►
From YouTube: Ethereum.org Community Call - December 2022
Description
These calls are an opportunity for the Ethereum community to learn about the latest updates to Ethereum.org and share feedback.
Website: https://ethereum.org/
How to contribute: https://ethereum.org/en/contributing/
Discord: https://ethereum.org/discord
A
So
first
of
all,
Paul
is
gonna,
start
us
off
by
talking
about
the
run,
a
node
and
staking
pages
that
we've
added
to
the
website
this
year.
Next
up,
Joseph
is
gonna
talk
about
the
energy
consumption
page
and
our
work
in
preparation
for
the
merge
very
on
topic
with
the
major
events
of
this
year.
Next
up,
Corwin
is
gonna,
walk
us
through
the
new
layer,
2
page,
the
scaling
pages
that
we've
updated
in
the
developer,
docs
and
the
find
wallet
revamp.
A
B
Gm
folks,
so
yeah
thinking
back,
it's
been
a
long
year.
Do
you
run
a
note
page
I
had
to
look
back
myself
and
realize
it
was
launched
back
in
January.
That
was
an
exciting
update,
in
my
opinion,
to
the
page
trying
to
encourage
everyone
to
learn
more
about,
what's
involved
in
writing
a
note
why
it's
important.
Why
why
our
Network
depends
on
it?
B
So
obviously
you
can
get
to
that
at
ethereum.org
run
Dash
a
dash
note,
there's
some
tips
on
there
for
folks
who
haven't
checked
it
out
to
try
to
learn
more
about
why
this
is
all
important
to
have
you
potentially
get
involved
and
get
started
your
own
node
and
participate
it's
not
necessarily
as
hard
as
a
lot
of
people
think
it
is
so
if
you
haven't
checked
it
out,
I've
heard
the
other
set
of
pages
that
we
worked
on.
This
is
Google
launch.
B
We
took
a
look
at
the
staking
pages
that
were
there,
which
were
pretty
simple
at
first
that
we
tried
to
expand
on
those
and
for
more
information
about
different
tools
that
were
available
difference
taking
as
a
service
providers,
different
coolant,
staking
options
to
help
kind
of
inform
the
community
of
all
the
different
aspects
of
staking
that
are
involved,
because
certain
parts
of
it
can
sound
pretty
intimidating,
While
others
are
much
simpler,
easier
for
for
new
folks
to
to
get
on
board
and
learn
more
about
it
get
involved.
B
So
if
you
haven't
checked
that
out
as
well,
it's
definitely
Church
same
same
thing:
etherm.org
thinking,
that's
going
to
be
the
main
pages
and
there
you
can
take
a
look
at
all
the
different
ways
you
can
get
them
all
mistaken.
You'll
learn
more
learn
more
about
the
risks,
learn
more
about
the
benefits
and
why
it's
important,
I
mean
yeah,
definitely
have
a
lot
of
folks
up
today.
I'm
gonna
leave
it
at
that.
A
C
Yeah
well
yeah
to
merge.
It
was
such
a
fundamental
change
to
ethereum
that
it
really
touched
a
large
amount
of
our
content
in
some
way
or
another.
It
was
also
a
very
hyped
event
that
the
community
needed
to
be
ready
for
which
required
one
type
of
content,
but
then
also
the
moment
that
the
merge
happened.
We
had
to
switch
to
talking
about
it
in
the
past
tense
and
start
talking
about
the
low
carbon
high
security
proof
of
stake
model
being
the
current
protocol
design,
rather
than
a
an
upcoming
upgrade.
C
So
our
approach
was
to
update
the
site
in
advance
of
the
merge
so
that
all
the
content
was
appropriate
for
helping
people
prepare
all
about
what
to
expect
and
how
to
act
and
what
to
do
and
what
not
to
do,
and
that
you
know
to
explain
the
mergers
and
upcoming
event,
that's
still
in
ethereum's
future.
But
then
we
also
wanted
to
be
able
to
update
the
site
on
merge
day
so
that,
as
soon
as
we
saw
a
successful
transition,
we
could
pretty
much
do.
C
One
click
update
all
of
our
content
for
for
the
post
merge
world,
and
that
means
discussing
it
in
the
past
tense,
showcasing
the
the
scale
of
the
improvements
that
it
enabled
celebrating
with
with
Easter
eggs
on
the
site,
like
the
merge
panda
on
the
on
the
ethereum
commons
background
and
Etc.
