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From YouTube: Ortelius Outreach September 12, 2022
Description
Hacktoberfest and other Outreach programs covered in this Ortelius Outreach meeting.
B
But
the
had
we
been
able
to
stay,
it
had
spend
more
time
at
the
blockchain
conference.
It
was
quite
interesting.
You
know,
as
a
kind
of
as
a
technology
geek
it's
fun
to
learn
new
terms
and
new
ways
of
thinking
about
storing
files,
storing
data.
B
So
I
think
it's
going
to
be
a
fun
project
for
anybody
who
wants
to
learn.
Blockchain,
there's!
No
doubt
this
is
going
to
be
a
good
experience
for
anybody
from
the
open
source
site
who
wants
to
start
coding
and
learning
blockchain
and
can't
get
a
first
job
doing
it,
because
it
is
different.
They
you
know
they
use
different
terms
and
it's
all
the
same
stuff.
You
have
to
kind
of
learn
to
apply
it,
but
it
still
is
different.
B
You
know
it's
a
different
way
of
thinking
about
how
to
manage
data
in
where
you
never
go
backwards,
where
you
never,
where
there's
never
an
edit
there's,
always
just
a
new
record,
and
just
how
some
of
the
tools
that
they're,
using
some
of
the
struggles
that
people
are
having,
we
made
some
really
good
contacts.
B
One
of
the
guys
did
a
keynote.
We
were
able
to
reach
out
to
him,
I
think,
he's
probably
pretty
stable
in
terms
of
someone
to
reach
out
to.
If
we
have
trouble
with
like
nfts
or
any
of
the
transaction
processing,
it
has
to
get
done.
So
it
was
good.
It
was
really
good
to
be
there.
We
we
attended
sessions
most
of
the
day
and
I
learned
a
lot.
What
about
you
steve.
A
A
How
that's
going
to
be
handled,
but
I
think
we'll
be
able
to
get
some
guidance
from
the
ripple
community
on
that
front.
But
the
contacts
were
great
got
met
up
with
or
listened
to
a
talk
by.
One
of
the
companies
that
created
ipfs.
A
So
that
was
good
and
then
another
talk
around
identity
and
how
you
manage
identity
in
an
anonymous
way,
because
people
don't
want
their
identity
information
out
there.
So
that
was
interesting
and
it
basically
that
one
falls
to
a
third
party
part
of
the
the
world
kind
of
like
ssl
keys.
A
B
Yeah
I
went
to
a
session
on
it
was
the
government
of
colombia
and
they
had
a
bad
problem
with
people
in
the
rural
areas
being
chased
off
of
their
property,
basically
for
political
and
criminal
reasons,
and
they
wanted
to
be
able
to
track
who
owned
property
so
that
they
could
prove
that
they
they
lived
there.
B
So
the
government
put
together
a
list
of
a
list
of
proof
of
their
ownership
and
they
went
through
and
actually
surveyed
and
created
maps,
and
then
they
used
blockchain
to
start
tracking
ownership
of
property
and
what
they
said
was
they
learned
that
even
the
rural
people
now
have
cell
phones,
and
so
they
gave
them
a
qr
code.
So
they
could
literally
scan
the
qr
code
and
go
right
to
their
record
of
their
ownership
of
their
property.
B
C
B
B
They
they
use
the
tokens
to
track
the
pdf
files.
B
It
was
really
it
was,
it
was
really
fascinating
application
of
blockchain
and
they
had
been
one
of
the
early
grants
for
ripple,
so
rip
will
actually
help
pay
for
making
that
happen,
and
they
did
a
proof
of
concept
and
then
ripple
built
gave
them
additional
funds
to
help
with
adoption.
And
then
the
colombian
government
took
it
over
from
there.
So.
B
Really
interesting
applications
of
blockchain
and
I
think
now,
having
heard
some
of
those
other
applications,
I
feel
a
lot
better
and
I
have
a
better
understanding
of
how
it
can
happen
because
before
I
was
just
like,
how
do
you
use
a
wallet
to
track
s-bomb
data?
But
now
I
can
see
it
doesn't
really
matter.
