►
Description
The weekly office hours for the Baseline Protocol open source community, Wednesdays at noon in the US-Eastern timezone.
Learn more at https://baseline-protocol.org.
And don't miss the show on Saturdays at 6pm in the Indian (IST) timezone.
EthAtl: Sign up to join us in person or virtually at EthAtl.com
Date: September 27, 2021
Content:
1) Baseline Reference Implementation 1 (BRI-1) [02:40]
2) Grant Updates [29:04]
4) NASSCOM Annual Technology Conference 2021 Recap [35:25]
https://nasscom.in/natc/
5) TreeTrunk NFTs [39:00]
https://treetrunk.io/
A
B
A
We
have
our
usual
panel
of
of
esteemed
colleagues
and
we
have
lucas
from
from
provide
here.
I
haven't
seen
lucas
in
a
while
he's
been
heads
down,
actually
writing
code.
Shame
on
you
lucas
and
we'll
talk
about
that
in
a
few
minutes.
The
big
news
today
is
that
the
bri,
the
baseline
reference
implementation
number
one,
which
is
really
the
key
implementation
right
now
I
mean,
I
think
you
know
in
the
in
the
future,
we'll
have
more
of
them
that
are
mature,
but
right
now
we
have.
B
A
Based
on
the
provide
stack
and
base
ledger,
and
it
is-
and
they
just
pushed
out
a
major
update
to
bri
one
and
we're
going
to
get
a
little
bit
of
news
on
that
and
a
lot
more
news
about
it
on
the
weekend
at
ethan
atlanta
man,
I
should
have
a
like
a
like
a
stinger
for
that
either
atlanta
atl.com
october
1-3,
great
hackathon,
big
news,
great
speakers,
all
sorts
of
wonderful
stuff
going
on
and
I've
become,
like
mr
announcer
guy.
A
A
Right,
we
literally
don't
have
time
today
for
this
show,
but
we're
gonna
do
it
anyway,
because
we
love
you
out
there
and
speaking
of
which
I
better
double
check
that
it's
actually
running
is.
C
A
A
Right
so
we
have
just
a
little
time
because
we're
all
pretty
much
heads
down
working
on
stuff
to
deliver
for
the
keynotes
and
everything
happening
on
the
first
in
atlanta
so
and
lucas.
We're
really
grateful
that
you
took
a
little
bit
of
time.
I
know
that
kyle
and
everybody
else's
is
flat
out
right
now
you
made
some
big
promises.
A
You
got
big
big
things
to
deliver
and
I
know
the
heat's
on
so
I
wanted
to
get
you
in
and
out
today,
all
right,
so
we'll
in
fact,
let's
get
right
to
that
so
lucas.
Are
you
ready
to
do
a
quick
session
of
code?
Don't
lie.
D
As
it
stands,
john,
we
are
actually
working
on
pushing
everything
into
a
docker
container
for
testing,
because
we
want
this
to
be
as
stable
as
possible.
We
want
everyone
to
run
it
and
what
we
found
when
we
finished
the
first
bri
one
implementation
was
that
it
didn't
run
consistently
for
everyone,
and
that
is
mostly
due
to
the
fact
that
you
know
bri
one
runs
on
linux,
windows
and
mac,
and
everyone
has
different
configurations
on
their
system.
D
So
what
that
means
is
that,
if
you're
running
a
different
note
version,
then
it
it
might
not
run
for
you
or
it
might
run
with
some
unexpected
errors.
So
what
we
decided
to
do
is
in
favor
of
the
community
of
developers
is
dockerize
all
the
testing
and
work
in
the
release
of
a
stable
tag
of
the
provide
stack
where
we
can,
where
we
can
offer
a
stable
development
environment
for
developers
to
work
on
baseline.
D
D
I
am
very
much
not
I.
I
tried
to
to
pitch
a
two-week
costa
rica
vacation
to
kyle
so
that
I
can
enter
through
there,
but
it
did
not
fly
so,
unfortunately,
I'll
have
to
join
async
or
virtually
maybe
next
year.
A
What
I
think
I'll
do
is
I'll
just
quickly
share
a
screen,
lucas
and
and
let's,
let's
look
at
just
the
baseline
repo,
and
maybe
you
can
comment
quickly
on
on
that
yeah.
A
So,
just
just
so
that
developers
out
there
know
where
to
go.
Apologies.
This
is
still
called
master.