C
So
if
it
was
just
ready
to
make
live
as
soon
as
the
moment
arrived,
and
we
also
went
through
the
site
seeking
out
all
of
the
gaps
in
our
merch
and
proof
of
State
content,
so
that
we
were
as
well
positioned
as
possible
for
for
helping
the
community
understand
how
ethereum
Works
in
in
proof
of
stake
mode,
come
in
writing
some
new
pages
on
some
of
the
more
technical
aspects
of
the
protocol,
and
specifically,
we
added
pages
on
the
the
architecture
of
an
ethereum
node.
After
proof
of
stake.
C
How
blocks
are
proposed
to
improve
of
stake,
proof,
stake,
attack
and
defense,
and
we
added
FAQs
page
and
a
page
about
proof
of
sake
versus
proof
of
work
and
coming
onto
the
energy
consumption
page
now,
one
of
the
most
significant
things
that
the
merge
brought
to
with
you
was
was
a
dramatic,
really
dramatic
drop
in
the
amount
of
energy
that
it
consumes.
C
C
It's
just
really
satisfying
to
change.
All
this
interacts
from
ethereum
will
move
to
proof
of
stake
and
reduce
its
energy
expenditure
to
no
actually,
if
you
did
move
to
brutal
stake
and
obliterate
its
energy
consumption
and
that
page
got
shared
a
lot.
The
the
bar
chart
on
the
page,
with
the
values
that
I
created
got
shared
a
lot
all
over
Twitter
and
various
reports.
C
You
know
sorry
a
lot
in
September
October
time
and
just
after
the
merge,
a
bunch
of
third-party
reports
started
to
be
published
as
well.
They
confirmed
what
what
we'd
said,
what
we
already
knew
about
the
drop-off
in
energy
consumption
so
which
is
brilliant
to
be
able
to
add
those
citations
and
back
up
the
claims
with
you
know
increasingly
robust
sources
over
time
and
I.
Don't
know
about
you
guys,
but
for
me
on
The
Bleak
Daisy
crypto.
That
page
in
particular,
is
is
a
real
pick
me
up.
C
So
that's
all
I
got
to
say
back
to
you
Luca.
Thank
you.
A
Great
thanks,
Joseph
yeah,
the
merge
was
definitely
the
highlight
of
this
year
for
ethereum
in
general
and
as
it
makes
sense,
there
was
also
a
bunch
of
work
for
to
get
ethereum.org
live
and
ready
for
all
of
that.
So
thanks
to
everyone
who
was
involved
in
getting
that
ready
next
up,
we're
gonna
have
Corwin
who's.
Gonna
chat
about
a
couple
of
different
things,
mostly
around
the
scaling
section
and
the
layer,
2
page
that
we
shipped
this
year
and
the
find
wallet
revamp.
Take
us
away.
Corbin.
D
Thanks,
hey
everyone
so
coming
into
2022,
we
saw
that
layer,
two
solutions
were
coming
online
and
we
need
to
get
some
information
on
the
website.
There's
also
a
meme
coming
into
this
year
of
l22
I'm,
not
sure
if
it's
still
alive,
but
it's
definitely
strong
at
the
start
of
the
year.
D
That
being
said,
when
we
started
the
year,
we
were
looking
at
building
out
a
layer,
2
page
for
kind
of
newer
people
coming
into
ethereum,
to
learn
about
it.
Just
a
more
approachable
page
that
we
put
into
the
use
ethereum
section
of
the
website.
You
can
also
find
it
on
ethereum.org
Layer
Two.
D
This
page
is
very,
like
approachable
for
someone
looking
to
learn
like
early
in
their
Journey
learning
about
ethereum
and
looking
to
learn
about
scaling
Solutions
on
ethereum,
and
so
it
basically
takes
you
from
the
start
of
like
what
is
a
layer
one.
Why
do
we
need
Layer
Two?
D
What
are
the
benefits
of
this?
How
do
layer
twos
work
going
into
the
different
kinds
of
Roll-Ups
a
little
bit
how
to
use
them
and
on
board
onto
the
layer,
2
products
and
kind
of
the
difference
between
layer,
2
and
of
validium
side
chain
and
some
handy
tools
to
use
layer
twos?
In
addition
to
this
page,
we
had
a
Community
member,
a
manual
who
did
a
lot
of
work
to
revamp
our
developer.
D
So
this
page
also
got
updated
talking
about
the
differences
between
optimistic
Roll-Ups,
zero
knowledge
Roll-Ups,
how
they
differ
from
side
chain,
plasma
chain
and
validiums
as
well
similar
to
these
comparisons
to
the
different
kinds
of
scaling.
