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From YouTube: April 5, 2022 - Ortelius General Community Meeting
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A
All
right,
everybody
please
go
ahead
and
sign
in.
Let
me
drop
it
in
one
more
time.
A
All
right,
so
we
got
the
visionary
summit
coming
around
the
corner
and,
as
you
can
see,
sergio's
been
working
on
some
new
graphics.
So
thank
you
sergio
for
that.
Looking
very
cool!
I,
like
the
I,
like
the
look,
so
we
go
to
the
link
here
and
that
link
will
take
you
to
the
document
that
has
all
the
the
10-minute
talks
that
we
have
going
on.
A
A
So
don't
worry
about
anything
weird
on
that
front.
You
know,
if
you
do
a
20-minute
talk,
we
can
go
in
and
edit
it
clean
it
up
before
it
goes
out
for
the
visionary
summit.
At
that
level.
A
A
A
Yet
but
we
do
have
an
issue
for
our
github
on
the
github
repo
for
our
community
rewards
tracy.
You
need.
B
Just
gonna
say
thought
you.
A
A
So
sergio
has
created
a
new
project
view
in
github
and
that's
trying
to
get
us
reorganized
on
how
to
find
issues
and
work
to
work
on
at
that
level.
So
it's
a
work
in
progress.
There's
some
fun
to
it.
A
So
just
been
re
trying
to
re
organize
the
different
issues
that
we
have
out
there
into
the
the
different.
I
don't
know
if
we
have
any
weapons
yet
a
couple.
A
So
if
you're
looking
for
something,
this
is
the
place
to
go,
it
has
things
a
little
more
categorized
better
that
you
know
things
that
you
can
and
pick
up
at
that
level
and
and
we're
not
really
good
at
this
at
the
the
tags.
Yet
so
it's
a
work
in
progress,
whether
it's
going
to
be
a
bug
or
co
coding,
a
good
first
issue,
but
please
go
out
there
grab
something
go
ahead
and
assign
yourself
to
it:
we're
not
real
strict
on
or
strict
at
all
about.
A
A
So
there's
skill
updates
for
the
devops
institute
if
you're
interested
in
presenting
there
hit
that
link
and
and
get
picked
up
for
that
also,
the
devops
institute
will
have
a
throughout
the
year
a
bunch
of
different
skill
up
days
that
you
can
participate
in
and
also,
if
you're
interested,
you
can
become
a
an
ambassador
for
the
devops
institute
and
work
work
that
front
as
well
so
good
exposure
over
there
on
the
devops
institute,
kubecon,
spain,
I
believe
brad's
gonna
have
is
going.
A
I
think
he
has
a
presentation,
but
I'm
not
a
hundred
percent
sure.
A
All
right,
cool
and
then
tracy
on
cdcon.
What
did
you
find
out
on
that
front?.
C
Not
much,
we
have
a
panel
discussion
and
we
have
one
presentation,
don't
know
who
is
in
the
panel
and
I
don't
know
whose
presentation.
A
So
did
anybody
get
a
confirmation
that
they
got
accepted?
There
was
an
email
that
was
being
sent
out.
I
voted
you
got
accepted,
awesome
connected.
You
got.
A
A
A
This
is
where
you
guys
caught
me
when
I
was
the
meeting
guest
started.
So
we
had
we've
been
having
a
couple,
a
couple:
co-coding
events
around
the
home
charts,
that's
been
moving
along.
I've
been
working
on
them
over
the
weekend.
That's
why
you
see
a
lot
of
the
build
notifications
coming
across.
I
think
I
figured
out
some
of
the
issues
that
we're
having
and
and
when
we
restructured
the
directories,
so
that
should
be
sorted
out.
Brad
mccoy
is
gonna,
be
doing
a
a
weekend,
a
mini
hackathon.
A
So
I
don't
have
a
a
time
frame,
yet
I
know
he's
been
working
on
with
the
the
the
captain
team,
so
if
you're
interested
please
reach
out
to
him
or
if
he
can't
get
in
touch
with
him,
let
me
know-
and
I
can
get
make
sure
that
you're
in
the
loop-
I
don't
know
the
the
the
time
zone
that
they're
going
to
be
working
from
that
most
of
them
are
going
to
be
online,
but
I
know
he's
planning
to
do
it
over
a
weekend,
so
that
that
should
be
fun
should
be
interesting
to
learn
how
to
plug
captain
how
to
get
kept
in
working.