All
new
repos
are
called
main,
I'm
not
sure
we
can
go
into
settings
and
check
and
change
that
so,
but
I
think
legacy
is
what
it
is,
but
so.
C
A
All
right,
we'll
look
into
that.
I
didn't
realize
that
embarrassingly
so,
okay,
so
here
we
are
in
in
in
the
repo.
This
is
baseline,
repo
and
github.
A
What
what
should
we
be
looking
if
I
was
a
developer-
and
I
wanted
to
get
in
here-
quick
and
start
really
cooking
out
some
stuff?
Where
would
I
go
lucas.
D
So
so
as
it
stands,
you
would
have
to
click
on
master
and
go
into
bri
one
privacy.
A
News
I
thought
sonal
didn't
we
confirm
that
this
was
all
pushed
a
lot
yeah
two
days
ago,.
A
All
right,
okay,
so
here
it
is
presumably
it'll
be
done
by
friday,
yeah
yeah,
because
that
would
be
kind
of
important
all
right.
So
all
right
people
can
still
see
it.
It's
in
bro
on
privacy,
all
right
moving
forward.
A
A
I
thought
we'd
there's
another
branch
that
deprecates
radish
right.
A
A
It
the
bri,
should
not
be
under
examples.
I
think
that's
confusing
right.
It
should
just
be
up
top
watch
it.
You
know,
hey
bris
and
then
there.
If
there
are
examples
that
are
bri
independent,
they
could
be
in
an
examples,
file
or
folder,
and
any
examples
that
are
only
bri
dependent
should
be
in
an
examples
folder
inside
that
bri.
I
should
think
right.
D
D
Basic
sample
yep
and
you're
gonna
wanna
go.
I
I've
always
thought
that
the
best
way
to
run
through
code
is
through
the
tests.
Yeah
and
the
end-to-end
spec
is,
is
where
the
magic
happens
here.
So
a
bit
of
background
on
what
happens
on
this
this
testing
round.
What
bri
one
is
is,
in
very
few
words
integration
testing
for
the
provide
stack
that
follows
the
the
standards
set
out
in
the
baseline
standard
documents.
D
So
what
we're
doing
here
is
we
are
mixing
and
matching
all
of
the
functionality
that
the
provide
stack
has
to
offer
and
which
fulfills
the
the
requirements
set
out
by
the
baseline
standards
in
a
way
where
we
show
a
functional
process
of
carrying
out
a
baselining.
D
More
specifically,
we
have
the
ability
to
create
a
baseline
process.
We
have
the
ability
of
initializing
a
work
group
initializing,
a
work
group
inviting
people
to
that
work,
group
generating
circuits
and
proofs
based
on
those
circuits
and
then
exchanging
messages
between
exchanging
messages
in
the
form
of
groups
between
different
participants
in
that
work
group.
D
So
a
big
portion
of
this
test
is,
in
short,
the
ability
to,
or
the
ability
or
the
setup
for
for
this
baselining
process.
So
john,
if
you
scroll
down
a
little
bit,
you'll
see
the
description
of
baseline
and
you've
got
the
before,
which
basically
ensures
that
the
testnet
configuration
is
is
correct.
That
we've
got
we've
got
the
test
net
configured
for
bob
and
for
alice,
which
are
obviously
our
two
participants.
D
We
managed
to
give
these
these
people
a
token
that
they
can
that
they
can
use
to
interact
with
our
stack,
and
if
you
keep
going
down,
we
then
run
the
baseline,
app
factory.
D
So
all
these
are
variables
that
we
set
in
a
utils
file,
which
is
which
is
determined
at
the
top
as
an
import,
and
we
basically
say
this
are
the
ports
that
the
ports
and
the
destinations
where
you
should
be
where
you
should
be
connecting
to
each
of
these,
has
a
specific
each
of
these
has
a
specific
use.
So,
for
example,
you've
got
things
like
volts.
You've
got
ident,
you've
got
n-chain,
which
are
all
part
of
the
provide
stack
and
provide
different
services
to
what
the
baseline
process
is.
D
N-Chain
is
a
web3
swiss
knife
ident
manages
all
the
identities
we
also
have
fallbacks
in
in
the
form
of
our
service
called
payments
in
which
you
know
in
case
the
the
accounts
that
that
we're
using
are
not
funded,
for
whatever
reason,
we
can
always
use
bulky
to
ensure
that
these
tests
pass.
D
So
as
it
stands,
bob
and
alice
app
in
it
set
the
work
group
set,
the
different
invites
it.