Solutions
you'll
also
see
that
content
and
how
they
compare
with
the
zero
knowledge,
Roll-Ups
page,
the
side
chains,
page
plasma
chains
and
validiums,
and
this
was
all
spearheaded
by
Emmanuel
a
Community
member.
D
So
thank
you
to
Manuel
for
helping
update
all
this
content
around
scaling
for
us
last
thing
we
wanted
to
highlight
that
we
were
yeah
that
we're
working
on
this
year
was
updating
our
find
wallets
page.
So
initially,
I
went
to
the
way
back
machine
here
to
look
at
what
our
page
looked
like
before
we
had
some
filters,
but
when
you
use
them
it
would
it
was
all
at
the
top
of
the
page.
D
It
was
a
little
bit
like
confusing
of
the
user
experience,
since
this
is
way
back
we're
not
going
to
see
any
wallet
data,
but
the
flow
was
kind
of
awkward
for
users,
so
we
revamped
our
find
wallets
page
to
make
it
much
more
streamlined
and
a
better
user
experience
for
users
to
find
a
wallet
and
how
we
did
that
was
looking
at
okay.
What
are
some
of
the
main
user
profiles
that
people
would
have
coming
into
this
ecosystem?
D
So
you
might
be
brand
new,
just
looking
for
a
wallet
to
hold
some
funds
or
you
may
be
really
into
nfts
or
you're,
holding
your
crypto
for
the
long
term,
so
trying
to
find
a
wallet
that
fit
what
a
user
may
be.
D
Looking
for
and
having
easy
options
as
well
to
just
come
into
all
the
features
that
we
keep
track
of
and
let
you
toggle
those
to
find
like
a
wallet
that
fits
your
criteria,
and
this
was
done
a
lot
by
our
team
and
the
community
is
at
large
by
submitting
wallets
for
us
to
have
on
this
website
as
well.
D
Yeah
with
that,
I
will
pass
it
back
to
you.
Luca.
A
E
Thanks
silica,
yeah
learning
stuff,
so
I'll
start
with
the
learn
help
a
big
part
of
2022
was
making
ethereum.org
more
accessible
to
everyone,
and
we
found
that
one
of
the
best
ways
to
do
that
was
by
creating
simpler,
more
curated
learning
experiences.
E
The
goal
was
to
explain
about
the
essentials
of
ethereum
and
straightforward
language.
Well,
so
communicating
that
the
finer
details
that
helium
has
to
offer
that
is
sometimes
quite
complex,
so
this
page
in
particular,
it
starts
off
as
if
you
have
absolutely
zero
knowledge
about
anything
crypto
related
and
it
walks
you
through
the
very
basics
of
ethereum
of
ifar
of
buying,
if
moving
through,
to
different
building
blocks
around
like
smart
contracts,
web
free
wallet,
security
and
also
into
quite
a
few
of
the
many
use
cases
the
fdm
has
built
on
top
of
it
now.
E
I
won't
go
through
and
speak
to
everything
that's
on
this
page,
but
if
you
haven't
checked
it
out,
I'd
highly
recommend
it
to
anyone.
That's
familiar
with
a
lot
of
these
Concepts.
It
seems
pretty
obvious,
but
the
positive
response
that
we've
had
from
our
user
research
has
made
it
quite
clear
that
these
types
of
curated
learning
experiences
were
highly
useful
to
almost
all
users,
but
especially
beginners,
by
pretty
much
every
metric.
E
E
And
people
think
the
overall
layout
and
design
of
the
pages
4.66
out
of
five,
and
that
really
was
quite
eye-opening
for
us
about
the
type
of
content
that
we
want
to
prioritize
moving
forward.
E
Building
on
top
of
those
ideas
and
the
learnings
from
the
learn
Hub,
we
decided
also
to
create
these
learning
quizzes.
So
the
problem
we
were
trying
to
solve
was
no
matter
how
interested
you
are
in
ethereum.
Reading
documentation
can
be
pretty
dry,
it
can
get
quite
boring
yeah.
So
the
learning
quizzes
were
our
first
effort
into
trying
to
make
our
content
a
bit
more
fun
a
bit
more
engaging.
E
The
idea
here
is
pretty
simple
people
like
to
play
games
and
people
like
to
do
well
at
the
games
that
they
play.
