►
From YouTube: TSC Kickoff
Description
TSC Kickoff
A
A
A
A
Got
it
and
by
the
way,
thanks
for
demonstrating
my
favorite
thing,
Eric,
which
is
chat,
nothing
better
than
a
good
chat
log
at
the
end
of
a
meeting
like
this,
and
it
helps
with
blocking
so
I
hope,
everybody
utilizes
that
we
have
one
two
three,
four,
eight
twelve
thirteen
fourteen
folks
on
call.
We
have
a
couple
of
guests:
I
see
that
Joe
Lubin
is
here
and
Dan,
Burnett's
and
I
think
yeah.
Those
are
the
two,
so
everybody
else
is
a
member
of
the
TSC
and
we
have
a
couple
of
guests.
This
is
a
public.
A
This
will
be
publicly
recorded
and
then
and
publicly
distributed
on
our
YouTube
channel.
Sorry,
that's
that's
correct
right,
so
we
can
do
that
if
there
are
anything
if
there
are
any
discussions
that
someone
feels
strongly
about
not
being
public,
that
might
not
be
the
best
forum
for
it
because
we
have
transparency
is
essential.
A
A
There's
a
there's,
a
big
principle
that
we've
asked
everybody
to
consider
coming
in
here,
which
is
don't
do
any
work
for
this
unless
you
can
draw
a
straight
line
between
what
you're
doing
and
your
avarice
or
what
you
know
what's
gonna
be
good
for
your
company,
so
enlightened
self-interest
is
essential
for
maintenance
of
the
community
over
time,
so
be
great.
To
you
know,
say
you
know
a
line
or
two
about
what
your
intentions
are.
D
Nate
mccurdy
from
Splunk
I
lead
our
blockchain
and
DLT
efforts.
That's
flunkin
and
we're
excited
about
baseline
for
multiple
reasons,
but
it's
Blanc.
We
believe
that
every
problem
is
a
data
problem
and
this
technology
is
going
to
allow
enterprises
to
share
data
in
a
better
way
and
have
that
you
know
we
agree
upon
this
baseline,
and
so
that
is
a
big
opportunity
for
enterprises
to
be
more
efficient,
transparent
and
it's
all
based
on
data.
So
we
want
to
make
that
easier
for
everybody
right
now
how
enterprises
come
to
agreements
they
it's
it's
pretty
pretty
ridiculous.
D
Hi
I'm
Zack
I'm,
the
CTO
of
a
state
where
a
previously
protocol
for
aetherium
and
we
develop
snoc
based
previous
solutions
and
we're
kind
of
we're
looking
for
looking
to
baseline
as
an
avenue
for
commercial
adoption
of
our
kind
of
our
zero
state.
Only
reason
us
not
technology,
and
we
were
just
very
excited
about
the
baseline
projects.
We
think,
has
great
prospects
for
a
programmable
privacy
on
the
net.
E
E
We're
about
to
launch
you
know
a
significant
offer
that
just
removes
a
lot
of
the
barriers
and
is
very
much
so
focused
on
getting
people
developing.
On
top
of
you
know,
public
etherium
network
sense,
there's
a
really
nice
synergy
there
when
we're
talking
enterprise
based
line-
and
you
know
having
a
roots
and
compelling
business
use
cases
for
them
to
actually
interact
with
them,
because
we,
we
really
believe
in
adding
value
for
really
SMEs
and
business
for
to
get
them
on
board.
F
Yep,
hello,
everybody.
This
is
stefan
CTO
of
uni
pride,
a
german
company,
blockchain
integrator,
so
what
we're
doing
is
bringing
enterprises
closer
to
blockchain
and
that's
also
why
we
are
so
excited
about
the
baseline
protocol,
because
we
think
it's
maybe
one,
if
not
the
missing,
link
for
enterprise
adoption.
