►
From YouTube: Baselie Show - India
Description
The official office hours of Baseline Protocol community in india.
We bring together experts from various industries and talk about data silos and the adoption considerations for Baseline Protocol.
Hosted By: Samrat Kishor
#baselineprotocol #baselineinindia #B2BBlockchain
A
Hey
everybody
hi.
I
welcome
you
all
to
the
baseline
show
in
india.
If
we
do
this
every
saturday
at
6,
00
pm
and
thanks
for
thanks
so
much
for
making
it
today,
I
we
were
late
by
a
couple
of
minutes.
We
had
a
technical
glitch
so.
A
I
see
there
are
nine
people
waiting
and
thanks
so
much
for
making
it
on
time.
So
today
happens
to
be.
You
know
today
promises
to
be
one
of
the
most
bombastic
episodes
that
I've
had
on
baseline,
show.
India,
kyle
thomas
is
here
and
he
will
be
walking
us
through.
You
know
how
do
we
get
started?
Baselining
because
I
did
you
know,
we've
been
doing
baseline
shows
since
july
for
the
indian
community
as
well.
People
have
hopped
on
to
the
idea
of
you
know.
A
Why
do
they
need
baseline
and
what
really
what's
the
value
it
brings
for
various
industries?
We've
had
many
speakers,
we've
done,
you
know.
Various
talks
me
and
mark
also
have
in
the
past
spoken
about
insurance,
healthcare
and
other
other
industries.
You
know
various
use
cases
and
then,
over
a
period
of
time
we
we
reached
a
stage
where
we
started
talking
about
how
do
people
get
started?
A
How
do
people
hop
on
the
baseline
bus,
so
this
episode
happens
to
be
an
anchor
for
to
answer
those
questions
and,
of
course,
kyle
has
some
really
interesting
releases
to
make
today.
Thank
you
so
much
kyle.
I
feel
privileged
that
you
bring
those
updates
for
the
indian
community,
so
yeah
and
I
and
I
do
call
kyle
the
og,
the
og
of
baseline,
the
original
gangsta.
A
Thank
you
so
much
kyle
once
again
for
waking
up
and
and
this
morning
and
walking
us
through
through
all
this
so
yeah
take
it
away.
Let
the
bass
lining
begin.
C
Okay,
so
yeah
thanks
for
thanks
for
having
me,
I'm
rod
appreciate
it.
Let
me
let
me
share
my
screen
here.
A
A
D
I
made
so
I
made
some
slides
for
today.
I'm
kyle,
I'm
just
a
humble
blockchain
entrepreneur
trying
to
change
the
world
provide.
Is
this
what
I
would
now
call
this
enterprise
blockchain
visionary
we've
survived
a
couple
of
bear
attacks
and
we
we've
architected
the
baseline
protocol
and
base
ledger.
D
Really,
if
you
understand,
provide
skill,
but
we're
working
on
that
and
really
demand,
you
know,
is
really
starting
to
pick
up
and
grow,
which
is
really
exciting.
To
see
you
know
provide
is
the
future
of
enterprise
middleware
we're
working
with
some
really
big
big
organizations
as
a
result
of
our
investment
in
the
baseline
community.
D
Place
just
some
very
awesome,
awesome
organizations
that
we're
working
with
so
code
don't
lie
right,
so
the
provide
stack
if
you're
not
familiar
is
a
collection
of
microservices
that
do
different
things.
You
have
service
for
identity,
it's
called
ident.
You
have
this
sort
of
swiss
army
knife
for
web3
called
in
chain.
D
You
have
a
vault
for
for
key
management
and
a
privacy
service,
essentially
for
abstracting
away
a
lot
of
the
complexities
around
zkp's
and
then.
D
Some
other
open
source
tool,
other
open
source
projects
that
sort
of
underpin
those
you
have
nats,
postgraph
and
redis,
and
then
you
know
a
little
vm
that
also
get
your
lobster.
D
It's
a
sort
of
walk
through.
You
know
that
that
is
code
bases.
D
A
D
C
D
These
these
repos
are
at
github.com
provide
platform,
but
what
you
can
see
is
and
I'll
get
to
this
in
just
a
second.
You
have
insane
vault
or
I'm
sorry,
I
didn't
in
chain
vaults
privacy,
and
then
you
have
another
container
called
baseline.
D
That
is
still
closed,
but
we
are
going
to
be
opening
it
up
seemingly
any
day
this
was.
This
was
one
of
the
repos
that
we
held
back
from
the
open
source
community
just
yet
just
because
we've
been
working
on
getting
it
up
to
speed
with
the
standard
that
we
collaborated
with
with
andreas
freud
and
others
from
the
community
on.
So
you
have
those
those
sort
of
five
core
containers
that
represent.
D
You
know
the
the
baseline
stack
for
each
party
and
then
there's
some
other
other
good
repos
that
you
should
look
at
as
well,
just
very
quickly
to
mention
the
provide
go,
provide,
there's
a
provide
cli,
there's,
even
a
provide
rust
client.
Now
that
we've
been
working
on,
which
is
a
which
is
just
a
you
know,
an.
D
C
I've
got
there's
a
shout.
D
C
E
A
D
Okay-
okay,
so
maybe
around
the
time
when
I
was
showing
like
provide
go
so.
D
These
five
core
repos
that
I
mentioned,
including
the
baseline
repo
and
then
you
have
some
other
like
api
clients
such
as
a
going
client
there's
a
javascript
client.
There's
our
cli
there's
even
a
rough
client.
That's
that's!
You
know
a
full
rust
api
client
for
that
implements.
You
know
the
apis
all
of
the
apis
for
these
different
services,
including
baseline.
So
you
have
you
know:
you'll,
have
you
have
a
bunch
of
different
clients
or
you
know
different
api
clients?