E
So
we
thought
that
if
we
could
gamify
our
content
in
a
way
that
forced
people
to
comprehend
less
wall
of
text
that
you
can
see
a
little
bit
more
filly
and
then
it
would
make
them
a
more
impactful
user
of
BBM
and
allow
them
to
do
more
stuff,
so
the
quizzes
themselves
they're
very
basic
questions
based
on
the
content
that
lives
on
the
page,
so
I
believe
we've
got
quizzes
currently
on
eight
different
pages
on
the
website,
and
every
question
is
about
the
content
that
came
prior
to
on
the
page.
E
And
yeah.
Lastly,
you
can
also
share
your
results
on
Twitter
to
let
everyone
know
how
smart
you
are
or
if
you're
Skyler,
maybe
how
smart
that
you
are
in
it
so
far,
I
believe
there's
over
50
000
quiz
questions
that
have
been
answered
so
far.
The
reception
to
them
has
been
overwhelmingly
very
positive
so
next
year,
we'll
be
expanding
out
the
amount
of
questions
that
we
have
on
the
website,
as
well
as
adding
more
functionality
to
this
feature.
E
So
if
you'd
like
to
try
those
out
I'm
sure
someone
will
be
playing
another
product
in
the
chat.
For
me,
the
last
thing
I
want
to
chat
through
before
I
pass
you
back
over
to
Lucas
just
to
take
a
minute
to
thank
all
of
our
amazing
content
contributors.
E
If
you
didn't
ARG
is
successful
thanks
to
literally
thousands
of
contributors,
and
we
value
each
and
every
person
who
is
helping
to
build
out
this
fantastic
resource.
There
are
a
few
pages
that
I
really
like
from
2022.
That
I
would
like
to
call
it
specifically,
but
we
don't
have
time
to
go
through
everything.
So,
just
as
a
caveat
to
this
that
there's
a
lot
more
to
this,
and
if
I
haven't
mentioned
something
here,
it
doesn't
mean
that
it
wasn't
massively
appreciated.
E
First,
one
was
the
blockchain
bridges
that
we
collaborated
with
argen
on
very
early
on
in
the
year,
and
this
was
just
as
L2
2022,
as
coron
mentioned
was
just
starting
to
kick
off,
and
everyone
was
a
little
bit
confused
at
that
point
about
how
did
I
take
my
if
and
get
it
from
Meine
on
to
something
else.
So,
Pages
like
this
and
a
couple
of
other
supplementary
Pages
were
quite
pivotal
to
helping
people
understand
that
we
also
have
a
d
side-
page
decentralized,
science,
thanks
to
Vincent
yeah.
E
This
isn't
something
that
I'd
hear
of
until
maybe
close
to
halfway
through
the
year,
and
there
was
a
lot
of
hype
and
a
lot
of
interest
around
it,
and
it
seems
to
solve
a
lot
of
problems
that
there
are
and
the
scientific
community
at
the
moment.
So
we
really
appreciated
Vincent
coming
forward
and
building
out
this
awesome
resource
for
us.
It
definitely
helped
me
and
a
lot
of
people
on
the
team
to
understand
this.
E
A
little
bit
better,
but
again,
we've
got
overwhelming
positive
feedback
from
the
community
that
this
is
a
worthwhile
resource
and
for
the
last
two
pages,
we've
got
decentralized
social
networks,
I'm
sure
everyone
who's
been
on.
Twitter
knows
that
it's
potentially
imploding
at
the
moment
and
a
lot
of
people
are
looking
for
Alternatives.
So
having
a
page
like
this
has
been
great
just
to
point
people
to
what
is
the
decentralized
social
network
and
what
does
it
do
and
what
are
some
options
and-
and
this
was
include
as
well
as
the
decentralized
identity
page.
E
This
was
written
by
Emmanuel,
who
core
would
mentioned
earlier
on
and
has
been
one
of
our
most
pro-ethic
contributors
in
terms
of
content
yeah.
So
we
really
appreciate
that
yeah
and
lastly,
just
the
decentralized
identity
and
explaining
what
identity
is
and
how
you
can
use
various
things
on
ethereum
to
build
up
your
decentralized
identity
or
perhaps
many
different
identities,
using
things
like
attestations
and
explaining
some
of
the
more
difficult
technical
Concepts
around
this
and
how
those
work
so
yeah
thanks
again
to
everyone.
E
Lastly,
I
would
like
to
call
her
if
you
like
writing
and
you
would
like
to
get
involved
with
building
out
ethelium.org's
content
resources.
Then
we
have
some
very
big
ideas
for
scaling
up
this
effort
in
2023,
so
we'd
love
to
hear
from
you.