A
G
We
go
thanks:
John
Kyle,
Thomas,
founder
and
CEO
provide
will
provide
the
blockchain
enable
organizations
they
started,
have
developed
a
platform.
I
hate
the
word
platform.
Call
it
a
launch
pad.
Really.
You
know
it's
kind
of
infrastructure.
Api
is
for
AWS
and
Azure.
It's
got
sort
of
core
blotting
ap
is
where
you
can
certain.
You
know
web
three.
G
So
we
were
early
so
they've
been
building
on
top
of
our
own
platform,
a
product
called
shuttle
that
leverages
a
lot
of
those
api's
and
really,
you
know,
I
see
this
division
here
for
being
able
to
baseline
the
baseline
protocol,
essentially
in
terms
of
adoption,
and
you
know
really
getting
getting
early
adopters
going
with
experiment
but
shuttle.
So
it's
been
great
to
meet.
Some
of
you
guys
already
look
forward
to
work
with
everyone.
Hey.
H
So
people
were
skeptical,
but
now
that
we're
moving
toward
working
on
main
net
I
think
that
that
can
change
and
I
see
a
future.
Hopefully,
where
a
lot
of
the
more
crypto
anarcho,
leaning
people
kind
of
realize
that
we
need
something
like
baseline
for
enterprise,
adoption
of
Maine
net
protocols,
because
otherwise
we're
not
going
to
get
as
big
as
we
need
to
as
a
whole
platform
as
a
theorem.
So
yeah
I'm,
just
hoping
that
things
go
well
on
this
I'm
happy
to
be
contributing
on
the
steering
committee.
A
D
Guys,
yeah
yeah,
hey
nice,
to
see
everyone
really
good
to
have
this
first
call
Sarika
chain-linked
mostly
on
the
product
management
on
gender.
You
know
providing
Experian
allocations,
real-world
data
so
for
changing
based
on
protocol
and
the
support
we're
bringing
makes
you
know
seems
like
a
no-brainer,
because
our
whole
vision
is
bridging.
D
So
if
you're
your
ecosystem
and
can
establish
an
ecosystem
to
enterprises
to
real
word
use
cases
right,
so
baseline
is
kind
of
step
and
I
think
a
huge
step
towards
bridging
that
gap
and
fortunate
or
super
excited
about
the
work
being
done
here
same
every
meeting.
We
have
and
can
do,
every
time
we
we
speak
together.
I
think
we
all
have
the
same
vision,
driving
us
and
I
think
this
could
be
the
beginning
of
some
great
stuff,
so
yeah
happy
to
be.
There
sounds.
A
D
Everyone,
this
is
Karthik,
so
new
poem
presenting
Eve
I
play
the
role
of
solution
architect
and
researcher
at
ey.
Be
one
of
the
original
authors
of
the
baseline
protocol
in
the
radish
demo.
Looking
forward
to
get
further
adoption
on
this
particular
focus
area
of
interest
would
be
the
ZK
schmuck
technologies
and
scalability
of
Baseline
towards
more
adoption
in
the
Tetum
community,
as
well
as
how
we
can
scale
this
further
to
be
adopted
beyond
the
theorem
one
daughter.
A
G
Hi
Fran
Chamberlin,
engineer
consensus,
also,
one
of
the
core
team
core
developers
of
the
baseline
project
to
date
worked
on
a
lot
of
the
messaging
and
architecture
and
sort
of
some
protocol
design
for
the
system
in
the
code
base.
As
it
stands,
I'm
looking
forward
to
meeting
everyone
in
the
community
and
getting
good
feedback
and
looking
for
applications
for
this
technology
in
different
industries,
particularly
interested
in
building
a
more
modular
system
and
now
aren't
composing
an
architecture
that
scales.
A
Thanks
Brian
I'd
like
to
say
that
Brian
and
Karthik
are
probably
crucial
resources
for
the
short
term
in
that
they,
you
know,
they
say
you
know
and
trying
to
teach
my
six-year-old
daughter,
good
leadership
is
good.