B
It's
simply
just
a
ledger,
and
just
because
it
has
a
zero
amount
in
the
zero
dollar
in
the
amount
field
doesn't
really
mean
anything
just
as
a
it's
just
a
a
placeholder,
and
I'm
wondering
if
eventually
somebody's
going
to
write
some
libraries
and
that
take
a
default
for
the
amount
as
a
zero
and
not
you
don't
have
to
actually
worry
about
carrying
it
around
all
the
time,
because
I
think
right
now,
all
of
the
apis
require
some
amount,
because
it
does
all
the
addition
and
subtraction
for
you.
A
Right
and
that
may
be
where
we'll
need
to
find
out,
we
may
just
use
a
one
token
as
the
amount,
but
there's
some
weird
you
get
into
weird
currency
regulations
at
some
points
across
different
governments,
but
I
think
it
sounded
like
the
ripple
folks
had
from
the
keynote
from
the
founder
of
ripple
that
they
have
a
good
side
of
the
business
that
deals
with
the
illegal
aspect
of
blockchain.
A
B
A
They're
they're
they're,
moving
around
on
the
network,
10
terabytes
a
week,
10
terabytes
of
transactions
a
week
on
the
on
the
network
and
then
the
guy
I
listened
to
around
the
ipfs
from
protocol
ai
was
the
whole
nft
there's
filecoin
ipfs
nft
storage.
That
whole
network
right
now
is
something
like
16
exabytes
of
data
that
it's
storing.
I
I
couldn't
even
figure
out
how
to
do
the
math
on
that
one.
B
B
We
are,
you
know,
we're
just
from
an
industry
perspective,
we're
pretty
far
behind
in
really
making
inroads
into
really
automating
our
production
releases
any
coming
anywhere
close
to
what
the
mainframe
can
do
and
we've
been
trying
to
do
it
for
years
and
years
and
years
and
years,
20
30
years
now,
we've
been
trying
to
do
it.
I
mean
jenkins,
is
what
20
years
old.
B
B
But
I
was
polite
and
I
kept
my
mouth
shut
and
I
went
and
got
their
names
and
I'm
gonna
talk
to
them
about
artelias,
they're
they're,
the
kind
of
that's
the
kind
of
team
that
really
should
be
focusing
on,
like
chaos,
engineering
worrying
about
keeping
you
know
not
worrying
about
root,
cause
analysis,
but
worrying
about
keeping
all
that
system
up
and
running
and
knowing
the
right
fire
drills
right.
They
weren't
even
close,
they
weren't
even
close.
But
overall
it
was
a
good
conference.
A
So
I
think
for
the
artilleries
community,
I
think
one
of
our
next
steps
is,
we
should
probably
kind
of
reach
out
to
everybody
in
the
ortelius
group
and
see
who
is
interested
in
blockchain
and
what
what
type
of
level
that
they're
interested
in
or
they
just
want
to.
You
know,
sit
on
the
sideline
and
watch
everything
as
it
goes
by
or
do
they
want
to
be
like
involved
in
the
design
or
actual
coding.
A
I
don't
know
how
we
can
do
that.
I
don't
know
if
we
need
to
if
we
should
create
a
form
and
do
a
quick
survey
or
any
thoughts
on
that,
because
I
think
that's
going
to
be
one
of
the
just.
So
we
know
who
in
our
group
wants
to
do
what.
D
I
think
on
a
form
because
at
the
end
it's
just
a
spreadsheet
and
you
can
publish
that
so
just
saving
time
for
everything.
Everyone,
I
think,
is
good
enough.
A
Because,
as
we
now
that
we're
in
the
middle
of
september,
our
next
step
is
to
start
the
design
process
of
of
our
solution
and
then
circle
back
around
with
the
xrpl
community
and
find
out.
You
know
what
changes
we
should
make.
We
tried,
you
know
on
the
board
meeting
we
try
to
bring
in
who
is
it
prey.
B
Yeah
he's
like
he
says,
he's
just
too
swamped
and
he
couldn't
find
anybody
who
wasn't
swamped
with
doing
and
stuff,
but
we
did
and
we
did
meet
a
few
people
from
a
ripple
that
we
could
potentially
we're
going
to
be
given
a
mentor.
So
we
can
give
the
documents
to
our
mentor,
and
I
guess
it
just
pushes
some
save
some
money
for
development.
A
So
we're
not
going
to
be
in
the
dark
but
they're
when
we're
talking
to
them
they're
still
working
through
setting
up
their
mentorship
program.
It
may
line
up
just
right
for
us.
The
next
couple
weeks.
A
Okay,
so,
like
the
you
know,
kind
of
like
the
it
would
be
like
three
or
four
categories.