Please
do
get
in
touch
and
you
can
Pang
us
directly
or
we
do
have
our
content,
Channel
and
Discord
as
well
yeah.
So
that's
all
I've
got
I'll
pass
it
back
over
to
Woodcraft.
A
F
Everyone,
so
you
all
know
that
we
have
been
working
on
the
design
system
for
the
past
few
months.
We
are
at
the
point
that
we
will
start
coding
some
of
the
some
of
the
parts
you
already
have
laid
outs
on
the
design
system
for
the
next
quarter.
So
that's
super
excited
to
have
something
catching
up
in
the
browser
for
this
updates.
F
I
was
focusing
on
the
on
the
December
update,
which
I
was
almost
focused
on
the
markdown
pages,
and
we've
been
tweaking
a
lot
of
details
on
those
and
we
read
to
to
you
storybook,
on
our
Tech
stack
to
bridge
the
design
into
the
components
on
code.
Thank
you,
Tyler,
for
the
help
and
pushing
forward
this.
This
idea
of
incorporating
sorry
book
in
our
Tech
stack
we're
looking
forward
that
will
help
bridge
the
design
and
the
coding
and
everything
will
work
smoothly.
F
So
some
of
the
highlights
that
I
wanted
just
to
point
out.
It's
like
small
examples
that
design
system
will
help
like
we
came
up
with
the
idea
of
expanding
a
little
bit
the
hero.
This
will
be
something
that
we'll
be
working
on
on
codes
for
the
next
quarter.
Something
new
that
will
open
up
a
little
bit
to
the
design
on
the
on
the
on
the
big
screens.
F
It's
just
an
example
of
how
important
week
this
work
has
been
to
update
the
design
step
by
step
without
disrupting
the
normal
flow
of
new
content
of
the
website.
Some
of
the
components
that
we
have
been
working
on
for
the
markdown
projects,
as
I
mentioned
so
small
details
and
crafting
the
small
in
small
design
details
using
chakra,
has
a
base.
As
you
all
know,
we
have
been
migrating
to
chakra.
F
Pablo
will
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
that,
and
just
to
finish
a
quick
example
that
this
is
a
normal
page
that
we
have
now
and
we
will
transition
to
something
close
to
this,
which
is
a
lot
more
cleaner.
A
lot
more
open,
really
easy
to
read
but
more
enjoyable
to
to
go
about,
and
we
will
update
all
those
small
details.
This
is
just
one
small
example
of
the
design
system
and
how
it
will
be
applied
to
the
pages
and
the
work
we
have
been
done
for
this
month.
F
We
we
closed
this
page,
all
the
small
details
for,
and
we
are
really
looking
forward
to
see
this
on
the
browser,
and
this
is
my
appetite
for
design
system.
Thank
you.
So
much
Luca.
A
Thanks
Nuno
yeah,
exciting
shout
out
to
Nuno
and
Jacob
our
two
designers,
who
have
really
been
thinking
a
lot
about
how
to
make
contributing
as
a
designer
easier
and
getting
more
designers
involved
with
ethereum
and
just
to
drive
that
point
home
right
now
we
have
36
people
with
the
design
role
on
the
server,
so
people
who
are
interested
in
contributing
as
a
designer
versus
a
year
ago
when
it
was
literally
zero,
so
amazing
growth.
G
So
in
the
course
of
this
year
we
did
two
big
migrations
that
were
driven
by
Community,
essentially
with
the
main
goal
of
making
our
code
base
more
robust
and
that
that
will
help
us
sorry
you're,
showing
this
course
screen.
Okay,
perfect.
We.
F
A
F
G
Thank
you
so
much
for
my
new
skills
on
Discord
salary,
so
yeah
we
were.
We
want
to
to
make
our
code
more
robust
and
basically
to
to
scale
better
in
the
future
and
then
adding
new
features.
On
top
of
that,
so.
G
B
G
A
pretty
big
people,
we
have
our
20
000
comments
and
we
have
a
bunch
of
a
lot
of
contributors,
adding
code
constantly
day
by
day
on
the
repo
on
the
project,
and
this
is
really
hard
to
to
keep
the
code
organized
and
what
a
structure.
So
that's
was
basically
the
main
reason
why
we
decided
to
implement
typescript
on
the
code.
G
We
did
this
with
the
help
of
you
guys
with
the
community.
You
can
see
here
almost
10
parties,
participants,
10
contributors,
help
us
in
the
process
and
I
think
we
did
a
pretty
good
job
on
this.
