
using
baseline,
and
we
have
some
very,
very
amazing
people
today.
Turning
the
call
on
zoom
and
I
see,
tons
of
people
have
joined
on
youtube
as
well
and
there
are
more
people
who
are
joining.
You
know
I.
I
got
many
things
asking
for
the
link
so
awesome,
so
you
know
thank
you
so
much
for
making
it.
B
I
am
somrad
kishore,
I
I
am
part
of
the
technical
selling
committee
of
baseline
protocol
and
I'm
also
the
head
of
head
for
india.
I
lead
the
team
with
mr
day
here
in
india,
so
she's
she's,
a
technocrat,
she's
she's
running
her
own
company,
as
well
as
building
some
fantastic
stuff
for
baseline
protocol
over
to
you,
john
and
jack,
quickly
introduced,
introduce
yourself
and
let's
go.
A
B
B
B
C
That's
that's!
That's
all
right,
samurai
pleasure
to
be
here.
This
is
jack,
leahy,
elite
sales
and
growth
at
provide
provide
is
a
organization
that
is
been
spearheading
within
the
baseline
protocol
community.
Certainly
that's
the
topic
of
conversation
today
and
so
really
happy
to
be
here.
B
Awesome,
that's
a
pretty
modest
introduction
from
jack
pro
provide
is
probably
the
coolest
company
to
watch
out
for
in
the
baseline
ecosystem
right
now,
so
everybody
who's
who's.
Watching
today,
tomorrow,
whenever
on
youtube,
you
know
hit
up
jack
and
the
rest
of
the
provide
team.
They
have
done
some
super
cool
stuff,
some
of
which
we
will
be
discussing
today
later
in
the
show
we
have
louise
suarez,
we
have
rajiv,
so
rajiv
parker
is
from
the
most
premier
b
school
in
india.
B
I
and
you
know
thanks
so
much
rajiv,
sir,
for
making
it
at
such
short
notice.
I
we
just
spoke
yesterday
about
participation
and
we
will.
We
will
initiate
official
communication,
of
course,
but
today
was
just
about
introduction
and
getting
to
know
each
other
well,
yeah.
B
Awesome
awesome
awesome
and
we
also
have
saurabh
singh
with
us.
He
of
course,
he's
joined
us
in
his
personal
capacity
he's
a
very
accomplished:
blockchain
developer.
He
also
works
with
one
of
the
biggest
telecom
companies
in
the
in
india.
So
so-
and
you
know
we
are
in
talks
about
engaging
with
them
and
getting
them
on
board.
So
sort
of
you
want
to
go
ahead
and
use
yourself
briefly.
F
Yeah,
hello,
everyone
so
yeah,
it's
like
a
few
days
back
a
few
weeks
back
sumrat
sir,
has
connected
with
me
connected
me
about,
and
he
told
me
about
this
baseline
protocol.
After
that
I
visited
the
the
page,
the
main
page
on
the
internet
and
searched
about
this
very
great,
like
you
know
the
great
concept
of
about
the
protocol-
and
this
is
this-
is
going
to
be
a
revolutionary
and
it's
it's
going
to
be
going
to
be
a
very
cost-cutting
protocol.
F
You
know
or
like
a
way
to
you,
know
in
a
very
efficient
way.
It's
going
to
be
for
the
big
industries,
like
you
know,
petroleum
or
telecom
sector,
all
kind
of
sector.
I
could
say
that
thing
so
yeah,
it's
going
to
be
a
game
changer
in
in
a
while
yeah
thanks
for
inviting
me,
sir
yeah.
B
D
B
But
thanks
for
making
it
and
I'm.
D
A
Hey
samrad,
I
know
that
you
know
I
think,
for
for
bandwidth
reasons,
it's
a
lot
of
folks
keep
their
videos
off,
but
for
some
reason
I
think
the
settings
are
only
showing
those
folks
who
have
live
video.
I
think
there's
like
seven.
B
A
People
on,
I
think,
youtube's
only
seeing
three
of
us.
A
Just
a
fair
warning:
I
think
there
might
be
a
setting
that
could
be
changed
live,
but
if
that,
if
not,
you
know
something
to
know
for
future.
B
B
A
Well,
you're,
well,
sam
rats,
looking
into
that,
the
andreas
freund
who's,
one
of
the
principal
folks
who've
been
writing.
The
standard
is
really
into
the
telecom
space,
pretty
well
known
in
it
as
working
on
a
number
of
standards
in
telecom,
and
you
might
want
to
reach
out
to
him
on
the
slack
summer.
You
might
if
I,
if
I
make
my
if
you
don't
know
where
the
slack
is
go
to
baseline,
protocol.org
and
you'll,
and
you
can
see
the
slack
inviter
there.
B
B
Moving
on
john,
you
know
we
have
a
good
quorum
today.
We
also
have
some
new
participants
and
I
would
like
to
to
invite
you
to
sort
of
introduce
baseline
protocol
to
all
of
us.
Once
again.
You
know
you
did
that
in
the
maiden
show,
but
now
we
have
more
interest-
and
you
know
rajiv
comes
from
the
academia
so,
and
we
already
have
duke
university
with
us
right
so.
D
A
Well,
I
think
the
hi
rajiv
it's
great,
to
see
you
and
I
I
should
say
my
alma
mater,
my
b-school
alma
mater-
has
recently
sent
us
an
intern
who's
doing
a
wonderful
job
here
at
consensus
on
on
in
her
job
right
now-
and
I
find
this
pretty
fascinating,
she's
she's
done
a
lot
of
interviews
with
some
really
notable
executives.
A
A
Why
and
she's
asking
everybody
that
she
can
find
that
one
question
because-
and
this
kind
of
leads
into
the
point
about
a
baseline,
if
you
can
reduce
the
inconsistency
between
my
my
record-keeping
system
and
your
record-keeping
system
and
the
probability
that
goes
down.
But
what
are
all
the
reasons
and
one
of
the
one
of
them
she
found
was
very
interesting
and
it's
one
I'm
sure
many
of
us
have
been
living
with
for
decades.
A
Is
my
payment
system
or
my
salesforce
people
raise
the
price
by
a
dollar
say
you
know
from
10
10
to
11
and
the
customers,
you
may
be
using
salesforce
and
they
make
the
change
from
10
to
11,
but
then
the
the
change
does
not
get
pushed
to
the
erp
system.
A
That's
running
their
payment
payables
system
and
they
pay
me
10,
not
11.,
and
maybe
I
never
fix
that,
like
maybe
I'm
just
too
scared
of
losing
that
customer
I've
lost
that
one
dollar
difference
until
we
you
know,
get
on
them
with
humans
and
spend
a
lot
of
time.
So
those
are
the
kinds
of
screw-ups
that
happen
between
companies.
I
think
more
than
anything
else
baseline
is
about
multi-party
workflow
integration
or
rather
verified
multi-party
workflow
integration
right.
A
So
I
can
be
confident
that
what
I
know
is
the
same
as
what
you
know,
and
even
though
that
that
story,
I
just
told,
has
an
internal
integration
component
to
it.
You
can
imagine
that
if
we
have
a
always-on
global
tamper-resistant
way
of
running
an
integration
bus
without
having
to
set
one
up
de
novo
every
time
we
have
a
new
counterparty
to
deal
with,
we
start
to
use
that
also
for
internals
right,
we
say
yeah.
Let
me
just
jack
into
the
base
ledger
right
or
into
the
baseline.
A
You
know
system,
and
now
I
you
know-
and
you
know
like
that-
I
I
I
have
that
integration
point
without
putting
any
data
on
anything
else.
