►
From YouTube: Baseline Show - India
Description
Baseline Protocol Office Hours for the India Community
A
Everybody
hi,
my
name
is
simrad
and
and
we're
live
from
india
and
we
are
on
the
baseline,
show
india.
We
do
this
every
saturday
at
6,
00
pm
with
us.
We
have
today
the
very,
very
special
john
walpout
mark
guys
if
you
come
closer,
I
can't
recognize
you
from
there,
but
but
it's
it's
it's
fun
time
today.
B
B
You're
getting
feedback
because
you
might
have
your
the
youtube
on
no.
A
Never
mind
yeah
thanks
thanks,
so
much
john
for
making
it
today's
show.
We've
been
missing
you
here
so
tell
us.
C
A
About
what's
happening
at
either
atlanta
you're
you're
there
and
most
of
the
baseline
community
members
us
have
flown
down,
have
taken
the
effort
of
flying
down
there
and
you
know
what
to
be
at
a
live
event
after
such
a
long
time.
You
know,
with
with
the
whole
coronaval
situation
and
and
being
locked
up,
although
I
did
see
you
attended
some
of
the
previous
events
as
well.
B
Yeah
we've
been
having
a
great
time
here.
Yesterday
was
a
long
day
we
drove
in
from
mark
and
mark
and.
A
I
drove.
B
In
from
from
from
raleigh
to
atlanta
six
hours
I
was
I
was
mark
was
driving
and
I
was
hacking
on
terminal
hoping
that
my
cell
connection
to
the
internet
would
die
while
we
drove
to
rural
georgia
and
got
the
demo
if
anybody
saw
the
demo
of
a
tree
trunk
nft
yesterday,
I
thought
people
really
liked
it.
The
developers
didn't
poke
too
many
holes
in
it,
which
is
good,
that's
a
good
sign
and,
and
they
had
really
good
ideas
for
how
to
use
it.
D
B
And
yeah
it
was,
it
was
a
a
great
a
great
time.
There
was
really
cool
people
in
the
in
the
speaking
too
paul
brody
was
there
york
roads.
We
had
some
a
b
trouble
with
joe,
which
I
will
go
bash
somebody
about
later,
but
it
he
was
there.
He
worked.
B
He
was
joe's,
always
a
good
sport
about
these
things,
so
he
you
know
worked
out
pretty
well
yeah
rachel
excuse
me
rachel
from
coinbase
was
there
and
she
did
a
great
job
with
with
the
interview
with
joe
yeah.
B
Good
event
from
splunk-
and
I
I've
got
some
really
high
hopes
for
splunk.
I
think
that
I
I
was
always
wondering
why
splunk
was
so
involved
from
the
very
beginning
in
baselining,
and
now
I'm
starting
to
see
it
because,
really,
if
you,
if
you're
splunked
as
they
say
if
your
company's
already
splunked
for
your
logging.
B
You've
got
half
of
maybe
even
three
quarters
of
what
you
need
to
baseline
yeah,
so
I
could
see
them
going
all
the
way
very
interesting.
A
So
awesome
awesome
now
this
is
something
which
I
have
to
pick
up
one
more
time
with
melanie,
because
she
she
and
I
we've
been
having
this
chat
since
a
while,
and
I
think
we
have
this
video
to
meet
next
friday
or
something,
but
this
is
very,
very
interesting.
John.
Thank
you
so
much
for
trying
attention
to
watch
that
so
tell
us
more
about.
What's
how
how's
the
atmosphere?
What's
the
white
I
see
mark.
B
Is
also
having
fun
things
for
live
events.
I
will
admit
that
so
especially
you
know
it'll
scare
recently
and
here
in
the
states,
and
we
just
passed
700
000
deaths,
which
is
heartbreaking,
but
there
were
some
intrepid
folks
come
that
that
came,
I
think,
almost
if
well,
if
there
was
anybody
that
wasn't
faxed,
I
will
be
having
words
with
them,
but
or
or
at
least
already
pre-covertized,
but
yeah.
I
I
felt
pretty
safe.
It
was.
There
was
a
lot
of
just
insane.
It
was
fine.
B
There's
some
really
interesting
teams.
