►
From YouTube: The Baseline
Description
The weekly office hours for the Baseline Protocol open source community. Learn more at https://baseline-protocol.org.
A
Hey
everybody
it's
time
for
the
baseline
show
once
again
every
week
right
here
on
youtube,
I'm
john
wilpert
and
I'm
here
with
the
with
our
regular
panelists
around
the
baseline
protocol,
our
weekly
office
hours,
that
we
discuss
recent
events
for
baselining
and
help
people
who
need
to
need
to
know
how
to
get
involved,
how
to
how
to
help
how
to
how
to
get
help,
how
to
contribute
and
how
to
implement
baselining
patterns.
A
If
you
don't
know
what
that's
all
about
go
to
baseline
protocol.org-
and
you
will
find
I
heard-
actually
you
can
go
to
just
baselineprotocol.org-
I
I
thought
it
was
a
dash
too.
I
thought
you
had
to
have
the
dash,
but
maybe
you
don't
I
should.
I
should
probably
look
into
that,
but
baseline
dash
protocol.org,
where
you
can
get
click
that
slash
or
that
slack
button
and
get
into
our
slack
channel,
which
is
over
a
thousand
people
at
any
given
time
and
and
get
help
from
people.
A
And
if
you
need
more
than
that,
you
can.
You
can
get
more
help.
In
fact,
by
you
know
just
asking
one
of
us
to
set
up
an
email
list,
or
anything
like
that.
So
with
that
I
see,
we've
got
our
friends.
Stefan
schmidt
from
unibright
we've
got
samurai
kishore,
hello,
hello.
A
We
have
dhruv
malik,
we
have
who's
been
really
one
of
our
our
newest
contributors
and
a
big
supporter
ishwashri
day
from
from
india
doing
a
grants
project
right
now
that
we'll
talk
about
sam
stokes,
our
our
illustrious
maintainer
guy
and
and
congratulations
sam
stokes
and
samarat
for
being
the
newest
technical
steering
committee
members.
A
They
were
voted
in
unanimously,
no
dissensions,
and
so
now
sam
and
samurai
sam,
both
of
them
have
put
in
real
work
and
time
on
the
on
the
protocol
and
the
community,
and
we're
very
glad
to
have
you
involved
sam.
It's
you
know
long
past
two
you've
you've
been
doing
yeoman's
work
in
the
in
the
community
and
we're
all
very
grateful
to
that.
B
A
E
A
Star-Lord
and
barry
white
together
again,
hey
ryan
fish
is
here
jack
lee,
so
yeah
we've
got
a
lot
going
on
and
things
are
really
really
speeding
up.
Now
I
think
we
we
had
some
sort
of
this
normal
open
source
community.
A
Sometimes
it
gets
softer
and
then
it
gets.
Then
it
gets
going
again
and
so,
for
you
know,
as
we
were
all
coming
out
at
cove,
it
felt
like
there
was
some
softness
there.
A
A
I
don't
know
what
you
want
to
do
and
at
some
point
somebody
stands
up
and
says
we're
going
to
do
this,
we're
going
to
do
these
things
and
so
right
now
we
have
now
that
for
the
v1
standards
document,
which
is,
I
think,
ready
to
go
fully
to
draft
right.
Andreas
friend.
E
Yeah,
I
I
I
would
say
the
the.
If
everything
goes
well,
we
should
be.
We
should
have
everything
except
the
test
fixtures
merge
by
sometime
in
july.
It
was
right
on
the
time.
E
So
I
have,
I
have
one
more
pr
dropping
next
week
we
have
kyle,
approve
that
pr
dude
section
six.
So
then,
on
thursday
we
can.
We
can
finish
out
the
identity,
identifiers
and
credentials
section.
Anybody
interested
in
identifiers,
identity
and
credentials
join
the
standard
call
and
make
your
voice
heard,
because
if
you
don't
speak
up,
sit
down
and
hold
your
peace.
A
A
Yeah,
so
that
that's
that's,
that's
a
really
good.
