►
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
#baselineinindia #B2BBlockchain
A
We're
now
live,
hey
everyone,
my
name
is
samrad
and
I
welcome
you
all
to
the
baseline
show
once
once
again,
we
do
this
every
saturday.
This
is
official
office
hours
of
baseline
protocol
in
india.
This
is
specifically
for
the
indian
community
to
hop
on
to
the
baseline
bus.
We
have
with
us
our
usual
suspects
mark
haddle
mohan,
who
are
baseliners,
who
are
proud
baseliners
already,
and
we
also
have
anushri
with
us
as
a
guest
today,
but
I'm
sure
she's
going
to
be
joining
us
as
a
proud
baseliner
very
very
soon.
A
B
Oh
thanks,
samrad,
I'm
great.
B
So
yeah,
it
is
very
humble,
I'm
very
I'm
very
thankful
tamra
for
making
me
join
this
session,
so
just
to
give
everybody
a
brief
idea.
How
I'm
connected
to
this
session
is
through
some
rats
is
a
great
friend
of
mine.
B
We've
done
our
college
together
and
we've
done
a
lot
of
projects
in
the
college,
a
lot
of
revolutionary
projects,
I'll
say
in
the
college
and
actually
a
few
like
a
few
establishments
there
and
since
then
we
both
have
shared
some
sort
of
vision
towards
doing
some
doing
something
out
of
the
box
and
doing
some
great
things.
Of
course,
he
has
been
doing
things
in
his
own
area.
I've
been
working
a
lot
in
telecommunications,
section.
C
B
When
I
heard
about
this
baseline,
I've
been
very
much
in
touch
with
samurai
to
understand
exactly
what's
this,
and
what's
this
new
thing,
it's
just
a
curiosity.
I
attended
few
sessions
last
time
and
it
looked.
A
B
Interesting-
and
I
had
this
idea
as
well
that
definitely
this
idea
can
impact
a
lot
of
strategies
in
telecommunication
domain
in
terms
of
technology.
B
So
so
here
I'm
here,
I
am
I'll-
be
just
wanting
to
discuss
some
of
the
potential
areas,
probably
around
telecommunication,
and
we
can
you
guys
being
experts
in
baseline.
You
can
pitch
in
where
you
think
baseline
could
be
a
benefit
to
this
two
vein
as
well.
So
yeah,
that's
it
from
my
side.
So
maybe
you
can
start
with
the
slide.
There's
a
small,
very
quick
diy.
A
Yeah,
it's
just
a
bare-bone
deck
just
to
give
a
direction
to
the
conversation,
so
so,
as
some
of
you
may
have
noticed,
I'm
in
a
different
background.
So
I'm
in
the
beautiful
city
of
bangalore,
the
silicon
valley
of
india
and
I'm
doing
this
baseline
show
from
bangalore
for
the
first
time.
You
know
this
is
something
very
interesting,
because
I
also
met
some
leaders
here
who
are
super
keen
on
on
joining
baseline
and
and
and
I
think,
we're
just
getting
started.
A
You
know
in
india
the
community
in
india
is
just
getting
started
so
very
exciting
times
ahead
of
us.
I'm
I'm
super
pumped
having
those
meetings
having
those
discussions,
bringing
leaders
on
board
the
baseline
bus,
so
so
with
that
understand
and
initially
happens
to
be
a
very,
very
strong
professional
in
the
telecom
domain,
so
so
so
mohan
mark.
I
think
I
think
we
we
need
to.
A
We
need
to
make
this
episode
in
a
way
that
you
know
this
can
be
referenced
in
future
people
watching
us
on
youtube
and
and
and
this
can
be
referenced
in
future,
saying
that
you
know
this
is
how
telecom
telecom
companies
should
see
value
in
joining
the
baseline
consortium
as
sponsors.
You
know
we're
going
to
be
calling
a
lot
of
sponsors.
We
need
sponsors,
we
need
maintainers.
We
need
all
people
in
all
roles
to
join
baseline
and
amnesty.
You
know
he
has
an
individual
self.
You've
also
joined
baseline.
Thank
you
so
much
for
that.
A
So
so,
let's,
let's
shape
it
up
in
a
way
that
that
you
know
we
attract
the
right
people.
You
know
from
the
ecosystem
of
telecom,
not
just
providers
or
sim
card.
You
know
not
just
connectivity
providers,
but
you
know
even
software
providers
for
that
matter,
so
so
anushri.
Why
don't
you
talk
to
us-
and
you
know
in
general
people
watching
us
on
youtube
that
how
you
know
how
are
how's
the
ecosystem
structured?
How
does
data
exchange
happen?
A
You
know
in
telecom
in
general
and
we're
going
to
find
some
pockets
where
you
know
baseline,
can
come
in
and
and
sort
of
make
a
difference,
improve
speed,
improve
agility,
improve
efficiency,
etc.
So
so,
let's
look
at.
Let's
look
at
some
areas.
I'm
happy
to
you
know,
project
your
slides,
which
you
shared
a
little
earlier.
B
Yeah,
I
think
you
need
to
just
present
it
as
in
press
f5
or
something
okay,
cool
yeah.