We
basically
migrated
a.
B
G
Files
to
typescript
and
and
yeah,
this
is,
of
course
not
the.
This
is
clearly
a
an
an
ever
living
epic
or
effort.
This
was
just
the
first
iteration
where
we
just
migrate
all
the
files,
but
in
the
future
we
we
expect
to
to
keep
improving
the
typescript
I'm
sure
that
there
are
tons
of
things
to
improve
and
to
fix
that
are
related
to
typescript.
G
So
the
next
big
migration
that
we
did
on
the
code
base
was
related
with
UI,
and
you
can
see
the
implement
this
epic,
the
implementation
of
the
UI
Library,
so
aniraco
on
December
2021.
We
were
trying
to
improve
the
accessibility
of
of
the
website,
and
in
that
moment
we
were
also
thinking
about
creating
this
design
system
that
you
know
just
talk
about
and.
G
We
we
realized
soon
that
we
were
inventing
the
wheel
in
a
lot
of
custom
components
that
we
have
so
in
that
moment
we
decided
to
to
implement
a
UI
library
that
set
the
the
foundations
of
of
our
UI
components
where
we
can
build
on
top
of
of
them.
G
G
We
decided
to
go
with
chakra
UI,
that
is
a
an
open
source
Library
that
has
a
a
pretty
big
Community
around
a
super
good
documentation
and
the
API
for
for
this
UI
components
is
pretty
easy
to
use.
G
So
we
started
implementing
the
UI
library
with
you
guys
this
website
great
success.
This
is
a
great
success
because
we
are
still
working
on
this.
G
We
have
around
30
contributors
migrating
all
the
UI
components
that
we
have
recently.
We
started
this
second
wave
of
migration,
so
we
divided
all
the
components
that
we
have
into.
G
G
Another
thing
to
to
highlight
on
this
is
that
in
the
in
the
process
of
this
migration,
you,
the
community
have
not
only
added
a
incredible
value
on
this
migration
itself,
but
also
you
have
proposed
some
great
ideas
that
are
kind
of
related
with
this,
for
example,
the
the
storybook
proposal
don't
buy
tire
that
you
know
just
just
said
as
well.
G
That
is
a
great
example
of
of
people,
giving
us
great
ideas
to
to
improve
our
code,
so
I
I
would
invite
everyone
who
has
ideas
or
improvements
or
something
that
we
haven't
considered
yet
on
the
code
to
create
a
PR,
an
issue,
sorry
and
propose
those
changes.
We
are
always
open
to
to
hear
that
and
and
discuss
them.
G
So,
as
I
said,
we
are
close
to
finish.
It
I
think
early
q1,
we
are
going
to
to
finish
migrating
all
the
all
the
components
and-
and
this
will
serve
as
the
foundations
for
the
upcoming
goals
for
2023,
where
we
are
going
to
basically
try
to
implement
the
design
system
from
from
the
designers
that
that
they
are
creating
from
Nuno
and
Jacob
and
improve
the
accessibility.
G
That's
those
are
the
goals
so
yeah,
that's!
That's
all
I
have
to
say
thanks
everyone
again
who
has
collaborated
and
participated
in
in
these
efforts
and
yeah
have
a
happy
holiday.
A
Awesome
thanks
Pablo
yeah
and
thanks
to
all
of
the
contributors
who
have
been
involved
with
all
of
these
initiatives,
couple
of
pretty
pretty
massive
migrations
and
it's
always
exciting
to
see
so
many
people
getting
involved
all
right
next
up,
I'm
gonna
briefly
cover
the
translation
program
and
some
of
the
highlights
from
this
year
just
share
my
screen.
Real
quick
s
is
a
very
basic
way
of
just
highlighting
some
numbers
so
that
there's
a
A
visual
representation
there
as
well.
A
A
Because
of
all
of
this
activity,
we
were
able
to
update
over
650
content,
buckets
across
all
languages
on
the
site
massively
up
from
last
year.
The
number
of
languages
available
on
ethereum.org
has
also
grown
from
39
in
last
December
to
51
currently
live.
A
A
In
addition
to
these
brief
stats,
we've
also
worked
on
a
couple
of
different
translation
related
initiatives.
This
year,
in
the
first
quarter,
we
published
translation
style
guide
translation
program,
Playbook
cleaned
up
the
crowd
in
glossary,
so
focusing
a
lot
on
resources
for
translators
later
on
in
the
year.