So
that's
that's
really
important.
To
bring
up
is
that
the
baseline
protocol
is
all
about
keeping
your
data
in
the
system
of
record
that
you
probably
are
already
using,
say,
sap
dynamics
netsuite,
you
know.
So
this
is
a
protocol
that
supports,
doesn't
try
to
get
you
off
of
traditional
systems
of
record.
Leave
your
data,
so
data
for
databases,
proofs
for
blockchains.
A
That's
what
the
baseline
protocol
is
all
about
is
basically
a
standard
for
you
know
how
you,
how
you
use
a
blockchain,
preferably
a
public
one
as
a
proof
repository
that
allows
you
to
subscribe
to
those
proofs
and
say
yep
you
and
I
have
the
same
information.
Nobody
looking
at
that
blockchain
would
know
anything
about
us
they're,
just
looking
at
a
bunch
of
nonsense,
but
you
and
I
can
point
to
that
and
say
yep.
We
are
in
a
state
of
consistency
or
oh,
no,
we're
not
something's
gone
wrong.
A
And
I
think
there's
a
lot
of
money
to
be
made
in
that
it
changes
the
tco.
G
A
System
integration
significantly
from
you,
know,
big
capital
expenditures
to
opex,
and
it
just
becomes
easier
to.
D
A
Multi-Party
system
integration,
which
has
been
really
hard
for
a
lot
of
years,
so
this
is
you
know
anybody
that
knows
how
to
baseline
is
going
to
be
making
a
lot
of
money.
In
fact,
we're
already
seeing
companies
like
provide
taking
business
from
a
really
big
companies
from
their
traditional
service
providers,
just
because
they
know
how
to
baseline.
B
Yeah
yeah
and
we
are
going
to
be
talking
about
that
huge
company
in
a
bit
right.
So
you
know
thanks
thanks.
So
much
john,
that's
that's
very
exciting
and
you
know
we've
been
having
these
sessions,
and
you
know
this
is
just
the
fourth
one
here
and
we've
been
talking
about
business
value
being
created
for
various
industries.
B
India
is
looked
as
the
outsourcing
hub
for
the
world
and
a
lot
of
companies
sitting
here
are
often
processing
information
being
provided
by
companies
based
wherever
in
the
world
right.
So
so
a
lot
of
times
the
information
exchange
as
well
as
authentication
of
the
records
coming
in.
That
is
a
serious
challenge,
and
you
know
I've
seen
floors
and
floors
full
of
people
just
doing
reconciliations
and
consolidations
and
then
spending
days
and
hours
just
to
get
paid.
So
so
so
this
is.
This
is
exciting.
This
is
truly
exciting.
B
A
A
I
got
I
I
had
somebody
call
me,
and
they
said
we
love
the
block,
the
baseline
protocol.
We
love
it,
but
we're
so
scared
of
putting
data
on
the
on
the
you
know,
but
but
it
you
seem
to
use
a
lot
of
ethereum
in
this,
which
is
not
I
mean
the
standard
doesn't
require
ethereum
and
most
of
the
implementations
are
using
ethereum,
because
many
of
us
think
it's
the
best
place
to
put
proofs
or
at
least
to
anchor
them
right.
A
We
can
put
it
on
something
like
base
ledger,
which
is
coming
out
soon
and
then
that's
anchored
to
the
main
to
the
public
platform.
You
want
a
supremely
tamper
resistant
finality
layer
that
makes
sure
that
those
proofs
don't
get
changed
by
anybody,
but
the
yeah.
A
E
A
What,
if
have
you
not
been
listening?
You
don't
put
data
on
the
blockchain,
not
corporate
data,
I
mean
there's,
you
know
you
could
say
that
ash
is
a
data
piece
of
data
too,
but
you're
not
putting
you
know
personal
pii
or
any
kind
of
corporate,
almost
any
kind
of
information.
Your
company
has
it's
probably
information.
You
don't
want
your
competitors
to
have
I
mean
blockchains,
whether
they're,
private
or
public
are
effectively
digital
nudist
colonies
right
they
like
to
spread
things
out.
A
If
you're
a
private
blockchain
and
it's
a
proper
blockchain
you
then,
then
somebody
has
a
node
who
is
not
under
your
control
who's,
not
under
your
security
policies.
You
have
a
big
threat
surface
that
guy's
going
to
get
hacked
and
make
irrelevant
all
the
reasons
why
you
made
a
private
blockchain.
You
might
have
well
have
just
gone
with
a
sas
data
solution.
A
You
know
or
something
like
snowflake
or
what
have
you
right,
but
instead
you
said,
oh,
let's
make
spend
a
lot
more
money
on
a
private
blockchain
which
is
really
just
saying:
let's
use
a
shared
database
that
has
nodes
that
are
run
by
different
companies.
I
don't
know
that
you
want
that.
I
think
you
might
just
want
to
set
up
a
jv
with
a
really
good
system
administrator
and
and
run
it
in
common
and,
if
you're
really
worried
about
control,
shamir
secret
sharing,
the
keys
will
do.
C
You
know
it's
been
one
of
the
one
of
the
goals
of
organizations
you
know
in
this
kind
of,
as
we
see
this
new
transformation
ongoing
from
a
digital
perspective,
we
see
the
goal
of
many
organizations
to
effectively
centralize
their
data.
You
know
we
have
a
lot
of
these
times.
These
data
sources
are
disparate
and
just
from
an
organizational
strategy
perspective
they're
still
at
the
current
adoption
stage
of
still
trying
to
modernize
their
their
data
environment
and
centralization
of
that
data
within
their
cloud
environment.
C
On
top
of
that,
which
is
really
something
that
unlocks
something
quite
different
than
had
what
had
been
achieved
from
and
really
kind
of,
a
blockchain
implementation
perspective
in
the
past,
as
well
as
the
way
in
which
enterprises
were
trying
to
leverage
blockchain
systems
to
support
their
ecosystems.
A
H
Yeah
yeah,
so
you
were
mentioning
base
ledger.
Can
you
provide
sort
of
indicate
what
the
goals
and
scope
of
base
ledger
is.
A
Well,
I
can
talk
about
what
I
think
it's
going
to
do
for
me
as
a
customer.
I
think
you
know
jack
and
his
team
are
actually
building
that
and
and
and
before
I
get
onto
that,
we
also-
I
see
the
bishwashi
days
here
and
you
know
talk
about
things
you
can
baseline.
A
You
could
you
know
bishwash
figured
out
how
to
baseline
an
excel
spreadsheet
with
an
erp
system
which,
by
the
way,
makes
her
like
the
best
programmer.
I
know
right
now.
That's
cool,
and
you
know
man.
C
Speaking
of
that
fishwashery,
if
you're
with
us
there
would
you
want
to
expand
a
little
bit
on
that
some
of
the
work
within
from
an
excel
perspective.
Some
of
the
work
that's
on
has
on
gone
there
and
kind
of
where
yeah
we
hope
and
envision
us
taking
this.
E
Yeah
hi
guys
everyone.
This
is
I'm
currently
working
on
an
excel
add-in
for
the
baseline
protocol.
So
what
it
basically
does
is
that
you
can
open
up
your
excel
and
you'll
see
a
small
window
on
your
right
side
of
your
screen
and
basically
using
that
you
log
in
and
you
can
you,
whatever
data
changes
you
make
on
your
excel,
with
your
counterparty
that
will
get
synced
automatically.
So
that's
the
main
functionality
that
we
are
providing.