So
I
have
to
give
like,
like
I
mentioned,
I've
been
working
for
in
telecommunication
industry
for
14
plus
years,
currently
working
as
a
lead
solution,
architect
for
one
of
the
organization,
I'm
based
in
malaysia,
kuala
lumpur
at
the
moment,
and
I've
been
dealing
with
clients
worldwide
and
japan
and
asia
apac
mainly
and
philippines.
Yes,
so
multiple
projects
that
have
been
working
at
the
moment
and
my
work
is
towards.
C
B
B
My
main
expertise
would
be
solution,
design
and
implementation
for
end-to-end,
full
stack
of
these
components
and
yeah
my
interest
a
lot
nowadays
like
everybody,
is
moving
towards
iot
and
connected
devices
and
everything.
So
I
am
a
lot
investing
my
head
towards
that
reading,
through
the
big
data
technologies
and
and
all,
but
my
work
makes
me
focus
towards
policy
and
charging
systems
as
well.
These
are
the
main
telecommunications
solutions
that
currently
are
other
ones
which
my
project
is
based
on.
B
These
systems
are
something
like
you
can
say
that,
let's
say
a
person,
a
calls
to
person
b,
then,
whatever
happens
in
between
is
basically
the
charging
system.
I'm
sure
you
guys
know
and
then,
if
per
event,
every
event
leaves
some
packets
and
these
packets
lead
to
some
kind
of
data.
These
data
are
then
provided
to
service
providers,
which
they
further
use
it
for
billing
or
analytics
recommendation
kind
of
systems
right
and
also
the
policy
enforcement.
Where
you
we
force
the
subscriber
to
only
browse
to
a
certain
feed.
B
If
your
let's
say
your
data
packet
has
finished,
then
you
will
be
throttled
to
some
other
speed.
So
these
are
the
solutions
I've
been
working
on
yeah.
I
I
paint
a
lot
so
just
about
myself,
I'm
a
painter
by
passion.
So
I
do
I've
participated
in
art
exhibitions
as
well
in
malaysia.
So
that's
like,
for
my
part
time
and.
A
A
Do
post
do
post
this
on
on
our
channel
as
well.
You
know
people
are,
people
are
really
enthusiastic.
They
and
I've
been
getting
a
lot
of
requests
and
questions.
You
know
people
sending
me
dms
and
asking
me
questions
about
stuff.
So
so
it's
interesting
yeah.
So
thank
you.
So
much
and
honestly,
I
think
particularly
what
is
interesting
is
the
event-based
charging
systems.
I
think
that
is
something
really
cool
sits
on
tons
of
data
has
yeah.
You
know
it's
very
close
to
a
company's
revenue
cycle.
A
You
know
you
you're
you're
billing
people
you're,
making
revenue
you're
charging
them
so
so
yeah
yeah
throughout
your
talk,
you
know,
try
and
more.
You
know
lean
more
towards
charging
systems.
I
think
that
is.
B
Yeah
yeah
go
ahead.
Okay,
so
I
like
yeah,
comrade
you
mentioned
the
charging
system,
so
the
main
focus
of
charging
system
is
to
gather,
delete
like
generate
data
and
then
provided
the
service
providers,
like
I
meant,
and
every
cycle
every
step
of
this
event.
B
Wherever
you
touch
any
internet,
there
is
a
data
event
generated,
so
I
was
just
wondering
like
we
all
discuss
like
what
is
data
that
comes
maybe
a
10
years
old
guy
boy
can
tell
what
is
data,
but
nowadays
we
are
moving
towards
big
data
because
all
the
things
everything
is
connected
and
every
step
generates
one
set
of
data.
These
data,
these
data
gets
generated
from
subscribers
from
cyber
devices,
the
network,
their
location,
their
speed
at
which
they
are
browsing,
the
data.
So
in
the
charging
solutions
we
also
store
such
data.
B
These
are
humongous
amount
of
data
like
the
subscriber,
their
loyalty
their
whether
they
are
premium
or
not.
What
kind
of
data
they
usually
browse
with
what
kind
of
plants
they
purchase
all
these
data
we
we
do
store
in
our
you
know,
telephone
backing
and
these
data.
There's
an
interesting
point
there
that
these
data
are
such
big.
That
nowadays
there's
no
no,
no,
we
cannot
maintain
a
structured
database.
B
It's
all
structured,
unstructured,
scalable
amount
of
data,
because
the
the
the
size
of
data
keeps
varying
and
the
proportion
by
which
it
increases
is
humongous,
and
we
have
seen
the
projections
I'll
talk
about
that,
also
in
the
later
slides
with
a
feud.
B
You
know
basis
where
they
can
sell
customer
a
this
plan,
which
is
very
much
customized
for
that.
So
this
is
the
trend
that's
going
on
and
the
big
data
that
comes
on
comes
from
everything
from
your
smart
watch
to
your
cars,
to
your
even
refrigerators
or
your
e-cards
everything.
So
it's
all.
We
are
definitely
working
towards
a
future
which
is
all
connected
so.
A
B
And
in
this
data,
another
interesting
point
that
I
find
is
that
nothing
goes
waste.
Nothing
goes
for
a
weight,
every
data
constitutes
something.