It
just
gets
the
entire
process
initialized
and
what
we
do
through
through
the
rest
of
the
work
groups.
Is
we
ensure
that
all
of
that
setup
was
carried
out
correctly?
So
we
go
through
the
work
groups.
We
ensure
that
the
very
token
is
correct
that
we
should
that
we
have
deployed
an
erc
1820
contract.
D
We
ensure
the
the
participants
have
have
been
correctly
set
up
and
they
contain
all
the
information
work
groups
have
been
set
up,
the
invite
for
alice
has
been
generated,
and
within
that
we
we
ensure
that
obviously
bob
owns
that
erc
1820
and
that
organization
registry
and
that
alice
has
accepted
that.
D
Alice
has
accepted
that
that
invitation
now
post
onboarding,
we
we
carry
out
a
test.
So
if
you
click
control
should
behave
like
a
work
group
counterparty
organization,
john
in
line
225.
D
She
can
still
invite
people,
but
we
ensure
that
there
is
a
difference
between
alice
and
bob
in
terms
of
group
membership
or
workgroup
membership.
So
if
you
go
up
a
bit
john
or
alternatively,
if
you
go,
if
you
go
into
the
previous
folder,
the
test
folder.
D
There
is
what
people
will
see
when,
when
they
go
into
the
original
end-to-end
testing
is
that
there
are
a
lot
of
custom
methods
and
custom
assertions
in
the
form
of
should
behave
like
a
work
group
organization,
for
example.
D
I
feel
like
a
lot
of
the
of
the
tests
have
been
written
in
a
very
idiomatic
way,
meaning
that,
with
a
very
quick
look
at
them,
you'd
be
able
to
know
exactly
what's
going
on
and
what
we're
trying
to
achieve
with
the
test.
But
the
trade-off
that
we
have
made
is
that
we
have
kept
some
of
the
more
verbose
parts
of
the
testing
in
another
file.
D
So
I
think
that
you
know,
as
as
a
up,
you
should
always
click
on
these
methods
and
ensure
that
that
you're
getting
into
into
exactly
what's
going
on
so
john.
What
I'm
trying
to
say
here
is
that
should
behave
like
a
work
group
organization
is
used
in
the
end-to-end
testing,
and
people
should
go
into
this
method
to
be
able
to
to
see
exactly
what's
going
on,
and
you
see,
like
a
worker
organization,
has
the
erc
1820
registry.
They
have
the
organization
registry
line,
25
230.
D
Yeah
they've
got
the
organization
registry,
the
shield,
the
workflow
identifier.
So
what
you
get
really
is
the
the
entire
idea
of
what
exactly
what.
D
It
means
to
have
to
have
a
work
group
by
by
our
standards,
and
then
we
we
make
a
series
of
assertions
based
on
based
on
on
this.
This
idea
that
that
the
contracts
are
are
stored
locally.
D
D
D
A
A
By
the
way,
so
where
would
I
what
what
are
the
packages
I'm
going
to
need
to
npm
and
can
get
down
or
or
which
repos
are?
Am
I
going
to
have
to
clone,
or
you
know,
for.
D
A
Because
this
is
there's
dependencies
not
only
on
bri
one
but
internally,
but
it's
going
out
to
what
is
now
largely
open
sourced,
provide
stack
right,
which
is
good,
because
I
know
that
one
of
the
criticism
folks
had
was
they
were
running
into
this
monolithic
wall
of
trust.
Us
you
know,
we've
got
that
right
and
now
you
can
say
no.
You
can
also
dig
in
right.
D
Yeah
absolutely
so
the
main
thing
people
are
gonna
want
to
have
installed
for,
for
bri
to
vr
I
want
to
work,
is
gonna,
be
the
provide
cli.
The
provide
cli
is
currently
open
sourced
people.
D
That
would
be
provide
platform
dash,
provide
cli
dash.
I
mean
slash,
provide
platform.
Slash
provides
you
a
lot.
A
I'm
going
to
put
that
in
a
tip
here
so
we'll
say
again,
provide.
D
D
Oh
to
to
install
the
cli,
you.
D
There
is
not
an
npm,
you
would
have
to
clone
the
the
repo
and
make
install.
A
Thank
you
so
folks
there
are
developers
that
are
out
there,
not
quite
the
easy
button.
Yet,
but
at
least
it's
there
is,
you
can
go
to
provide
cli
and
get
that
that
that
repo,
so
between
the
bri
one
repo
and
this
repo
and
base
ledger
which
you
can
get
to
on
where's
my
base
ledger
thing:
yeah
base
ledger,
baseledger.net,
slash,
testnet,
those
three
things
together.