E
E
E
So
that's
the
main
work
that
has
been
going
on,
I'm
currently
working
on
like
creating
some
mapping,
so
that
your
columns
and
your
data
is
very
accurately
mapped
with
your
counterparty
so
that,
like
I'm,
making
some
tweaks,
and
so
that
is
the
current
status
of
the
project.
A
A
So
being
able
to
maintain
consistency
between
a
row
or
or
a
table
of
excel
in
this
washroom.
Are
you
gonna
be
able
to
to
baseline
a
row
in
the
next
iteration?
Just
so
I
can
have
like
one
row
being
say,
my
invoice
record
and
baseline
that
to
to
my
customer.
E
Yes,
that
is
what
I'm
trying
to
like
push
forward
before.
Currently,
it's
the
entire
table
that
we
are
declining,
but
with
the
future
iterations
that
is
like
even
just
one
cell.
If
you
want
to
baseline,
we
should
be
able
to
do
just
that,
like
any
object,
that
is
there.
A
Yeah,
it's
like
well,
okay,
so
I
can
keep
my
my
cell
consistent
with
somebody
else's
system
and
you're,
like
oh.
B
C
I
was
just
gonna
say
I
think
I
think
the
excel
piece
just
unlocks
a
heck
of
a
lot
of
use
cases.
Not
only
does
it
unlock
the
ability
for
the
smaller
participants
to
have
access
to
this
new
way
of
participating
in
these
ecosystems
and
new
ways
to
find
new
financial
incentives
as
part
of
these
enterprise
ecosystems,
but
also
it
unlocks
a
lot
of
these
different
use
cases
that
are
really
exciting
as
well.
You
know
I
I
I
envision
excel
playing
a
huge
part.
C
You
know
like
things
like
autonomous
procurement
operations
and
autonomous
financial
modeling,
if
you
will
as
well,
and
so
I'm
we're
just
at
the
forefront
of
kind
of
where
we're
going
to
start
seeing
these
use
cases
pick
up
from
an
excel
perspective,
but
many
of
which
that
we've
talked
about
based
on
your
perspective.
More
generally,
I
think,
can
start
almost
be
immediately
applied
from
an
excel
perspective.
So
we
really
do
welcome
people
that
you
know
have
been
starting
to
build
within
these
blockchain
systems
and
and
are
strongly
leveraging
xl.
C
C
I
think,
sometimes
people,
you
know
they
hear
that
we're
working
on
it
and
there's
kind
of
almost
this
idea.
It's
like
this
is
things
that
we
can
start
pursuing
and
working
with
with
stakeholders
and
potential
customers
right
now
on,
and
so
we
certainly
welcome
these
type
of
different
ideas
and
we've
kind
of
started
to
see
different
ones
start
permeating
from
an
excel
perspective.
And
again,
I'm
just
excited
as
to
where
this
really
goes
from
here.
B
I
think
in
the
first
episode
we
spoke
about
appealing
to
the
cios
and
the
and
the
in
the
csos
with
the
baseline
protocol.
I
think,
with
counterparty
risk
at
a
minimum
we
would
have.
We
would
have
actually
appealed
to
the
chief
risk
officers
as
well.
Yeah.
C
Right,
you
have
enough
having
them,
so
I
think,
having
a
mature
stack,
having
a
mature
stack
that
is
gdr
compliant,
has
the
ability
to
effectively
accomplish
kyc
and
ml
aml
processes
within
that
as
well?
I
think
it's
just
going
to
be
essential
to
the
adoption
and
comfort
with
you
know
the
executive
leadership
as
we
can,
as
well
as
within,
like
the
actual
in
the
financials
of
their
organizations,.
B
Absolutely
I
think,
the
third
week
of
this
month,
third
week
of
august,
we
are
also
going
to
have
a
dedicated
show
just
for
compliance.
You
know.
What's
what
does
baseline
mean
for
gdpr?
B
I
think
that
is
something
which
which,
which
is
which
is
key
and
and
we
are
going
to
pick
that
up
a
lot
of
companies
in
india
are
required
to
bgd
file
compliant
as
well.
B
Even
if
you
know
they
are
processing
data,
they
are
also
required
to
you
know
at
times
process
healthcare
information
as
well,
so
we're
going
to
be
talking
about
high
trust,
we're
going
to
be
talking
about
gdpr
and
I'm
going
to
get
I'm
trying
trying
to
get
andreas
for
that
and
and
yeah
I
mean
rest
of
the
baseline
members.
I
think
they're,
pretty
senior
people
who've
seen
compliances
very
closely.
I
myself
have
been
an
auditor
for
a
very
long
time,
so
I
I
totally
get
if
the
audit
landscape
were
to
change.
A
A
It's
not
not
for
nothing.
It
should
be
known
that
you
know
ernst
young,
which
was
one
of
the
three
founding
companies
behind
baseline
protocol.
D
D
A
If
I
can
have
auditing,
if,
if
I'm
auditing
a
company
or
a
set
of
companies-
and
all
I
need
to
know-
is
that
they're
that
these
the
set
of
proofs
proves
that
that
they
followed
a
certain
set
of
rules
that
were
enforced
by
zero
knowledge
circuits,
then
I
can.
I
can
spend
a
lot
less
time
doing.
You
know
sampling
right,
I
don't
have
to
sample.
I
didn't
know
that
every
single
one
was
done
correctly
and.
A
I
think
it's
a
big
deal.
You
know,
shuya
was
asking.
B
I
was
just
saying
one
of
my
seniors
is
watching
the
show
right
now.
I
was
discussing
the
exact
same
concept
with
him
that
the
company
is
going
to
get
rid
of
auditors,
especially
for
some
compliances
which
which
people
are
required
to
have,
especially
in
outsourcing
operations
and
and
he
was
laughing
at
me,
and
I
said
you
know
what
come
to
the
show
that
particular
episode
and
we're
going
to
make.
It
happen.
At
least
we're
going
to
reach
to
a
point
where
the
auditors
would
be
so.
B
C
Key
piece
to
that
samurai
is
the
fact
that
we're
doing
these
on
public
blockchains
and
those
public
blockchains
are
something
that
has
gained
enough
momentum
and
confidence.
You
know,
of
course,
it
doesn't
necessarily
have
to
be
done
on
public
blockchains,
but
the
the
fact
that
public
blockchains
have
gained
this
momentum
and
confidence
from
some
of
the
largest
institutions
in
the
world
at
this
point
in
time
is
changing
the
narrative
and
confidence
that
these
enterprise
leaders
can
have
moving
into
these
type
of
projects
and
implementations.
C
But
then,
furthermore,
layering
on
the
ability
from
an
audit
perspective,
the
assurability
perspective
says
really
all
the
difference
in
where
we're
headed
with
this,
of
which
I
don't
really
think
that
they
were
in
that
position
and
willing
to
do
that.
In
the
past.
With
some
of
those
private
implementations
that
we
had
seen.
A
Summer,
if
I
could
I'm
I'm
mindful
that
I
did
not
answer
to
this
question
about
about
base
ledger,
so
I
should
say
yeah,
but
I
just
really
was
trying
to
talk
about
excellent.
I
mean
I
I'm
so
jazzed
about
what
miss
washer
has
done.
That's
like
all.
I
want
to
talk
about
yeah.
C
A
Yeah
the
base
ledger
is
you
know,
so
you
can
put
your
proofs
directly
on
a
layer,
one
like
mainnet
like
like
the
ethereum
maintenance,
and
it's.
E
A
That
expensive,
because
you
don't
you
know
you,
can
you
know
with
a
little
bit
of
batching
and
it's
not
it's
not
like
it's
the
least
costly
thing
you
could
do
on
a
blockchain
right.