D
Those
are
very
useful
and
I
also
shouted
gave
a
shout
out
to
dishwasher
this.
Is
the
shuttle
excel
repo?
It's
an
awesome
example
of
using
the
baseline
protocol
with
microsoft
excel.
D
So,
if
you
look
in
the
baseline
repo,
which
is
at
eea
oasis,
slash
baseline,
you
will
see
and
we're
among
the
bri
one
privacy
branch,
but
it
it
and
we
need
to
merge
this
branch
frankly.
But
if
you
look
under
the
baseball,
so
if
you
look
under
that
repo
and
you
go
to
examples-
bri
one
base
example:
you'll
see
sort
of
the
you
know
this
implementation,
the
the
bri-1
reference
implementation.
D
That
really
illustrates
how
two
parties
alice
and
bob
use
the
provide
stack
that
I
just
that
I
just
shared,
plus
the
baseline
container,
to
go
about.
You
know
inviting
one
another
like
bob,
creates
a
work
group
and
invites
alice,
and
then
they
they.
You
know
they
agree
upon
a
circuit
and
begin
baselining,
essentially,
and
so
here's
how
here,
let
me
show
you
how
that
works.
D
So
essentially
it's
kind
of
interesting
because
it's
sort
of
like
like
a
medieval
fight.
This
is
this
is
what
this
vri
reference
implementation
sort
of
represents.
D
D
I
say
that
because
I
believe
it's
26
containers
that
spin
up
13
per
participant
when
you
run
this
reference
implementation,
because
it's
simulating
both
alice
and
bob
running
the
full
provide
stack
each
so
like
they're,
each
running
their
own
copy,
their
own
full
copies
of
all
of
the
containers,
plus
the
baseline
container,
the
plus
the
baseline
stack
for
each
party,
and
so
that's
kind
of
a
lot
of
containers.
A
D
Like
once,
you're
once
you're
in
that
reef
step
in
that
directory
you're
in
safe
line,
examples
bri
one
basic
example:
if
you're
on
npm
install
you
you'll
install
the
package
and
then,
if
you
run
mpm
test,
it's
sort
of
like
charge
is
being
cut,
is
being
called
and
then
you
can
run
make
logs
simultaneously
and
what
you'll
see
is
the
stack
stand
up
for
both
parties
and
there's
quite
a
bit
of
stuff
that
happens
here
initially,
so
you
can
sort
of
see
how
how
the
provided
stack
works,
there's
a
pretty
decent
amount
of
logging,
the
ident
and
the
vault
service
they
defend
on
one
another
asynchronously.
D
So
there's
like
some
self-healing
that
happens
initially
and
once
that
sort
of
like
solves
itself,
you
know
once
they're
both
available
and
ready.
The
tests
start
and
you'll
see
like
the
initial
work.
With
the
points
like
the
work
group
contract
gets
deployed,
and
you
know
it's
off
sort
of
off
to
the
races.
Here
we
go
so
it's
sort
of
getting
into
this
test.
Suite
now.
A
So
kyle
couple
of
yeah.
A
Of
people
in
my
team,
they
they
reported
that
their
systems
were
pretty
jammed
up
when
they
tried
that
so
do
you
do
you
recommend
doing
it
on
the
cloud
that
I'm
doing
on
local
laptops,
yeah.
D
I
mean
I
would
rather
I'm
doing
it
on
my
local
laptop
right
now.
You
know,
I
would
say
your
mileage
could
vary
depending
on
your
machine.
D
Is
like
it
does,
you
know
we
do
shell
out,
for
example
like
when
you
run
like
we're
running
a
few
few
containers
here,
and
so
I
put
you,
can
you
know
you
can
if
you,
if
you
don't
have
enough
resources,
you
can
get
a
little
jammed
up.
No
doubt.
A
D
That,
I
would
say,
don't
be
discouraged
by
that.
I
think
we're
looking
into
having
a
more
lightweight
version
of
you
know
this
process
to
to
run
for
folks.
You
know,
but
it
does
show
the
value
of
this,
isn't
something
that
you
can
take
and
like
use
to
build
like
this
isn't
like
an
app
that
you
will
just
take
and
run
it's
that
this
is
a
simulation
of
the
baseline
protocol
between
two
parties
in
like
yeah.
B
D
So
you
know
it's
really
it's
useful,
but
yeah
it
is
there.
There
is,
you
know
some
inconsistencies
from
time
to
time.
You
see
like
all
of
this
stuff,
that's
happening
and
you
see
like.
Oh
here's,
an
invite
that
here's,
a
verifiable
credential
that
was
sent
between
you
know
between
the
parties
and
then
that
you
know
alex,
gets
the
credential
and
accepts
the
invite
and
the
protocol
sort
of
continues.
D
So
it's
useful
and
you
could
run
it
on
the
cloud,
but
you
know
I
think
running
it
locally
is
important
and
so
yeah.
It's
certainly
would
love
to
hear
if
folks
have
issues
and
what
specs
you're
running
what
lap
you
know,
what
with
what
your
laptop
looks
like
that
you
ran
it
on,
etc,
so
that
you
can
yeah.
So
you
can,
you
know
we
can
figure
it
out
for
you
and
you
can
participate
really.
You
know
it's
just
a
matter
of
seeing
how
all
this
fits
together.
B
D
You
know
it's
really
important
to
see,
and
so
that's
how
you
run
see
that
that's
how
it
looks
when
you
play
it
run
successfully.
There's
abc
passing
tests
and
you
sort
of
see
at
this
point
all
right
now
you
could
create
a
work.
You
could
actually
create
a
workflow
and
plug
that
into
this
process
and
you're
actually
sort
of
off
to
the
races
building
with
baseline.
At
that
point,
so
bri.
D
And
I
would
recommend
folks
to
try
to
run
it
and
fight
through
any
any
issues,
they're.
