►
From YouTube: The Baseline
Description
The weekly office hours for the Baseline Protocol open source community. Learn more at https://baseline-protocol.org.
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
Hi
everybody
it's
john
wolpert
and
the
baseline
crew
here
for
yet
another
week
of
fun
baseline
office
hours-
lots
to
talk
about
today,
but
this
is,
I
think,
we'll
we'll
probably
have
a
pretty
short
session
today,
because
we're
all
super
busy
getting
ready
for
upcoming
stuff
in
september
and
october,
most
notably
the
eath
atlanta,
hackathon
and
and
general
keynote
session
will
be
industry.
There,
there's
going
to
be
a
very
cool
folk,
hey
jack
lee
you
want
to
you,
want
to
plug
east
atlanta
for
us
here.
B
Yeah,
certainly
starting
starting
off
right
with
it:
okay,
yeah
yeah
october,
one
through
three
right
october,
one
through
third
yep
one,
two
three
friday,
as
we'd
articulated
in
the
past
and
the
agenda.
We
are
working
to
get
a
full
announcement
here
through
the
end
of
this
week
or
into
early
next,
and
we've
been
showing
it
up.
Very
it's
coming
together
very
nicely
friday
will
encompass
the
keynotes
that
we're
really
looking
forward
to
saturday
will
and
friday.
B
We'll
kick
off
the
hackathon,
I
believe
around
noon,
and
then
that
will
be
followed
by
keynotes
friday
evening,
which
will
then
roll
into
saturday.
B
We
will
have
food
trucks
there,
the
entire
time,
a
number
of
other
activities
ongoing,
but
saturday
we'll
have
a
set
of
base,
signing
systems
of
record
a
number
of
tracks
predicated
on
that
encompassing
things
like
salesforce
dynamics,
365
azure,
excel
sap,
servicenow
splunk,
and
then
I'm
sure,
I'm
missing
a
couple
into
that
as
well.
You're.
B
Yeah
yeah,
which
we're
certainly
excited
to
incorporate
into
the
keynotes
friday
evening,
that'll
we're
we're
certainly
hoping
to
have
joe
participate.
He.
B
Yeah
yeah,
we
have
a
number
of
good
fireside
chats
lined
up
for
friday
evening,
yeah,
many
of
which
were
gonna
be
unveiling
further
here,
but
then
into
saturday
night.
We
have
just
a
number
of
different
panel
conversations
set
up
one
relative
to
creators
and
really
like
the
creator
economy.
B
We're
gonna
have
one
predicated
on
d5.
We
have
one
built
on
the
ethereum
community.
More
generally,
we
might
have
like
a
media
focused
one
as
well
and
there's
kind
of
a
couple,
others
that
we're
putting
together
right
now
that
we
have
some
good
participation
in
so
yeah
we're
really
looking
forward
to
it
and
then
that'll
saturday
night
we're
gonna
have
music
on
going
calling
eve
beats.
B
We
got
a
dj
all
set
up
and
actually
there's
it's
actually
we're
getting
some
we're
getting
some
significant
interest
coming
from
some
different
musicians
from
atlanta
atlanta
is
looking
to
get
involved,
as
well
as
some
of
the
creators
within
hotland
and
really
within
the
space.
More
generally,
we're
gonna
have
like
an
nft
creator,
space
just
similar
to
that
they've
had
at
east
denver
and
then
sunday
we
will
have
judges,
be
evaluating
the
hackathon
and
that'll
conclude
around
noon
on
sunday.
I
believe.
A
Outstanding
very
exciting
and
yeah:
maybe
we
can
get
some
good
music
for
the
baseline
show
out
of
that
or
something
I
did
reach
out
to
the
folks
that
do
this
song.
A
I
did
reach
out
to
them
and
they
the
band
was
like
yeah,
this
is
cool
and
then
they
referred
me
to
their
their
studio,
so
their
their
label.
So
we'll
work
on
that
see.
If
we
can
get
get
rights
to
use
it
more
than
10
seconds
long.
B
A
Awesome
so
yeah,
so
everybody,
a
big
quick
plug
if
you're,
if
you're
in
india
at
6
00
p.m
on
saturday
on
all
saturdays
and
that's
8
30
a.m.
As
I
recall
in
the
us
eastern
time
zone
on
saturday
morning
or
saturday
evening,
india
time
industry,
isd,
the
samurat
runs
the
baseline
show
from
there
samurai
and
I've
been
talking
a
lot
about
how
to
improve
the
the
show,
as
it
were,
the
office
hours.
These
were
just
supposed
to
be
office
hours.
A
I
think
at
this
point
you
know
we
folks
who
were
the
early
adopters.
They
know
what
to
do
so.
We
don't
get
a
lot
of
questions
anymore
about
how
to
do
this
or
how
to
do
that.
A
But
I
I
should
like
to
hope
that,
and
you
know
out
there-
everybody
out
there
in
the
community
that
after
september
and
certainly
october,
with
the
drop
of
all
these
tools
coming
out
to
provide
things
like
base,
ledger
and
other
things
that
it
you
know,
the
easy
button
will
be
there
for
developers
and
we're
going
to
start
to
see
a
lot
of
hey.