There
was
a
there's
a
there
was
a
a
law,
student
and
and
and
the
couple
I
was
a
law
student
one
was
at
rn
and
they're,
not
coders
they're,
not
developers,
but
they've
been
watching
the
baseline
show
since
the
beginning,
and
they
drove
all
the
way
from
san
antonio
to
come
to
the
show
to
come
to
the
event
to
support
the
community
was
that
it
was
the
most
awesome
thing.
I
I
took
a
picture
of
a
selfie
with
them
and
sent
it
to
joe
lubin
and
he
was
okay.
B
He
was
delighted
and
a
little
freaked
out
he's
like
wow.
You
guys
have
fans
already
and
I'm
like,
so
that
was
really
nice.
I
actually
it
kind
of
warmed,
my
heart
a
lot
and
there
was.
There
was
three
developers
from
gm
general
motors.
We
were
like
hey
wanna,
baseline
general
motors
yeah.
It
makes
sense,
we're
gonna
talk
to
our
boss,
they're
working
on
a
project,
and
we
have
and
we're
eating
breakfast
right
now.
It's
8
30
in
the
morning
here
with
your
food.
D
D
A
D
Very
excited
to
be
here,
some
really
really
cool
stuff
going
on
with
you.
D
Oh
man,
well
I
mean
some
of
the
stuff
I'm
hearing
right
now
already
is
actually
really
interesting.
Just
to
see
like
the
kinds
of
conversations
that
have
been
had
in
the
past
day
from
from
this
conference
to
you
know
see
that
this
event
is
generating
some
actual
advancements.
It's
really
awesome
to
see,
but
yeah.
You
know
beyond
that.
I
I
did
really
like
paul
brody's
talk
yesterday.
It
was
very
energetic,
definitely
held
me
up
a
little
bit.
Yes,.
A
A
D
But
yeah
there's
some
great
ones
today,
I'm
really
excited
for
all
of
the
different
like
excel
sap,
those
kinds
of
demonstrations
just
to
see
how
you
know,
baselining
really
fits
in
with
the
legacy
system,
so
yeah.
A
As
thick
as
the
things
going
on
one
more.
D
Yeah
yeah
from
what
you're
doing
so,
I
guess
baseline
or
battle
line
or
battle.
D
So
so
really
excited
there
is
a
demonstration
of
battleship
using
baseline
sdk
specifically
provide
provides
sdk,
hey.
A
D
Version
when
we
crank
that
out
at
the
end
of
the
weekend.
D
Yeah,
this
is
a
game
that
is
just
two
parties,
so
essentially,
you've
got.
Each
player
has
a
hidden
state,
which
is
when
you're
playing
the
game
in
real
life
and
you've
got
the
board
game.
You've
got
five
different
ships
and
you
place
them
down
on
a
grip
and
there's
another
grid
that
the
other
player
has
and
there's
like.
Generally,
a
wall
separating
it
so
you're.
C
D
To
see
but
and
then
you.
D
A
D
D
B
Ten-Year-Old
daughter,
my
eight-year-old
daughter,
yeah,
remember
her
actually
my
eight-year-old
daughter
and
she
I
didn't.
I
was
pretty
sure
she
wasn't
either
putting
the
pegs
in
the
right
holes
when.
B
D
B
Okay,
because
you
know
eight-year-olds
cheaters
yeah,
they
can
debate.
A
B
I
had
to
keep
on
looking
over
the
top
of
the
wall
to
check
if
she,
if
she
was
playing
fair
or
correctly,
which
of
course
breaks
the
game,
because
I
could
see
where
all
the
battleships
were
yeah
so
yeah.
So
what
we
needed
was
a
way
now
you
can
solve
this.
If
you
just
have
a
cloud
like
a
sas
game,
a
battleship
or
a
computer
bug
game
because
then
the
computer
knows
and
it's
keeping
track
and
you've
got
basically
a
referee.
B
Most
problems
that
you
try
to
solve
with
baselining
are
trivial.
If
you
can
have
a
referee
and
the
problem
in
business
is
who
do
you
decide?
It
gets
to
be.
The
referee
gets
to
be
a
big
political
mess
right
yeah.
So
now
we
say
well
what,
if
I
can
be
sure
that
I
didn't
hit-
or
I
did
hit
but
not
know
anything
else,
about
your
board
right,
yeah
yeah,
so
you
guys
are
building
that.
A
A
C
B
D
C
I
mean
right
now
we
have
a
pretty
basic
wireframe
of
what
we
want
to
look
like
I'm
working
on
the
ui
right
now
from
there
jack
was
gonna
start.