So
we
have
to
store,
there's
a
need
to
store
all
sort
of
data.
A
Now
that's
an
interesting
perspective
because
I
always
thought
that
people
are
probably
looking
at
200
reports
and
and
and
and
not
everything
makes
sense
right,
but
I
think
from
an
analytics
perspective
from
drawing
cohorts
from
from
understanding
user
behavior.
Every
data
point
has
some
value.
You
know
for
sure.
B
One
of
the
days
where
you
know
reports
were
just
some
kind
of
audit
purpose
for
audit
or
something
we
didn't
we
used
to
have
these
reports
generated
nowadays.
Every
data
that
gets
generated,
there's
reports,
which
are
which
constitutes
a
further
business.
You
know,
so
that
is
an
important
aspect.
So
all
these
like.
B
How
do
we
manage
all
this
data
is
something
very
interesting
and
now
we
are
walking
into
file
5g
the
fifth
generation
network
service,
which
basically
becomes
the
basis
to
all
these
connected
devices
till
4g
the
b
were
we
were
using
internet
as
internet,
but
now
it's
internet
of
everything.
So
there's.
A
B
Concept
that
has
built
up
and
5g
is
something
that
is
leveraging
these
concepts.
So
if
you
go
to
the
next
slide,.
A
Yeah
sure
sure
so
5g
definitely
is
the
genesis
of
connected
everything
mark,
and
I
we've
been
talking
about
very
interesting
data
points
and
even
connected
devices
connected
services.
We
had
one
specialized
one
dedicated
episode
on
talking
about
insurance
that
how
it
sort
of
ties
in
you
know
it
can,
even
it
can
be
insurance
companies
analyzing
what
their,
what
their
you
know,
customers
are
doing.
Where
all
are
they
shopping?
It
can
be
anything
and
then
eventually
designing
plans
for
them.
A
If
they're
fit
guys,
you
know,
reading
information
from
their
devices
and
their
fit
guys,
giving
them
custom
plans
etc.
So
so
so
yeah,
it's
sort
of
tying
in
to
what
we've
been
talking
about,
and
you
know
it
also
brings
me
to
another
point,
which
is
extremely
important,
which
is
the
sanity
of
that
data
that
we're
collecting.
You
know
it
has
to
be
structured.
It
has
to
be
same.
It.
B
C
B
A
Collected
and
analyzed
and
looked
at
and
and
decisions
being
made
on,
then
I
think
we
are.
We
are
planning
for
trouble
so
so
so
I
think
that
is,
that
is
really
cool.
Mohan
happens
to
be
our
data
guard
within
the
baseline
community.
A
Where
he's
he's
ex
tibco,
he
knows
how
systems
and
companies
talk
to
each
other
he's
designed
those
buses.
You
know
that's
what
I
understand
mohan
correct
me.
If
I'm
wrong.
A
With
your
introduction,
okay,
okay,
now
so
so
so
so
so
yeah
mohan,
you
know
I
just
want
to
sort
of
bring
you
in
and
and
and
get
your
perspective
on.
You
know:
where
are
we
headed
with
5g?
What
what
do
you
think
is
is
going
to
change
for
us
and-
and
you
know
how
is
baseline
coming
in
here.
C
Well,
you
know,
I
only
have
I'm
not
on
a
direct
perspective,
but
I've
been
asking
about
one
of
my
friends.
Good
friends
is
a
cfo
was
a
chief
operating
officer
at
the
company
called
beyond,
which
is
basically
us
initially
running
out
the
analytics
platform
for
5g,
so
they're
a
global
platform,
and
what
I
heard
from
him
was
that
they
have
not
considered
blockchains
in
general
because
of
performance
issues.
Sorry,
because
we're
talking
about
extreme
throughput
and
speed
of
events,
and
so
they
don't
see
that
they
didn't
think
blockchain
was
quite
relevant.
C
But
the
thing
here
is:
it
depends
on
what
you're
looking
at
I
mean
if
you
look
you're,
not
if
you're
looking
at
putting
data,
yes
yeah,
it
obviously
doesn't
make
sense.
But
if
you're
looking
at
putting
out
useful
things
in
the
public
net
that
you
know
that
others
can
you
know?
Basically,
you
know
systems
of
records
that
you
want
a
common
point
of
reference.
C
Solid
state
right,
so
that's
the
one
perspective
I
know,
but
you
know
beyond
that.
You
know
it
really
depends
on
what
she
can
identify,
as
perhaps
being
some
very
interesting
things
that
put
interesting
use
cases.
There
is,
I
think,
andreas
fine
actually
is
involved
in
mobility,
blockchain,
sort
of
autonomous
vehicles
and
you.
B
Yeah
yeah,
that's
a
great
insight,
so
yeah
like
you
mentioned
yes,
of
course,
the
data
that
we
have
as
part
of
the
future,
which
is
the
big
data
and
everything
the
main
important.
The
selling
point
that
that
service
providers
stick
on
now.
What
I
see
is
the
intelligence,
the
intelligence
on
how
they
can,
how
quickly
how
strictly
they
can
use
this
data
and
the
intelligence
that
that
you
know
bind
certain
set
of
data
to
bring
out
some
information
which
is
meaningful
and
used
for
the
business
and
this
data.