You
throw
a
proof
on
it
or
you
know,
into
a
merkle
tree,
but
even
so
you,
you
know
it's
nice.
If
you
can
go
to
an
l2
or
or
a
you
know,
a
secondary
substrate
that
is
anchored
to
the
main
net
so
that
it's
getting
the
tamper
resistance
from
the
main
net
or
a
major
public
mainnet.
A
Theoretically,
you
could
have
many
of
these.
I
kind
of
would
love
to
see
it
not
be
many
of
these
things.
It's
a
pretty
basic
job
and
it's
it
and
there
are
advantages.
If
there's
just
one
place
where
you
know
you
can
go
to
for
proofs
and
and
do
you
know
workflow
integration
and
say
my
you
know
the
proof
of
my
work
step
number
33
is
now.
I
can
use
that
to
inject
into
your.
A
You
know
work
step
number
44
under
zero
knowledge
without
as
long
as
you
know,
our
two
work
steps
are
compatible
and
have
you
know
appropriate?
You
know
schemas
and
all
that,
but
you
know,
even
even
if
we
never
knew
each
other.
When
we
were
setting
up
these
workflows.
That's
a
really
powerful
thing.
You
can
do
that
across
chains,
but
you
have
to
now.
You
have
to
add
addressing,
and
you
know
resolving
and
discoverability
it's
it's
fine.
A
You
can
do
that,
but
it
would
be
nice
to
have
just
kind
of
one
place
where
most
people
go
for
that
stuff
and
you
know
it
because
it's
a
standard,
it's
kind
of
taking
a
profit
motive.
Out
of
that
thing
anyway,
so
kind
of
like
tcp
did
so.
A
Hopefully
we
can
have
some
unity
and
not
a
bunch
of
balkanization
on
on
workflow
integration.
That
would
be
a
really
good
result,
but
yeah
so
base
ledger
is
just
is
the
first
place
where
is
about
to
be
and
jack?
It's
not
launched
yet
right.
C
It's
it's
not
officially
launched
at
this
point
in
time.
That
being
said
as
we've
as
kyle,
and
the
team
has
articulated
a
number
of
times
before,
what
I
think
some
folks
think
is
that
you
know
base
ledger's,
just
all
of
a
sudden
going
to
be
turned
on
many
of
the
core
pieces
that
are
part
of
the
base.
Letter
stack
are
inherent
and
embedded
within
the
provide
stack.
So
many
of
those
things
that
are
core
pieces
of
base
ledger
that
are
part
of
provide
are
currently
running.
I
was
just
on.
C
I
was
on
late
last
night
with
kyle
kyle's
flipping
stuff
on
this
weekend
of
which
is
going
to
be
lighting
up
more
core
pieces
of
the
base,
ledger
network,
and
so
again
that
doesn't
necessarily
mean
that,
as
you.
E
C
He
flicks
that
on
this
weekend
that
we're
full
in
production,
but
we
are
getting
much
closer
to
that
with
some
of
the
core
pieces
of
the
provide
stack
running
and
getting
in
preparation
for
a
test
net
to
be
to
be
up
and
running
through
the
month
of
august
and
into
september
and
having
that
ready
to
go
and
be
tested
on
for
the
for
the
hackathon
that
we're
having
at
eat
atlanta
october
1st
through
october
3rd.
C
So
that's
where
it's
headed
towards
the
test
net
will
be
ready
for
eath
atlanta
for
developers
to
be
ready
to
hack
on
and
develop
on,
and
so
that's
really
kind
of
the
the
time
frame
that
we
have
set
for.
A
Yeah
and
so
as
a
customer
or
not
a
customer,
but
as
a
user
of
that
I
mean
you
know,
bishwashi
had
to
take,
you
know
had
to
spend
a
lot
of
time
and
had
to
be
a
pretty
good
systems
level
developer,
to
figure
out
how
to
use
baseline.
After
all,
this
stuff
goes
open,
source
and
and
goes
live.
A
It
should
be
something
that
anybody
in
a
you
know
a
tcs
or
accenture
or
emphasis,
or
why
pro
could
just
grab
and
or
or
just
a
you
know,
somebody
like
a
smaller
competitor
to
those
guys
who
go
and-
and
you
know,
really
sell
pretty
significant
system
in
a
fairly
straightforward.
A
You
know
sell
system
integration
between
companies,
so
you
could
take
a
whole.
You
could
take
a
supply
chain
grab
one
company
that
supply
chain
get
them
as
your
customer
and
then
start
going
up
and
down
that
supply
chain
across
and
just
start
gobbling
up
the
you
know
all
of
their
customers
and
all
their
suppliers,
and
before
you
know
it,
you
could
be
really
a
supplier
or
a
service
provider
to
a
fairly
large
network,
just
by
kind
of
growing
fractionally
out
from
there.
Incredibly,.
C
Well
said,
john
incredibly
well
said,
and
I
think
why
that
opportunity
is
so
important
is
because
it
enables
these
organizations
that
start
innovating
in
this
capacity
to
be
to
remain
as
the
ecosystem
enablers
of
their
respective
ecosystems
and
so
the
fir
some
of
the
first
movers
that
are
going
to
be
doing.
This
are
the
ones
that
are
going
to
really
build
out
these
strong
partner
networks,
of
course,
the
networks
that
they
already
have
inherent
to
their
business.
C
But
the
ability
to
add
kind
of
this
new
layer
of
value
to
that
the
ecosystems
that
they
serve.
And
so
that's.
A
B
C
D
C
I
think
there's
just
a
little
lag:
oh
good,
well
and
supply.
C
You
know
and
supply
chain
touches
so
many
different
things,
but
at
the
same
time
you
know
like
just
from
a
servicenow
perspective,
we're
talking
like
incident
management
that
was
the
first
workflow
within
the
servicenow
modules
that
we
worked
at
baseline
and
again,
we've
targeted
incident
management
because
it's
their
num.
You
know
it's
their
most
commonly
remediated
service
request
within
the
platform,
and
so
we
knew
if
we
could
target
that
and
start
working
at
baseline,
that
we'd
really
be
able
to
open
the
floodgates
and
so
from
there.
C
You
know
like
workflow
management,
you
know:
incident
management,
problem
management,
resource
management,
service
management,
of
course,
like
there's,
so
many
different
things
just
across
the
service
now
platform
alone,
that
we
can
work
to
start
baselining
and
that
really
kind
of
unlocks
a
lot
of
this
strategy,
because
what
we're
so
excited
about
from
a
servicenow
perspective
or
a
lot
of
these
different
workflows
that
we're
able
to
baseline
is
tying
the
sla
to
it
and
once
we're
able
to
tie
you
know
anything
that
has
an
sla
tied
to
it.
B
C
Yeah
absolutely
so
we're
getting
very
close
to
going
in
full
production
to
coke.
C
This
has
been
an
ongoing
initiative
that
we've
had
the
support
of
kona,
koko
and
north
america
for
quite
some
time
now:
koko
and
north
america
being
encompassing
the
primary
supply
chain
operations
for
coke,
and
in
that
initial
instance,
what
we're
working
to
do
is
effectively
baseline
their
procure
to
pay
process
and
the
procure
to
pay
process
is
one
that's
very
common.
C
Many
know
for
those
that
might
not
know
what
that
work
step
or
what
workflow
effectively
encompasses
our
five
work
steps
that
we
are
working
at
baseline
along
that
and
as
we
baseline
acro
along
that
workflow,
we
are
keeping
those
systems
amongst
those
various
parties
within
that
ecosystem
in
sync,
throughout
that
particular
workflow,
and
for
procure
to
pay.