Having
make
sure
you
have
like
at
least
16
gigs
of
ram.
That's
definitely
definitely
recommended.
C
A
D
Can
the
containers
aren't
serverless,
I
mean
there's
other
docker
containers.
I
suppose
you
could
deploy
them
in
in
a
serverless
way,
but
I
mean,
I
think
you
know
kubernetes
is
probably
kubernetes
or
just
like
the
docker
proposed
would
be
the
way
to
go
at
this
point,
but
you
certainly
I
I
I
don't
think
there
would
necessarily
be
a
limitation
if,
depending
on
what
someone
had
in
mind
could
be
possible.
D
Yeah
so
so
I
wanted.
B
D
About
a
couple
of
things
you
know
I've
already
mentioned,
there's
the
you
know,
there's
rust,
open
source
client.
That's
that
thing
is
pretty
interesting.
Let's
take
a
look
at
that
for
a
second.
D
Let's
see
how
to
run
it,
there's
there's
some
some
command.
It's
brand
new
there's
some
command.
B
D
Some
command
here
we
go
it's
this
right
here,
cargo
net
get
fetch
or
cli
was
needed,
so
so
I
just
want
to
show.
C
D
Because
it's
interesting,
let's
make
sure
that
the
stack,
I
think
the
stack
should
have
stopped
see
like
once
the
bri
one
exits
you
actually,
so
you
don't
have
anything
running
anymore,
so
you're,
good.
The
rust
client
is
very
similar
to.
D
I
want
to
show
this
because
you'll
see
that
the
rough
test
suite
that
we
have
is
very
similar
to
the
bri
one
suite
in
that
it
stands
up
some
containers
and
runs
some
tests,
and
I
don't
believe
this
actually
is
passing
fully
yet
I
mean
we
literally,
we
literally
just
you
know
it's
still
like
not
fully
it's
not
to
a
release.
Yet
I
just
wanted
to
show
it
because
it's
it's
interesting
context
to
bri
one,
because
we
have
these
other.
D
You
know
client,
eight
client
apis
that
are
where
we're
developing
kind
of
a
robust
test
suites
around
our
stacks,
and
you
see,
there's
66
tests
that
are
going
to
run
and
there's
a
handful
of
containers
that
are
going
to
run
it's
not
as
many,
but
it's
going
to
run
the
baseline
stack
as
well,
and
so
that's
you
know
it's
it's
pretty
interesting,
stuff
and
you'll
see,
I
think,
there's.
I
think
the
tests
might
fail
if
you
run
all
66
of
them
at
once.
I
think
there's
two.
D
I
think,
I'm
not
sure
if
there's
a
race
condition
or
something
but
we'll
see,
I
think
there's
these
may
fail,
but
it's
that's
part
of
the
fun
right.
You
see
some
failing
tasks,
you
you,
you
fix
them.
I
think
if
you
run
them
independently,
they
they
work.
We'll
see
what
happens
here.
D
C
D
Of
the
organization
there
that
that,
where
we
started
the
stack
and
you'll
see
there,
it
is
so
it's
just
one
stack.
It's
not
it's.
Just
one
baseline
stack
for
one
participant
industry
in
this
case,
not
both
and
you
see
here,
there's
there's
a.
D
Of
tests
that
the
our
standard,
I
think
it
may
simply
be
because
there's
a
there's
a
base,
the
baseline
container
hasn't
been
deployed
like
the
latest
one
that
we've
been
wrong.
A
D
I
I
your
yours
sounds
weird
really
odd
too,
when
that
happens,
let
me
let
me
let
me
do
a
a.
C
Quick
speed
test
here
I
mean
yeah.
C
D
I'm
getting
like
700
down
and
800
up
should
be
fine.
Let
me
double
check
the.
B
A
C
Does
it
sound
okay,
we'll
keep
going
cool.
D
Yeah,
you
sound
a
little
a
little
weird
around
the
time
that
you
say
that
too,
okay,
so
yeah.
So
I
think
the
you
know
the
rust.
The
rust
plant
is
pretty
illustrative
as
well.
You
know
we're
still
working
on
that
a
bit
but
yeah,
it's
pretty
cool.
You
see
that
all
the
containers
are
stopped
and
you
also
see
like
when
bri
one
stops
like
from
before
you'll
see
that
it
gracefully
shuts
down
all
the
services
quite
nicely.
D
You
see
all
those
connections
that
are
being
set
down
for
alice
and
then
bob.
So
it's
it's
basically
shuts
down.
So
it
does.
It
does
show
like
a
nice
life
cycle
that
provides
back
and
I
again
would
recommend
you
know
trying
to
work
through
any
issues.
You
have
locally.
B
D
Thing
I
wanted
to
talk
through
so
vault.
Are
we
good.
C
D
So
one
one
thing
that
I
wanted
to
touch
on
was
our
vault
service.
So
one
thing
that
someone
from
the
community
brought
up
you
know
around
around
base.
B
C
D
Want
to
expand
on
that
a
little
bit
more
today,
because
I
think
it's
it's
pretty
important
to
talk
about,
and
that's
you
know.
How
do
we
solve
for
this
notion
where,
if
someone,
for
example,
kona
were
to
for
let's
say
they
decide
to,
I
don't
know,
stake
some
uvt
off
and
run
a
basement.
You
know
validator
does
well
what
what
happens.
If
you
know
sophisticated
criminals
find
out
who
at
kona
is
behind
that
and
decide
to
do
something?
D
Well,
the
vault
saw
we
we're
working
on
on
something
a
feature
that
takes
vault
to
the
next
level,
because
it's
actually
built
for
solving
for
this
very
problem,
and
so
vault
can
be
used
to
autonomously.
It's
really
as
an
autonomous,
c-wap
counter-runs
attack
protocol
for
enterprise.