B
These
keeps
on
changing
very
quickly,
so
the
intelligence
is
one
part
of
it
that
I
find
that
intelligent
speed
is
one
part
where
I
find
that
the
baseline
can
be
a
few.
Another
major
point
that
I
see
is
the
integration
points.
The
concept
of
5g
is
that
in
terms
of
technology
and
the
infrastructure,
is
that
it's
all
modernized,
so
every
component
in
spiket
is
working
individually
and
because
these
are
huge
big
data
and
need
scalability
and
all
so
most
of
the
deployments
that
we
work
on
is
all
services
based,
which
is
scalable
dynamically.
B
As
the
data
comes
in
the
data
size
becomes
bigger,
then
the
service
providers
can,
you
know,
scale
their
instances
so
and
each
a
module
works
separately
and
they
talk
to
each
other.
So
every
module
also
shreds
off
data,
so
they,
the
integration
of
data,
is
very
important
aspect
where
reliability,
security,
fasting
everything
is
required.
I
do
have
that
in
this
slide.
We
can
discuss
but
yeah.
B
That
is
the
integration
in
5g
is
a
huge
factor
which
is
you
know
yeah
like
like
it
says
it's
the
driving
force
for
data
creation,
where
every
module
will
shred
out
data
and
that
data
can
be
utilized.
B
Function
then,
there
are
certain
exchanges
that
happens
when
we
store
all
those
records,
all
those
circles,
all
those
you
know
the
small
details
of
the
subscriber
and
the
and
their
location
or
profiles
or
whatever.
So
every
every
aspect
has
a
data
creation
created
over
there.
So
that
is
the
main
concept
inside
that
I
think
baseline
can
benefit.
B
Definitely
yes,
so
that
is,
that
is
the
fun
part
since
it's
all
integration
like
there
are
multiple
integration
points,
so
it's
all
modular,
so
one
company
can
focus
on.
Let's
say
a
charging
function.
Another
can
do
the
policy
pcs,
which
is
yeah
pcs,
so
they
both
can
talk
to
each
other,
but
these
companies
can
totally
talk
to
their
components
via
the
integrated
gateways.
Okay,
so
these
direct-
these
are
like
rest
apis
and
wireless
rustic
ears
and
all
so
yeah.
Those
are
the
technology
part
over
there.
B
But
of
course,
these
the
main
concept
is
that
to
bring
multiple
modules
together
via
gauge
page
and
then
talk
to
each
other.
So
definitely
it
can
be
a
different
company.
B
B
Can
let
you
do
till
like
from
your
phone,
you
can
switch
on
your
lights,
switch
off
your
to
bring
on
your
curtains,
just
manage
your
refrigerator,
so
every
module,
the
same
concept
lies
even
in
the
instruction
infrastructure.
Every
module
can
be
of
different
aspects,
different
companies
whatever,
but
they
can
talk
to
each
other.
A
So
mark-
and
I
we
we
were
discussing
this
just
last-
this
last
episode-
I
think
when
we
were
when
we
picked
up
ordering
a
pizza
via
an
alexa
device
right
but
mark.
C
D
You
know,
and
another
thing
is
that
you
too
an
initially
point
is
that
you
know
you
have
so
many
different
points
of
data
that
are
coming
from
so
many
different
platforms
and
sources.
One
of
the
compelling
capabilities
that
really
comes
into
play
here
is
you
know
from
a
user
standpoint.
D
They
want
to
be
able
to
consume
these
services
as
a
single
transaction,
and
you
know
they
want
to
be
able
to
saying
I
just
want
to
you
know
and-
and
you
want
to
be
able
to
disperse
you
know
the
payment
of
that
across
all
the
different
data
point
providers
and
that's
where
you
kind
of
need
that
unifying
type
capability,
because
if
they
have
to
sit
there
and
say
well,
you
need
to
pay
23
cents
here
and
41
cents
there
and
somewhere
all
that,
and
it's
just
not
going
to
work.
D
They
need
to
actually
have
that
unified
for
the
user
interface
that
they
can
pay
for
whatever
it
is
that
they're
consuming
in
a
single
transaction.
B
Absolutely
absolutely
and
the
and
the
benefits
the
thing
that
benefit
telecom
domain
as
a
base
is,
is
that
it's
all
standardized
like
every
company
will
follow
a
standard
set
of
you
know,
request
response,
adp's
that
comes
into
picture
the
my
new
parameters.
Those
are
well
defined.
It's
like
nobody,
a
a
good
service
service
provider,
won't
breach
such
standards.
So
when
it
comes
out,
it's
all
standard.
Every
company
is
working
with
those
standards
in
place.
So
it's
the
integration
technology
wise,
it's
not
so
painful,
but
still
it
generates.
Various
sets
of
data.
A
Yeah
exciting
so
yeah,
initially
back
to
your
talk,
I
think.
B
B
B
It
it's
fun
to
have
the
various
aspects,
so
please
jump
in
yeah.
B
No,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no
yeah,
because
the
next
slide
I
just
wanted
to
you
know.
I
think
we
covered
this.