I
need
to
be
able
to
do
this
and
hey.
How
do
I
configure
that
and
what's
going
on
with
this,
and
how
do
I
get
involved
on
this?
A
Those
are
the
that's
the
purpose
of
the
show,
and
hopefully
we'll
get
a
lot
more
of
that.
Now
that
it'll
be
implementing
the
baseline
standard
will
be
hopefully
in
in
october,
starting
october,
fun
and
easy,
and,
and
at
least
straightforward
for
for
any
journeyman
developer,
so
very
excited
about
that.
But
in
addition
to
that
samurai
and
I
are
lining
up
submissions,
so
people
who
can
sign
up
to
be
interviewed
one-on-one
during
those
shows.
A
So
if
you
have
a
business
that
has
doesn't
have
to
be
about
the
updates
about
baseline
specifically,
it
can
be
about.
You
know,
problems
with
sync
between
different
systems
of
record
different
companies,
supply
chain
issues
and
others.
So
we're
going
to
be
lining
up
interviews
and
in
september
when
our
full-time
baseline
project
manager
comes
aboard
on
september,
1
they'll
be
able
to
help
make
sure
that
we
get
that
right
every
week.
A
So
so
today,
and
really
the
the
remaining
august
baseline
shows
will
be
pretty
minimal
and
then,
hopefully,
in
september
or
october,
we're
gonna
come
out
with
a
new
and
improved
format
to
go
along
with
what
we
expect
to
be
quite
an
upgrade
in
in
the
experience
of
developing
on
the
baseline
standard
and
speaking
of
the
baseline
standard.
Andreas
freund
is
here,
and
I
think
that
we
can
celebrate
today
that
we're
probably
one
table
read
maybe
two
away
from
releasing
the
draft
standard
which
is
finished
to
the
ratification
process.
A
This
is
a
big
deal
and
I'm
going
to
pull
up
the
the
the
so
the
this
is.
Here's
you
know
for
those
who
are
watching
on
youtube.
You'll
see
the
baseline
github
stamp
baseline,
dash
standard,
github
and
you'll,
see
that
not
everything
has
been
merged
to
the
main
branch,
but
and
andreas
remind
me
which
of
the.
If
they
want
to
see
the
most
recent
stuff.
It's
in
sect
three
sec,
five
sec,
five.
So.
D
If
you
go
to
second
five
pr
59.
A
Right,
so
if
you
go
to
pr
pull
request,
59,
that
will
be
the
most
recent
stuff,
and
so,
if
you're
really
interested
in
in
in
reading
the
standards,
this
is
where
it'll
be,
and
you
can
see
here
that
we've
got
all
the
all
the
work
any
any.
Would
you
like
to
say
anything
else
about
that.
D
Well,
we
have
over
300
requirements
about
30,
odd
recommendations
and
50
plus
conditional
requirements
that,
if
you
choose
to
implement
an
option
then
there
are.
There
are
additional
requirements
with
that,
so
we
are
actually
in
the
process
of
creating
an
implementation
guide
to
make
it
easier
for
implementers
to
build
their
own
implementation.
D
This
is
obviously
not
like
a
straight
like
cut
and
paste
of
a
reference
implementation,
but
more
of
a
by
requirement
hey
this
is
actually.
This
is
what
it
means,
and
here's
an
example
of
how
this
could
be
implemented
or
what
you
need
to
keep
in
mind,
really
keep
in
mind
when
you,
when
you,
when
you
implement
it,
with
plenty
of
links
to
different
types
of
of
of
open
source
code
that
can
be
used
to
build
your
own
very
personal,
baseline
protocol
implementation.
A
Right
on-
and
this
is
very
important
for-
or
adoption
by
companies
right,
yeah,
the
companies
are
gonna,
you
know
they
wanna
be
safe.
They
wanna
know
that
they've
got
good
standards
that
they're
working
with
for
the
start
to
keep
to
make
sure
that
they
are
implementing
integrations
in
a
safe
and
effective
manner.
One
of
the
things
I
I
think
we'll
put
out
is:
if
anybody
watches
or
listens
to
adsm
podcasts.
A
A
A
D
Exactly
right,
it
is,
it
is
slightly
so
the
the
the
interesting
thing
is.
We
are
where
there's
a
there's,
a
an
effort
being
kicked
off
now
by
the
ethereum
foundation,
around
sort
of
like
replicating
what
baseline
has
done
in
the
wider
community,
around
layer,
twos
and
bringing
together
enterprises,
the
venture
capitalists
that
actually
fund
player,
2
projects
and
the
layout
2
projects,
of
course,
to
to
to
build
standards
for
layer,
2's
and
interoperability.
D
As
our
you
know,
as
the
recent
polychain
hack
demonstrated,
it's
really
really
important
to
have
standards
and
it's
really
really
important
to
have
certifications,
because,
if
you're
moving
hundreds
of
millions
of
dollars
back
and
forth,
you
better
be
safe,
otherwise,
there's
a
lot
of
story
at
the
end.