Listening,
so
listening
to
what
we've
already
done
and
then
taking
it
from,
there
is
a
good
way
for
us
to
make
sure
that
we
can
maintain
alignment
in
and
find
our
focal
points
as
a
community.
A
A
I
Yeah,
that's
pretty
much
what
I
was
going
to
say:
I'm
I
do
standards
with
consensus
and
I'm
on
the
project
governing
board
for
the
the
Oasis
etherium
open
project.
We're
very
excited
to
have
this
particular
project
within
that
group.
The
the
baseline
project,
because
it's
it's
really
just
the
interest
in
it-
is
phenomenal
and
I
think
it
fits
right
squarely
in
the
Bailiwick
of
the
etherium
project
at
Oasis,
so
I.
Thank
you
all
I'm,
mainly
just
going
to
be
listening
in,
but
I'm
looking
forward
to
a
lot
of
great
success
here.
Thanks.
A
Dan
and
as
the
person
who
probably
knows
more
about
standards
work
than
many
of
us,
including
myself,
please
check
our
sticks
if
we
miss
if
we
misstep
anywhere
in
this
hall,
Joe
hi.
J
Joe
Lubin
from
consensus
we've
been
bringing
any
kind
of
interested
party
to
the
etherium
technology
since
POC
0.5
before
Maine
that
was
launched.
We
have
been
particularly
interested
in
bringing
enterprise
to
the
use
of
the
technology
and
eventually
to
the
use
of
Maine
net
and
baseline
represents
a
potential
breakthrough
for
that.
J
J
I'd
like
to
actually
call
out
my
my
key
collaborator
collaborator
and
who
I
also
referred
to
as
a
mentor
Joe
Rubin,
who
I've
worked
with
closely
since
2015,
so
as
as
he
will
readily
reply.
Probably
my
enterprise
education
of
his
positioning
of
aetherium
is
has
been
critical
as
well,
but
it's
an
amazing
journey
and
you
know
I'm
really
really
happy
to
see
this
particular
part
of
this
journey,
because
I
think
this
is
a
you
know,
sort
of
critical
spot
and
also
a
critical
need
so
welcome.
Everyone.
A
My
personal
interest
in
this
is
well.
This
is
my
I
think
I'm,
the
only
person
Lee
senior
person
whose
day
job
is
nothing,
but
this
I
say
that
way
commit
my
boss,
show
there
to
say
you
know:
I,
eat
sleep
and
drink,
making
sure
that
the
community
gets
running
under
its
own
power
in
a
good
way
and
so
I'm
at
your
service.
A
That's
that's
the
introduction
phase
thanks
everybody
looking
at
the
agenda,
so
I
think
I've
already
mentioned
that
you
know
we
want
to
contribute
based
on
enlightened
self-interest.
So
I
encourage
everybody
to
continue
to
think
about
that,
articulate
it
to
the
community
and
can
encourage
others
to
do
the
same.
A
So
very
recap:
a
brief
recap
of
current
impact.
As
of
now
I
haven't
checked
in
the
last
few
hours.
It
might,
we
might
have
just
passed
it,
but
this
morning,
at
about
4
a.m.
we
were
at
a
hundred
and
eighty
stars,
35
Forks
and
committers,
jumping
on
all
the
time
after
six
months
as
a
benchmark-
and
this
is
by
no
means
a-
we
got
the
you
know-
we
love
our
brothers
and
sisters
at
hyper,
ledger
Basu,
but
base
has
been
running
for
six
months.
A
D
A
A
A
What
what
do
we
want
to
keep
an
eye
on
what
matters
Nate
you're,
you
guys
are
great
at
AnnaLynne,
alysus
and
finding
finding
the
important
things
out
of
the
data.
So
maybe
that's
something
you
can
advise
us
on
in
future
meetings
say
you
know
what
you
know.
What
what?
How
do
we
figure
out?