A
A
D
So
so
talking
about
the
cli,
I
think
there's
there's
something
very
important
to
understand
about
the
reference
implementation
and
the
way
the
the
cli
works.
The
cli
is
a
helper
for
developers
to
bring
up
the
baseline
stack
so
when
we
are
introducing
a
company
or
a
new
developer
into
baseline,
what
we
do,
or
what
we
want
to
achieve
is
the
fastest
onboarding
to
a
demo,
as
we
humanly
can
so
bri
one
achieves
that
through
automated
testing.
D
However,
we
want
to
go
a
bit
further
than
that
when
it
comes
to
introducing
developers
into
the
stack-
and
we
want
them
to
have
a
tool
with
which
they
can
deploy
their
their
own
baseline,
stack
and
tweak
in
different
ways.
The
the
parameters
and
play
with
different
statements,
sorry
play
with
different
systems
of
record
and
overall,
have
a
more
hands-on
experience
with
baseline.
D
D
Function
to
set
up
the
function
to
set
up
the
entire
environment
for
baseline
and
they
help
us
to
ensure
that
messaging
is
working,
that
the
bold
service
is
working
and
just
overall
create
a
full
stack,
baseline
representation
of
how
everything
would
work
if
they
decided
to
set
it
up
in
their
own
computers.
D
B
Cli
on
the
ask
you
a
question
so
so
so
the
the
client
presumably
is
is
a
is
a
is
a
wrapper
around
around
your
your
the
services
and
the
endpoints
right,
so
is
there?
Is
there?
Is
there
an
intention
to,
or
is
there
a
a
roadmap
to
release
an
sdk
that
that
would
allow
developers
to
simply
integrate
to
to
integrate
the
services
into
their
applications?
B
Because
that
typically
is
is
the
is
the
is
the
best
approach
to
to
to?
You
know
abstracting
away
all
the
complexities
for
deaths,
and
just
and
just
like,
it's
like
here,
the
services
this
is
stuff
you
put
in
you
know
it's
like
you
know,
require
statement
that
yeah.
D
We
provide
the
different
services
in
our
stack
as
reachable
api
endpoints.
D
So
I
feel
like
the
next
logical
step,
for
that
would
be
an
sdk,
but
before
an
sdk
is
released,
I
think
we
want
to
focus
on
getting
the
integration
testing
completed,
stable
and
out
there
for
all
the
developers
to
be
able
to
use
and
try
and
understand,
and
the
logical
step
after
that
would
be
to
release
an
sdk
for
for
with
with
a
more
mature
implementation
of
of
the
services,
so
that
you
know,
industry
giants
can
just
log
and
play.
A
Right
andreas,
I
know
you've
you've
said
some
pretty
good
things
about
the
you've
seen
the
code
in
the
provide
stack
up
and
down,
and
you
saw
you
you
mentioned
that
you
thought
it
was
pretty
good
work,
which
is
nice
to
hear
so.
Quality
work
on
the
part
of
provide-
and
you
know,
andreas
he's-
not
gonna,
tell
me
otherwise
unless
he
thinks
so
so.
That's
good,
but
yeah
a
lot
a
lot
to
do
on
documentation
still
and
making
that
easy
button
even
easier.
A
But
it
sounds
like
you
guys
are
well
underway.
There
are
a
couple
of
things
questions
what
about
so
the
battleship?
Where,
where
am
I
going
to
find
the
battleship
example
when
it
gets
up
which
folder
it
will
be?
Another
examples
folder
inside
the
repo.
A
D
B
Yeah,
actually,
john,
what
would
be
good
is
is
is
actually
to
to
in
order
to
accelerate,
because
I
I'm
you
know,
I'm
a
big
believer
in
in
sdks,
even
if
low-level
sdks
is
to
to
create
a
baseline
grant
for
for
for
for
that,
because
it's
it's
it's
it's
definitely
something
that
should
be
on
the
on.
The
should
should
should
get
an
afterburner,
because
in
the
end
anything
else
like
you
know,.
B
Nice,
you
know
clay's
nice,
you
know
it's
like
it's
like,
but
but
the
the
the
the
the
the
rubber
the
rubber
meets
the
implementation
road
in
the
sdk
for
for
for
for
that
type
of
type
of
type
of
stuff.