A
A
Anaiso
frank
if
you're
out
there
on
youtube
tuning
in
we'd
like
to
give
a
big
shout
out,
because
this
yeah
unai
is,
you
know,
made
that
committee
happen
and
was
extraordinarily
good
at
getting
all
the
hurting
all
the
cats
and
making
sure
that
that
we
got
we
drove
to
the
end-
and
I
think
really
was
a
great
team
up
between
andreas
and
anis
and
it's
a
good
example
of
how
yeah
we
have
over
a
thousand
people
thousand
or
eleven
hundred
now
people,
it's
just
in
the
slack
for
baseline
and
two
people
with
a
lot
with
great
help
from
others.
A
I
mean
ron
from
sap.
It
was
was
in
many
many
of
the
meetings
you
know.
Obviously
you
know
I
I've
attended.
Many
we've
all
had
something
to
say:
sam
stokes
has
done
great
work
and
I'm
missing
important
people
here,
but
at
the
end
of
the
day,
the
hard
just
sloggy
work
came
down
to
anise
and
andreas
and
that's
a
pretty
par
for
the
course
for
for
these
kinds
of
community,
the
pareto
role
is
in
play
and
you
guys
are
on
the
right
side
of
the
pareto
rule.
Congratulations.
D
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
John
anais
has
has
given,
given
the
master
of
cat
hurting.
She.
A
Might
she
might
give
hudson
jameson
a
run
for.
D
She
has,
she
has
given
she's
she's,
giving
hudson
jameson
a
run
for
his
money
in
in
her
in
her
effort.
So
it's
like,
I
think
we
have
we
have.
We
have
two
masters
now.
A
I
think
you
know
some
of
the
feedback
we
get
from
the
community
and
I
want
to
read
some
of
these
questions
and
that
are
coming
in
on
youtube.
A
Is
you
know
that
when
they,
when
one
tries
to
sell
a
company
on
the
idea
of
baselining,
if
you
get
into
things
like
ck
circuits
and
that
sort
of
thing
it
they
they
just
you
know
they
just
it's
very
complicated
for
them
so
jack
and
you
know,
and
sam
and
the
you
know,
the
team
on
the
on
the
implementation
side.
A
On
the
on
the
code
side,
it's
really
important
for
us
to
get
those
tools
out
to
them
so
that
they
can
adhere
to
the
standard,
but
not
have
to
be
a
systems
level
enthusiast
like
andreas
to
get
to
grock
it
and
and
implement
it,
and
they
can't
be
writing
zero
knowledge
circuits
from
scratch
in
their
heads
with
math
right
so
yeah
those
tools
are
going
to
be
really
important.
I
know
that
provides
got
a
number
of
them
coming
out,
both
open
source
and
and
commercial
available
stuff.
So
that's
that'll
be
exciting.
D
A
Yeah
and
by
the
way,
jack,
if
you
go
audible
to
the
your
friends
that
provide.
I
know
that
sam
and
some
other
folks-
and
I
were
on
a
call
this
morning-
we're
gonna
we're
gonna,
create
a
checklist
of
things
that
you
know
that
for
those
of
us
who
have
tried
to
use
like
bri
one.
What
do
we
need
to
you
know
like
what
sucked
about
that?
What
you
know
this
was
missing.
I
was
confused
here.
This
needs
to
happen.
This
is
you
know
this
is
missing.
I.
A
Yeah
stuff,
like
that,
you
know
and
we're
so
that
we
can
just
kind
of
start
to
compile
a
checklist
to
make
sure
that
the
things
that
that
are
being
released
in
september
and
october
are.
A
You
know
gonna
gonna
cut
the
mustard
when
it
comes
to
you
know,
viral
adoption.
At
this
point
right
developers
have
gotta,
it's
gotta,
be
fun,
easy,
straightforward
and
satisfying
to
be
able
to
start
a
baselining
project,
and
with
that
you
know,
lauren
gibson,
you,
you
did
some
research
with
a
bunch
of
companies
without
name
naming
names.
If
you,
if
you
can
there
were
some
interest
interesting
insights,
do
you
want
to
you
want
to
the
one
that
I'm
reminded
in
particular
about?
A
Is
you
know
that
when
things
go
wrong
in
getting
paid
by
a
customer?
Oh
it's
not
always
that
they're
paying
late
or
forgetting
or
going
out
of
business,
but
it
has
to
do
with
things
like
price
changes.
A
F
I
think
that
the
interesting
thing
that
I
found
as
well
most
recently
was
that
there
can
be
you
know
we
are
talking
about
like
updated
problems
related
to
covid
and
transportation.
You
know
at
this
company
and
related
to
that.
F
We're
seeing
you
know,
problems
in
in
the
in
the
consumer
package,
goods,
industry,
they're,
moving
lots
of
products
around
and
and
due
to
the
transportation
issues
that
we're
seeing
in
shipping
just
all
throughout
the
united
states,
like
it's
interesting
that
we're
seeing
these
problems
in
the
in
in
in
in
the.