That
yeah,
the
5g
is
the
future
and
you
can
see
the
size
of
data
like
how
it
changed
it
has
changed
like
and
the
you
know,
speed.
So
5g
is
promising
every
one
of
us
to
have
very
high
speed.
So
this
would
be
something
like
a
one
subscriber
will
be
connected.
B
The
projection
is
something
like
one
subscriber
will
be
connected
to
at
least
nine
live
devices
at
one
point
of
time.
That
is
what
the
basis
has
been
taken
in
terms
of
you
know,
performance
and
reliability,
and
that
is
going
to
be
the
future
as
well.
You'll
be
definitely
connected
to
at
least
nine
devices,
so
you
can
imagine
a
population
of
india
times.
Nine
then
times
how
much
data
has
been
generated.
So
that
is
the.
C
B
Of
database
sizing
that
we
are
looking
into
it
and
also
the
speed,
so
the
concept
of
5g
also
runs
in
terms
of
network.
I
can
just
briefly
tell
that
it
is
towards
slicing.
So,
as
a
user,
you
will
be
entitled
to
have
a
subscription
in
a
certain
slide
like
a
normal
pop
electric,
where
us
has
a
normal
any
layman
he
can
buy
here,
she
can
buy
a
plan
and
that
good
plan
would
give
them
a
bandwidth
from
a
certain
slice
of
it.
B
Now
the
another
organization
like
bigger
organization
which
require
higher
speed
and
higher
data,
then
they
will
be
placed
into
another
network.
So
it's
totally
up
to
you.
What
kind
of
slicing
you
want?
If
you
can
afford,
if
you're
coming
to
that
bandwidth,
then
you
will
be
like
your
provisioning
will
be
done
in
that
slicing
and
your
data
and
your
feed.
Everything
will
be
adjusted
according
to
that.
So
that
is
a
fun
concept
as
well.
You'll
be
like.
B
If
you
require
more
data,
you
can
opt
for
higher
slicing,
like
your
netflix
can
run
on
a
lower
network
network
size,
whereas
you
you
want
to
you
know,
do
some
like
the
organizations
will
be
on
higher
right.
Something
like
that.
Yeah.
A
At
the
data
sizes
and
the
progression,
I
think
it
just
it
just
brings
one
thought
that
you
know
here
is
a
highway
so
wide
that
you
are
tempted
to
go.
You
know
you
attempted
to
have
more
vehicles
and
attempt
to
go
faster
and
stuff
like
that.
So
so
I
think,
and
that
you
know
in
in
the
telecom
power
lines
or
in
the
user
end
user
computing
parallels.
I
think
it.
A
B
Is
a
privileged
generation,
probably
who
have
been
able
to
see
this
transition
and
definitely
hits
our
role
to
make
the
future
better
here
yeah.
So.
B
C
B
Start
living
on
moon,
then
it's
going
to
be
further
crazy.
So
definitely
the
sizing
is
going
to
change.
Yeah.
A
A
Do
you
also
see
any
constraints
you
know
while,
while
this
has
happens,
you
know,
while
we
are
traversing
the
exabytes,
do
you
also
see
any
constraints,
any
challenges,
any
evolution
with
coming
in
into
devices
into
human
beings,
into
usage
trends,
etc.
A
B
Challenges
would
be
a
lot
so
knowing
coming
being
born
in
india
and
then
staying
here.
I
know
there
will
be
huge
challenges
in
terms
of
infrastructure,
because
you
know
when
5g
promises
you
a
high
speed,
every
probably
every
200,
not
200
meters
I'll,
say
maybe
every
two
kilometers
there
will
be
a
booster.
There
will
be
devices
that
is
required
to
be
placed
so
that
everybody
is
connected.
It's
like
wi-fi
everywhere.
B
B
On
air,
so
infrastructure
is
one
major
aspect
that
I
see,
as
you
know,
as
a
pain
point,
but
then
it
needs
to
be
established.
It
will
be
established.
That's.
A
A
B
That
work
in
terms
of
data
management
yeah
there
will
be
again
there
will
be
have
there.
There
would
be
security
issues.
There
would
be
loss
of
package
lot
lots
of
accuracy,
kind
of
issues.
That's
what
I
see
so
anything
that
integrates
the
data
between
the
two
points.
That
becomes
very
ethical
point
of
question
over
there.
So,
whatever
comes
in
let's
say
baseline
or
anything
that
comes
in
has
to
be
very
much
reliable,
very
secure
platform.
B
The
we
would
as
a
user,
I
would
not
be
comfortable
with
that.
A
B
Yeah,
like
without
my
consent,
which
are
which
comes
as
a
contract
of
let's
say,
what's
there
for
anything
without
my
consent,
if
my
data
goes
out,
then
it's
that's
all
together
legal
issue,
so
we
should
not
get.
We
should
not
get
into
that.
So
any
platform
that
comes
in.
I
think
that
security
is
one
of
the
assets,
that's
concerned,
but
we'll
see
how
it
pans
up.
Apart
from
that
yeah,
that's
what
I
meant
is
like
five
essentials
towards
data
management.
B
When
it
goes,
you
know,
when
we
step
towards
future
that
integration
should
be
seamless.