At
least
that
has
been
my
experience
and
you
know,
especially
if
it's,
if
it's
like
you
know
you
you
you
just
do
and
and
pm
require
and
then
you're
good
right.
That's
that's
that
that
that's
that's
the
developer,
easy
button
right.
A
B
A
Hiring
yeah,
okay,
so
speak
lucas.
If
you,
I
know
you're
busy,
it
is
bottom
of
the
hour
and
we're
really
grateful
for
your
time.
I
don't
have
any
other.
I've
got
tons
of
questions,
but
I
think
that
you
really
helped
us
at
least
let
anybody
that's
watching
the
video
who's
getting
ready
for
the
hackathon,
though
I
think
you've,
given
him
a
leg
up,
and
I
really
appreciate
that.
Thank
you
for
the
time.
You're
welcome
to
stay
on
absolutely.
A
But
but
you're
also,
I
just
want
to
make
sure
you're
comfortable
doc
ducking
out
if
you
need
to
andreas
speaking
about
grants.
How
are
our
friends
doing
with
the
did
the
did
project?
Nick,
it's
good
to
see
you
too,
I
know
you've
got
a
big
thing
going
on
as
well.
A
A
So
yes
yeah
the
so
there's
two
companies
right.
You
want
to
take
us
through
the
background
again.
B
Sure,
very
very
briefly,
so
the
the
two
largest
baseline
grants
that
have
been
awarded
today
were
for
one
was
to
transmute.
Both
were
for
twenty
twenty
thousand
dollars,
so
those
developers
out
there
there
is
some
there
is.
B
There
is
some
big
chunk
out
there
for
you
guys,
so
the
transmute
is
upgrading
a
scalable
did
method
called
element
which
is
ethereum
based
and
the
keyword
is
scalable
element
as
a
layer
as
a
as
a
layer,
two
for
decentralized
identifiers
and
it's
actually
based
on
an
existing
spec
from
the
decent
price
identity
foundation
called
site
tree
and
they're.
Upgrading
this,
the
current
element,
implementation
to
the
version,
one
of
the
specs
such
that
it
can
be
utilized
in
baseline.
So
you
can
baseline.
B
You
know
your
iot
networks
and
and
and
all
that
good
stuff.
That
is
actually
a
big
deal.
You
know
imagine.
A
You
know
I'm
an
old
thinker,
I
guess
in
some
ways,
but
I
still
wish
I
had
some
way
of
just
counting
the
number
of
baselined.
You
know
entities
that
are
in
the
phone
book
right,
it'd
be
nice
to
just
kind
of
a
new.
You
know,
go
yeah,
here's
the
phone
book-
and
there
are
you-
know
10
000
records
here.
So.
B
A
Well,
yeah
so
yeah
so
like,
like
mesh,
has
got
a
company
spinning
up
around
that
with
evan
and
and
their
team
right.
Andreas.
B
I
I
just
possibly
I
I
wouldn't
I
wouldn't
possibly
know,
but
what
what
what
importantly
spruce
id
is
the
is
the
other
company
and
they're
actually
integrating
they're,
actually
integrating
that
element
into
bri
one.
So
it's
kind.
B
B
B
It
can
do
that,
basically
in
in
in
in
10
in
10
seconds,
because
it
it
just
you
know,
puts
a
puts
a
puts
us
several
batches
on
using
did
element
and
now
they
can,
for
example,
record
the
the
distance
driven
provably,
so
baseline
baseline
that
and
get
co2
credits
for
the
driver
issued
to
them
as
tradable
tokens
right
now.
That's
that's!
That's
that
that's
the
stuff!
B
That's
then
possible,
and
you
need
it
because
you
know
you
have
a
whole
lot
of
cars
and
a
whole
lot
of
iot
devices
out
there
that
that
will
that
will
be
doing
just
that
counting
co2.
That's
that's
created
or
not
created
so
anyway,
so
that
that's
the
that's
what's
happening
on
the
on
the
on
the
on
the
ground
proposal
hey
and
on
this
show
we
created
two
new
two
new
rfps
for
for
for
for
baseline
grants.
Now
we
just
need
to
to
raise
some
more
some
more
some
more
money.
A
Yeah,
hey
sonal
yeah.
You
want
to
take
a
note
on
those
and,
let's
get
to
it.
Yeah
sunny's
spearheading
a
lot
of
stuff
like
that
right
on
okay,
so
I
guess
that
you
know.
I
think
that
wraps
the
the
key
things
certo
by
the
way
is
scrto
is
a
is
the
sort.