You
know
I
wanna.
I
want
to
just
keep
informed.
I
want
to
be
involved
in
like
the
design
aspect.
I
want
to
actually
do
coding
and
then
probably
testing
or
would
be
the
other
side
of
it
would
be
like
the
fourth
one.
B
A
And
try
to
build
up
some
more
community
involvement
around
it.
C
B
All
right,
so
the
other
thing
that
we
really,
I
don't
think
we
have
a
big
enough
group,
I'm
going
to
send
out
a
a
general
reminder
that
we're
back
in
business
from
our
time
off,
but
the
other
thing
that
we
want
we
should
start
thinking
about
is
what
we
want
to
do
for
december
1st.
B
Or
should
we
continue
to
just
do
the
lightning
talks
and
record
them,
or
should
we
do
have
everybody?
Do
them
live
the
problem?
I
started
thinking
about
it
when
it's
live,
it's
like
it
makes
it
hard
for
every
sport
to
be
it's.
Let's
say
if
you're
it's
live
and
we
do
it
in
the
morning.
It's
really
hard
for
somebody
like
brad
mccoy
to
do
anything,
because
it's
such
a
weird
hour.
D
Maybe
we
can
do
something
in
the
middle,
like
we
have
most
of
part
of
the
the
event
like
a
recorder.
Maybe
we
can
do
this
time
like
both
but
more
more
half
and
a
half
of
things,
something
like
that,
so
I
still
having
recording
for
for
rap
and
still
doing
more
live
stuff.
Maybe
we
should
like
compare
what
is
more
right
to
do
in
life,
but
it's
more,
I
don't
know
interactive
in
life
and
what
is
just
necessary
better,
just
to
be
recording.
B
So
what
do
you
think
doing
them
live,
though,
would
make
it
harder
to
actually
present
it,
because
so
we
could
offer
like
you
said
we
could
kind
of
do
both
like
a
hybrid
and
allow
people
to
either
record
it
or
do
it
live,
but
how
about
for
you
or
somebody
who's
going
to
take
that
job?
B
D
Well,
and
in
the
production
side,
having
everything
recorded
is
easier
to
me,
at
least
for
because
I
can
have
like
a
clear
schedule
and
I
don't
need
to
like
speak
with
much
people
if
there
is
a
lot
of
people
like
live,
you
need
to
like
have
like
a
backstage
channel
where
to
say,
like
hey
you're
like
taking
too
much
time,
we
need
to
stop
here,
but
why
I'm
eager
to
try?
It
is
because
it's
more
interactive,
for
example,
there
is
more
interaction
if
there
is
like
a.
I
don't
know.
D
Two
hosts,
like
speaking
talking
like
it's
more
interesting
like
it's.
It's
like
like
offline
series
versus
like
having
a
live
discussion,
so
if
we
need
to
if,
if
our
objective
is
have
like
more
interaction
with
people,
yes,
we
should
have
like
at
least
the
half
of
the
event
like
to
to
the
people
feel
that
is
participating.
D
But
if,
for
or
objectives
it's
just
like
sharing,
probably
we
can
give
it
offline,
so
all
depend.
What
is
the
impact
we
are
looking
for?.
A
I
wonder
if
I
wonder
if
we
did
kind
of
a
a
host
with
asking
questions
to
the
person
instead
of
just
presentations
around
topics
you
know,
so
you
know
the
the
person
that's
being
interviewed
already
knows
what
the
questions
are,
so
they
already
have
something
more
or
less
prepared,
but
maybe
that
you
know
interview
format
may
work.
B
Well,
the
thing
is
is
that
we
try
to
do
10
minute,
lightning
talks.
We
don't
normally
do
questions
on
the
lightning
talks
unless
we
went
ahead
and
extended
it
to
20
minutes,
10,
minutes
of
lightning
talks
and
10
minutes
of
canned
questions,
and
we
can
record
all
that
and
then
normally
the
reason
why
I
like
doing
these
is
because
it
gives
me
six
basically
six
months
worth
of
content.
So
as
soon
as
we
get
these
done,
I
put
I
start.
B
I
set
up
the
calendar
to
have
everybody's
presentation
pushed
out
through
the
ortillius
social
networking,
on
linkedin
and
on
twitter
for
a
period
of
that,
I
do
it
for
about
five
months,
and
then
we
have
a
quiet
month
that
we
have
do.