What
signal
is
when
I
was
a
CEO
some
time
ago?
You
know
the
board
one
of
the
board.
Member
taught
me
this
is
you're.
A
Gonna
keep
your
job
as
long
as
we
think
that
you're
looking
at
the
right
things,
you
know
you
could
be
winning
you
could
be
losing,
but
as
long
as
we
if
you
could
be
winning
and
if
we
think
you're
looking
at
the
wrong
things,
you're
going
to
be
out
of
a
job
anyway,
I
thought
that
was
a
very
important
way
of
looking
at
things.
So
what
should
we
be?
Looking
at
as
it's
a
steering
committee
seems
to
be
an
important,
constant.
A
G
A
D
B
A
D
Just
gonna
say
our
our
experience
with
slack
for
community.
They
are
not
very
good
for
pricing
even
for
a
very
community-oriented
use.
Cases
if
made
I,
don't
know
if
anyone's
been
through
this
rodeo
before,
but
it
can
be
quite
the
challenge.
I
love
slack,
we
use
it,
but
it
is
very
difficult
and
expensive
for
communities
yeah,
fair.
H
With
this
whole
slack
thing,
I
think
it's
cool
if
the
TSA
is
on
it,
but
for
the
broader
community,
like
I,
just
looked
through
the
baseline
github
and
we're
already
getting
outside
contributors,
who've,
never
even
heard
of
baseline.
Before,
like
we
jokey
and
eva
Balin,
come
and
others
so
Pete
a
place
for
them
to
stop
by
and
ask
questions
would
be
cool.
Do
we
have
something
like
that
right
now,
because
I
have
a
proposition?
If
we
don't.
H
H
So
basically
you
can
go
in
and
make
it
so
that
when
someone
talks
on
the
getter
side,
it
goes
to
telegram
and
vice
versa,
so
I
think
that
would
probably
be
a
good
first
step
unless
someone
has
a
better
idea
for
a
first
step
and
it
also
kind
of
seems
a
little
more
organic.
That
way
in
my
opinion,
because
it's
not
something
that's
like
slacks,
like
very
enterprise
and
paid
for
and
that
kind
of
stuff.
So.
B
H
It's
it's
like
to
ask
questions
and
get
real-time
feedback,
but
also
to
build
a
community
around
it.
So
you
kind
of
have
these
real-time
chat
channels,
rather
than
just
the
github
issues
and
PRS,
which
is
purely
for
technical
stuff
too,
like
brainstorm
with
the
community.
What
good
next
steps
are?
This
github
is
not
built
for
that.
It's
purely
I
mean
you
can
you
can
make
github
built
for
that?
H
There
are
new
tools
and
like
a
projects,
board
and
stuff
like
that,
but
it's
I
think
it's
better
to
have
some
kind
of
just
like
all
the
other
projects
and
the
space
have
getter
Telegram
and
also
discord.
I
think
Eric,
just
wrote,
discord
is
a
good
one
too,
and
we
can
bridge
to
that
as
well.
So,
basically,
you
have
one
channel
that
goes
over
three
chat
platforms
and
when
you
write
in
one
it
goes
to
all
the
others,
so
it
makes
it
easy
for
people
to
jump
in.
E
E
You
know
it's
only
very
useful,
so
people
can
almost
have
getting
started
or
you
know
refer
back
to
things
that
people
asked
time
and
time
again
is,
of
course
the.
Although
historical
search
is
there
on
a
lot
of
the
you
know,
chat
applications
that
it's
it's
not,
as
you
know,
good
as
its
it's
not
so
good
for
seeing
the
historical
stuff
I
completely.
H
A
Right
now,
I'm
gonna
I'll
call
time
on
this
particular
subject.
If
you
don't
mind,
this
is
excellent.
I
may
have
proposed
that
Hudson
and
Jory
and
I,
perhaps
in
listen
to
anybody
else,
would
like
to
jump
in
I'm.