A
There
are
some
things
I
thought
were
were
in
came
out
of
the
box
like
a
docker
build
but
kept
in
out
of
the
box.
Doesn't
support
a
docker,
build
believe
it
or
not,
so
you
actually
have
to
code.
I
think
they
call
it
a
runner
to
make
that
happen.
So
in-depth
under
hoods
for
captain
will
be
part
of
that.
A
We've
taken
care
of
that.
The
next
thing
in
the
architecture
we
did
submit
for
the
xrpl
grant.
A
I
think
it's
those
two
folks
are
working
on
it.
I
can't
remember,
or
is
it
you
joseph,
I
know,
there's
a
couple
folks
that
are
interested
I'll
leave
that
off
for
now
there's
issues
out
there.
A
So
if
you're
interested
in
that,
please
reach
out
on
the
discord
channel,
let
folks
know
that
you're
interested
and
we'll
get
everybody
paired
up
on
the
part
to
work
on
so
there's
two
main
pieces.
One
is
the
the
blockchain
piece
and
ukersch
is
taking
a
look
at
that
and
joseph
is
looking
at
the
nft
which
is
based
on
ipfs,
which
is
the
an
interplanetary
file
system.
A
If
everybody
wants
to
know
what
that
stands
for
so
those
are
kind
of
like
the
two
branches
and
we're
going
to
put
together
some
pocs
just
some
base
samples
of
getting
them
it
running
independently,
and
then
the
next
step
will
be
to
bring
the
the
two
pieces
together
to
kind
of
back
up.
What
we're
doing
and
the
concept
that
we
have
around
the
the
blockchain
is.
We
are
interested
in
storing
all
of
our
versioning.
A
So
when
we
create
a
new
component
version,
new
application
version,
those
would
be
stored
into
the
blockchain
and
nft
as
part
of
that
also
we're
going
to
have
some
work
around
a
graph
database.
A
So
there's
a
open
source
graph
database.
A
That
we're
gonna
be
using
for
backing
the
blockchain
and
a
project
that
aisha
is
working
on,
which
is
called
libyars.
A
So
if
you're
interested
in
learning
a
a
graph
database,
let
me
know
and
I'll
help
you
get
started
on
on
that
front.
There's
a
couple
issues
out
there
as
well
on
that
front.
So,
basically
there,
the
rango
db
allows
us
to
store
json.
A
It's
like
a
mongodb
is
like
a
a
document
store
we'll
be
able
to
put
our
json
snapshot
of
our
application
version
into
the
graph
database
and
that'll
give
us
a
way
to
quickly
query
the
relationships
in
there
and
because
the
blockchain's
gonna
be
every
time
because
it's
immutable,
you
have
a
history.
So
every
time
you
make
a
change,
you
get
a
new
version
of
the
nft
which
ends
up
as
a
new
record
in
the
the
graph
database.
A
The
graph
databases
allow
you
to
do
a
high
number
of
relationships
and
compute
and
traverse
them
very
quickly.
So
a
million
record
search
happens
sub
second,
as
part
of
the
graph
database,
just
a
shout
out
again
to
sergio
and
sasha
for
getting
us
into
the
crowd,
funding
and
being
our
first
donors
we're
up
to
what
20
22
or
something
like
that
or
23
dollars.
B
D
B
We
were
trying
to
start
like
we're
gonna
rally.
Some
we
were
trying
to
rally
the
troops
in
the
channel,
but
it
was
very
silent.
We
were
like
trying
to
you
know.
I
was
trying.
A
I've
been
so
sidetracked
with
the
the
blockchain
stuff
that
that
is
on
my
to-do
list
to
get
in
and
get
to
get
a
donation
out
there.
The
crowdfunding
will
be
directed
all
the
way
back
to
the
project.
So
the
way
the
linux
foundation
has
it
set
up.
Is
it's
set
up
for
our
specific
project?
We
could
use
it
for
swag.
We
use
it
to
pay
people
to
program.
A
You
know,
there's
there's
a
lot
of
things
that
that
crowdfunding
can
be
used,
for
we
did
as
part
of
the
xrpl
grant
we
did
put
in
there
for
it
to
go
to
the
linux
foundation
into
our
crowdfunding
bucket.