F
How
would
I
put
this
the
the
the
purchasers
of
the
of
this
of
these
cpg
supplies?
They
are
actually
saying
that
they
have
not
received
a
product,
for
example,
and
so
I
think
it's
interesting
that,
like
an
interesting
problem
that
we
can
try
to
solve
related
to
customers
saying
that
they
have
not
received
a
a
package
and
yet
they
actually
did
receive
it.
F
And
so
this,
these
sorts
of
problems
are
actually
taking
six
months
to
maybe
a
year
to
resolve,
just
to
say
that
you
actually
did
receive
a
product
when
you
didn't
and
and
to
see
that
there
are
disputes
on
such
invoices.
You
know
that's
just
something
that
we're
really
that
we're
really
working
on
to
understand.
A
Just
the
ugly
business
of
keeping
companies
information
in
sync,
it's
just
it's
crazy
and
how
how
badly
things
go
wrong
when,
when
that's
not
the
case
right.
C
You
know
I
mean
we've
we've
been
running
into
with
our
medical
provider
right,
we,
you
know
you
go
and
you
get,
you
know
what
do
they
call
it?
C
The
payments
you
make
you
know
co-pays
and
all
that
stuff
right
and
my
wife
is-
is
a
virgo
she's,
very
diligent
about
keeping
track
of
all
these
things
and
the
fact
that
we
paid
them
and
this
one
particular
hospital
keeps
saying
that
we
haven't
paid
these
things,
and
it's
been
going
on
for
at
this
point,
close
to
a
year
on
12
different
transactions,
we've
had
to
we've
gone
to
the
bank,
we've
got
documentation,
we've
paid
it
to
the
right
account
shared
it
with
them,
goes
to
their
billing
department
and
they
still
want
to
pursue
it
for
collections.
C
So
it's
like,
I
wonder
how
many
times
they're
billing
people
that
aren't,
as
you
know,
as
as
organized
as
my
wife
and
they're,
just
like.
Oh
it's
only
another
30
bucks,
I'm
just
gonna
pay
it
or
it's
only
another
25
bucks,
I'm
going
to
pay
it
or
it's
another.
You
know
what
I
mean
and
how
much
revenue
they're
making
on
that
and
there's
very
little
incentive
for
them
to
fix
it
sometimes.
But
it's
sad
anyway.
F
Yeah,
I
think
it's
really
telling
when
you
hear
these
big
companies,
how
they
actually
pinpoint
the
exact
companies
whose
accounts
payables
representatives-
you
know
they
they
dislike.
It
does
seem
like
it's
it's
kind
of
ingrained
in
the
system.
Somehow,
and-
and
also
you
know,
I
was
just
thinking
nick
about
how
you
know
different
accounts,
payables
or
accounts.
Payables
representatives
have
to
deal
with
various
systems,
so
it's
very
different
being
an
accounts.
F
Receivables
representative
versus
accounts
payables,
because
the
receivables
you're
only
dealing
with
one
software
but
an
accounts,
payables
person
they
have
to
go
to
this
software
and
then
this
software.
So
these
people
actually
deal
with
they
have
to
you
know,
code
switch
so
to
say
of
of
how
to
of
how
to
pay-
and
you.
A
Know
I
see
mark
cattle's,
head
bombing.
F
A
C
Yeah
exactly
and
lauren,
you
called
it
code;
switching,
they
there's
actually
a
term
of
called
context.
Switching
that
years
ago.
They,
you
know
scientific
research
demonstrated
that
context.
Switching
is
the
number
one
cause
of
human
error
right
because
you're
switching
from
one
to
the
next
and
it's
anyway,
it's
so
it's
a
big
problem
anyway.
A
A
We
bought
a
my
last
company
or
a
company
a
couple
of
companies
ago.
We
bought
a
net
company
company
that
was
writing
their
code.net
and
we
were
all
in
erlang
and
just
the
errors
that
started
happening
just
on
capitalization
errors
in
the
code.
Just
you
know,
because
we
had
to
switch
but
yeah
mentally
switch
between
the
two
languages.
It
was
bad
mark's,
also
nodding
his
head
on
that
one
mark
haddle
everyone,
the
famous
and
illustrious
mark
cattle.
E
Context
shift
has
given
developers
a
a
really
compelling
reason
just
to
sit
there
and
say
leave
me
alone.
Don't
context
shift
me
if
you
want
to
ask
me.
A
Yeah
yeah,
the
one
that
that
here's,
here's
kind
of
what
I
was
fishing
for
also
lauren-
was-
I
mean
this
jacket,
I
think,
is
an
interesting
thing
from
a
perspective
of
base.
Ledger
is
you
know,
there's
a
good
trade
in
laziness
right,
so
it's
arguably
overkill
to
use
baselining
for
systems,
internal
systems
right
when
you're
trying
to
have
synchronization
synchronize
machines
inside
your
own
company,
you
just
throw
up
kafka
and
you're
good
right.
It's
not
actually!