I
mean
you
know
having
the
standard
dock
to
a
point
where
we
can
all
argue
over
it
and
we
can
have
the
standard,
the
the
oasis
standards
body.
A
A
Also
going
on
right
now
is
ryan
and
on
my
team,
ryan
and
sam
are
are
spending
the
our
next
sprint
for
the
you
know,
the
next
two
weeks
effectively
articulating
and
elaborating
the
specific
technical
requirements
and
turning
those
into
stories
and
issues
and
tasks
epics.
What
have
you
that
we
can,
as
a
development
community
go
and
either
you
know,
have
different
our
respective
companies
implement
those
components.
You
know
those
elements,
and
you
know
companies
like
provide
company,
microsoft
and
and
others
ey.
A
A
3Q4Q,
that's
the
goal
right.
So
we
can.
We
can
expand
or
re
reduce
the
scope,
but
the
time
frame
is
that
time
frame
because
we
want
to
go
promulgate
the
standard
before
the
end
of
the
year
so
that
we
can
have
that
for
the
new
year,
and
that
means
2022
should
be
not
only
the
year
of
the
did.
You
know
the
modern
digital
identities
for
corporates
and
individuals,
but
it
should
also
be
the
the
year
of
really
going
production
with
baseline
in
a
repeatable
scalable
way,
I
think,
we've
you
know.
A
Companies
like
provide
and
and
unibright
have
shown
that
you
can
go
full
enterprise
with
this
stuff,
but
it's
not
ready
for
it's
not
really
repeatable
scalable
and
that
you
know
a
journeyman
engineer.
Who's
just
coming
in
without
good
systems.
Knowledge
like
kyle,
does,
is
going
to
have
a
hard
time
getting
getting
their
head
around
this
stuff
and
we've
seen
that
right.
So
that's
what
that's!
A
What
really
the
next
stage
is
all
about
is
getting
it
so
that
it's
so
easy,
straightforward
and
stable
and
stable
and
and
there's
a
nice
little
path
of
breadcrumbs
from
becoming
aware
of
baselining
to
implementing
awesome
stuff
that
you
just
want
to
do
more
of
that's
what
v1
is
all
about
ryan
and
sam.
I
know
you
guys
aren't
ready
to
really
talk
a
lot
about
that,
but
maybe
we
can
have
a
discussion.
A
I
mean
kyle's
here
and,
and
andreas
is
here,
so
maybe
we
can
discuss
what
what
what's
going
into
that,
that
list
of
stuff
that
we're
gonna
go
tackle?
A
F
Yeah,
we
actually
were
discussing
this
yesterday
with
lucas
as
well
api,
clear
definitions,
use
cases
diagrams
that
was
on
the
on
the
list,
we're
also
looking
at
tooling
and
and
what
automations,
what
tools
or
extensions
to
tools
can
we
add
to
really
scaffold
the
experience
so
to
your
point,
john
of
if
you're
not
coming
in
with
an
extensive
systems,
experience
and
all
of
that
landscape?
F
F
Is
there
a
way
to
set
up
a
biased
instance
of
the
protocol
so
that
it
becomes
usable
very
quickly
and
then
hooking
in
all
the
different
facets
that
are
required
from
local
project
client
to
servers
running
could
be
docker
packaging,
that's
kind
of
what
we're
exploring
now
and
trying
to
flesh
out
a
list
of
all
the
highest
common
patterns
you
can
put
in
there
and
the
most
common
tool
sets
that
they
could
be
put
in.
So
it
was
a
recommendation
to
look
at
dhruv.
I
think
it
was
yours.
C
A
A
Yeah
drew
you
were
saying,
I
I
loved
this
idea
and
we
got
to
get
klter
and
the
microsoft
gang
to
to
get
on
this.
I
love
the
idea
of
of
yeah,
but
introspection
and
type
ahead
on.
You
know
a
package
on
vs
code
right.
That
would
be,
I
think,
that's
probably
doable.