What
that
is,
is
the
purchase
order
to
a
sales
order
to
shipment
notification,
goods
receipt
to
invoice,
and
so
amongst
that
process?
C
What
we're
doing
is
we're
baselining
each
step
of
that
process
and
at
the
end
of
it,
we're
effectively
taking
that
invoice
and
we're
taking
that
proof
and
that's
what
ultimately
goes
to
the
base
ledger
network
and
then
effectively
to
the
ethereum
main
net
to
to
store
the
proof.
C
So
that's
really
where
we're
at
from
a
coca-cola
perspective-
and
you
know,
I
think
some
of
the
there's
been
some
insights
around
there's
been
details
around
what
we're
actually
projecting,
as
well
as
what
we're
currently
doing
for
coke
and
current
state.
You
know
we're
looking
to
target
to
produce
650
million
in
enterprise
d5
liquidity,
which
is
the
output
of
the
actual
assets
that
we're
tokenizing
for
these,
for
these
invoices
projecting
over
100
million
in
operational
savings
with
coke
among
a
number
of
other
different
things.
So.
B
C
I
was
just
going
to
say
that
100
million-
you
know
that's
something
that
coke
was
willing
to
be
comfortable
with
in
projecting
early
on.
I
you
know,
I
hope
and
anticipate
that
we're
actually
going
to
see
larger
savings
than
that,
as
we
continue
to
work
this
into
larger
ecosystems
across
coke
and
across
these
other
different
ecos
customers
that
we're
working
with
as
well.
A
Yeah
it
it.
It
seems
to
me
that
there's
yeah
there's
two
stories
on
this.
One
is
hey:
there's,
there's
screw-ups
that
happen
between
companies
that
don't
that
can't
be
sure
that
their
their
records
are
in
a
state
of
consistency
right
and,
if
you
just
be
great,
actually
samara
to
get
it
like
in
india.
I
did
this
over
in
the
states
last
year,
just
started
asking
people
what
goes
wrong
when
your
system
is
not
consistent
with
your
counterparty
system
and
there.
A
Great
stories
that
came
out,
I
bet
there'd-
be
interesting
ones
there
as
well,
and
you
know
what
what.
D
A
Of
screw-ups
happen,
and
how
do
you
manage
them?
How
do
you
deal
with
them
today
right?
So
that's
one
story
right.
If
I
get
an
elevator
and
say
hey
ceo
you're,
you
know
what:
how
much
are
you
spending
just
hedging
against
the
possibility
that
people
are
going
to
get
that
you're
going
to
get
screwed
up
with
your
partners
or
your
customers
or
your
suppliers
and
they're
going
to
say
we
spend
a
lot
of
money
on
it.
Sometimes
I've
I've
heard
as
much
as
you
know,
up
to
10
of
profits.
A
E
A
Can
really
cut
into
margin
just
just
hedging,
just
just
maintaining
a
contra
account
against
legal
fees
that
could
come
up
or
maintaining
a
float
that
you're
you're
holding
in
case.
Something
goes
wrong
or
a
make
good
happens,
say
you're
supplying
a
retailer
and
that
retailer
and
I
used
to
work
for
best
buy,
and
I
I've
got
a
good
friend
who
was
the
head
of
merch
there
and
he'll
tell
you
they
would
call
up
a
vendor
and
say
where's,
my
where's,
my
shipment
and
the
vendor
would
say.
A
Well
I
it's
my
record
say
that
it's
supposed
to
be
there
two
weeks
from
now
and
they
would
say
well,
I
think
it's
today
and
I
don't
care
what
your
records
say
and
you're
going
to
spend
whatever
you
have
to
to
get
it
here
by
tomorrow,
or
you
don't
have
to
do
business
with
us
right.
That's
that's.
That
could
be
millions.
D
A
Dollars
to
expedite
an
order
right
that
kind
of
thing,
those
just
horrible
things
that
happen
when
consistency
goes
awry
between
companies
and
that's
what
base
led.
I
mean
baseline,
is
all
about
it's
not
about
blockchain.
It's
about
the
fact
that
we
now
have
a
name
for
fixing
that
problem
in
the
future,
and
this
is
the
opportunity
I
think,
for
early
adopters,
like
the
folks
on
the
call
to
say,
hey
right
now,
it's
good
to
profit
on
on
taking
advantage
of
somebody
else's
stupid
right.
A
So
right
now,
people
are
stupid
about
being
afraid
of
public
blockchain
as
this
kind
of
function,
because
they
don't
understand.
You
know,
they've
been
they've,
been
sold
this
bill
of
goods.
That
blockchains
are
databases
and
they're,
like.
I
don't
want
to
put
my
database
my
data
on
a
public
thing
like
that.
Are
you
crazy
and
the
answer
is
you're
right?
A
Don't
do
that,
but
it's
a
pretty
good
piece
of
middleware-
and
you
just
didn't
realize
that
so
as
the
few
people
that
understand
that
right
now
can
really
draft
past
the
knuckleheads
that
don't
understand
this
yet
and
and
get
real
profitability
on
this
and
say.
Okay
and
now
we
have
this
word
for
we
say:
yeah,
you
better
baseline
your
system
to
get
rid
of
those
kinds
of
problems.
So
that's
one
interesting
way
of
discussing
the
problem.
The
other
one
is.
A
If,
if
I
know
that
your
invoices
are
baselined,
then
they're
probably
more
likely
to
get
paid,
so
I
will
buy
them
from
you
for
a
lot
less
money
than
a
typical
factor
would
or
a
typical
invoice
finance,
or
even
or
even
letters
of
credit
right.
So
now
now
that
ceo
is
interested
right
yeah.
The
previous
conversation
will
get
you
a
meeting
with
the
cio
yeah
right,
but
the,
but
the
ceo
wants
a
lower
cost
of
capital.
B
Absolutely
absolutely
no,
I
think
you
know
there's
one
more
good
word
for
for
an
option
like
this,
which
is
called
early
mover
advantage.
So
people
have
to
understand
the
material
value
which
this
is
bringing
in,
and
the
business
on
one
part
now
are
going
to
be
the
leaders
you
know,
industry,
first
and
and
world
firsts
doing
this
stuff.
That
is,
that
is
pretty
amazing
and
jack
yeah.
I.
H
Yeah,
hey,
you
know
this
to
you
know
when
I
listening
to
this
coming
from
an
enterprise
integration
background,
you
know
what
what
jack
mentioned
in
terms
of
service
level
agreements,
you
know
sort
of
being
able
to
enforce
service
level
agreements
is
to
me
it's
a
big
big
positioning
right.
I
mean
it's
like
it's
not
about
integration,
it's
not
about
any
of
the
technical
aspects
of
trying
to
make
systems
talk
to
each
other,
etc,
etc.
H
The
problem
that
you're,
trying
to
sort
of
say
solve,
is
that
we
can
enforce
whatever
service
level
agreements
you
have
and
at
the
end
of
the
day,
the
the
purpose
of
integration
really
is
to
make
sure
that
you
know
everybody
has
er.
Er
you
know
is
is
is
is
maintaining
a
contract
right,
I
mean
he's
able
to
service
a
contract,
and
I
think
that's
the
my
I'm
always
trying
to
understand.