We
also
completely
revamped
the
translation
program,
pages
and
resources
available
on
the
website.
A
Recently,
we've
been
focusing
more
on
the
translator,
experience
running
some
heart
analysis
and
identifying
concrete
next
steps
to
improving
the
translator.
Experience
that
we're
currently
working
through
and
the
final
translation
related
initiative
that
I'll
briefly
mention
was
adding
internationalization
support
to
the
EF
blog,
which
is
now
available
in
15
languages.
A
Nico
will
go,
will
go
through
this
in
some
more
detail,
so
we
can
give
the
floor
to
Nico
who
will
walk
us
through
some
of
the
other
EF
websites
that
we've
been
involved
in
this
year
and
just
a
quick
shout
out
if
you
are
interested
and
want
to
help
translate
ethereum.org.
Let
us
know
reach
out
to
us.
We
have
a
translation.
Channel
DMS
are
also
always
open,
always
happy
to
chat
and
meet
new
contributors
and
listen
to
feedback
and
ideas.
So
that
would
be
it
on
my
end
and
now,
let's
hand
it
over
to
Nico.
H
We
have
been
working
on
different
side
projects
along
this
year.
The
first
one
is
the
site
from
the
ESP
team,
which
was
the
first
project
that
I
worked
on
this
since
I
joined
the
team
last
year.
Basically,
this
project
was
an
opportunity
to
test
a
new,
a
new
stack
on
on
a
smaller
scale
and
to
validate
this
stock.
To
then
start
applying
this
progressively
on
a
team.org
as
aloe
mentioned,
the
circular
migration
are
in
Thai,
script
was
possible
to
because
we
we
first
test
this
new
stacking
in
this
smaller
projects.
H
So,
in
the
case
of
this
site,
we
completely
redesigned
the
site
and
we
redesigned
the
application
forms.
We
also
iterative
the
CRM
software
that
the
ESP
team
uses.
So
this
allows
us
to
improve
the
application
flow
to
scale
the
application
funnel
and
to
make
the
application
process
easier
for
for
the
applicants.
H
H
In
this
case,
the
idea
was
to
have
a
site
to
centralize
the
content.
The
members,
the
different
members
of
this
team
have
their
personal
sites
and
blogs.
An
idea
was
to
have
like
a
hub
for
this
content.
So,
for
example,
now
they
have
a
vlog
for
the
team
and
I
can
post
a
different
posts
here
so
so
share
the
different
research
projects
and
Publications.
They
have
been
working
on
the
same
for
the
bounties.
This
was
these
parts
around
different
places,
and
now
we
have
all
the
content
on
the
same
page.
H
H
We
have
also
worked
on
some
UI
and
ux
improvements.
The
performance
has
also
improve
a
lot
and
we
still
have
some
ideas
in
in
the
roadmap
for
some
future
improvements.
I
I
share
the
post
on
Discord.
If
you
want
to
read
more
in
in
detail
and
the
last
one
is
more
like
a
sneak
peek,
because
the
site
is
not
live
yet,
but
in
this
last
queue
we
have
been
working
on
a
revamping
of
the
get
client
side.
H
The
documentation
pages
are
now
have
I
think
that
a
much
better,
UI
and
ux
than
when
you
start
to
use
it.
You
I
think
you're
you're,
going
to
notice
the
the
difference.
The
search
feature,
for
example,
I-
think
it's
quite
cool
and
also
we
have
rebuilt
the
the
logic
in
the
downer
space
to
improve
the
performance,
the
filtering
and
Etc
so
I
think
that's
all
I
have
to
say
think
so
and
I'll
see
back
to
you
to
you.
Okay,
oh.
A
Thank
you,
Nico
yeah,
a
bunch
of
pretty
cool
looking
websites
that
we've
just
walked
through,
so
we've
all
been
looking
behind
giving
you
an
overview
of
some
of
the
main
things
we've
been
working
on
this
year
and
I
guess:
Sam
is
gonna,
wrap
this
up
by
sharing.
I
Thanks
Luca,
hey
everybody
happy
to
be
here
yeah
what
a
year
it
was
awesome
to
see
the
updates
I
mean
over
2
000
translators
involved,
seeing
GitHub
contributors
cross
a
thousand
people
this
year,
I
think
yeah
easily
the
most
productive
year
for
ethereum.org
as
a
project
and
like
major
shout
out
to
the
community
here
for
for
helping
out,
it's
really
inspiring
to
see
and
to
be
a
part
of
I
mean
looking
ahead
to
2023.