Using
our
you
know,
our
service,
vault
and
ngs
our
partners
media,
which
is
a
commercial
offering
from
naps
that
partnership.
We
can
actually
autonomously
separate
seeds
across
data
centers,
for
example.
D
Let's
say
you
know
azure
and
aws
and
use
it
using
the
hsms
and
in
those
different
data
centers
we
can
basically
keep
the
seeds
separate
and
it
I
guess
it
could
sort
of
look.
You
know
it
would
sort
of
look
like
a
multi-sig
at
that
point,
but
you
know
to
have
to
do
that
in
in
a
ux.
That's
just
you
know
capable
for,
inter
you
know,
familiar
and
capable
of
for
enterprise
users
is
a
is
an
absolute
requirement
for
anyone
being
able
to
adopt
this
technology.
D
Otherwise
it's
sort
of
a
non-starter
when
you,
when
it
comes
to
safety
of
folks
that
are
that
are
adopting
the
technology,
which
is
kind
of
an
overlooked
thing,
but
I
think
you
know
we're
really
thinking
of
all
this
stuff
and
especially
it's
really
exciting.
Look
forward
to
sharing
more
about
about
how
balls
can
be
used
to
to
keep
to
keep
folks
safe.
You
know
in
crypto,
even
you
know
when
it
comes
to
enterprise
or
especially
based
ledger,
which
is
the
future
of
enterprise.
D
R2
base
ledger
is
sort
of
like
the
provide
open
source
stack.
You
put
that
you
know
you
have
all.
You
know
that
those
containers
that
I
just
showed
you
you
sort
of
have
that
logical,
stack
that
you,
you
run
the
that's
the
baseline
protocol,
you're
running
the
baseline
protocol
there
and
we're
bringing
you
know
the
saps,
the
d365s,
the
sales
forces
of
the
world
excel
and
we're
doing
that
by
way
of
our
partners.
You
know
circle,
microsoft,
dash
d5
again,
you
know,
mr
a
lot
of
fun
working
with
her
on
on.
D
You
know
this
excel
stuff
and
there's
really
good
opportunities
splunk
another
one
that
we're
working
closely
with
and
then
so
so
face
ledger
is,
like
I
said,
is
the
provide
open
source
stack
and
then
it's
ubc,
it's
the
universal
business
token,
it's
obviously
the
the
token
the
erc20
issued
by
unibrite
and
they're.
D
You
know
they're
working
currently
with
observant
regulator,
on
compliance
to
make
sure
that
when
we
launch
the
mainnet,
you
know
aboveboard
they're,
also
working
on
the
liquid
test
net,
which
is
a
test
net
that
is
driving
some
of
the
dials
around
the
like
minimum
ubt
needed
to
stay.
You
know
to
run
a
validator,
the
number
of
max
number
of
validators
and
other
parameters.
D
Other
network
parameters
around
around
around
that
and
then
we
sort
of
we
hit
the
trifecta
with
you
know,
with
consensus
being
a
part
of
this
effort
behind
base
ledger
and
so
providing
a
bright
consensus
really
really
makes
a
strong
foundation
for
base
ledger.
You
know,
and
ubq
is
all
you
know
the
gas.
You
know
vine
baseline
protocol
and
the
provided
stack
at
that
point.
So
that's
really
cool.
So
what
is
how?
What
is
the
base
ledger
stack
and
how
does
it
you
know?
D
What
is
it
really
and
it's?
It's
really
the
provide
stack
plus
there's
there's
a
baseline
container,
which
is
actually
a
picture
here,
but
it
should
be
so
it's
I
did.
Privacy
vault
and
chain
baseline,
that's
postgres,
redis
and
then,
instead
of
cosmos,
so
cosmos
was
the
chosen
technology.
Really
it's
tendermint,
though
that
is
the
chosen
technology
for
bass
pleasure.
You
know,
cosmos
is
a
little
heavy.
D
If
you
look
at
the
the
repo,
the
baseline
core
repo
you'll
see
that
it's
actually
just
a
tinderman
app,
and
we
can
do
this
like
some
more,
don't
lie.
I
think
that
we
can.
D
We
can
benefit
from
here
if,
if
only
john
was
here,
he
would
say
like
one
of
those
all
right,
it's
early,
so
bass.
Budget
core
is
is,
is
the
repo.
You
should
definitely
check
that
out.
Go
smash
that,
like
button
turn
that
subscribe
forward.
D
So
so
really-
and
this
sort
of
follows
this-
the
structure
of
this
repos
and
contributing
much
like
the
rest
of
the
provide
stack,
it
structured
very
similarly
to
the
provided
factory
post
and
you
have
a
couple
of
commands
top
level
node
command,
that
you
know
sort
of
the
entry
point
and
then
you've
got
this.
D
This
folder
called
protocol-
and
you
got
this
this
file
called
baseline.gov,
and
that
thing
is
the
application
blockchain
interface,
which
is
the
tindermet
interface
that
that
you
use
to
interact
and
essentially
control
with
consensus
mechanism
around
blocks
it's
beginning
and
ending
and
validators.
You
know
basically
staking
so
like,
for
example,
when
ubt
is
staked
either
the
resolve.
You
know,
after
the
governance
contract,
essentially
on
mainnet
allows
a
validator
into
the
network.
Essentially,
this
is
the
mechanism
that
actually,
you
know,
makes
that
validator.
D
Actually
it
applies
the
validator
their
their
their
voting
power
on
the
network.
So
this
is
a
great
repo
to
check
out
as
well
and
also
to
join
the
discord.
I
would
say:
join
our
discord
for
for
checking
out.
You
know
for
for
collaborating
around
the
base,
ledger
core.
You
can
also
the
test.