H
Where
is
the
differentiation
between
classical
integration
and
baseline
and
and
and
that's
that
and
the
problem
I
have
is
coming
from
publish
and
subscribe
world
traditional
enterprise
integration,
seeing
a
gazillion
adapters
for
sap
or
you
know,
as
I
you
know,
even
excel
oracle
and
have
worked
on
all
of
these
things,
and
and
it's
always
from
a
technical
up
right.
Okay,
you
don't
have
information,
silos,
you're,
putting
everything
on
the
bus,
everybody's
access
to
information,
etc.
H
But
now
you
have
access
to
everything,
but
what
is
the
problem?
You're
solving
right
and
and
so
what
I'm
looking
at?
When
I
look
at
baseline,
I'm
looking
at
the
backwards,
I'm
saying
what
is
the
problem
you're
solving
and
then
how
does
it
differentiate
itself
from
classical
integration?
So
I'm
I'm
always
kind
of
looking
at
that
and
trying
to
say
make
sense
of
it
in
my
own
mind-
and
you
know
john
and
jack
are
helping
a
lot.
You
know
and
obvious
collectively.
Everybody
here
is
helping
get
me
the
understanding.
H
The
question
I
have
specifically
is
jack
jack
from
the
standpoint
of
of
penetration.
How
limited
are
his
baseline
in
terms
of
the
number
of
adapters?
You
have
two
different
systems.
For
example,
you
have
this.
You
talked
about
sap
dynamics,
you
talked
about
now,
you
know
debussies
excel,
but
in
terms
of
just
integration
with
various
products,
you
can
talk
with
servicenow
integration.
Is
that
a
limiting
factor?
H
Is
that
a
thing
that
you
need
to
have
more
of
to
to
get
baseline,
more
pervasive.
C
C
Sql
server
right
now,
right
now,
like
we
like
to
call
it
our
service
now
and
splunk,
I
mean
you
know
that
that
covers
five
six
of
the
larger
technology
players
that
a
lot
of
these
organizations
are
running
on,
and
so
there
are.
A
Well,
there's
tons
more
right
and
it'll
be
great
to
see
like
a
connector
in
mulesoft,
and
I
I'm
looking
forward
to
that.
It
all
needs
to,
but
really
it
that's.
I
I
suspect
that
october
is
going
to
be
a
big
sea
change
and
that
when
the
v1
just
like
with
hyperledger
when
we
hit
v1,
everybody
started
using
it,
v.6
was
a
toy
right
now
you
have
to
be
kind
of
a
pretty
good
systems.
A
Integrator
systems
level
developer,
to
use
to
get
in
to
block
the
the
baseline
pattern
it
you
know
it's
not
like
you
just
install
npm
and
go
it's
not
a
product
right.
It's
a
design
pattern.
I
mean
which
the
upside
of
that
is
any
any
competent
group
could
implement
baselining
today
in
production
without
anybody
else,
they
could
just
do
it,
because
it's
just
a
design
pattern.
A
You
just
have
to
understand
the
pattern
and
use
it,
but
you
know
tools
like
what
provides
coming
up
with,
and
things
like
base
ledger
where
you
just
don't
have
to
think
about
it.
You
just
you
know,
you're,
zip,
sag.
A
You
know
you've
got
to
install
npm
you're
done
that's
going
to
massively
push
adoption
forward,
so
I
think
that
I
think
the
end
of
the
year
when
we,
when
we
push
out
v1
when
the
standard
goes
to
iso
and
when
the
and
when,
when
these
tools
are
out
in
open
source,
but
also
in
verified
downloadables
that
have
been
audited.
I
think
we'll
we'll
see
a
lot
of
acceleration.
F
H
This
is
a
question
to
so
this
you
had
talked
earlier
about
you
know.
So
if
you
take
excel
and
so
you
have,
a
row
gets
updated.
So
maybe
a
pricing,
you
know
catalog
the
product
catalog,
the
pricing
gets
changed
and
you
want
to
synchronize
to
a
source
and
a
sink.
H
That's
one
part,
but
I
would
imagine
that
if
there
was
a
contract,
if
there
was
a
agreement
based
on
the
original
price,
yes
that
the
change
in
price
is
not
is
is
is
going
to
trigger
a
consequence.
I
would
imagine
right:
it's
not
like.
Okay,
if
I,
if
I
agree
to
buy
something
at
a
certain
price
and
and
and
so
and
and
or
you,
I
expect
a
certain
number
inventory
level,
but
you
changed
that
with
the
price
or
the
inventory
level
and
therefore
you're,
not
my.
H
My
original
agreement
may
be
at
risk
that
the
latter
pro.
So
it's
not
just
a
synchronization
issue.
Right
synchronization
is
one
thing,
but
I
the
ability
for
me
to
make
sure
that
now
that
the
prices
have
changed
it's
in
violation
of
my
original
agreement,
so
I
what
I
wanted
to
understand
there
is
is
is,
is
the
sla,
if
you
will,
the
violation
of
the
original
contract,
the
key
part
of
baseline
or
is
it
the
ability
to
synchronize.
A
H
C
I,
what
I
would
say
is,
I
think,
it's
both.
C
I
think
it's
both,
but
I
think
undoubtedly,
the
the
the
biggest
underlying
value
here
is
the
synchronization
never
before
had
there
had
there
been
done,
the
synchronization
of
erp
and
crm
systems
in
the
way
in
which
we
are
able
to
do
them
now
that
hadn't
simply
never
been
solved
for
in
this
way
and
the
way
in
which
that
we
are
doing
this
is
an
effective
way
of
which
to
enable
that
synchronization-
and
I
think,
at
the
outset
of
that
process-
is
the
ability
to
provide
that
assurability
that
that
verify.
C
These
are
what
we're
producing
are
just
much
more
high
fidelity
outputs,
much
more
high
fidelity
assets
and,
as
a
result
of
that,
there's
the
assurability
in
that
and
the
ability
to
reduce
the
claims
disputes.
That
is
the
that
is
the
overwhelming
kind
of
value
that
we
continue
to
hear
from
these
different
customers
that
we're
working
is
the
ability
for
them
to
reduce
their
claims
disputes,
but.
A
Jack,
I
I
I'll
I
I
don't
want
to
contradict
you,
but
but
I
will
say
that
to
enhance
that
point-
and
I
remember
this-
is
something
that
stefan
martin
over
at
unibright,
which
is
a
big
system
integrator
with
sap
very,
very
strongly
in
line
with
sap,
traditionally
that
they
see,
but
right
now
in
particular,
that
baselining
is
you.
A
You
can
set
up
your
circuits
for
changing
right,
so
it
is
state-changing,
so
you
can
you
can
you
can,
and
I
think
jack
one
of
your
colleagues
has,
you
know
likes
to
talk
about
how
you
can
entangle
work
steps
to
work
steps
by
putting
the
output
proof
from
one
work
step
into
the
input,
proof
or
input
circuit
of
this
of
the
next
proof
and
and
that
and
thereby
enforce
under
zero
knowledge
consider
integrity
right.
A
So
you
can
say
well
I
have
you
know
I
have
a
purchase
order,
that's
based
on
a
master
service
agreement
and
that
master
service
agreement
requires.
You
know
this
price,
for
example,
and
if
I
don't
adhere
to
that
price,
then
I
will.