Just
calling
names
so
say:
hey
wait
a
minute.
You
missed
me:
why
don't
we
take
an
action
to
do
a
spike
and
and
come
back
to
the
team
next
time
with
with
finals
and
we'll
stick
with
what
we
have
until
then,
but
then
we'll
make
we'll
make
final
determination
about
two
channels
and
modalities
cool
I.
A
Let's
send
upset
of
principle
down
right,
you
know,
there's
a
dialectic
between
stuff
people
already
have
making
people,
you
know
use
stuff.
They
don't
have
already
have
getting
to
people
that
don't
use
the
stuff
that
other
groups
have
and
we
are
living
in
that
age.
Where
you
know
we
have
this
explosion
of
channels.
A
So
it's
a
it's
a
fascinating
and
an
interesting
problem.
I
suppose
a
good
one
to
have
a
bank,
but
it's
still
it
is
a
problem
so
and
I
read
it.
Obviously
it
would
go
in
there
as
well
all
good
so
issues
and
tasks.
So,
ok,
so
careful
we
have
an
email,
miss
distribution
list
as
well.
So
the
two
things
that
we
have
for
now
is.
A
The
slack
and
an
email
distribution
list,
if
anybody's
not
on
that
the
TSC,
where
there's
a
tsc1,
there's
an
SSE
one,
there's
the
general
members
list,
which
I
think
is
approaching
four
hundred
people.
That
means,
of
course,
careful
use
of
the
email,
distribution
list
and
I'll
I
will
argue,
I.
Think
it's
almost
QED
jory
that
the
TSC,
possibly
the
SSE,
but
certainly
the
TSC
members
would
be
the
one
yeah
and
it
would
be
ones
that
get
that
email
that
says
approve
or
disapprove.
We.
A
Anyone
does
not
want
that
yoke
around
their
neck.
Let
us
know
so:
I
get
an
email
and
it
hopefully
won't
get
a
lot
of
them
right.
If
we,
if
we
get
the
community
understandings
correct
folks
will
will
use
it.
I
think
that
the
argument
is
to
use
it
only
for,
like
you
know,
big
meeting
announcements
and
things
like
that,
where
you
need
three
hundred
four
hundred
people
to
know
the
same
thing,
otherwise
yeah
slack
and
whatever
we
come
up
with
next
github
issues
and
Zen
hub.
A
So
this-
and
this
is
fairly
important-
we
have
a
Zen
hub
account
full
up
and
we
have
a
certain
way
of
using
Zen
hub
that
I
shall
propose
now
and
if
anyone
wants
to
alter
that,
that's
certainly
something
we
can
discuss,
but
yeah
just
for
to
get
the
ball
rolling.
This
is
the
proposal,
and
it
is
that
tasks
I'll
actually
bring
up.
I
didn't
have
it
bring
it
up
right
now,.
A
Pretty
cool,
it
has
kind
of
a
feature,
bug
combo,
which
is
or
not
bugged,
but
it
has
a
data
structure
or
it
has
a
data.
There's
a
schema
where,
where
it
has
a
new
object,
called
epoch
which
I
wish
they
didn't
call
epics.
But
it
is
a
Nesta
bull
object
right,
so
you
can
create
epics
within
epochs
within
epics
within
epics,
and
then
put
an
issue
into
it.
A
You
can't
and
give
up
without
just
doing
general
references
do
an
issue
with
an
issue
within
an
issue,
and
so
this
it
makes
epics
nice
for
defining
topics,
creating
projects
and
then
nesting
down
into
them,
ultimately
down
into
user
stories
and
tasks.
Or
what
have
you
I
would
propose
that
we
use
github,
which
is
the
public
repository
for
anything
that
we're
doing
seriously
as
an
organization.
A
So
if
we
go
into
yeah,
this
is
not
written
as
a
story
and
that's
okay,
because
it's
an
issue
usually
we
like
to
encourage,
starting
with
in
action
verb.