D
That's
running
we
just
re,
we
just
restarted
the
read
like
region,
it's
just
the
the
peach
tree
test
that
so
the
I
mentioned
lakewood
as
the
test
net,
that's
sort
of
like
the
the
a
lab
for
tuning
knobs
turning
knobs
and
like
figuring
out
the
right
network
parameters.
Then
the
peachtree
testnet
is
the
production
grid
network
that
we're
looking.
D
You
know
to
actually
deploy,
as
in
the
main
net
and
using
those
using
the
learnings
and
like,
for
example,
the
those
those
network
parameters
that
that
are
settled
on
by
you
know
on
on
lakewood,
so
yeah
so
check
check
this.
This
out.
We
need
a
pro
a
little
bit
better,
more
friendly
url
here.
The
block
explorer
is
a
little
is
a
little
ugly
but
we'll
actually
we'll
work
on
that.
So
it's
more
permanent
and
a
little
more
user
friendly
there.
C
D
And
then
there's
this
smart
contracts,
repo
that
has
mistaken
contract.
That's
that's
pretty
interesting,
and
so
all
right,
oh
and
one
more
thing,
there's
a
digital
ocean
image
that
we've
created
and
it's
pending
listing
in
the
in
the
marketplace.
So
this
should
be.
I
think
it
says
seven
days
at
the
most,
I
think,
probably
within
three
to
five
days,
we'll
probably
have
a
link
for
folks,
so
you
can
just
turn
key
run
a
node,
a
full
or
validator
node
on
the
pc
test
nut.
D
D
I
think
it's
interesting
for
base
ledger
network
validators
that
could
expand
the
ability
for
users
to
secure
the
network
using
assets
beyond
ubt
now
ubt
will
always
be
the
base
asset
on
base
ledger
and
always
be
required
as
gas
for
transactions,
but
think
about
the
greater
ecosystem
and
being
able
to
stake
other
assets
I'll
just
leave
it
there.
I
won't
mention
any
assets
by
name
there's
some
interesting
opportunities
that
we've
been
exploring
with
various
people
and
hopefully
we'll
have
some
interesting
announcements
soon.
D
Let's
just
say
for
now
you
what,
if
you
could
stick
each
to
help
secure
base
ledger
by
way
of
proxy?
That
is
something
that
we're
really
excited
about,
and
working
on,
baseball
is
going
to
really
enable
bass
ledger
and
the
provide
stack
together
are
going
to
enable
enterprise
d5,
because
space
ledger
is
going
to
really
add
security
for
settling
vktk
rollups
at
enterprise
scale,
which
is
really
what's
needed
for
these.
This
kind
of
volume
that
we're
looking
at
in
terms
of
you
know
really
really
like
affecting
transformational.
D
You
know
change
on
the
global
supply
chain,
so
it's
not
nothing,
nothing,
nothing
to
nothing
too
crazy
here,
just
just
global
finance,
just
global
supply
chain
transformation,
no
big
deal
and
next
step.
Obviously
in
q1
we'll
provide
it
right,
we'll
initialize
the
governance
and
launch
the
main
net
for
base
ledger
so
really
really
humbling
to
be
a
part
of
that
journey
with
martin
stephan
and
the
team.
D
At
this
team,
like
look
at
john
look
at
this
fake,
he
looks
so
happy
here.
Look
at
jack
like
look,
we
got
really.
We
got
connected
with
with
some
awesome
folks
here
in
the
baseline
community,
used
to
join
this
community
and
you
know
samurai.
I
really
appreciate
you
know
the
time
to
be
here
today.
Super
super
cool
and
if
you
have
an
awesome
idea
to
baseline
reach
out
to
sam
rock,
we
are
connected.
You
know,
okay,
so
now
we
can
just
chat.
A
C
A
D
A
A
Yeah
and
extremely
important
join
our
community.
So
if
you
visit
baseline
hyphen
protocol
dot,
org
you're
going
to
get
a
get
involved
session,
a
get
involved
section
just
go
to
the
get
involved,
section
and
you'll
get
links
to
all
our
official
channels.
You'll
get
youtube,
you'll
get
slack
and
slack
is
where
all
of
us
are
available
and
active
and
responding
to
a
lot
of
questions
awesome
so
kyle.
While
we
have
you
here
on
the
india
show.
A
A
D
Yeah
yeah
absolutely
so
so
kona's
real
a
really
unique
case
and
we're
really
fortunate
to
be
working
with
coda.
We've
been
working
with
kona
now
for
like
14
months.
I
think
officially
on
this
on
this
effort-
and
you
know
these.
These
are
these
are
digital
transformation
projects.
You
know
they're,
they're
and
they're,
not
for
the
faint
of
heart.
You
know
they're,
really.
This
is
brand
new
tech,
but
to
have
some
an
organization
like
kona
come
out
and
you
know
really
really
get
behind.
D
This
effort
is
really
it's
incredible,
and
so
what
we've
been
able
to
do
over
the
span
of
those
14
months
is
really
built,
build
something
that
that
is
going
to
allow
them
to
really
adopt
and
create
a
more
open
ecosystem
for
all
their.
You
know
all
the
participants
in
their
in
their
raw
materials
supply
chain,
so
bottlers
and
those
in
their
raw
materials
suppliers
are
in
that
ecosystem
and
you
have
kona
as
the
operator
of
that
ecosystem,
really
looking
to
not
just
create
not
just
create
efficiencies.
D
That's
the
obvious
first
case
is
to
create
these
efficiencies,
but
there's
also
this
these
new
revenue
opportunities.
You
know
that
will
emerge
as
well,
and
so
in
terms
of
the
progress
you
know,
we've
got,
we've
got
the
sap
with
our
partner
through
our
partnership
with
with
the
university
circle.
You
know
we
helped
design
con
uvc
connector,
which
is
now
certified
in
the
sap
market,
and
you
know
that
that
was
part
of
the
the
lens
pin
that
we
needed
in
order
to
actually
go
to
production.