B
B
A
B
A
So,
okay,
so
I'm
gonna,
I'm
gonna
make
one
quick
announcement.
Well
summary:
are
you
you're
not
doing
the
show
on
saturday
because
of
the
atlanta
right
you're
going
to
tap
into
that.
A
A
Actually,
every
time
we
have
to
switch
our
names
because
we
switch
oh
yeah,
okay,
yeah,
so
so
that's
great
and
by
the
way
the
nascom
event
was
fantastic.
Are
those
videos
public?
E
Yeah
those
videos
are
available,
so
we
got
our
post
event
report
today.
The
event
was
very
well
received
and
I
think
you
know
I
personally
got
a
lot
of
messages
and
phone
calls
etc
from
people
known
and
unknown
to
me
and
then
especially
the
nascom
folks.
You
know
appreciate
it.
A
E
E
Yeah,
so
they
had
a
lot
of
people.
I
I
can't
recall
the
number
on
top
of
my
head,
but
they
had
thousands
of
people
attending
it,
and
and
and
of
course
they
have
a
post
event
report
which
which
we
can
publish
actually,
which
we
can
probably.
E
A
That
we
made
the
top
four
or
five
recommended
things
to
watch
post
in
their
little
list
either
that
or
they
had
a
bot
that
made
sure
that
the
mail
that
I
got
showed
that
and
and
maybe
everybody,
maybe
everybody
who
who
spoke-
has
a
similar
email
with
them
on
top.
But
I
don't
know,
I
don't
think
so.
No.
E
No,
I
got
the
same
email,
which
has
one
of
one
of
the
four
ones
is
yours,
so
I
think.
B
2900
people
attending.
A
Just
in
the
in
the
yeah,
which
is
not
bad
for
a
virtual
contract
these
days,
I
miss
the
big
30
000
people.
Events
in
vegas,
though
sometimes
yeah,
but
they're,
not.
A
And
andreas
had
a
a
talk
on
that
and
also
kyle
thomas
did
as
well
so
great
job,
and
and
thank
you
very
much
summerhead
for
being
such
a
champion
for
baseball.
E
Yeah
is
this
the
starting
I'm
rooting
for
many
more
events
to
come?
We
have
to
put
baseline
on
all
major
events,
and-
and
you
know
particularly
something
which
came
out
of
this-
was
that
you
know
we
are
now
positioned
with
these
guys
when
we
talk
to
them,
they
sort
of
recognize-
and
this
is
what
was
happening
and
with
the
post
event
report.
We
can
also,
you
know,
keep
reaching
out
to
the
prospects
that
we
were
talking
to
earlier.
So
I
think
it
will
help
us.
A
Everybody's
getting
it
it's,
it's
really
hit
it's
really
hitting
now.
I
I
I
was
just
talking
to
yeah.
I
don't
think
he
might
tell
me
so
mark
mercury
who
used
to
be
a
big.
You
know,
he's
a
famous
microsoft
guy
and
he's
now
over
consensus,
and
we
just
had
a
great
call
today
talking
about
stuff
he's
like
no
yeah,
I'm
like
I'm
trying
to
make
the
case
for
baseline
he's,
like
you,
don't
have
to
make
the
case.
I
get
it
already.
A
C
A
But
it
it's
great
to
you
know
to
get
that
kind
of
feedback
it
just
kind
of
makes
sense.
I
also
had
a
call
or
a
thing
yesterday.
I
think
it's
still
on
youtube
or
it's
up
on
youtube
now,
with
with
one
of
the
leading
voices
for
in
the
stellar
community,
and
he
was
just
a
really
great
guy
to
talk
to
sam
connor
and-
and
I
really
like
talking
this
guy,
I
wanna-
I
wanna
like,
let's
create
a
show
with
this
guy.
You.
A
You
and
you
and
I,
and
maybe
we
can,
you
know,
add
to
add
to
the
fun.
But
it
was
nice
to
have
a
conversation
with
folks
in
the
stellar
community
about.
A
A
Yeah
this
makes
sense.
It
was
really
nice,
okay,
so
last
thing
and
I'll
go
full
screen.
I
guess
on
this
we
have.
I
want
to
make
sure
everybody
knows
that
you
know
everybody's
asking
for
great
use
cases
for
baselining
and
we're
going
to
have
some
really
good
ones.
I
love
you
know
the
demo
that's
coming
out
around.
Obviously
we
have
coca-cola
and
servicenow
will
be
there
on
on
the
weekend,
and
I.