We
got
to
talk
to
kale
about
that.
C
It's
just
that
we
have
to
define
the
grammar
of
the
yeah
when
api
endpoints
are
clearly
defined,
but
we
will
have
to
define
the
methods
exactly
so
I
think
andreas
and
we
will
then
we
will
have
to
just
write
json
scripts
and
yeah.
It
can
be
packaged.
E
Yeah,
you
just
need
a
couple
of
npm
modules
that
are
that
are
that
are
that
are-
and
you
know,
export
them
so
that
you
can.
You
can
pull
them
into
your
own
code,
js
code
for
to
to
to
use
those
to
use
to
use
the
wrap
methods
right
I
mean,
as
a.
B
E
Yeah,
it's
it's!
It
just
takes
a
concerted
effort-
I'm
I
just
went
through
this,
or
still
I'm
going
through
this
with
another
project
that
has
that
had
a
lot
of
stuff
going
on
and
a
lot
of
endpoints
both
rest
api
as
well
as
ditcom
endpoints,
and
in
order
to
be
really
usable
and
easily
usable
by
other
by
other
participants
and
applications.
It
was
an
sdk,
so
that
was
built
and
and
now
there's
there's
significant,
more
more
more
uptake.
So
so.
F
I
think
another
avenue
that
we
can
explore
for
for
I
don't
want
to
call
it
tooling,
but
loosely
is
if
you
take
something
like
aws
as
well
architected
framework
and
you
start
applying
their
the
tool
that
they
put
against
that
which
is
really
because
portion
of
this
is
systems
right.
It's
one
thing
to
be
a
developer,
but
the
overall
implementation
is
a
systems
effort
across
organizations.
So
it's
not
going
to
be
an
individual
developer,
accomplishing
that
goal.
F
E
Of
ways
by
the
way
it's
like
api
portal
is
part
of
the
next
pr.
That's
going
to
be
dropped
into
the
standard.
E
F
E
B
B
A
A
All
right,
well,
yeah,
let's,
let's
do
the
merging
you
know,
smash
the
like
button,
hit,
hit
the
subscribe
button
and
hit
the
merge
hit.
The
merge,
hey
folks,
that.
A
You
know
if
you
write
code,
get
off
your
butt
get
in
here.
We
need
your
help
and
also,
let
me
say,
let
me
mention
a
couple
of
things.
One
is
we
are
hiring
you
might
see
tyler
here
when
his
camera
was
on,
you
might
have
seen
him
typing
on
our
internal
meetings,
he's
our
head
of
products,
projects
and,
and
our
meetings
like
this
he's
like
okay,
that's
a
ticket,
that's
a
ticket!
A
That's
a
ticket,
we're
gonna
hire
a
community
manager,
slash,
you
know,
driver
slash
and
maybe
on
the
upside.
If
we
can
find
somebody,
that's
also
got
some
light.
Tech
chops
that
are
that
are
able
to
you
know
lead
on
docks.
A
That's
a
that's
a
we
we're
ready
to
hire
that
person
right
now.
So,
if
you're
that
person
or
if
you
know
them,
you
know,
you
know
how
to
find
us,
we
want
to
get
that
person
installed
into
the
community.
They'll
be
working
for
my
company
consensus
reporting
to
nick
and
myself
and
but
we're
but
they'll
be
organizing
the
baseline
protocol
community,
as
I
and
nick
spend
more
and
more
time
building
our
business.
That's
based
on
baselining.
A
So
as
as
we
get
busy
doing
that,
you
know
there's
an
old
phrase
I
like,
which
is,
if
you
want
to
fail
at
two
things,
do
two
things
right.
So
if
we're
going
to
focus
on
building
the
business
and
focus
on
keeping
the
community
active,
we're
going
to
need
somebody
else
to
help.
A
So,
if
you're,
that
person,
if
you've,
got
really
good
organizational
integrity,
operational
integrity,
skills,
good
linear
thinking,
good
good,
good
at
and
then
good
at
nagging
people
to
get
get
work
done,
you
know,
give
us
a
call,
we
need
it.