D
Integrating
what
are
you
working
on
so
that
was
like
kind
of
the
first
part
that
clearly
needed
to
be
done
for
me,
there's
there's
some
tests
that
have
been
already
written
so
kind
of
my
approach
has
been
to
try
to
deconstruct
as
much
of
the
logic
as
I
can
to
try
to
understand.
What's
going
on
from
there,
you
know
just
fill
in.
D
I
think
that
there's
like
a
manual
turn-based
system
set.
C
C
D
Know
in
general,
we're
just
kind
of
looking
to
set
up
a
really
easy
ui
that
you
know
people
can
play
around
with
and
kind
of
understand.
What's
going
on
and.
C
D
They
can
go
back
and
look
at
the
code
and
really
understand
what's
going
on
there,
so
yeah,
so
mostly
just
at
this
point,
we're
still
kind
of
deconstructing
the
provide
stack
going
through
the
different
services.
You
know
my
den
engineering
privacy
we're
relying
on
all
of
those
to
actually
accomplish
that.
I
think.
B
There's
a
lot
of
developers
out
there
in
india
and
they're.
You
know
pretty
talented
guys
there
yeah.
I
know
a
number
that
are
already
trying
to
you
know,
make
the
livestack
work
and
it's
fresh
off
the
press.
Right
I
mean
it.
Just
came
to
the
drop
king
yesterday.
I
think
right
for
some
of
the
final
stuff
and
they're
working
like
crazy
dude.
B
They
also
tend
to
like
promise
some
big
things,
because
that's
what
you
do
when
you're
a
startup
and
they
work
really
hard
to
get
those
on
time.
So
it
wouldn't
be
unusual
for
there
to
be
things
that
are
not
quite
as
easy
as
the
easy
button
wants
to
be
yeah.
Do
you
have
any
tips
for
people
that
are
trying
to
use
the
baseline
or
the
provide
stack
in
this
case
and
a
hot
like?
Is
there
like
a
pothole
that
you
you,
you
could
tell
them
to
avoid
or
yeah.
D
Well,
I
think,
as
as
the
days
go
on,
you
know
there
are
more
and
more
docs
coming
out
on
the
provide
website.
So
three
days
ago
I
was
trying
to
research,
the
privacy
api,
and
there
was
nothing
out
there
and
then
another
two
days
later,
there's
there's
some
documentation,
so
I
think
part
of
it
is
just
going
to
be.
D
D
Through
it
and
just
guess,
a
lot
of
this,
a
lot
of
the
documentation
is
starting
to
be
provided.
I
guess.
B
Working
through
so
the
privacy
package
has
a
lot
of
zero
knowledge.
Stuff
right,
right,
yeah
and
from
sap
has
made
a
baseline
improvement
proposal
in
the
blip.
B
You
know
like
what
about
cases
where
you
don't
really
need
zero
knowledge
to
govern
a
particular
workflow.
You
just
need
consistency,
checks
we
need,
could
you
do
it
with
less
zero
knowledge
and
something
more
repeatable?
So
that's
one
thing
you
said
you
had
you
had
to
do
a
bit
of
learning
to
really
understand
the
zero
knowledge
stuff.
Do
you
have
any
tips
for
how
to
how
to
get
into
that?
If
you
don't
already
know
there.
D
Is
actually
this
one
it's
on
it's
on.
Battleship
is
your
knowledge
actually,
but
there's
there's
one
paper.
D
That
I
read
when
you
watch
videos
about.
D
Me
once
once,
I
kind
of
understood
like
you
didn't
want
to
show
the
entire
picture
of
that
picture,
but
you
did
want
to
prove
that,
like
you
could
point
exactly
to
where
waldo
was
without
revealing
any
of
the
other
people
that
you
know
are
not
walled
up,
you
know
just
to
provide
that
kind
of
individual
pointer
without
revealing
anything
else.
B
B
A
You
know
which
are
ripe
for
baselining,
even
even
for
a
for
a
bank
of
that
size,
and
these
are
these
are
absolutely
ready
use
cases.
You
know
there's
this
stuff
on
the
table
which
could
just
pick
up
and
do
you
know
provided
that
people
understand
and
adopt
the
baseline
protocol.
So.