A
I
won't
be
able
to
generate
my
new
proof
and,
as
long
as
everybody
says,
don't
go
to
the
next
step
without
getting
approved,
then
you're,
good,
right,
you'll,
you'll,
know
that
you,
you
have
to
stop
the
line
and
figure
out
the
problem,
but
you
can
also
you
can
you
can
have
another
part
of
that
original
msa
circuit
say
allow
you
know
this
is
how
we
handle
changes
where
you
can
change
the
price,
and
this
is
what
they,
the
unibright
guys
find
it
much
more
interesting
right
now
today
is
is
managing
state
changes
of
a
single
record
from
during
its
life
cycle,
so
yeah
I'm
going
to
change
the
price
from
a
to
b
or
I'm
going
to
increase,
I'm
going
to
I'm
going
to
add
a
discount
to
this
to
this
product,
for
example,
or
I'm
going
to
change
an
attribute
to
the
product.
H
That's
a
great
great
clarification
that
was
really
helpful
because
the
state
change
you
know
you
know
adding
something
favorable
and
then
versus
you
know
having
a
agreement
based
on
a
master
contract.
H
The
two
two
two
two
angles
to
this
problem:
right
and
they're
equally
important-
and
I
think
that's
that
was
that
clarification
is
important
where
I
was
going
with.
This
is
the
following
right.
You're
talking
about
if
you're
there
there's
a
company
called
workato,
which
is
basically
being
has
is
a
huge
partner,
has
got
huge
investments
from
both
workaday,
as
well
as
salesforce.com
right
and
I
and
tibco,
which
is
a
historical
company
published
in
subscribe
integration,
which
I
think
it's
might
have
been
acquired
by
salesforce
or
sap.
H
Forget
who
you
know,
I
used
to
work
there
about
20
years
ago,
but
in
either
of
these
guys
have
tons
and
tons
of
adapters
to
various
systems
right
and
they
have
so
many
customers,
just
like
servicenow
does
if,
if
baseline,
is
not
necessarily
competitive
in
terms
of
if
then
you
are
a
partner
and
you
could
leverage
the
install
base
of
these
guys
right
well,.
A
It's
more
like
think
of
it.
This
way,
mohan,
it's
it's
and
I
apologize
for.
You
know
that
for
some
for
some
reason,
your
your
title
card
is
not
giving
the
name.
We
know
you
buy,
but
you
know
tibco.
I
remember
tim
co
very
well
when
I
was
at
ibm
and
and.
A
And-
and
we
you
know,
as
over
the
last
35
years-
I've
been
in
business,
the
you
know:
we
we
adopt
different
techniques,
different
standards,
we
go
from,
you
know,
pushing
token
ring
to
put
to
going
to
ethernet
and,
and
you
know,
saml
and
xml
to
json
right.
It's
not
that's
the
way
to
think
about
baselining
right.
A
So
it's
just
a
new
standard
kind
of
like
json.
Is
you
know,
kind
of
a
de
facto
standard
so
for
a
lot
of
people?
So
it's
really
about
adopting
the
technique,
and
then
you
know
to
make
it
easy
you
can
you
can
hire
companies
like
provide,
and
presumably
people
listening
to
this
skull
will
say:
hey
I
could
I
could
make
a
lot
of
money
doing
this
in
fact
summer.
A
C
Absolutely
I
absolutely
I,
I
think
that
we're
in
we
have
the
ability
to
support
that
at
current
state.
I
need
interest
in
indian
firms
that
that
being
said,
I
think,
as
we
roll
into
q3
and
q4
of
this
year,
our
pricing
strategy,
the
way
in
which
this
is
all
rolled
out
will
be
far
more
clear
for
for
folks
and
for
enterprises.
C
But
that
being
said,
the
strategy
is
very
clear
at
this
point,
but
I
think
that
we'll
do
even
a
more
effective
job
at
articulating
that
you
know
on
our
site
and
in
other
places,
but
yeah.
We
have
the
ability
to
do
that
at
current
state
right
now.
So.
A
B
Absolutely
so,
if
you're
a
technology
company
based
in
india-
and
you
want
to
make
it
big
in
baseline
protocol,
you
know
who
to
want
that
hook.
Me
up
hit
me
up
on
on
linkedin
and
and
we'll
have
a
chat.
B
I
think
today
went
pretty
pretty
pretty
well
and
thanks
mohan
for
bringing
in
those
those
really
interesting
questions.
I
think
all
of
these
really
bring
out
the
real
value
and.
H
H
This
is
a
really
exciting
time,
I
have
to
say
I'm
trying
to
figure
out
how
my
what
we're
doing
at
junior,
which
we
still
you
know
it's
a
lot
of
definition
required
and
which
is
what
we're
working
on
and
I've
talked
to
kyle
a
lot,
and
you
know
jack
as
well,
so
we're
looking
to
hear
how
we
can
use
it
but
jack.
I
just
wanted
to
throw
out
something.
H
C
It
and
furthermore
mohan,
let's,
let's
baseline
the
local
municipality,
that
we
were
talking
about
right.
H
They
can
learn,
learn
and
and
start
manifesting,
a
zero-waste
lifestyle.
So
from
there
we
have
to
go
to
the
other.
H
And
so
on,
so
it
may
be
a
bit
off.
I
I'm
actually
have
to
respond
to
you
guys
about
our
status
so
that
you
know
it
doesn't
look
like
we
just
disconnected
so
apologize
for
that.
Hey.
A
As
I
need
to
dispatch
my
duty
as
the
tsc
chair
and
say,
if
workato
wants
to
be
a
sponsor
of
the
baseline
protocol
oasis
foundation,
then
yeah
they
should
definitely
do
that.
In
fact.
Anybody
listening
to
this
that
wants.
You
know
the
companies.
A
You
don't
have
to
be
a
sponsor
or
pay
any
money
to
be
part
of
the
baseline
protocol
community
to
contribute
code
to
be
part
of
the
standards
team.
You
could
just
step
up
just
like
bishwashree
did
just
like
samrat
did,
but
you
can
also
just
like
a
lot
of
companies
like
accenture
and
others.
You
can
you
can
sponsor
and
and
and
that
that
helps
keep
the
the
lights
running
with
the
standards
organization.
So.
B
Absolutely
absolutely
well,
that's
that
that
that's
a
I
think
so
far
this
has
been
the
really
the
most
exciting
show
that
I've
had
so
so.
Thank
you.
So
much
guys,
you
know
very
briefly
I'll
invite
louise
luis
are
you?
Are
you
up
for
it
you're
at
you're
at
the
airport?
I
can
see
that.
Are
you
up
for
it?
G
Is
good?
Okay,
so,
like
two
months
ago
I
I've
been
working
together
with
a
guy
from
jp
morgan.
He
who
is
very
interested
in
baseline
and
his
name
is
boris.
He
is
usually
attend
the
baseline
show
on
wednesday,
and
he
asked
me
to
to
help
him
during
a
grant
to
write
zero
proof
of
knowledge
secrets
for
bones,
and
it
was
a
great
opportunity
to
to
learn
with
a
real
example
the
zero
proof
of
knowledge
and
to
learn
more
about
the
financial
system.
G
For
me,
because
I'm
more
technical
and
boris
has
his,
he
has
more
financial
knowledge
and
it
was
great
it
was
he
well.
He
took
part
of
the
how
to
prepare
writing
the
text
to
prepare
for
the
grant
and
prepared
and
organized
the
work
that
we
had
to
do,
and
but
it
was
good
and
the
people
from
the
baseline
slack
channel
that
he's
responsible
for
the
grants
helped
us
to
when
we
had
some
doubts
regarding
the
grant-
and
it
was
very,
I
don't
say
easy,
but
it
was
very
smooth
process
to
to
work
with
this
grant.
A
I
I'm
happy
to
report
by
the
way
luis
that
that
we
just
approved
the
funding
of
that
grant
and
that
it's
been
distributed
so
somebody
got
paid.