So
do
this
fix
that
work
on
that
and
as
we
get
going
most
of
them,
unless
their
chores
would
be
connected
to
an
epoch
in
which
you
can
create
in
the
standard
github
area.
A
A
A
You
know
Joe
needs
this
so
that
he
can
do
that,
which
is
the
best
way
to
write
a
story
and
write
a
needs
B
so
that
C
and
the
so
that
being
the
most
important
part
that
all
gets
plugged
into
into
epics.
So
you
can
have
a
story
that
sits
within
a
topic
and
I
expect
that
the
SSC
will
start
on
having
project
level
topics
or
epics
called
vertical
industry
acts
vertical
industry
y
and
that
sort
of
thing
and
then
we'll
use
that
for
specifications
as
well.
A
D
A
So,
ideally,
every
task
would
be
connected
to
actually
I
missed.
Some
steps
here
stories
would
be
connected
to
a
story
that
has
a
so
that
usually
that
doesn't
wind
up
happening,
especially
in
a
big
community
effort,
gets
a
little
messy,
but
I'll
try
to
be
vigilant
on
that,
and
anybody
that's
interested
in
helping
out
there
and
be
great
any
questions
on
it.
H
A
A
B
A
One
pro
tip
there
is
that
the
epic
object
in
Zen
hub
is
not
in
github.
There
is
no
object,
there's
nothing
to
contain
that
object
in
github.
So
when
you,
when
you
do
when
you're
doing
Zen
hub
op
it
and
that
it
actually
has
some
nice
features
to
it
because
not
having
it
and
give
up
me,
as
you
know,
you're
not
cluttering
up
github
with
that,
necessarily
with
from
the
engineering
perspective,
you
can
use
it
for
a
lot
of
good
project
management
and
that
sort
of
thing
so
I'll
move
on
from
there.
A
We
review
governance
next
and
and-
and
we
have
an
action
item
really,
which
is
is
to
the
only
real
big
action
item
for
today-
is
to
seed
the
maintainer
x'
with
folks
we
can
have.
We
will
follow
this
up
next
time
with
another
round
of
this,
because
you
know
the
app
they
ask
for
everyone
is
to
go
and
find
you
know.
A
A
Anybody
not
seeing
this
has
anybody
not
been
able
to
go
onto
the
docs
dot
baseline
protocol?
That
word,
if
you
haven't,
do
that,
it's
I,
you
know:
we've
spent
a
good
amount
of
time.
I.
Think
it's
a
work
in
progress,
but
I
think
it's
got.
Some
good
stuff
got
our
community
members
here,
and
we
have
governance
here
and
in
that
we
have.
B
A
Maintain
that
here,
so
everybody
can
see
it
and
they're
just
a
few
basic
rules.
One
is
that
we
we
will
determine
the
initial
maintain
errs,
and
the
number
of
maintain
is
required
to
merge
a
contribution
I'd
like
to
open
that
question
right
now,
which
is
we
have
initially
set
it
to
three
by
default
and
I
would
think
it
would
be
a
very
appropriate
thing
for
somebody
to
say,
are
you
crazy?
It
should
be,
or
what
have
you
so
does
anybody
else
Turk
the
bidding.
Anybody
feel
that
needs
to
go
down
or
up
arguments.
I
A
H
My
learn
is
that
if
someone
is
going
to
the
you
know,
zero
knowledge
part
of
the
repo
and
submitting
a
change,
because
that's
actually
one
of
the
issues
pulled
up
right
now.
Do
we
have
people
like
in
this
steering
committee,
who
have
an
expertise
and
that
who'd
be
able
to
review
that
like
if
they
do
a
pull
request
on
this.
A
H
I
The
maintainer
--zz
don't
actually
have
to
be
experts,
but
they
do
have
to
know
who
the
experts
are
right.