C
B
A
Guy
and
he's
he
said,
you
know,
there's
a
lot
of
technical
jargon
on
the
website
and
I
said
yeah
we're
working
on
that
no
problem.
Let
us
deal
with
the
dev
community
first,
so
so
yeah
there
is
there's
all
this
conversation
going
on
and
I'm
also
having
a
lot
of
you
know
super
chats
here.
A
A
You
guys
are
doing
amazing.
Stuff
john
tell
us
a
little
more
about
tree
trunk.
If
you,
if
you
want
to
you,
know
ramp
up
the
people
yeah
now
that
now
that
it
is
out
in
the
open,
let's,
let's,
let's
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
youtube.
B
Right
on,
I,
I
apologize
for
the
background
noise,
we're
and
we
couldn't
get
into
the
venue
there's
a
really
great
podcasting
booth
in
the
venue
that
I
wanted
to
use,
but
the
venue's
not
actually
open
yet
so
we're
here
in
the
hotels
cafe.
I
hope
you
can
hear
us.
Okay,.
A
B
Yeah,
okay,
thank
you.
Macbook
pro
good
microphone
system,
yeah,
so
the
the
tree
crunk
demo.
Obviously
I
don't
know
if
you
have
the.
I
don't
know
if
you
have
the
the
link.
If
you
go
into
my
twitter,
j
wolpert
you'll
see
a
retweet
with
the
time
frame.
From
from
the
speech
on
on
the
nfts,
the
demo
actually
worked.
I
was
very
happy
about
that.
B
Nothing
broke
so
the
demo
gods
were
kind
to
me
and
I
was
proud
of
myself
for
actually
we
went
through
code
review
yesterday
and
I
I
found
a
bug
and,
and
I
correctly
identified
a
where
somebody
was
casting
from
one
thing
to
another
and
I
was
like
and
and
I
I
felt
very
technical
again
for
for
a
moment
as
I
as
I
was
useful
in
the
code
and
I
was
like
you
know,
the
developers
on
the
team
were
shocked
a
bit.
I'm
like.
D
B
It's
the
one
I
think.
Well,
it's
the
one
I
retweeted
with
the
time
index.
I
think
I
did
it
just
this
morning
with
time
is
I
think
it's
like
30
minutes
in
or
something
I
don't
know
it's
30
30
is
the
number
I
remember,
but
it's
on
the
it's
on
the
twitter.
It's
on
the
twitters
but
yeah
the
the.
B
That's
not
important,
I
mean
everybody
should
know
to
go
to
if
atl.com
and
the
live
stream
is
there
and
I
think
recordings
are
there.
So
you
can
go
back
to
your.
You
know
where,
where
where
we
were-
and
I
think
we're
all
in
a
big
long
line
on
that
live
stream,
so
yeah
that
was
it
yeah
I
mean
it
just
worked
and
you
know
there's
there's
we
showed
the
road
map
and,
oh
I
can.
I
can
bring
up
the
I'll
find
it.
B
I
can
bring
up
the
there's,
a
public
url
of
the
whole
speech
for
the
the
slide
deck.
So
if
anybody
wants
to
know
hang
on
for
a
second
I'll
I'll
find
my.
B
B
And
I'll
put
it
on,
I
actually
don't
have
access
to
the
the
chat
on
youtube
so
and
yeah
it's
getting
it's
gonna
get
loud
in
here
pretty
soon,
so
we
might
be,
might
have
to
tap
out
here
soon
pretty
soon.
You
have
any
last
questions
for
us.
A
Yeah
sure
so,
okay,
so
how
do
and
and
mark
has
been
quiet
today-
mark
hey
mark.
A
Cool
so
so
mark
tell
us
more
about
what
you've
been
doing.
What
you've
been
looking
forward
to
at
ethan,
atlanta
and
and
and
you
know
any
any
final
signing
of
words
for
people.
C
Space
right
now,
because
right
now,
you've
got
so
much
that
really
is
allowing
all
this
stuff
to
you
know,
to
bake
and
to
bubble
together,
but
having
everybody
in
the
same
room.
I
think
it's
just
you
know
incredible,
because
you
know
it
kind
of
creates
its
own
magic.
Where
you
know
everybody,
you
know
you're.
C
You
know,
having
you
know,
the
type
of
physical
separation
just
doesn't
give
you
so
I've.