With
this.
C
D
We're
you
know
we're
looking
at
taking
this
to
production
and
I
think
we'll
see
some
real
real
real
money
transactions
this
year.
Actually
kona
and
that's
our
that's
our
goal.
A
D
Real
money,
real
real
and
I
say
real
money
and
what
I
mean
by
that
is
not
necessarily
the
finance,
like
the
actual
turned
into
nd5,
like
d5
financing,
piece
of
that.
I
think
that's
first
quarter,
perhaps
but
yeah
actually
the
documents
behind
that,
though
representing
real
money
and
actually
could
be
financed
in
b5.
So.
C
D
I
think
that
that'll
happen
this
year
and
also
you
know,
working
with
unibride
into
circle.
Very
closely
has
been
you
know,
a
real
privilege.
It's
a
great
team
and
yeah
we're
gonna
deliver
for
kona
they're,
pushing
they're,
pushing
to
move
this
into
production
now
yeah.
It's
exciting.
A
C
A
And
and.
B
A
A
Is
because
there
are
there's
a
lot
of
exploration
going
on
sorry,
I
interrupted
you,
but
just
to
set
up
a
little
more
context.
So
there
is
a
lot
of
exploration
going
on
which
I'm
party
to
in
india
as
well,
where
people
now
want
to
land
on
use
cases
which
can
really
generate
some
revenue.
You
know
two
years
back,
it
used
to
be
all
about.
You
know,
oh
we'll
save
costs
and
we'll
you
know
we'll
bring
everybody
on
the
same
page,
but
who
wants
that
kind
of
transparency?
You
know
it's
like
okay.
A
A
Of
stuff
like
that,
but
now
when
you
know
we
become
part
of
explorations,
people
want
to
know
about
new
revenue
models.
So
so
you
know
with
that
context,
you
want
to
highlight
some
industries
which
which
are
ripe
and
ready
for
for
adoption
of.
D
I
think
I
think
cyber
security
is
definitely
an
a
really
awesome
opportunity
and
with
stock
compliance
so
yeah.
I
know
you
have
some
some
thoughts
there,
perhaps
yeah.
D
I
think
that's
a
really
a
really
good
one
that
we're
looking
at,
and
that's
really
more
of,
I
think,
on
the
new,
like
on
a
new
sort
of
revenue
model
side
versus
you
know,
just
like
some
digital
digital
transformation
projects,
which
I
mean
you
look
at
the
global
supply
chain
right
now,
it's
kind
of
a
disaster,
and
so
it
what
better
time
than
to
than
now
than
to
fix
that
some
of
those
some
of
that
disaster,
some
of
that
disaster,
so
that
you
know
I
do
think
you
know,
I
do
think
the
supply
chain
projects
are
going
to
be
front
and
center,
but
I
do
also
believe
that
you
know
there
are
new
opportunities
around
especially
around
something
like
stock
compliance.
F
Yeah
absolutely
samurai,
you
were
mentioning
like
what
are
common
use
cases
and
kyle
was
mentioning
the
kona
use
case
and
a
part
of
that
is
the
procure
to
pay
process.
That's
purchase
order,
sales
order,
shipment
notification,
goods
receipt
invoice
amidst
that
whole
process
right
there,
even
just
you,
you
extrapolate
that
a
little
bit
just
a
purchase
order
or
sales
order
when
you're
asking
about
use
cases
and
how
this
can
start
being
applied.
F
When
you
look
at
the
platforms
and
the
systems
of
record
that
we
have
already
been
effectively
able
to
baseline
and
it
it's
it's
quite
understandable
how
you
could
apply
a
purchase
order
or
like
a
sales
order
in
a
ver,
a
number
of
these
various
different
platforms,
whether
that
be
sap,
whether
that
be
dynamics
365,
whether
that
be
servicenow,
these
are
use
cases
that
are
permeating
very
quickly
yeah
splunk,
whatever
that
might
be
that's.
These
are
the
use
cases
that
we're
seeing
most
commonly
be
brought
up.
F
We
just
had
a
conversation
from
a
dynamics
365
perspective.
You
know
when
you
think
about
that,
you
think
of
anything
or
really
across
the
dynamics,
365
platform
and
any
crm
related
platform
or
process.
Excuse
me
so
yeah.
So
I
think
these
are
the
ones
which
may
be
very
common
not
to
jump
around
too
much.
F
But
you
know
we've
mentioned
service
now,
one
of
which
that
we've
talked
quite
extensively
about
that
is
representative
of
servicenow,
but
other
platforms
as
well
are
service
level
agreements
and
what
we're
quickly
build,
embarking
on
from
a
service
level
agreement
perspective
and
to
be
able
to
like
remediate
quickly
change
management
requests,
service
management
requests.
F
That's
very
that's.
Certainly
ever
expanding
those
use
cases
there,
yeah
we've
actually
been
seeing
just
a
number
of
interesting
new
use
cases
pop
up.
We
had
one
recently
coming
from
fraud
analytics
department
in
a
huge
bank
interested
in
how
that
they
could
start
a
check
attacking
this
from
a
fraud
detection
perspective
and
the
navigate
detection
perspective
within
their
organization.
So
that's
a
really
new
interesting
use
case.
It
just
came
up
in
the
last
couple
weeks
we're
seeing
this
kind
of
spread
in
a
number
of
different
ways.
D
F
I
think,
as
we
move
forward,
I
think
like
what
there's
a
ripe
opportunity
to
make
it
very
seamless
to
help
help
kind
of
shepherd
new
users
and
developers
around
use
cases
that
we
can
very
seamlessly
deploy,
and
that's
something
that
you
know.
As
kyle
mentioned,
we've
been
embarking
on
a
journey
to
make
that
that
that
onboarding
experience
very,
very
seamless,
both
developers
and
business
users,
and
so,
as
part
of
the
question
you
said
like
what
are
the
most
common
use
cases.