So
we
asked
for
75
000
as
part
of
that
grant.
A
And
that
would
be
that
75k
if
we
get
awarded
that
would
be
to
help
up.
Do
the
programming
behind
the
to
make
everything
happen,
but
we
still
do
need
to
get
the
poc
out
there,
because
that's
one
of
the
things
they
look
at
from
a
grant
perspective
is
how
we
started
working
with
xrpl.
A
Yet
so
that's
what
I
had
on
my
list,
I'm
sure
I'm
missing
something.
So
does
anybody
else
have
anything
that
I'm
totally
spacing
on.
D
Well,
on
my
I
might
say
I
was
like
playing
around
with
the
rest
of
the
tools
of
linux
foundation.
I
think
the
more
interesting
one
are
the
one
side
of
our
security
tools.
They
they
have
like
two
two
tools.
D
One
is
for
like
getting
the
batch
about
the
security
foundation
where
you
can
get
extend
and
have
like
a
it
discount
and
tell
you
like
an
inform
that
points
out
what
it
what
you
made,
and
what
do
you
not
meant
to
to
improve
and
get
the
batch,
and
I
think
it's
really
nice.
There
is
a
lot
of
work
to
do.
I
I
run
into
one
one
of
my
private
repo.
I
didn't
get
much
luck.
D
I
think
there
is
a
lot
of
stuff
and
we
we
don't
do
by
default,
so
we
can
start
with
that
and
another
side.
There
is
a
vote.
There
is
a
security
bot
that
you
can
install
into
your
project.
I
don't
know
if
all
of
your
pro
some
ribbons,
but
still
there
is
some
more
actively
review
on
what
we
are
doing
so
maybe
the
the
the
bot
can
help
to
improve
into
the
security
batch.
D
So
I'm
going
to
ask
for
the
permission,
usually
steve,
if
you
see
like
one
request
about
permission
to
to
get
access
to
need
to
ask
on
regardless
of
orthodox,
because
I
I
don't
have
the
like
the
ownership.
D
The
last
thing
thing,
I'm
being
looking,
I
I
watch
the
mentorship
tools
is
interesting,
but
one
one
big
surprise
is
like,
like
the
90
percent
about
the
mentorship
programs
are
related
with
hyperledge,
so
I
have
to
say,
like
blockchain
is
really
hot
inside
the
open
source.
It's
is
great.
This
crazy
is
like
people
around
all
the
world
just
doing
mentorship
around
hyperledge.
So
guys,
if
you
have
the
the
the
living
foundation
hyperledge
course
just
do
it,
because
there
is
a
lot
of
demand
on
that.
D
Finally,
I
look
up
about
the
there
is
a
tool
to
like
administrate
or
organization
like
enrollment.
It's
not
just
like
the
easy
class.
It's
like
more
for
getting
more.
I
don't
know
if,
if
the
word
is
controlled,
but
at
least
like
more
transparency
about
the
organization
and
the
member
enrollment,
so
I
think
is
the
last
one
I'm
going
to
give
it
a
shot,
but
I
have
to
say
that
well,
we
know
that
we,
we
are
short
in
times,
but
I
think
we
are
going
I'm
going
to
continue
pushing
the
security
side.
D
A
Right
right,
I
know
when
we
go
to
move
from
the
incubating
stage
to
the
graduated
stage
that
we
have
to
have
meet
certain
security
levels.
A
So
this
is
great
work
that
you're
doing
and
just
make
sure
that
you
know
we
get
issues
created
about
what
we
need
to
fix
on
the
security
front,
with
our
code.
D
A
Yeah
and
then
I
know
some
once
we
get
that
list,
I
some
of
the
stuff.
That's
in
the
ortillius
repo
is
like
demo
repos
for,
like
the
hipster
store
that
we
may
need
to
exclude
from
the
scanning,
but
we'll
have
to
see
how
they're
popping
up.
A
Yeah
and
those
are
those
security
fixes
that
show
up
are
usually
just
simple
changes
that
we
need
to
do
down
at
our
docker
build
level.
You
know
like
bumping
the
the
alpine
version
or
including
a
certain
package,
so
they're
not
hard,
so
they're
good
first
issues
to
take
on
as
part
of
that
process.
So
if
you
see
security
issues
in
the
in
the
github
issues
list,
please
pick
those
up
and
give
them
a
go.