A
However,
it
you
know
if,
if
and
what
you
know
when,
when
something
like
base
ledger's
out
there,
it's
inexpensive,
it's
got
a
stable
price,
it's
pay
as
you
go,
and
it's
not,
and
it's
kind
of
like
a
like.
Almost
like
a
cert,
a
yeah,
it's
a
service
or
synchronization.
A
F
A
They're
not
integrated
well,
and
you
can
see
you
can
imagine
that,
as
with
the
pressure
of
of
external
organizations,
saying
hey,
we
need
to
synchronize,
you
know,
then
companies
go
well.
We
better
make
sure
our
internal
systems
are
more
synchronized
and
clean
up
our
internal
mess
and
oh
well,
you
know
there's
base
ledgers
out
there.
Why
don't
just
use
that
it's
a
lot
easier
than
just
setting
up
another
kafka
or
something
like
that
or
mq?
A
So
unless
you
need,
I
mean
there's
a
lot
of
things
that
mq
does
that
baseline
doesn't
actually
address,
but
I
mean,
if
you
don't,
if
all
you
need
to
do
is
sync
and
have
very
verifiable.
Sync
then
yeah
you
should
just
be
able
to
just
have
a
no-brainer
right
and
go
oh
yeah
I'll.
Just
use
base
ledger
for
that,
so
that
that
that
could
help.
A
E
Was
gonna
say
and
that's
a
process
that's
commonly
done
when
companies
are
either
installing
or
upgrading
a
risk
management
information
system,
an
rmi
and
to
where
they're,
just
basically
tying
all
the
stuff
and
having
a
rest
proxy
and
then
just
organizing
all
of
the
apis
just
so
they
could
have
read
only
access
on
a
single
pane
of
glass,
so
they
can
actually
look
at
all
this
stuff.
It's
batch,
updated,
probably
you
know
nightly
but
and
that's
served.
E
The
purpose
I
mean
I
guess
for
a
while,
but
having
it
in
real
time
would
be
a
you
know,
a
really
compelling
selling
point,
or
at
least
at
least
a
differentiator
to
say,
hey.
Why
are
you
waiting?
You
know
you're
going
to
know
tomorrow.
If
you
were
right,
wouldn't
you
like
to
know
now.
A
F
To
the
news
right
of
jp
morgan
right,
they
just
released.
They
just
released
like
a
payment
feature.
That's
like
that
that
moves
in
real
time
right.
A
I
mean
we
also
reporting,
I
mean
sap,
for
example,
is
good
at
now
you
can,
you
don't
have
to.
You,
can
run
queries
on
your
live
system.
You
know,
hana
makes
that
a
lot
easier,
you're,
not
it
used
to
be
that
you
know
you.
Couldn't
you
couldn't
query
the
system
that
was
running
the
transactions?
It
would
blow
it
up
that.
C
A
C
A
You
know
my
my
my
current
mental
state.
I
can
only
remember
things
from
before
1995,
so
it's.
C
C
F
No
worries
this
is
what
this
was
just
something
to
tie
into.
F
What
mark
was
saying,
I
just
I
got
off
call
last
week
after
you
know
the
baseline
office
hours,
where
I
found
out
you
know
a
major
cpg
company,
one
of
their
customers
had
switched
to
a
had,
had
switched
erp
systems
and
two
they
switched
to
oracle,
which
ties
into
you
know
nick's
background,
and
they
copied
the
the
codes
wrong
so
that
the
trade
sales
codes
wrong
and
they
were
actually
putting
them
under
one
code
that
gave
them
a
longer
time
for
payment,
and
this
large
cpg
company
is
currently
dealing
with
millions
and
millions
of
dollars
of
late
payments
and
fines,
and
just
due
to
switching
erp
systems
and
those
codes,
not
updating
correctly.
A
So,
for
those
who
don't
know,
lauren
gibson,
everyone
lauren
is
is
on
a
mission
this
summer
to
find
all
all
sorts
of
companies
and
understand
how
they
are
challenged.
In
terms
of
saying,
you
know
what
what
goes
wrong
when
they're
trying
when
one
company
is
trying
to
get
paid
by
another
company,
what
goes
wrong
when
purchase
orders
happen
between
companies
or
any
other.
You
know
data
sync
issues
and
yeah.
A
So
and
if
you
have
a
story
for
lauren
lauren,
how
do
we
get
a
hold
of
you
in
a
sa
on
twitter,
you're
gonna,
put.
F
Just
made
in
twitter,
but
I
don't
I'm,
I'm
still
working
that
out
but
feel
free
to
message
me.
You
know
on
slack.
A
Go
to
baseline
protocol.org
and
look
up
at
the
top
right
corner.
There's
the
slack
button
there
and
you
can
get
on
the
slack
channel
and
find
lauren
there.
F
A
F
And
I've
gotten
a
few
responses
from
people
from
the
baseline
community
and
it's
really
just
been
great.
You
know
to
meet
people
who
are
interested
in
this
sort
of
this
sort
of
like
new
technology
that
we're
all
building.