F
That
is
something
that
we're
hyper
focused
on
right
now,
to
make
sure
that
on
recording
experience
is
very
easy
for
these
most
common
use
cases
onboarding
to
these
kind
of
the
next
fringe
ones
that
were
that
are
surfacing
and
becoming
more
common
as
well.
Exciting.
D
And
so
exciting
is
going
to
really
make
that
process
of
joining.
You
know
and
integrating
a
lot
easier
and
to
jack's
point,
there's
some
additional,
like
opportunities,
even
around
the
sap
ecosystem,
to
make
this
a
lot
easier
in
terms
of
the
integration
and
the
burden
that
it
places
on
it
in
terms
of
like.
Oh,
we
have
to
open
ports
and
stuff
now,
and
maybe
we
don't
right,
maybe
there's
new
newfangled
things
that
might
come
about
that
make
it.
So
you
don't
have
to
do
that
anymore
and
you
can.
D
On
the
front
end
of
shuttle
and
configure
it
right
there
and
it
just
works,
so
that's
sort
of
the
ux
that
we're
really
driving
towards
which
is
a
brave
new
world.
If
you
think
about
it,
but
really
cool
opportunities
to
accelerate
baselining
and
the
experience
for
users
adopting
the
technology.
A
D
Well,
it
can
all
be
used
independently
for
other
uses.
Yeah,
absolutely
you
know
it's
that's
actually.
Some
a
lot
of
demand
that
we
are
seeing
is
is
starts
at
fault
for
our
vault
service,
some
really
large
organizations
that
are,
you
know,
there's
a
lot
of
demand
coming
out
of
some.
You
know
several
large
organizations,
just
in
particular
for
vault,
which
is
it
makes
sense
for
that
to
be
a
jump
off
point
because
it's
sort
of
the
first
thing
you
need
in
order
to
start
base
fighting.
D
You
need
a
vault
instance,
and
so
yes
and
again
vault
is
you
know
this
counter-rinse
attack
ready
solution,
and
so
I
think.
D
Of
sense
to
do
some
education,
education
in
the
market
around
that
technology
and
that
and
that
need
there's
a
real
need
for
this
technology
to
exist
and
in
this
way,
so
that
folks
can
executives
can
feel
comfortable
and
their
families
can
feel
safe
using
the
technology
and
adopting
the
technology
with
assets
on
a
public
blockchain,
even
though,
like
all
there's
other
there's
other
mitigation
around
like
the
the
actual
privacy
of
on-chain
privacy,
for
example,
provide
payments
sort
of
shields.
D
You
shields
the
the
transactions
and,
like
you,
sending
the
transactions,
but
then
it
provides
provide
payment
to
sending
them.
So
then,
you
then
you're
coming
at
me
right
and
if
somebody
somebody
is
a
threat
to
joke
eventually,
and
so
in
order
to
enable
the
technology
vault
is,
is
super
important
and
yes,
it's
definitely
a
pattern.
We're
seeing
of
people
adopting
it
first
and
independently.
A
Okay,
exciting,
so
I
have
a
little
slide
to
show
you,
and
I
think
that
is
something
which,
which
will
you
know,
which
will.
C
A
Okay
cool
so
this,
so
this
is
a
slide
I
just
put
together
and
on
the
left,
you
see
mr
mukesh
ambani
he's
the
richest,
indian
and
now
also
one
of
the
top
one
of
the
top
10
in
the
world
and
on
the
right
hand,
side.
You
see,
mr
elon,
you
know
our
dear
friend
from
the
crypto
world.
So
so
my
question
to
you
is,
you
know:
first,
let's
start
with
iran.
You
know
he's
always
talking
about
innovation
and
and
going
to
mars,
etc.
Stuff
like
that.
A
D
Yeah,
so
my
perspective
is
where
you
know
where's
all
this
going,
and
I
mean
we
called
it
shuttle
for
a
reason.
You
know.
I
think
that
there's
a
baseline
rocket,
that's
gonna,
take
off.
You
know
in
the
next.
It's
already
it's
already
taken
off,
but
I
mean
like
really
accelerate.
D
D
A
D
This
guy
wants
revenue,
yeah
yeah,
absolutely
so
you
know,
I
think,
that,
because
of
the
pandemic
and
how
that's
changed
some
things
in
the
global
supply
chain,
I
I
think
that
it
would
be
a
lot
harder
to
justify
adopting
this
technology
head
first,
if,
if
that
hadn't
happened,
but
it
did
and
so
for
that
reason
I
think
we're
going
to
see
a
lot
of
heads
at
first
adoption,
which
will
this
will
sort
of
turn
that
sort
of
pragmatic.
D
You
know
approach
a
little
bit
on
its
head
because
of
the
opportunities
you
know
the
opportunities
for
for,
for
you
know
for
for
just
creating
efficiency,
because
peop
it's
a
real
need
for
real
people
right
now.
You
know
just
to
make
things
a
lot
better
and
so
yeah.
I
think
that
the
pandemic
is
actually
gonna
play
in
the
favor
of
more
rapid
adoption.
I
think
we've
certainly
seen
that
already
and
I
I
believe
that
that's
my
take.
I
guess.
F
F
New
process
efficiencies
which
baseline
certainly
enables,
but
as
you're
hitting
on
it's
like
the
new
business
model,
from
revenues
that
are
able
to
be
driven
on
top
of
it.
It's
what
the
promise
of
web3
enablement,
why
everyone
is
coming
to
the
defy
ecosystem
to
the
crypto
world
to
this
community
driven
type.
You
know
kind
of
exciting
drive
that
we're
seeing.