So
if
they
themselves
are
not
experts
as
long
as
they
are
able
to
reach
out
to
a
sufficiently
broad
number
of
other
experts
to
review,
then
the
maintainer
job
is
to
watch
the
conversation
and
see
if
there
is
agreement
among
those
who
are
experts.
D
G
Guys
Brian
here
what
we
talked
about,
we
haven't
yet,
but
you
could
or
leave
it
open,
is
obviously
github
provides
the
ability
to
you
know,
flag
or
require
certain
reviewers
on
certain
areas.
The
code
base,
or
certainly
the
library,
is
a
file
types.
That
kind
of
thing
you
could
potentially
do
something
like
that
to
ensure
someone
with
technical
knowledge
use
it.
We
didn't
add
that
in
yet
we
can
discuss.
If
that's
something
we
think
is
valuable.
A
Yeah
tell
you
what
why
don't?
We
start
with
the
simplest
version
of
that,
which
is
we
teach
maintain,
errs
how
how
to
be
maintained
errs
in
onboarding
sessions,
which
is
something
I'll
mention
in
a
few
minutes
and
and
principle
number
one
for
the
maintainer
ziz
this
one
right
here,
don't
need
to
be
expert
need
to
be
good.
Listeners
need
to
be
good
at
you
know,
enabling
the
community
to
do
its
job
right
so
yeah
if
Brian
is
maintaining
and
and.
A
E
A
D
E
A
Blockchain
porridge
right
or
blockchain
soup,
you
know
just
becomes
a
mess.
You
know
there's
this
balance
between.
You
know
going
out
too
soon
too
late,
and
you
never
know
if
you
got
a
right
until
after
the
fact,
we've
got
just
enough
code
that
people
seem
to
understand
and
enough
articulation
and
people
get
the
general
idea
yeah
and
now
you
know
the
question
is:
will
we
all
run
amuck
or
will
we
come
together
into
some
kind
of
focused
activity
and
the
maintainer
is
having
a
crucial
role
in
this?
A
So
what
I'd
like
to
propose
is
that
one
or
two
or
three
people
have
the
take
the
responsibility
of
doing
an
actual
onboarding
session
for
every
new
maintainer
or
they
take
them
through
things
like
don't
have
to
be
an
expert.
Here's
how
you
do
this
and
we
have
some
experts
about
being
maintainer
on
this
call.
So
who
would
like
to
step
up
and
take
that
ask.
G
Obviously
my
son,
whose
level
we
don't
do
at
least
in
some
part
as
when
you're
faced
with
new
folks
who
want
to
contribute
like
this,
my
initial
thought,
a
video
which
is
a
good
idea,
I
mean
maybe
there's
a
short
less
than
five
minutes
kind
of
you
could
put
together,
but
that
would
probably
start
with
in
you
know
the
contributor
guide
a
lot
of
that
mind.
Looking
those
concepts,
my
framed,
the
video
just
like
the
other
way
to
consume
it,
and
then
people
come
into
the
forums
the
chat.
G
A
So
but
yeah
I
think
we
can.
We
can
keep
it
at
2
for
now.
Does
anybody
else
have
any
questions
comments,
things
to
add
about
maintainer
Xand,
getting
into
the
work.
A
Okay,
if
no
one
else
does
it
I'm
going
to
be
doing
regular
office
hours,
style,
onboarding
sessions
for
anybody,
maintainer,
x'
or
otherwise,
who
want
you
know?
So
if
anybody
wants
to
jump
into
the
work
and
get
a
lay
of
the
land,
I'm
going
to
do
once
or
twice
a
week,
video
taped
onboarding
sessions
using
the
whiteboard
just
like
this
and
showing
you
know
at
least
what
I
know
others
can
can
do.
The
same
can
do
their
own
can
help
their
can
can
jump
on.
Do
it
ride
ride
together
on
them.
A
I
will
announce
the
times
that
I'm
doing
them.
That's
just
something
again,
it's
my
day
job.