So
you
know
if,
if
you
even
just
want
to
talk
to
me-
and
you
know,
let
me
let
me
understand
what
you're
interested
in
for
for
for,
for
what
we're.
Building
I'd
be
really
interested
too.
A
Right
on
lauren,
are
you
going
to
be
at
east
atlanta?
You
think.
F
A
See
yeah,
you
can
talk
to
lauren
there
as
well
all
right.
So
some
of
the
questions
on
the
the
youtube
is
there
a
chance
that
coca-cola
and
kona
and
coke
bottling
companies
will
go
global
with
baselining
jack.
I
think
that's
a
question
for
you.
B
Baselining,
oh
coca-cola,
go
global
with
it,
as
opposed
to
just
like
kona
from
north
america
supply
chain
perspective.
B
Thanks
for
the
question
daryl
good
question:
there's
a
there's,
certainly
a
good
chance
of
that
with
the
type
of
buy-in
that
we're
getting
from
senior
leadership
there
at
kona.
I
think
that
we
could
see
this
permeate
into
different
type
of
workflows
and
work
streams
there
at
kona-
and
I
do
know
that
the
senior
leadership
of
kona
is
a
huge
entity,
an
important
facet
of
coca-cola
proper.
B
So
I
don't
see
any
reason
as
to
why
this
won't
permeate
into
coca-cola,
especially
with
the
opportunities
that
are
enabled
just
in
these
kind
of
open
networks
and
opportunities
to
build
new
services
revenue
on
top
of
it
and
to
really
start
moving
into
more
of
the
d5
landscape
and
the
opportunities
that
are
involved
there.
I
certainly
think
that
you
know
kona
is
aware
of
those,
and
I
think
that
coca-cola
is
as
well
and
I
foresee
coca-cola
moving
in
that
direction.
A
Cavea,
of
course
nobody
here
can
really
speak
for
them,
but
yeah.
It
seems
like
the
stanza
reason
that
you
know,
as
it
becomes
more
end,
to
end
integrated
and
more
pervasive.
The
utility
goes
up
and
and
there's
more
reasons
to
use
it
in
wider
and
wider
use
cases
right.
B
Yeah
yeah,
I
mean,
I
think
coca-cola
is
just
an
innovative
organization
in
itself.
You
know
they
just
recently
did
the
nft
like
two
weeks
ago,
which
I
thought
was
pretty
cool.
You
know
it's
still
still
kind
of
initial
phases,
but
it's
cool
to
see
organizations
of
their
stature.
You
know
demonstrating
that
and
yeah.
So
I
certainly
think
that
we
can
see
it
permeating
a
coke.
C
Yeah
well
everything
coke
has
done
over
the
years
right
from
even
the
the
creation
of
kona
as
an
outsourced.
I.T
services
firm
effectively
right
serving
their
own
bottlers
is
hugely
innovative
and
coke's
been
an
innovator,
as
you
pointed
out
for
years,
and
kona
is
one
of
their
largest
kind
of
innovation
hubs
within
the
greater
ecosystem.
So.
A
Yeah,
I'm
just
waiting
for
somebody
to
nft
the
the
cell
of
the
the
the
fonzie
jumping
the
shark.
That
that'll
be
a
when
somebody
buys
that
nft
I'll
know
that
it's
over.
B
At
the
top,
at
the
top,
at
that
point,
yeah
as
part
of
that
nick,
I
do
know
that
you
know
kona's
had
the
flexibility,
they're
they're
known
to
be
an
organization
that
has
the
flexibility
to
pursue
those
type
of
innovative
endeavors
and
those
are
the
type
of
organizations
that
we're
finding
the
most
success
with
within
the
baseline
community.
Those
that
are,
you
know,
from
a
from
a
baselining
perspective,
from
from
utilization
of
the
provided
platform
perspective.
B
Those
are
the
organizations
that
we're
seeing
really
have
the
opportunity
to
kind
of
build
in
these
ways
and
see
the
opportunities
to
to
leverage
baselining
and
again
the
services
that
can
be
built
on
top
of
it
and
then
building
into
the
much
bigger
thing,
which
is
the
d5
side
of
it.
I
mean
we're
at
the
forefront
of
building
the
new
business
settlement
network
business
settlement
layer.
I
should
say
more
specifically,
I
think
that's
going
to
be
quite
powerful
as
we
continue
to
move
forward.
A
Right
now,
daryl
had
a
follow-up
question.
What
is
the
biggest
hurdle?
Do
we
see
right
now
for
baseline
mass
adoption,
andreas
sam?
Actually,
sam,
you
know
luis,
you
guys
are
living
with
this
day-to-day
jack.
What
are
we
seeing,
as
obviously
you
know,
having
a
having
something
that
you
know
you
can
kind
of
do
the
same
swing
over
and
over
again
with
you
know
something
that's
out
there
and
standing
like
a
like
a
bass,
ledger
l2.
A
B
Would
say
also
things
that
we're
working
towards
as
a
community
here
as
well.
You
know
from
the
v1
release
from
the
standard
I
mean
that's
going
to
be
huge
in
itself
to
the
the
base
ledger,
test,
net
being
live
and
going
into
production.