F
Bags
yeah,
not
only
not
only
you
have
come
across
new
enterprise
assets
that
are
new
higher,
yielding
assets,
but
amidst
the
baselining
process,
you're
able
to
incentivize
those
ecosystem
participants
in
ways
that
you
weren't
able
to
do
so
previously
and
so
now,
you're
able
to
create
new,
higher,
yielding
assets
and
returns
to
some
of
those
ecosystem,
participants
and
again
incentivize
them
in
ways
that
you
couldn't
do
so
before.
So.
By
doing
that,
you're
able
to
now
drive
new
revenue
models
within
your
organization.
F
A
A
Okay,
so
I
think
with
that,
we
we
are
at
the
end
of
today's
episode,
a
rather
very
interesting
episode
mark.
You
have
some
comments.
E
No,
not
really,
I
mean
it's
it's
one
of
those
by
watching
all
of
this.
If
someone
were
to
want
to
go
ahead
and
take
this
and
deploy
it,
you
would
not
really
need
very
deep
engineering
resources
to
do
so.
I
mean
you
just
need
to
have
somebody
that
is
familiar
with
the
stack
and
familiar
with
the
containerization,
but
getting
it
up
and
administering
it
or
running
it
wouldn't
require
deep,
inter
engineering
resources
at
all.
D
D
Definitely
it's
definitely
on
on
its
way
to
being
user
friendly,
so
I
would
definitely
encourage
all
the
developers
to
join
the
community
join,
join
the
devs
channel,
clone
the
repo
phone,
the
repos
get
involved,
and
you
know
I'm
really
excited
also
about
the
provide
stack
and
how
we
recently
opened
source
those
before
those
four
repos
and
how
the
baseline
repo
is
actually
on
the
heels
to
be
open
source
of
those
other
four
and
the
opportunity
moving
forward
to
turn
those
into
community
projects.
You
know
under
the
right.
D
You
know
governance
structure
somewhere
they
perhaps
around
the
eea
or
something
some
something
like
that.
We'll
also
see
how
the
actual
structure
shakes
out,
but
I'm
really
excited
and
interested
to
collaborate
with
with
with
wolford
and
dan
shaw
and
others
in
the
community
around
that
that
effort.
E
So
I've
got
another
question
because
I
get
this
question
quite
a
bit
since
baseline
and
the
provide
stack
and
bri
and
all
this
are
within
the
ethereum
universe.
Basically,
smart
contracts
is
that
something
that
that
the
yeah.
C
D
So
in
chain,
so
that's
in-chain,
the
web,
three
swiss
army
knife
kind
of
where
you
can
configure
multiple
networks
and
look,
for
example,
you've
one
one
is
davinci,
can
talk
to
any
of
the
evm
networks.
It
even
talks
to
bitcoin
the
evm
networks,
not
no,
nothing
against
bitcoin.
It
also
talks
to
bass,
ledger
right,
so
you
you
have
insane.
D
It
talks
to
different
networks
and
it's
you
know,
fault,
tolerant
and
that
it
you
know,
asynchronously
keeps
up
with
with
the
logs
and
essentially
emits
other
messages
when
certain
things
happen
in
the
stack
so
that
the
baseline
protocol
can
react
to
different
events
that
happen
so
yeah
we're
definitely
a
web
three
native
platform.
D
F
E
D
Right
right
and
then,
then
you,
you,
just
see
those
proofs
deposit
on
the
base
ledger
by
way
of
provide
privacy,
so
it
flows
through
the
stack
and,
I
think,
a
diagram.
I
I
need
to
add
an
additional
diagram
to
the
dock
that
shows
this,
but
you
know
it
deposits.
You
know
through
the
provided
stack,
it
hits
privacy,
privacy
deposits
in
the
base
budget
based
larger
accumulates.
Roll-Ups,
you
know
accumulates
proofs
there.
So
was
some
period
of
time
where
base
ledger
is
actually
secret.
D
Like
you
know,
securing
the
proof
springs
from
the
latent
period
prior
to
being
rolled
up
and
deposited
on
layer,
one
layer,
one
chain
so
yeah.
You
know
that.
There's
then
that
you
can
see
how
amazing
plays
with
plays
a
distinct
role
in
in
communicating
with
these
different
networks
along
the
way
so
yeah
we're
we're
proud
of
what
we
built.
We
you
know
we
want
to
make
it
more
user-friendly
friendly
for
developers
and
and
we
welcome
any
and
all
feedback
from
the
community
as
we
import.
A
A
F
I
foresee
that
there's
a
likelihood
that
we
will
very
quickly
be
in
c
c
use
cases
relative
to
other
l
ones
as
well.
You
know
kyle
mentioned
bitcoin.
I
I
think
we're
gonna
not
too
distant
future
be
able
to
see
use
cases
that
are
resonant
there,
as
well
or
on
other
layer
ones.
F
By
way
of
some
of
the
clients
that
we're
working
with
and
the
way
in
which
that
they
have
embarked
on
primarily,
let's
say
the
ethereum
journey,
first
and
foremost,
but
in
the
way
in
which
that
they're,
enabling
their
respective
ecosystems
with
other
layer
one
technologies,
we
see
that
that
demand
is
starting
to
surface
up
for
us
to
be
able
to
help
service.
Some.
F
D
Well,
yeah
well
said
jack
and
samurai.
I
just
want
to
say
thanks.
I
think
we're
probably
at
the
time,
but
I
just
want
to
say
thanks
for
having
having
us
this
morning.
It's
a
pleasure
for
sure
look
forward
to
talking
more.
A
Super
cool,
thank
you
so
much
kyle
and
jack
for
making
it
to
today's
show.
Oh
you
said
you
did
namaste.
Thank
you.
It's
I'm
sure
the
indian
community
is
going
to
welcome
you
with
a
namaste
very
soon.
So
now
is
the
time
for
the
baseline
tune,
and
here
it
goes,
and
we
say,
bye,
bye
with
that.