A
I
don't
hope
I
hope
I'm
not
wrong
about
that.
I
think
they
are
and
there's
also
you
know
the
the
battleship
hello
world
demo
and
all
that
stuff
coming
up
and
andreas,
and
I
got
thinking
about
yeah.
A
Tree
trunk
nft,
you
are
unique
own
it,
which
I
gotta
go
back
in
advertising.
I
I
like
that
line.
You
can
join
the
discord,
go
to
treetrunk,
dot,
io
and
we're
gonna
be
presenting
it
demoing
it
and
playing
with
it
at
at
east
atlanta.
A
This
weekend,
so
it'll
be
part
of
my
keynote
and
you
can
come
and
either
joining
the
fun
live
or
virtually
create
and
own
private
exclusive,
original
art
make
unique,
signed
and
numbered
prints,
build
a
royalties
empire
and
we're
going
to
show
you
how
to
do
that
baseline
style
in
such
a
way
that
you
truly
do.
When
you
sell
your
original
to
another
person,
they
know
that
they're
getting
a
file.
A
Nobody
else
has
ever
the
ones
and
zeros
of
that
file
are
unique
and
exclusive
to
them,
and
that,
when
you
hand
that
over
you
didn't
just
hand
over
an
nft
and
and
that
you're
sure
no
longer
is
in
the
hands
of
the
previous
owner,
you
are
handing
over
the
the
actual
file
itself
is
unique
and
exclusive,
and
under
and
owned
by
you
and
andreas.
Do
you
want
to
say
anything
about
this
or.
B
Yeah,
so
so
so
you
know
it's
like.
Typically,
people
are
oh,
I
have
this
great
nft,
and
here
it
is
and
oh,
where
is
it
it's
gone?
Wait
I
don't
have
the
nft
anymore.
Of
course
you
still
have
the
token,
but
the
image
is
gone
because
you're,
you
know
the
guy
who
sold
it
to
you.
Didn't
check,
didn't,
didn't,
check
copyright
and
you
know
it's
like
violated
10,
different
copyright
laws
and-
and
you
know
it's
like,
oh
by
the
way
you
had
it-
you
might
get
sued
too.
B
B
Not
only
the
token
which
we
all
know
on
on
on
ethereum
is
is
unique
because
it's
you
know,
because
it's
a
smart
contract
and
everything
and
it's
controlled
by
you,
but
the
image
anybody
can
can
can
can
hack
around.
Take
it
copy.
It
pretend
it's
something
else
now
with
tree
trunk
nft
the
entire
package
is
now
authentic
cannot
be,
can
it
be
pretended
to
be
to
be
to
be
to
be
anything
but
and
if
you
buy
it,
you
can
check
that.
B
A
Yeah
well,
relatively
so,
and
certainly
a
little
help
in
tracking
you
know
and
tracking
royalties
tracking
use
and
giving
people
a
lot
more
and
also
things
like
twitter
will
be.
I
think
this
would
be
as
it
comes
out,
a
a
a
pretty
nice
way
for
twitter
to
be
doing
what
they
want
to
do,
which
is
validating
and
authenticating
your
you
know
your
your
your
your
id
or
your.
I
you
know
your
your
picture
and
lots
of
other
there's.
You
know,
there's
applications,
gaming
and
other
stuff.
A
We're
gonna
be
breaking
it
all
down
on
the
weekend
and
we're
going
to
show
you
exactly
how
it
works.
We're
going
to
show
you
a
working
demo
and
come
and
see
that
on
this
weekend
and
just
bring
that
up
to
as
one
example
of
what
you
can
do
creatively
with
with
the
baseline
approach.
There's
so
much
more.
Somebody
called
me
the
other
day
and
said:
hey
we
want
to
hack.
We
want
to
join
the
hackathon.
A
What,
but
we
just
don't
have
any
ideas
yet-
and
I
was
like
what
about
this.
What
about
that?
I
think
we
spent
an
hour
and
a
half
going
through.
I
think
six
different,
pretty
novel,
not
to
my
knowledge,
been
tried
before
use
cases,
so
there's
lots
of
stuff
out
there.
You
just
gotta,
come
to
east
atlanta,
drink
a
lot
and
and
and
and
get
loose
and
come
up
with
some
creative
ideas,
and
with
that
I
think
mark
I
I'm
looking
forward
to
seeing
you
there
are
we
are
we
gonna
drive
together.