We
need
a
tyler
for
baseline,
it's
what
we
need.
A
We
we
worked
on
cloning
tyler,
but
it
it
was
just
horrible
results.
It
was
terrifying,
yeah,.
E
They
they
they
they
actually
are
gonna
make
a
movie
out
of
that's
called
species.
Four.
A
So
yeah,
that's
that's
a
big
announcement.
We
are
committing
to
bill
to
hiring
that
person
and
could
not
work
faster
on
that.
So,
if
you're
interested
come
on
in
the
other
thing,
is
all
this
work
that
we've
been
just
talking
about.
If
you
want
to
oops
that
didn't
work,
if
you're
tuning
in
on
youtube
at
least
you'll,
see
that
on
your
screen,
the
baseline
grants
program
funded
by
the
ethereum
foundation.
Thank
you
very
much.
Ethereum
foundation
and
there's
still
a
good
chunk
of
money
in
here
unallocated.
A
Yet
for
projects
and
with
that
yeah,
and
it's
really
easy
to
you
know
just
go
to
baseline
protocol.org
and
you
can
you
can
get
into
the
you
know:
either
propose
a
grant
project
or
respond
to
a
bounty
project
and
and
if
you're
one,
if
you're
not
real,
comfortable
proposing
a
project.
That's
okay!
A
You
can
you,
can
you
know
contact
any
one
of
us
and
and
and
and
talk
it
through
before
you
propose
it,
so
you
don't
have
to
feel
like
you
just
have
to
go
in
cold.
You
can
just
get
on
the
slack
ping.
Any
one
of
us
on
this
co
on
this
channel
that
you
see
any
of
these
names,
you'll
you'll,
find
us
and
give
us.
You
know
we'll
just
talk
it
through.
A
That's
what
in
fact
drove
me
malik
did
and
dhruv
is
you're
working
on
the
hello
world
project
right.
C
Yes,
and
currently,
I
will
try
to
yeah,
run
an
example
on
provide
stack
and
just
it
will
be
basically
trying
to
show
that
if
in
a
two
counter
party
system,
if
somebody
has
enabled
baseline,
they
are
not
able
to
change
the
common
frame
of
data
as
a
reference
so
yeah,
I
will
currently
it's
time
for
minutes.
I
will
put
a
grant
on
that.
B
B
E
About
the
about
the
the
the
ethereum
based
that
method
and
and
incorporating
that
into
into
into
the
reference
implementation,
that's
that's,
what's
currently
being
being
prepared
to
be
to
be
to
be
put
out
and
and
put
up
for
the
community
to
to
put
in
proposals.
So
you
don't
have
to
wreck
your
brain.
You
know,
there's
some
there's
some
there's
some
concrete
things
that
that
you
want
to.
E
You
want
to
to
put
your
put
your
energy
behind
it,
because
it's
really
important,
because
the
ids
and
firefox
credentials
are
a
key
piece
and
core
part
of
of
the
baseline
baseline
protocol
and
the
standard.
E
So
we
want
to
make
sure
that
we
also
have
an
ethereum-based
dip
method
that
is
scalable
in
there
and
within
the
reference
implementation.
B
No
problem
yeah,
I
was
just
going
to
say
that
there's
a
branch
that,
where
there's
some
work
of
some
work
on
on
that,
has
been
done
already,
that
can
be
shared
along
with.
A
All
right
right,
andres,
do
you
want
to
take
some
time
on
this
on
this
video
or
next
week
next
week,
by
the
way
is
that
is
next
week,
the
29th?
A
It
is
right,
it
is
all
right
everybody
tune
in
next
week,
there's
a
pretty
sweet
announcement.
It's
only
the
first
of
many
that
I
think
are
going
to
be.