D
And
there
is
a
lot
of
other
recommendations
that
are
really
simple
like,
for
example,
you
need
like
read
me
file
in
an
inclusive
language
and
by
default
in
english.
So
it's
pretty
much
something
like
I
don't
know
pretty
much
every
everyone
can
do
it.
So
there
is
a
lot
of
recommendation
about
like
order
categorization
and
naming
conventions
and
stuff
like
that.
So
yes,
it's
super,
like
open
issues
to
inclusive
issues
for
saying
somewhere.
A
Yeah
yeah
definitely
and
there's,
there's
some.
I
know
there's
some
repos
that
need
to
the
branches
renamed
over
to
maine.
You
know
there's
things
like
that,
so
please
just
raise
your
hand
and
we'll
get
to
working
on
those
there's
a
lot
out
there.
So
don't
be
shy.
A
Cool,
thank
you
sergio
for
looking
to
all
the
all
that
I
know
it's.
The
linux
foundation
can
be
tough
to
navigate.
A
All
right,
one
last
thing:
sergio
nice
job
from
your
red
hat
recognition.
Thank.
D
A
That
was
very
cool
to
find
out
that
your
team
was
able
to
pull
that
together
for
the
the
covid
solution.
D
You
know
what
is
sad
that
the
I
I
wasn't
directly
involved
on
this
project,
but
the
first
project.
It
was
like
the
first
ever
open
innovation
lab
doing
remotely
and
was
from
latin
america,
and
I
was
on
that
project,
but
the
customer
never
signed
out
to
do
like
the
marketing
like
the
like
the
exposure.
D
So
we
we
we.
We
have
to
wait
until
this
one
just
to
make
all
this
over.
But
the
funny
thing
is
like
we
will
have
like
a
before
a
pretty
spray,
a
pre-project
before
this
one,
that
it
was
equally
successful,
but
we
didn't
we.
We
just
couldn't
show
up
right,
but
at
least
at
some
point
it
happened.
So
that's
that's
good!
That's
great!.
A
Oh
and
one
last
thing
that
I
think
of
that
getting
the
word
out:
does
anybody
know
if
syme
has
the
next
pod,
podcast
or
folk
person
lined
up?
I
know
he
was
trying
to
reach
out
to
somebody,
and
I
can't
remember
if
he
ever
was
able
to
get
that
taken
care
of
tracy.
Yes,.
C
He
has
two
people
lined
up
for
the
next
couple
months:
he's
got
a
person
from
microsoft,
who's
been
doing
a
work
around
microservices
and
then
he's
got
victor
farcik
on
get
up.
So
I
think
he
is
good
for
the
next
two
months.
E
A
One
of
the
things
that's
on
my
to-do
list
that
is
kind
of
around
the
co
coding
that
work
that
we've
been
doing
is
doing
like
a
state
diagram
of
the
get
ops
and
the
helm
charts,
because
I
know
there's
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
connecting
the
dots
in
the
get
ops
world
and
trying
to
get
it
get
the
sequence
down.
And
what
happens?
Where?
Can
we
scratch
your
head?
A
So
that's
on
my
to-do
list
to
get
out
there
to
help
help
help
visualize
what's
happening
in
the
get
ops
world.
D
D
Just
because
they
long
living
doesn't
exist
like
just
like
tomorrow
is
going
to
be
like
the
the
synchronized
so
may,
maybe
on
this
to-do
list,
maybe
we
can
just
start
working
with
cali
or
something
like
that
just
to
have
like
something
that
brings
the
match
into
some
visual
and
visual
way
to
to
see
how
this
work,
because
transit
racing
is
one
one
thing
that
yeah
you
see
like
a
sequential
map,
but
kelly
at
least
is
really
graphical
and
I
think
maybe
can
be
easier
than
doing
diagrams
like
every
week.
Yeah.
A
Well,
there
was
a
plug-in
that
I
found
from
another
team.
It's
called
mermaid.js
that
will
do
diagrams
inside
of
github,
so
I'm
gonna
see
if
we
can
enable
that
for
our
documentation
and
our
github
repo
yeah.
A
A
B
A
All
right
cool,
well
the
time's
coming
to
the
end
here.
Thank
you,
everybody
and
we'll
be
talking
to
you
soon.
Okay,
see
you.