I
will
also
say
that
we
now
have
been
fully
subscribed.
There's
all
the
money
from
that
100
000
grant
from
the
ethereum
foundation
has
been
distributed.
So
the
only
way
to
win
any
more
of
it
is
to
participate
in
the
east
atlanta
hackathon
in
on
october,
one
two
and
three.
A
So
if
you
want
some
of
that
grant
money,
you
know
we
we've
allocated
some
of
it
to
the
to
that
hackathon,
otherwise,
yeah
I
think
washery's
received
some
of
the
funding
and
luis.
Your
team
has
received
funding.
There's
another
big
couple
of
grants
out
there.
Several
so
we've
allocated
all
the
grants
at
this
point:
there's
no
more
money
in
that
pot
if
company
and
we're
now
talking
to
more
companies
about
adding
more
money
to
grandpa
to
the
grant
to
the
funding
of
grants.
A
So
if
anybody
wants
to
do
grants,
let
us
know
but
yeah
that
that
funding
source
is
is
now
depleted.
B
Excellent,
which
is
good,
which
is
good.
That
means
we're
going
strong,
we're
going
big,
and
you
know
that
brings
us
to
our
second
announcement,
which
was
about
with
atlanta,
so
jack
you're
quickly
talking
about
heath,
atlanta
and
how
people
from
india
can
participate.
C
Yeah
yeah
absolutely
we're
looking
forward,
but
let's
make
it
happen,
we're
looking
forward
to
october
1st
through
october
3rd,
it's
going
to
be
executive
summit
and
in
enterprise,
ethereum,
hackathon
and
yeah
we're
really
looking
forward
to
it.
The
agenda
has
already
started
to
come
together,
very
very
nicely
of
which
I
think
we
will
be
releasing
and
dropping
late.
Next
week
we
have
a
number
of
keynotes
already
set
up
for
friday,
including
john
a
number
of
leaders
within
the
baseline
protocol
community
and
within
the
ecosystem.
C
Overall,
we'll
have
stephon
and
martin
from
unibright
there,
andre
from
kona
expecting
splunk
to
be
there,
microsoft
ey,
a
number
of
the
large
players
within
kind
of
the
ecosystem
will
be
there
and
so
friday
will
encompass.
We'll
have
the
kickoff
of
the
hackathon
and
we'll
have
a
number
of
different
tracks
set
for
friday
and
then
we'll
roll
into
a
happy
hour
and
a
nice
key
to
dinner
into
keynotes
into
friday
evening,
and
then
saturday.
C
Saturday
evening,
including
like
finance,
d5,
l2
community,
we're
gonna,
have
creators
and
like
a
media
panel
as
well,
and
we're
really
starting
to
see
a
lot
of
good,
just
people
kind
of
get
involved
kind
of
come
out
of
the
woodworks
to
seek
to
be
involved,
and
so
we
certainly
love
that
and
welcome
other
folks
to
try
to
get
involved
and
yeah.
There's
gonna
be
a
bunch
of
things
that
we
didn't
really
mention.
You
know
like
food
trucks,
we
have
a
three-on-three
basketball
tournament.
We're
gonna
have
a
dj
that
we
haven't
released.
C
All
set
up,
we're
gonna
have
a
creator
space,
we're
gonna,
call
it
a
creator
space
similar
to
that
of
east
denver
for
many
of
like
the
creator
economy.
Folks,
within
the
space,
we
want
to
create
a
space
to
welcome
those
as
well
and
so
yeah
there's
going
to
be
a
lot
of
pieces
of
this
that
we
haven't
really
unveiled
yet.
But
it's
going
to
be
a
great
event
and
yeah.
You
know
just
to
make
a
quick
mention
with
everything
happening
from
like
a
covid
perspective
for
one.
C
I
know
that,
of
course,
we
wish
that
the
travel
restrictions
were
lifted.
We
want.
You
know,
of
course,
we're
seeing
an
uptick
in
covet,
so
everyone's
got
to
be
thoughtful
about
traveling
the
ability
to
be
there.
We
are
very
focused
on
making
eath
atlanta
a
safe
environment,
we're
going
above
and
beyond,
to
ensure
that,
like
the
ventilation
systems
create
like
a
safe
environment
for
those
that
are
participating
in
the
community
itself,
and
so
those
are
things
that
we
are,
you
know
ensuring
to
be
very
focused
on
as
we
hold
this
event
and
yeah.
C
We
welcome
welcome
folks
to
get
involved,
and
certainly
folks
from
india,
we're
gonna
have
a
high
production
recording
of
all
the
content
and
any
folks
within
indiana
organizations
that
want
to
get
more
involved
with
the
base,
signing
we're
more
than
welcome
and
excited
to
have
conversations
in
between
now
in
east
atlanta
to
talk
about
how
they
could
get
more
involved
or
be
building
within
the
hackathon.
B
Awesome
jack,
thank
you
so
much
this
is.
This
is
very,
very
exciting.
I
think
you'll
be
you'll,
be
helping
people
recover
from
all
the
lockdown
stress
that
they've
been
having
you
know
while
baselining.
So
thank
you.
Thank
you
so
much
so
so
you
know:
we've
made
some
really
huge
announcements
on
on
today's
show,
especially
from
the
india
show
perspective.
I
think
this
this
is
going
to
be
the
best
you
know
with
that.
I
think
we
we
come
to
a
closure.
B
We've
already
gone
beyond
the
alligator
time,
but
I
still
see
all
the
viewers
on
youtube
have
been
there.
Everybody
on
zoom
call
also
have
we
have
been
there.
So
so
thank
you
all
of
you
and
you
know
especially
saurabh
and
biswarashi.
Now
it's
the
onus
is
on
you.
You
know
you
take
back
the
ether
atlanta
announcement
and
and
go
back
to
the
deaf
community.
B
You
guys
are
deeply
embedded
into
the
community,
so
I
I
totally
put
this
on
you
now
to
amplify
within
the
deaf
community
here
back
in
india.
With
that
I
come
to
something
which
is
fun.
You
know
now
we
are
at
the
end
of
the
show.
I
have
a
new
tune
which
I
would
like
to
play
and
and
see
people's
comments
on
so
john
you've
already
heard
that
right,
we've
already
given
a
preview
of
that
tune
to
people
who
tuned
in
on
last
wednesday's
baseline,
show
on
youtube.
B
So
now
I'm
going
to
play
it
right
here
and
then
here,
let's
hear
from
people
how
the
how
what
do
they
think
about
about
this
about
this
new
tune
which
I'm
going
to
be
playing
on
this
show?
Okay,
so
here
it
goes,
do
you
have
it.
D
C
E
A
A
Are
you
talking
about
that
that
that
that
techno
song,
oh,
I
was
trying
to
find
the
I
I'm
trying
to
find
the.
B
A
Oh,
I
don't
have
that
one,
the
one
that
the
the
one
that
you
that's
on
the
slack.
Oh
well,
let's.
B
A
B
B
Anyway,
so
that's
exciting,
okay,
so
so
we
we
we
end
with
a
bummer,
but
no
problem.
I
think
this
was
a
cool
show.
B
We'll
fix
it,
we'll
fix
it
next
time.
This
was
a
great
show,
highly
valuable.
We
may
have
a
potential
new
sponsor
for
the
baseline
protocol,
nothing
bigger
than
that,
and
there
are
some
cool
new
announcements.
I
will.
I
will
play
the
music
next
time
onwards
and
people
are
gonna
love
it.
I'm
sure
thanks
all
of
you
for
making
it.
That's
me
signing.