So
I
have
the
time
I'll
make
the
time
to
do
it.
It's
not
everybody's
day
job,
so
it
may
not
be
for
everybody,
but
if
you're
interested
reach
out
to
me
after
the
call,
we
will
be
doing
on
boarding
sessions
of
various
kinds
and
we'll
tape
them
all
so
that
we
have
a
nice
video
library.
A
A
A
A
You
know
that's
a
big
claim.
We
better
be
right.
You
know
probably
be
good
for
somebody
to
spike
that
so
there's
all
sorts
of
work
like
this.
It
is
not
the
job
of
the
TSC
to
be
the
sole
planners
of
such
work,
of
course,
but
it
at
this,
and
it
is
also
not
verboten
that
the
two
folks
on
the
TSC
work
on
such
things.
A
So
as
we
bootstrap
the
community
I'd
like
to
encourage
everybody
to
start
developing
that
list
for
themselves,
posing
it
again
right
here
in
in
in
github,
be
brave,
don't
worry
about
putting
stuff
in
that
people.
Might
you
know
be
confused
about
you
know
and
again,
if
you
do
it
in
the
epics
you're,
not
really
cluttering
up
the
actual
github
and.
A
Yeah,
so
those
I
don't
want
to
go
into
that
too
much
today,
because
we
don't
have
we
have
an
hour-
and
this
is
our
kickoff,
but
I
think
that
this
is
where
a
lot
of
the
works
gonna
happen,
and
it
leads
to
the
other
thing
I
wanted.
We
wanted
to
talk
about
today,
which
is
ideas
for
or
for
the
community
organizing
itself
around
the
work.
A
You
on
you
also
do,
and
then
we
have
some
real
old
hands
and
experts
at
coordinating
in
leading
groups
of
people
that
can't
be
led,
I'll
just
quickly
say
the
IRA
I
used
to
play
this
game
EVE
Online
years
ago,
and
it
was
an
MMORPG
and
you
know
it's.
It's
the
I
think
the
foundation
of
ghosting,
because
you
could
just
disappear,
not
do
the
work,
but
everything
in
the
game
is
made
by
players
and
is
a
lot
of
drudgery
and
I.
A
F
Know
just
a
short
note,
perhaps
I
think
it's
always
especially
in
the
bootstrapping
face.
It's
very
important
to
know
who
the
audience
is,
and
my
feeling
is
that,
with
all
the
news
that
have
been
made
around
the
baseline
lounge
and
the
repo
going
public
and
that
there
are
clearly
two
to
target
audiences,
those
who
are
really
interested
in
coding,
stuff
and
developers
and
I
think
it's
quite
easy
to
motivate
them
and
the
bootstrapping
phase,
and
there
perhaps
is
another
audience
that
is
more
interested
in
the
long
term.
F
You
know
effects
that
something
like
a
based
on
protocol
has
and
I
just
want
to
bring
up
the
the
idea
that
it's
that
is
important
not
to
address
the
second
audience
too
early,
because
the
expectations
are
already
high
and
I.
Think
the
most
valuable
input
for
the
for
the
bootstrapping
phase
is
to
motivate
as
many
developers
and
code
contributors
and
maintainer
as
possible
to
ensure
that
the
transition
from
from
radish
to
the
initial
version
of
a
baseline
protocol
is
successful
and
then
tackle
the
the
wider
audience.
A
Thank
should
have
done
any
other
thoughts
on
that
as
a
practical
matter.
We
have
to
figure
out
what
kind
of
meetings
events
and
you
know
what
what
is
the
program
of
activities
and
that
that
I
think
that
that
is
the
the
V
thing
to
really
accomplish
this
week,
even
before
the
next
meeting,
which
we
do
have
to
set
before
the
top
of
this
so
very
quickly,
I'll
say
be
thinking
about
things
that
we
can
do
to
generate
to
create
within
the
next
week
a
starter
pack
for
a
program
of
activities.