The
processing
should
be
very
fast-paced,
and
this
requires
you,
high
reliability,
low
latency
through
components.
That's
talking
to
each
other,
there's
no
time,
there's
very
strict
change
in
the
data
effect.
Also,
your
own
data
can
change
very
quickly,
so
you
need
to
lecture
search
providers
and
the
marketing
agency
you
need
to
capture.
B
You
know
tap
on
the
very
high
speed
data
that
is
coming
in
and
then
this
aspect
is
something
we
talked
about
last
time,
also
data
reconciliation,
so
there's
now
there
are
multiple
systems,
you
know,
there's
billing
systems,
there's
charging
systems
and
the
data
travels
between
billing
and
charging
on
a
very
smaller
portion.
I'll
say
like
how
I've
been
working
in
my
project.
I
would
make
sure
that
data
that
is
at
the
charging
system
is
there
in
the
same
way,
in
the
same
content,
the
size
is
same.
Everything
is
trained
on
the
bss.
B
That
is
the
billing
charge.
Billing
system
like
I
cannot
make
a
call
as
a
user
and
then
my
if
the
packet
gets
lost,
then
the
billing
system
does
doesn't
build
me.
That's
all
together
is
a
loss,
so
there's
we
service
providers
cannot
afford
packet
losses,
the
data
laws
and
also,
at
the
same
time
the
subscriber
also
cannot
afford
such
loss.
B
So
data
reconciliation,
accuracy,
efficiency
is
a
very
important
aspect
of
that,
and
so
is
the
data
security
across
multiple
platforms
and
definitely
the
data
scalability
like
I
said
it
has
to
be
dynamically
scalable.
So,
as
the
data
is
coming
in,
there
needs
to
be
some
intelligence
that
processes
the
size
of
the
data
and
then
it's
scaled.
C
B
A
No,
I
think
I
think
at
this
point
we
can
also
bring
in
mark
and
and
mohan
and
and
sort
of
they
take
their
perspectives
on
you
know,
while
while
we
were
saying
on
one
side,
we
were
saying
you
know,
the
highway
is
evolving
and
there
are
high
speeds
too
many
vehicles,
a
lot
of
data
points
being
captured
a
lot
of
data
being
being
created
in
general,
I'm
using
somebody
else's
office,
office
and
and
they'll
have
this
so
much
yeah.
A
B
A
Okay,
so
so
so
yeah,
I
was
saying,
while
all
this
is
happening,
you
know,
while
we're
looking
at
this,
this
new
data
revolution
on
the
other
side
are
our.
You
know
these
systems
and
there
are
companies
who
have
organically
organically
grown.
You
know
as
big
warehouses
of
data,
you
know
to
say,
store,
houses
or
data,
so
so
at
times
I
see
even
within
the
company
they're,
not
using
their
data
to
the
to
the
best
possible
extent
in
terms
of
analytics
in
terms
of
intelligence,
etc.
A
So
so
I
think
here
is
one
big
gap
which
which
sort
of
baseline
can
plug
in
where
where
two
companies
are
talking
to
each
other
about
a
data
set,
which
is,
let's
say,
which
is
let's
say
about
a
certain
set
of
consumers.
Now
that
set
of
consumers
may
be
common
for
for
these
companies,
one
company
being,
let's
say
just
for
example,
say
one
company
is
an
insurance
company.
The
other
is
a
telecom
company.
Now
these
two
talking
together
and
saying
you
know
what
most
of
our
consumers
are
are
all
you
know.
A
C
D
C
A
C
Is
one
of
the
highest
professional
platforms
that
has
certain
qualities
of
service
which
is,
like
you
know,
reliable
delivery
of
messages,
so,
for
example,
this
is
something
that
all
the
messaging
systems
have
to
happen
service,
that
is,
when
you're
sending
a
packet
of
information
that
that
information
packet
actually
makes
the
best
effort
or
guaranteed
effort
to
get
to
the
destination,
meaning
you
don't
have
drop
factors
right,
and
so
this
is
one
of
the
things
that
we
used
to
do
back
in
the
day
messaging
systems
of
different
qualities
of
service,
because
folks,
like
the
telcos
needed,
you
know,
you
know
their
oss
systems
be
able
to
communicate.
C
A
C
Get-Go
and
because
baseline
does
a
lot
of
workflows
outside
of
the
mainland,
so
you're
not
necessarily
bogged
down
by
the
performance
of
the
main
net,
because
a
lot
of
the
workflows
are
done
off.
You
know
off-chain.
If
you
want
to
call
it
that
mark
correctly,
if
I'm
making
any
mis-statement
in
terms
of
terminology,
but
you
can
do
it
gets
done
off-chain.
C
So
the
public
system
of
records,
public
public
staff
synchronization
by
interstate
is
actually
only
when
it's
required
so
you're
not
really
facing
the
full
performance
bottleneck
of
traditional
blockchains,
and
I
think
that
so
you're
getting
the
best
of
both
worlds
with
an
implementation
that
you
provide
right,
and
I
think
the
two
areas
that
I
was
interested
in
finding
out
more
about
personally
is
the
the
system's
integration.