That's
going
to
be
essential
as
well,
then,
having
from
you
know
from
a
provide
perspective,
the
the
documentation,
that's
essential
to
get
started.
B
You
know
and
as
we
ultimately
go
and
open
source
the
core
services
of
the
stack
which
we're
preparing
and
ourselves
to
do
so,
that's
going
to
be
a
huge
piece
in
in
enabling
that
as
well
part
of
it
also
is
how
complex
these
systems
really
are.
And
you
know
it's
it's
something
that
you
know
we
started.
We
had
part
of
this
conversation
around
the
the
challenge
and
understand
what
his
ekp
is.
B
I
mean
that's
just
one
core
piece
of
the
the
multitude
here
and
he's
building
these
big
open
networks,
and
so
I
think
those
pieces
will
all
really
kind
of
help,
cement
that
and
I
think,
as
we
work
up
to
eat
atlanta,
a
lot
of
that
stuff
is
going
to
be
launched
and
announced,
and
that
will
be
there
for
public
digestion.
If
you
will.
A
A
You
know
what
what
is
the
tool
or
the
you
know,
component
that
you
wish
was
there
when
you're
trying
to
set
this
stuff
up
or
deal
with
it?
I
know
that
zk
zk
itself
has
a
lot
of
people
running
your
ground
right,
they're,
like
that's
scary,
but
I'll,
leave
that
question
out
there.
A
E
Was
gonna
say
I
mean,
have
we
pay
any
attention
to?
I
guess
the
the
first
couple
of
laps
company
comes
in
and
says
we
really
enjoy
it.
We
we
want
to
baseline
this
where's.
Our
starting
point
I
mean:
do
we
do
an
evaluation
of
the
architecture?
Do
we
do
just
kind
of
a
light
risk
analysis
just
to
find
out?
Where
is
everything?
How
big
is
it?
How
robust
is
it
you
know?
Where
is
the
starting
point?
How
do
those
first,
like
three
laps
around
the
track?
E
Look,
you
could
say
all
right.
We
want
to
do
this,
you
want
to
buy
it.
Let's
execute
the
agreement.
This
is
our
cso,
our
our
our
head
of
engineering,
you're,
going
to
be
working
with
him.
How
do
we
go
in
and
approach
them
and
say?
Okay,
hi,
we
are,
you
know
this
is
baseline
protocol.
How
do
we
get
started.
C
Yeah,
so
bold
is
to
to
offer
a
suggestion,
a
kind
of
a
pattern
that
I've
found
very
successful
in
many
years
talking
to
enterprise
companies
or
large
companies
selling
software
of
all
kinds.
The
first
thing
you
need
to
do
is
seek
to
understand
their
organization,
their
strategic
requirements,
and
what
they're
trying
to
achieve
then
understand?
If
their
organization
has
the
depth
and
maturity
to
be
able
to
deliver
on
those
or
if
you
need
to
bring
in
partners
right,
someone
that
can
help
them
implement
it.
A
All
the
solutions
providers
should
be
snipping
that
section
right,
nick
and
playing
it
over,
because
that's
what
they
need
to
be
doing
right.
E
Mark
I'm
still
taken
with
the
second
sentence
that
you
had
over
there.
If
an
organization,
if
an
organization
has
the
depth
and
maturity
to
actually
make
it
through,
there's
too
many
ifs
in
that
sentence,
there
is.
C
There
is-
and
you
know
that's
kind
of
indicative
of
the
state
of
where
we
are
with
the
the
protocol
itself
and
the
standard
right.
You
know
the
more
mature
it
gets,
the
less
ifs
there
are
right.
Nobody
worries
if
their
organization
is
strong
enough,
deep
enough,
mature
enough
for
tcpip
for
email.
For
you
know
web
servers
right
because
all
that
stuff,
you
know
you
can
push
a
button
and
get
it
on
the
web
outsourced
80
different
ways
right.
So
you
know
the
kinds
of
decisions
you
make
are
more
business
and
less
technical
anyway,.
A
Yeah,
but
I
think
in
general,
when
I
think
about
what
you
said
what
you
said
nick
about
about
maturity,
I
always,
I
think
about
you-
know
really:
the
maturity
of
a
company
to
handle
I.t
transformation
projects
in
general
right
and
that's
been
a
problem.
F
A
I'm
sanguine
that
again,
if
it's
easy,
if
it
becomes
easier,
more
straightforward,
quicker,
more
service,
you
know
proof
to
just
to
integrate
systems
across
different
companies.
A
Then
I
think
that
drives
a
lot
of
maturity
internally,
because,
honestly,
you
know
you
don't
clean
up
your
own
room,
but
you
clean
up
the
house
when
the
neighbors
are
coming
over.
So
if
I'm,
if
I'm
saying
hey,
I'm
only
going
to
buy
your
invoices
from
you
if
they're,
if
they're
properly
synchronized
between
you
know
buyers
and
suppliers
and.