A
Well,
there'll
be
it'll,
be
a
nice
announcement
to
talk
about
next
week
that
that
should
be
interesting
to
to
enterprise
organizations
in
particular
yeah,
so
that
that
you
know
you'll
want
to
tune
in
for
that.
But
andres
do
you
want
to
talk
about
this
today
or
do
you
want
to
kind
of
prepare
something
for
next
week
that.
E
No,
I
I
think
I
think
I
can
I
can
it
it's
it's
it's
relatively
straight.
It's
relatively
straight
straightforward.
There
is
the
the
reason
why
why
this
is
going
to
be
put
out
is
because
you
want
to
be
able
to.
E
E
You
know,
there's
not
going
to
be
just
one
individual
from
that
organization
that
has
to
interact
with
baseline
but
many
and
they
need
to
be
authorized.
So
you
need
a
a
method
for
for
decentralized
identifiers,
that's
scalable,
and
that
is
robust,
and
obviously
we
wanted
it
to
be
ethereum
based
like.
A
When
I'm
talking
to
corporate,
I
usually
call
that
modern
digital
identity
for
companies
right.
A
E
It's
it
enables
it
enables
scalable,
federated
identity
that
is
crucial
for
for,
for
for
large-scale
ecosystems
such
as
in
supply
chain,
which
is
going
to
be
also
mandated
very
soon
by
by
by
governments.
There
is
there
is
a
big
effort,
push
in
germany
going
on
there's
there's
one
here
in
the
us,
through
through
the
customs
and
border
patrol
part
of.
A
Dhs
there's
a
new
project
in
in
the
oasis,
open
foundation.
That's
called
it's.
If
you
go
to
oasis,
look
up
proof
of
origin,
it's
run
by
an
ex
ernst
young
guy
and
really
knows
supply
yeah,
so
they're
building
the
standard
out
for
for
proof
of
origin,
which
is
going
to
be
part
of
that
whole.
E
Customer
scene
yeah
exactly
and
there's,
there's
there's
work
going
on
in
the
w3c
around
that.
So
the
the
basic
point
here
is:
if
you
want
to
enable
large-scale
supply
chain
ecosystems
right,
which
we
now
see
in
the
world,
we
need
to
be
able
to.
Have
you
know
it's
like
fluid
trust
boundaries.
E
You
need
something:
that's
scalable
right,
so
scalable
methods
to
establish
these.
These.
You
know
scalable
trust
federations
require
the
right
method
and
we
want
it
to
be
ethereum
based,
and
luckily
there
is
already
an
existing
standard
which
is
called
site
tree,
and
there
is
an
ethereum
based
method
that
there
is
a
reference
implementation
for,
but
it's
not
yet
compliant
with
the
latest
version
of
the
spec.
So
the
rfp
is
going
to
be
about
make
that
the
id
method
spec
compliant,
that's
the
first
piece.
E
So
because
then
you're,
when
you're,
when
you're
spinning
up
a
baseline
stack,
you're,
not
only
spinning
up
a
baseline
stack
but
you're,
spinning
up
a
public
node
for
the
the
for
the
for
the
ethereum
based
site
tree
did
method
and
as
more
and
more
baseline,
stacks
are
going
to
be
spun
up.
You'll
have
a
very
robust,
large
large
scale
network
of
of
nodes
that
can
offer
identifier
and
identity
services
to
anyone.
A
E
It
is
it
is
it
is.
It
is
a
super
special
situ,
a
situation
I
already
talked
with
with
with
with
with
the
ethereum
foundation
about
that.
So
there's
there's.
E
There's
there
they're
they're
they're
behind
that.
So
we're
we're
gonna
bounce
that
out
like
at
at
a
very
attractive
price,
because
it
is
the
foundation
for
pretty
much
any
any
enterprise
application.
A
That
right,
yeah
right,
so
I
was
just
talking
with
a
huge
erp
vendor
this
morning,
and
this
was
central
to
the
conversation
so
yeah.