C
So
is,
if,
if
you
look
at
customers
in
telco
it's
two
times,
one
is
established
relationship
established
value
chain,
supply
chain.
You
know,
partners
and
perhaps
new
ways
of
creating
new
relationships.
Where
people
can
come
in
and
decide,
they
want
a
certain
service
levels.
They
want
a
certain
number
of.
C
They
want
to
issue
a
new
iot
device
out
into
the
market.
They
want
to
quickly
get
on
to
different
service
providers
around
the
world,
make
relationships
and
get
a
certain.
You
know
discounted
rate
for
the
service
and
get
moving,
so
they
don't
necessarily
have
to
figure
out
who
all
do?
I
need
to
kind
of
go
and
make
a
business
relationship
with
all
of
that.
It's
public,
and
so
you
can
essentially
fund
those
relationships
comply
with
the
requirements
of
security,
comply
with
the
requirements
of
format.
C
A
Yeah,
no
awesome,
awesome
perspectives,
you're
right,
you
know
we
are
heading
towards
convergence
and
that
convergence
will
mean
that
the
companies
are
providing
services
to
us
also
need
to
converge
and
then
agree
on
certain.
You
know
certain
common
grounds
mark
you
do
you
have
any
perspectives
on
on.
You
know
this
one,
I'm
sure
you
have.
You
have
more
slides.
D
No,
I
I
basically
understand
exactly
mulan's
approach
on
this.
It's
really
interesting
to
watch
how
you
know
blockchain
at
least
the
the
mindset
about
the
integration
and
deployment
you
know
just
you
know
well
still
currently,
but
in
the
you
know
very
recent
past,
the
everyone
basically
was
assuming
the
blockchain
was
going
to.
D
You
know,
rip
and
replace
a
lot
of
the
existing
architecture,
and
you
know
that
really
was
unrealistic
for
a
myriad
reasons,
but
I
think,
instead
of
banning
abandoning
it
completely,
we've
come
up
with
a
lot
more
compelling
utility
out
of
blockchain
using
it
as
a
settlement
layer
using
it
as
a
root
of
trust
and
yeah.
D
A
proof
of
consistency,
specifically
that
we
use
to
baseline,
to
where
you
know
it
is
always
on,
but
it
may
not
always
be
used
used
because
you
know,
as
data
becomes,
you
know,
so
you
know
so
so
copious
and
so
numerous
out
there.
You
know,
having
blockchain,
as
the
main
architecture
actually
makes
very
little
sense,
because
you
know
blockchain
with
the
you
know,
with
the
data
replication
across
all
of
the
particip
participants.
When
you
start
putting
a
lot
more
data
in
there.
It
really
starts
to
choke
the
ox.
Really.
D
You
know,
as
opposed
to
you
know,
contrasting
it
with
the
internet
yeah,
which
everyone
wants.
Everyone
likes
to
compare
blockchain
to
the
internet.
You
know
at
its
fundamental
core
things.
It's
two
very
different
processes
and
and
protocols.
The
the
internet
with
tcp
ip
was
a
transmission
protocol
which
actually
got
much
more
efficient.
D
The
more
participants
started
to
utilize
it
blockchain
is
the
polar
opposite
to
where
the
more
people
that
are
the
more
participants
that
you
have
on
there,
the
slower
it
it
it
can
get,
and
so
that's,
where
the
architecture
really
had
to
you
know
had
to
evolve.
You
know
before
it
got
so
massive
that
it
just
slowed
to
a
crawl,
and
then
you
know
ultimately
just
became
high
bound
and
stopped,
and
so
it
it
really
compelled
a
lot
of
people
to
start.
Looking
at.
D
You
know
different
applications
of
blockchain
technology,
and
this
is
something
to
where
you
have
that
universality,
you
have
that
transparency
plus
you
have
everybody,
you
know,
has
a
an
operational
environment
that
is
in
a
constant
state
of
synchronization
and
yeah.
You
know
so
much
right
now
in
the
processes
you
can
have
the
best
technology
in
the
world,
but
if
you
don't
have
the
right
protocols
and
the
right
governance
structure,
it
really
doesn't
work.
D
I
mean
to
an
industry's
point
to
where
you
know
having
the
the
standard
for
data
sharing
and
handoff
is
absolutely
critical.
That's
one
thing
that
we
use
within
the
baseline
environment
is
and
right
now
we
are.
We.
D
We
have
completed
the
final
graph
of
the
standards
right
yes,
and
so
it
now
goes
to
oh
oasis
for
ratification,
and
once
that
is
done,
we
now
have
the
common
set
of
tools
and
principles
that
you
know
all
participants
can
start,
can
start
baselining
and,
at
the
same
time,
we're
trying
to
make
it
as
easy
as
possible
by
putting
up
together
a
global
phone
book
of
people
who
have
already
started
to
adopt
and
ratify
the
the
standard,
the
body
of
standards
that
baseline
wound
up
utilizing.
D
I
mean
that's,
actually
huge
leap
in
that
direction.
A
Yeah,
that's
that's
massive
and
I
and
you
mar
I.
I
want
to
pick
up
your
notion,
which
you
just
mentioned
about
being
in
a
constant
state
of
synchronization.