C
C
C
B
C
C
C
I
commonly
kind
of
use
the
example
of,
if
I
wanted
to
send
you
a
document
or
a
photo.
You
know
it's
in
your
inbox,
but
it's
still
on
my
hard
drive.
This
is
a
mechanism
to
where
it
takes
it
from
my
hard
drive
and
it
goes
to
your
inbox,
you
now
have
full
care,
custody
and
control
as
well
as
ownership
of
well.
A
I
mean
the
trick
is
that
it
can
never
be
so
yeah
the
the
original
and
any
any
original
that
creates
a
or
any
child
or
branch
file
that
that
creates
a
lineage
below
it
is
yeah
it's
under
enclave,
and
it's
and
it's
never
seen
you
know
you
aren't
copying
those
ones
and
zeros
out
even
personally,
but
you
can
prove
that
what
you
have
in
this
magic
box,
this
that
you
can't
peer
into
is
the
file
that
you're
looking
at,
but
the
the
file
you're
looking
at
actually
has
you
know
that
file
is
not
the
original.
A
E
Well,
I
think
no,
I
think
tree
trunk
is
much
more
important
than
than
this
one.
So.
D
E
A
Going
to
actually
get
up
at
8
30
in
the
morning
here
can
is
atlanta
on
east
yeah,
it's
still
eastern
time
zone
right,
yeah
and
I'm
showing
my
ignorance
yeah.
So
let's
do
that
samurai!
Let's,
let's
do
the
show.
Let's.
A
Make
sure
you
let
everybody
know
like
today
and
give
them
the
link
and
and
and
we'll
get
some
well,
I'm
sure
we
can
get
some
people
up
early
on
saturday
and.
E
A
And
so
you're
doing
a
core
devs
meeting
at
on
saturday
right.
C
Yes,
we're
still
figuring
out
the
time
for
sure,
but
I'm
thinking
around
10
30
in
the
morning
just
to
say
hello
and
have
something.
Let's.
C
A
Okay,
cool
I'll
buy
those
all
right
I'll
buy
them.
If
you
just
keep
me
away
from
them,
I
don't
need
any
all
right
are
we
are
we
are
we
are
we
good?
Are
we
good,
then
somewhat
we're
gonna.
Do
that.
E
Yeah
perfect-
and
I
think
jack
just
said,
the
absolute
right
thing
actually
and
we
are
going
to
be
doing
demos
which
are
planned
for
saturday
and
then
of
course,
gossip
talk.
C
A
Bed,
because
you
know
it's
like
come
on-
I'm
not
gonna,
I'm
it's
a
long
tweet,
so
I'm
not
gonna
display
it
on
screen
but
z.
I
I
see
your
point
a
few
minutes
ago
and
don't
disagree
with
you
at
all.
There
is
a
lot
you.
B
A
And
that's
kind
of
what
we
wanted
to
do
is
was
whether
whether
people-
I
I
think
when
you
when
you
see
our
explanation
of
tree
trunk
nft,
I
think
it's
going
to
be
pretty
clear.
I'm
calling
it
crypto
lithography
crypto
lithography
right.
So
if
you
know
how
to
do
a
lithographic
prints
signed
numbered
prints.
This
isn't
completely,
unlike
that,
with
a
couple
of
interesting
twists.
C
A
C
E
A
Yeah,
the
images
aren't
unchained.
You
can
have
a
public
child
file
that
is
public
and
on
ipfs,
but
that
child
file
is
not
the
actual
original
article.
It
just
is
a
facsimile
of
it
with
ones
and
zeros
that
have
been
changed,
but
can
prove
that
it
is
a
child
without
showing
the
original
from
which
it
was
derived
ever
to
any.
B
B
A
Okay,
now
we're
sounding
salesy,
I'm
going
to
cut
it
off
there.
All
right,
I
told
andres.
Let
the
technical
people
that
try
to
be
marketers
go
crazy.
A
To
those
of
us
who
no
I'm
kidding
anyway,
so
I
think
we
are
done.
I
I
thought
this
was
gonna,
be
a
short
show,
but
we
always
have
so
much
to
talk
about,
and
I
love
you
guys
so
much.
C
A
C
A
All
right,
everybody
have
a
great
day,
have
a
great
week
and
we'll
see
you
hopefully
at
east
atlanta,
eth
dot
atl
on
friday
and
saturday
and
sunday
join
us
there,
eath
atlanta.com
and
with
that
we'll
take
us
out
on
my
favorite
song.