It's
important
2022
needs
to
be
the
year
of
the
dead
and
and
that'll
help
us
a
lot,
and
if
we
get
v1
out
it'll
be
we
can
support
that
and
also
if
we,
when
we
get
v1
out
before
the
end
of
the
year,
we
can
support
that
and
we
can
also
make
2022
the
year
of
production
baselining
with.
A
B
A
He's
a
good
guy
and,
of
course,
reuben
heck,
the
the
illustrious
and
famous
reuben
heck
and
all
those
guys
yeah
certo.
So
what
where
do?
Where
does
one
go
to
to
find
out
and
and
then
engage
in
trying
to
get
that
bounty.
E
I
did
will
be
that
will
be
published.
The
the
the
tse
needs
to
needs
to
approve
it,
and
then
we
will
put
it
out
on
the
on
the
on
the
we
put
it
on
on
on
git
coin,
and
we
put
it
on
the
baseline,
the
baseline
bounty
or
proposal
all.
B
A
All
right
well
stay
tuned
to
the
baseline,
show,
folks
and
we'll
we'll
perhaps
next
week,
we'll
be
able
to
tell
you
where
when
and
how
to
get
involved
with
that.
A
Serious
money
yeah
for
a
serious
mission
right,
so
we
we
have
some
incentive
funding
as
we
we
were
talking
about
for
r
d
and
enablement
projects
around
baseline.
I
don't
think
that'll
be
the
last
money
we
see
so
get
involved
right
now.
The
most
important
thing
is
getting
the
money
spent.
A
Baselining
getting
more
companies
baselining,
that's
that's
right.
I
mean
it.
I
I
have
to
say
I
was
so.
I
think
I
was
spoiled
by
the
fact
that
you
guys
jack
pulled
off
public
announcements
at
the
beginning
of
projects
around
baseline
with
major
entities.
It's
pulled
a
lot
of
attention
and
interest
your
way,
and
I
was
spoiled
by
that
most
of
the
time
in
these
enterprise
projects.
A
You
don't
hear
about
it
for
two
years
until
they
actually
release
the
thing,
and
so
I'm
hearing
about
all
this
stuff
privately,
that
that
cannot
be
spoken
and
I'm
like.
Oh,
please,
just
go
out
and
announce
it
publicly.
You
know
I'll
pay
you!
I
got
10
bucks
here
I'll,
give
you
10
bucks
for
that
and
they're
like
no.
No,
you
know
we've
got
more
public
ones
coming
yeah
big
companies
tend
to
not
want
to
tip
their
hand
until
they're
out
in
the
market,
but
I
I
I
will.
B
Understand,
based
on
certain
trajectory
that
we
have
and
on
the
level
of
development,
that's
been
ongoing
within
certain
cycles
that
we've
had
we're
nearing
public
announcement
of
others
as
well,
which
is
great
just
based
on
the
amount
of
effort
that
has
gone
in
by
kyle
and
the
greater
team
to
get
us
to
this
point.
So
we're
expecting
that
europe
coming.
A
A
Here,
let
me
see
if
I
can
here
just
I'll,
get
right
down:
okay,
nice!
Thank
you!
Do
a
little
brady
bunch
thing
here.
So
that's
really
great
great
news,
jack
and
we're
we're
seeing
the
same
stuff
over
here,
but
I
don't
know
you
guys
seem
to
have
this
amazing
knack
to
get
your
clients
to
actually
talk
about
what
they're
doing
before
they're
finished.
B
Yeah,
I
think,
when
we
can
instill
a
level
of
confidence
that
we
can
get
the
stack
working
to
the
extent
that
we
can.
It
builds
that
level
of
confidence
within
these
customers
and
puts
it
at
a
different
level
of
appetite
and
understanding
for
how
that
they
can
ultimately
utilize
and
leverage
it
moving
forward.
A
A
Yeah
yeah,
okay,
so
yeah,
so
that
that's
pretty
pretty
exciting.
You
know
not
news
yet,
but
hopefully
coming
soon,
the
the
so
what
what
else
is
going
on
with
with
the
community
summer?