I
have
to
do
other
things
and
then
we
we
I
the
next
one
shows
up
and
we
have
all
these.
You
know
we
have
basically
10
presenters
that
I
can
post
each
one
of
them
once
a
month
for
six
months.
B
So
that's
generally
what
I
use
it
for
and
that's
why
just
getting
it
recorded
because
we
have
to,
we
need
them
to
re-record.
It
anyway
is
the
easiest
way
to
go,
so
maybe
we
just
continue
doing
and
recorded
if
that,
since
that
is
the
reason,
that's
the
biggest
reason
why
we
do
it
is
for
creating
content.
E
B
Yeah,
I
don't
think
it
is.
I
think
I
think
that
10-minute
presentations
do
better
in.
If
you
get
something
sent
to
you,
that's
30
minutes
you
may
watch
it,
but
a
10-minute
lightning
talk
tends
to
do
better
in
terms
of
getting
eyes
on
it.
Well,.
B
Exactly
exactly
so
last
time
we
tried
to
keep
everybody
to
10
minutes
and
it
was
easier
for
people
to
do
it.
There
was
more
participation,
we
only
had
one
person
drop
and
that's
just
because
he
just
got
too
busy
with
work,
and
I
think
it
went
pretty
pretty
well,
but
it's
not
as
sergio
points
out.
It's
definitely
not
as
interactive.
B
So
maybe
there's
something
else.
We
need
to
do
between
the
10
minute
because
we
always
give
a
break.
Maybe
we
can,
I
think,
maybe
there's
something
we
can
do
to
make
it
more
interactive
between
between
the
talks.
B
B
And
maybe
I
interview
the
person
who
did
the
the
presentation
or
somebody
interviews
the
person
who
did
the
presentation
live
in
in
in
the
twitch
chat
or
something
of
that
sort.
So,
let's
just
let's
think
about
how
we
can
do
a
recording
and
make
it
interactive,
because
I
think
the
two
together
would
be
the
best.
D
I
was
thinking
I'm
sorry.
I
was
thinking
that
that
maybe
I
don't
know
what
is
the
name?
I
don't
know
if
the
name
is
anchors,
but
it's
a
lot
of
more
interactive
when
you
have
like
two
friends
like
doing
this,
I
mean
we
we
take
time
between
between
the
the
lighting
talk
or
we
do
breaks,
but
always
is
we
put
well.
We
watch
funny
videos
and
it's
okay,
but
maybe
we
can
use
that
time
to.
I
don't
know
like
two
friends,
two
anchors
at
two
commentaries.
D
D
You're
thinking
out
of
loud,
meanwhile,
the
people's
in
the
shot
and
having
like
more
into
the
conversation,
but
I
mean
interactive-
is
more
friendly,
more
people
like
having
in
this
moment
it's
like.
Like
a
watch
party,
you
know
it's
all
recorded,
but
it's
a
watch
party,
so
it's
more
fun
and
interactive.
At
the
same
time
right,
I
think.
B
So
that's
a
great
idea,
so,
let's
think
about
that
that
format,
what
that
would
look
like
and
continue
this
discussion
on,
since
we
only
have
six
minutes
left,
I
think
that's
a
really
good
way
to
make
it
more
interactive
kind
of.
C
E
Yeah
one
thing
we
used
to
do
at
ibm
and
these
kind
of
breaks
was:
we
did
poster
papers
and,
while
that
doesn't
magically
translate
to
an
online
presentation,
you
know
the
ones
where
somebody
has-
and
I
I
have
to
admit
I
don't
know
what
tool
is
used
for
this
they're,
basically
slides
but
there's
a
hand
drawing
across
them.
E
D
C
D
Question
and
stuff
like
that,
so
you
have
like
a
content
additional
content
as
tony
point
out,
because
yeah
maybe
five
to
ten.
You
are
always
going
to
have
like
a
lot
of
to
say,
but
if
you
have
like
this
in
the
background
that
your
people
is
feeling
it
at
least
you
are
going
to
have,
I
don't
know
you
can
pick
just
one.
D
And
using
a
few
like
yeah
like
google,
no
like
facebook,
no
mural,
it
was
good
at
the
beginning,
but
get
the
start
but
mirror,
I
think,
is
one
of
the
more
easy
popular
to
use
today.
A
Yeah
send
a
link
in
discord
when
you
have
a
chance.