A
B
B
It's
those
that
are
seeing
the
opportunity
to
build
on
top
of
this
as
well,
that
are
seem
to
really
be
the
most
deeply
invested.
I
mean
you
know
very
interesting
perspective.
Just
to
provide
a
little
bit
on
kyle
recently
participated
with
bsn
the
ceo
yifan
yifan.
B
He
in
a
recent
discussion
and
ifani
and
bsn
are
actually
going
to
be
participating
at
east
atlanta
as
well,
which
we're
really
excited
about,
and
as
part
of
that,
you
know
something
that
they
were
really
interested
in
discussing
around
baselining
and
the
potentiality
and
building
with
provide
is
the
opportunity
to
build
on
top
build
services,
on
top
of
it,
the
enablement
that
they
could
ultimately
provide
their
respective
ecosystems
and
the
system.
C
A
I
guess
yeah,
I
think
that's
that's
a
pretty
good
summation.
I
I
like
I
like
to
you
know.
I
think
that,
ultimately
we
need
to
be
talking
about
the
synchronizing
of
systems
of
record
across
the
internet
in
accordance
with
standards.
That's
really
the
story
that
people
are
going
to
listen
to.
It's
not.
You
know
the
big,
the
big
problem
with
mass
adoption
in
the
enterprise
right
now,
I
think,
is
the
minute
you
start
putting
up
blockchain
as
the
center
point
of
that
conversation
right
and
especially
public
blockchain.
A
They
just
run
for
the
hills
because
they
don't
get
it
yet.
They
don't
understand
how
to
use
that
safely
and
effectively.
It's
not
about
that.
It's
about
synchronizing
systems
of
record
across
the
internet
in
a
way
that's
stateful
and
things
like
base
ledger.
You
know
implementing
the
baseline
protocol
properly.
A
A
Yeah,
it
would
be
very
convenient
for
me
to
have
such
a
thing
right
with
that.
I
think
we
are.
We
might
be
able
to
wrap
any
any
last
parting
shots
before
we.
A
I
know
that
we're
gonna
be
against
the
next
couple
of
weeks,
we're
all
getting
ready
for
a
big
set
of
things
going
on
in
september
october,
and
so
you
know,
but
after
that
I
expect
that
these
the
office
hours
were
are
really
gonna
heat
up
and
we'll
we'll
be
able
to
turn
our
attention
to
good
form
and
function
any
other.
Any
other
questions
to
comments,
thoughts,
ideas.
C
Hey
jack,
if
you
were
going
to
come
to
eat
atlanta,
what
hotel
would
you
would
you
book?
Because
you
know
it's
advance,
is
gonna,
get
you
the
best
rates
and
and
all
that
kind
of
stuff
so
want
to
be
mindful
of
that.
In
my
my
role,
making
sure
that
the
people
on
my
team
don't
spend
too
much
when
they're
on
the
road.
B
Great,
that's
a
that's
a
good
question.
I
do
know
that
when
we
have
done
2018,
we
have
provided
a
list
of
when
we've
done
eat
atlanta,
2018
we've
provided
a
list
of
hotels,
that'll
be
released
with
kind
of
some
of
the
the
the
directions
and
suggestions
that
we
provide
once
we
go,
live
with
the
agenda
and
live
with
some
of
the
speakers
and
a
little
bit
of
the
code
of
conduct
for
the
event
and
what
to
a
little
bit
more
expect.
B
A
I'm
pulling
up
the
map
here
and,
and
so
folks
can
see.
Atlanta
tech
park
is
right
here,
hyatt
place
atlanta,
north
cross
beech
tree
and
there's
also.
We
stayed
at
mary.
A
Yeah,
so
that's
where
you're
staying
folks,
oops
and
just
for
for
the
sake
of
reference.
E
This
is
about
probably
15
20
miles
north
of
atlanta,
proper.
B
Yeah
and
just
it
and
just
to
add
a
little
bit
more
context
again,
I
know
I
mentioned
this
in
the
past,
we
are
working
very
hard
with
the
facilities
people
to
ensure,
from
like
a
ventilation
perspective
that
it's
a
safe
event.
I
know
that
there's
an
uprising
from
a
copic
perspective,
and
so
everyone's.
B
That
so
we
are
taking
precautions
to
make
sure
that
it's
a
safe
environment.
We
were
just
there
last
week.
The
facility
is
huge.
It's
going
to
have
no
problem
housing,
the
the
expected
attendees
that
we
have
for
the
event,
and
so
it's
going
to
be.
We
we
intend
for
it
to
be
a
safe
and
vet
for
for
the
community.
A
I
just
I
got
invaded
by
my
kids,
who
are
crying
like
trying
to
they're
like
hey
dad.
Let
me
show
you
this
new
toy,
I'm
like
in
a
second
kid
and
drama.
I
says
I'll
be
at
the
w
hotel.
Apparently
that's
where
they'll
be
anyway
yeah.
So
that
was
a
great
question
about
location,
thanks
nick
and
with
that,
I
think
we'll
take
us
out
on
the
baseline
show
everybody
have
a
great
week
and
keep
on
baselining.