I
think
constant
state
of
synchronization
has
to
be
our
motto
for
today
and
I
want
to
sort
of
make
the
make
it
the
hashtag
for
today
that
that
constant
state
of
synchronization
is
something
which
is
hard
to
achieve
and
expensive
to
achieve
in
current
times,
and-
and
you
know
to
your
into
your
past
point
again
mark
in
the
previous
episode.
A
You
spoken
about
the
total
cost
of
ownership,
of
a
conventional
system
versus
baselined
systems
or
baselineable
systems,
and-
and
you
know,
there's
a
there's.
A
massive
saving
on
on
you
know,
setting
it
up
using
it
and
and
best
part,
is
the
current
stack
that
we
have
the
current
providers
that
we
already
have
on
board.
You
know
they
are
providing
in
a
in
a
pay
as
you
go
model,
so
so
yeah
and
anushari.
A
B
So
yeah,
that
is
a
great
point
like
as
mark
mentioned
and
yourself
as
well.
This
constant
state
of
synchronization
definitely
responds
to
me
like
just
expressing
here
that
it's
something
that
would
solve
a
lot
of
issues.
B
So
what
happens
right
now
is
that
my
systems,
like
all
these
separate
components,
have
to
be
always
in
sync,
and
that
happens
too
still
that
happens
in
most
of
the
service
providers
happen
to
traditional
systems
of
thinking
those
are
standards
and
which
are
available
there,
but
there
still
is
a
leasing
process.
There's
a
process
associated
to
it.
That
consumes
your
memory
and
the
database
and
everything
right
so
and
also
at
the
same
time,
different
companies.
B
Different
systems
can
utilize
different
databases
see
there
are
in
memory
out
structure,
non-structured
different
kind
of
database
are
there,
so
the
process
of
thinking
has
to
be
always
established
and
by
either
traditional
way
or
other
way
or
as
a
process,
but
that
is
the
separate
process.
So
if
a
baseline,
as
I
can
understand,
can
bring
something
like
a
constant
string
is
respected
diagnostic
agnostic
to
the
layer,
the
backing
blade,
then
that
would
be
a
huge.
You
know
establishment
as
a
standard
across
all
the
species.
C
A
Right,
you
don't
have
a
telecom
guy
right
so
yeah.
We.
I
think
this
should
be
the
this
should
be
yeah.
Let
me
let
me
stop
the
share
so
so
I
think
I
think
I
I
think
industry.
This
was
a
very
informative
session
today
we,
I
think
we
had
a
great
chat
understanding
your
world,
your
ecosystem
and
and
sort
of
how
baseline
can
make
a
difference.
A
I'm
sure
the
kind
of
topics
that
we
picked
up
do
need
more
episodes
like
this
one,
but
I'm
just
conscious
of
the
time
that
we
that
we
had
set
forth
for
it.
So
so
so
you
know
what?
Let's,
let's
let's
do
this?
Let's
also
do
a
part
two
of
this
where,
where
we,
you
know
sort
of
double
click,
dive
deeper,
just
pick
up
one
type
of
systems
we
are
talking
about,
because
you
know
and-
and
you
know,
sort
of-
let's,
let's
draw-
let's
go
to
the
whiteboard.
A
Let's
try
sort
of
draw
to
be
states
of
you
know
how
potentially
baseline
can
come
in
and
and
and
do
something
because
you
know
there's
a
hackathon
coming
up
industry
and
I
think
you
being
you
being
you
I
know
I
know
you've
got
a
background,
you
you
can
fold
up
sleeves
and
code
stuff.
So
so
why
don't
you
participate
or
encourage
other
people
to
participate
in
the
upcoming
hackathon
at
east
atlanta
so
and.
A
Atlanta
is
an
event
which
is
happening
in
atlanta,
and
this
year's
big
theme
is
baseline
and
and
consensus
is
sponsoring
it
baseline
community.
Also,
I
mean
there's
a
proposal
today
for
approving
some
grants
for
the
hackathon.
So
so
it's
gonna
be
fun.
It's
gonna
be
informative.
It's
gonna
be
full
of
dollars
coming
in.
I've
also
been
talking
to
indian
community
developers
to
start
participating.
A
It's
in
the
first
week
of
october.
First
to
third,
it's.
B
A
A
So
that's
the
independence
day
coming
up
tomorrow,
yeah
and
they're
having
their
celebration
here.
India's
independence
day
is
tomorrow,
I'm
glad
we
are
having
this
episode
today.
I
would
like
to
wish
all
the
indians
watching
this
one
a
very
happy
independence
day.
It
fell
on
a
sunday,
so
yeah
bummer
we
lost
one
holiday,
but
we're
still
good
happy
about
it.
So
so
thanks
anushki
for
making
it
to
today's
show.
I
would
like
to
sign
off
by
by
saying
everybody
who's
watching
us
on
youtube.
A
Do
not
forget
to
subscribe
to
the
channel.
We
keep
coming
up
with
updates
and
announcements
via
this
channel
do
attend
this
show
every
saturday
at
6,
00
pm.
Thank
you
so
much
mark
thanks
mohan
for
making
it
see
you
next
time.
Thanks.