How
was
how,
last
week,
you
you
did
the
indian
show.
So
what?
When
are
we
going
to
do?
The
the
next
show
from
your
time
zone.
D
Well,
I
just
pushed
it
so
it's
now
gone
to
first
of
july,
but
you
know
I
wanted
to
actually
gather
sufficient
amount
of
steam
and
people.
So
I'm
also
talking
to
two
community
managers.
D
You
know
who
already
run
huge
communities
here,
and
one
of
them
is
a
is
an
absolutely
fantastic
community
called
blockchain,
india,
yeah
and,
and
they
have
about
50
000
plus
developers
already
and
a
lot
of
them
do
public
blockchain.
So
so
I
know
that
one
of
the
founders
of
that
group-
I
think
I've
been
one
of
the
members
since
they
just
started
off
so
so
yeah.
That
is
going
to
be
one
of
my
key
allies
here.
A
I
got
an
email
this
morning
from
a
big
indian
company
that
said
that
they
can't
use
slack,
and
they
want
me
to
set
up
an
email
list
of
technical
folks
that
they
can.
You
know
where
effectively
they
can.
They
can
do
what
we
would
normally
do
on
slack,
but
they
they
need
a
kind
of
an
email
thread
and
so
I'll
I'll
do
that
I'll
set
that
up
today.
D
D
That
yeah
do
that.
That
would
be
awesome,
so
yeah,
I
think
we're
all
set.
Even
the
the
critters
are
done.
The
creators
are
all
done,
so
we
have
a
banner.
We
have
a
invite.
We
have
stuff
so
I'll,
send
it
to
you
separately.
D
A
Oh,
this
is
good.
We
need
to
get
a
little
competition
going
between
you
and
me
on.
Who
can
do
a
better
baseline
show
and
that'll
prompt
me
to
start
lifting
my
game.
I'm
gonna.
A
C
A
No
all
right,
so
that's
that's
what
you
know.
That's
all
the
news.
I've
got.
You
know
right
now,
nick
what
what
what
have
I
missed.
B
A
Yeah
over
the
course
of
the
conversation,
dhruv,
ryan,
sam
and
others
have
hey
bishwashree.
You
guys
are
you're
still
working
on
that
that
that
project
of
your
own
right
so
how's
that
going.
G
Hey
john
yeah,
I'm
currently
working
on
it,
I'm
working
with
kyle
on
that
project.
So
any
questions
I
have,
I
direct
it
to
him.
So
apparently
the
plugin
is
able
to
send
requests
to
the
baseline
stack,
but
there
are
still
some
errors
that
I'm
getting
because
I
don't
know
how
the
basic
like
I
it's
been
a
learning
curve
for
me
to
figure
out
how
the
baseline
stack
actually
works.
So
I
am
still
getting
a
few
errors,
but
I'm
like
ironing
them
all
out
and
hopefully
like
soon.
A
Right
on
hey,
you
heard
me
talk
to
say
that
we're
looking
for
technical
writing
and
stuff
like
that
right.
A
Yeah,
I
thought
I
thought
I
was
I
had
yeah.
Maybe
we
should
talk
so
all
right,
so
the
the
hey
by.
A
Know
well,
I
guess
they've
they've
fled
the
coop
here,
but
I
have
to
say:
do
do
we
think
ryan,
sam
dhruv,
you
know,
there's
the
base
ledger
project
and
while
you
know
you
can
put
your
baseline
proofs
anywhere,
you
want.
Do
you
think
that
having
sort
of
a
go-to
you
know
sort
of
substrate
to
you
know?
That's
always
you
know,
that's
you
know
an
l2.
That's
always
there
is
that
going
to
help
accelerate
folks
and.
F
C
Well,
so
to
just
to
recap,
the
previous
discussions
that
we
had
in
maintainers
team,
like
andrea's,
put,
had
put
a
points
regarding
the
kind
of
centrality
of
certain
l2
solutions.
I
I
didn't
read
his.