Actually,
you
know
gotten
here
and
have
run
into
a
lot
of
old
friends
that
you
know
I've
known
you
know
pretty
much
ever
since
I
started
getting
involved
in
blockchain
way
back
in
the
early
early
early
time
stuff,
and
so
I
was
thinking
like
hey.
C
What
are
you
doing
now
so
we
do
have-
and
I
I
commonly
say
this
all
the
time
and
so
we
you
know,
we've
got
so
many
compelling
use
cases
that
can
be
done
for
baseline
and
stuff,
but
I
still
see
the
one
big
huge
elephant
in
the
room
that
you
know
seems
to
largely
be
passed
over,
which
is
healthcare
and.
C
Team
here
yeah
yes
and
yep
yep
they
are
and
stuff,
and
so
I
mean
good
to
see
that
on
there,
but
I
mean
hopefully
what
we
want
to
have
is
healthcare.
You
know
up
on
the
main
stage.
You
know,
basically,
because
you
know
right
now
within
healthcare.
You
know,
there's
so
many
different
interactions
between
all
the
different.
You
know,
stakeholders.
B
C
Hipaa
phi
coba
compliance,
I
mean,
and
that's
really
the
big
barrier
from
the
perception
at
least
that
you
know
doesn't
allow
the
industry
to.
You
know
really
innovate
in
ways
that
they
want
to
they're
going
to
build
real
value
because
we're
constrained
by
this
data
privacy
framework.
And
so
if
you.
C
You
don't
have
to
give
up
the
data
and
the
data
stays
within
its.
You
know
it
well
yeah
its
own
hipaa,
compliant
box
and
stuff.
You
know
through
zero
knowledge,
I
mean
it's
a
beautiful
thing
and
the
big
thing
is
is
so
much
of
the
you
know.
Healthcare,
workflows
and
processes
are
very
slow
and
friction
because
of
this
data
privacy.
There's
a
lot
of
you
know
it's
it's
almost
like
playing
battleship,
you
know,
are,
are
actually
playing
playing,
go
fish,
the
the
card
game.
Do
you
have
any?
C
60
60
60
to
90
days
to
you,
know,
to
process
a
claim,
and
you
know
everybody's,
that
there's
pain
on
all
sides.
I
mean
you've
got
you
know
the
health
insurers.
They
want
to
have
the
claim
paid,
settled
and
closed
all
the
providers.
They
want
to
get
paid,
you
know.
So
they
can.
You
know,
fund
their
operations
and
the
patients.
C
Of
the
the
obligations
and
so
so
much
more
in
that
and
you
know-
and
certainly
you
know
within
a
claim
situation,
certainly
but
also
you
know
that
directly
translates
within
clinical
trials
and
because
again
the
same
data
privacy
rules
apply
and
you.
C
You
know
this,
this
may
happen,
you
know
20
times
within
a
year
and
you
know
being
able
to
keep
all
of
data.
You
know
collated
and
curated
and
is
is
really
it's
really
huge.
So.
B
Again
and
if
you,
if
you
found
that
compelling
and
need
to
and
needed
somebody
that
really
knows
healthcare,
insurance
and
every
other
hard
business
out
there
get
on
the
baseline
protocol.org
website,
go
to
click
on
the
upper
right
slack
icon.
Our
cattle
is
right
there
in
there
and
you
can
talk
to
him
about
those
issues.
So,
if
you're
a
service
provider
by
the
way,
a
big
service
provider
in
india
yesterday
and
was
like
what
you
know,
what
deal
flow,
can
you
give
us
and
I
lifted
off
a
bunch
of
deal
flow?
B
I
said
I
already
gave
those
to
companies
that
are
sponsoring
so.
B
B
B
It's
getting
real
loud
in
here,
samrat,
sorry,
but
just
one
last
question:
where
can
we
find
you
guys
out
there
on
the
web?
Can
you
give
your
twitter
handles
or
whatever
that
if
somebody
wants
to
get
in
touch
with
you
guys.
A
Talented
developers,
you
can
find
me
on
linkedin.
I
actually
forget
my
profile
name.
You
can
look
that
up
right.
C
B
B
Besides
that,
but
actually
you
can.
C
B
A
B
D
Then
you
can
find
me
under
jp4g
across
the
internet,
mostly
so
jp
4g,
jp
4g.
Those
are
my
the
fours
in
a,
but
those
are
my
initials
so.