C
You
know
article
on
ethereum
magicians,
but
his
ideas
were
consistent
but
from
my
point
of
view,
when
I
think
from
more
scalability
perspective,
using
a
kind
of
specified
type
of
l2s
like
zero
zk
roll
ups,
to
try
to
combine
the
different
proofs
into
a
single
transaction
and
pushing
on
to
the
main
net
will
be
a
good
approach
to
start
with
and
more.
G
A
Of
you
know,
nonsense,
hashes,
right
or
you
know,
fancy
hashes
proofs
right,
so
those
are
going
on.
We
need
to
hide
who's
doing
it.
So
that's
under
zero
knowledge,
but
beyond
that,
it's
not
like
we're
running
we're
trying
to
maintain
eath
balances
or
transaction
amounts,
or
anything
like
that
right.
So
there's
no
or
or
hide
those
things.
So
it's
really
just
bagging
and
tagging
proofs
and
then
anchoring
the
merkle
roots
into
the
main
net.
A
I
think
isn't
it
to
me:
it's
it's
always
as
a
product
guy
everything
seems
more
simple
and
easy
to
say
than
it
is
to
actually
do,
but
that's
the
pattern
in
my
head
right.
So
you
just
want
you
know
kind
of
speed,
scalability
and
and
and
some
resistance
to
like
having
somebody
lock
you
out
of
a
transaction
because
they
don't
like
you.
C
So
that
for
that,
I
think
sam
had
already
suggested
a
quick
fix
in
shield
contract
to
try
to
bind
the
chain
id
of
a
particular
fork.
With
the
specific.
C
So
I
mean
yeah,
we
will
have
to
work
on
that.
It's
in
yeah
I
mean
currently
mentioned
as
a
we
had
discussions,
but
yeah.
We
will
come
out
with
the
solution,
but
I
mean
in
brief.
I
will
think
other.
You
know
in
ethereum
ecosystem
the
optimism-
and
you
know
some
other
type
of
l2
solutions.
They
are
for
more
financially
oriented.
They
use
some
sort
of
arbitration
for
cross
volume
flows.
C
A
And
it
it
would
I'm
I'm
guessing.
It's
important
that,
like,
if
you're
doing,
if
you're
kind
of
modeling
on
ganache
you're
going
to
want
to
be
able
to
push,
you
know,
click
click
onto
that
l2
and
not
have
to
re-tool
it
for
non-evm,
or
something
like
that.
So
I
should
think
that
that's
important
as
well.
C
Yeah
I
mean
that
you
can
put
in
settings
and
when
you
really
rebuild
it
so
npm
runs,
builds
and
creates
the
transaction
corresponding
to
a
specific
chain
which
we
have
mentioned
in
the
properties
of
nash
or
truffle
box.
For
instance,.
A
Right
now
so
yeah,
that's
that's
been
on
my
mind,
yeah.
I
think
that
will
be
a
nice
another
nice
tool
to
have
it's
just
you
know,
out
of
the
box,
yeah
you
put
put
put
put
stuff
wherever
you
want,
but
here's
a
pretty
quick
and
easy
go-to
place
for
it
right
now.
All
all
I'm
thinking
about
is
how
do
we?
How
do
we
smooth
the
path
smooth,
the
path?
How
do
we
make
it
easy
fun,
simple
or
not,
simple,
nothing,
simple,
but
straightforward,
and
satisfying
for
people
to
baseline.
A
All
right,
well
with
that,
I'm
gonna,
I
think
we
know
we
can
probably
give
ourselves
some
time
and
time
back
today,
we'll
we'll
call
we'll
call
it
at
45
minutes
here,
thanks
everybody
and
I'm
seeing
so.
A
Oh
thank
thanks
for
the
birthday
wishes
tommy
and
party
hard.
So
with
that
I'll
I'll
see.
A
A
B
C
B
A
It
all
right,
everybody
have
a
great
great
baseliny
dave
and
we'll
see
you
next.