Hopefully
you
guys
are
are
looking
forward
to
the
new
year,
I
think.
I
Ultimately,
the
story
is
just
a
lot
of
the
same
right
like
ethereum
as
as
a
protocol
as
a
project
in
open
source
as
a
community
and
ecosystem
continues
to
evolve
and
there's
constant
need
for
ethereum.org
as
an
educational
resource
to
to
continue
to
evolve,
to
keep
up
with
just
the
community
that
we
have.
I
I
If
you're
curious
to
learn
more
about
that,
encourage
you
to
yeah
Google
that
search
it
on
YouTube
you'll
find
presentations
from
many
people
within
the
ethereum
foundation.
Talking
about
it
and
I
think
each
project
tries
to
exemplify
that
in
different
ways,
but
I
think
the
major
kind
of
ethos
of
this
philosophy
looking
into
the
new
year
is,
you
know
we
have
a
core
team
on
ethereum.org
you've
heard
from
many
of
those
folks
today
who
have
presented
and
that
core
team
will
continue
to
to
build
out
features
and
and
contribute
to
the
website.
I
So,
if
you
folks
are,
you
know,
looking
for
ways
to
get
involved
like
that
is
basically
our
job
is
to
like
support
you
in
terms
of
like
what
you
want
to
build,
what
you
want
to
write,
what
you
want
to
design
or
translate,
and
for
us
to
help
facilitate
that
for
for
the
benefit
of
the
community,
so
whether
that's
applying
for
Grants
through
the
ethereum
foundation,
whether
that's
working
with
us
just
to
like
you,
know,
build
up
a
resume
or
learn
new
skills.
I
Definitely
encourage
you
to
get
involved
in
terms
of
like
a
couple
teasers
just
to
give
a
sense
of
where
we're
looking
for
like
the
next
few
months
of
the
coming
year.
I
can
say:
two
big
focuses
are
one
is
just
withdrawals
for
for
stakers.
So,
if
you've
been
following
the
ethereum
protocol,
much
you've
probably
seen
a
lot
of
chatter.
How
planned
into
this
next
upcoming
Shanghai
upgrade
will
be
facilitating
withdrawals
for
First
Acres.
I
Our
team
helps
maintain
launchpad.ethereum.org
and
that's
kind
of
like
a
go-to
resource
to
to
get
up
and
running
as
as
a
solo
Staker,
so
we'll
be
working
on
building
educational
resources
on
ethereum.org
to
explaining
how
do
withdrawals
work
from
a
technical
standpoint,
ways
to
learn
about
just
like
considerations
to
take
in
mind,
continuing
to
build
out
documentation
for
stakers
to
help
them.
I
You
know
to
stake
successfully
at
the
end
of
the
day
and
latest
indications
are
you
know
that
might
be
as
soon
as
you
know,
March
April
this
coming
year,
so
building
out
functionality
and
resources
around
withdrawals
is
going
to
be
a
huge
Focus
for
our
team,
which
is
super,
exciting,
I.
Think
the
second
one
that
you
know
you
heard
Nuno
and
Pablo
and
maybe
even
others
touch
upon,
but
just
like
implementing
the
design
system
we've
been
working
on
for
the
past
six
months,
actually
rolling
that
out
into
code.
I
We
think
this
is
going
to
be
a
huge
unlock
in
terms
of
just
like
improving
accessibility
of
the
website,
making
it
just
easier
to
design
and
build
new
pages
and
new
features.
So,
like
that,
any
developer
any
designer
can
come
into
the
project
and
have
like
the
building
blocks.
I
They
need
to
to
be
productive
and
be
successful
and
I
think
a
cool
part
of
that
which
others
also
mentioned,
but
like
rolling
out
storybook,
which
is
a
really
nice
kind
of
developer
sandbox,
if
you
will
for
us
to
you,
know,
build
components
in
isolation,
test
them
in
this
isolated
sandbox.
I
Take
image
snapshots
to
make
sure
there's
no
bugs
or
regressions
or
accessibility
pitfalls
should
really
help
us
kind
of
just
improve
productivity
across
the
code
base
for
really
any
contributor
looking
to
help
out
and
I
guess
last,
one
to
just
say
is
yeah
like
translation
improvements
is
always
an
area
we're
looking
at
as
Luca
mentioned,
you
know
over
2
000
people
contributed
to
translations
on
the
project
this
year,
like
we're
thinking
about
you
guys
and
how
we
can
make
your
job
easier
and
just
more
efficient,
whether
that's
like
QA
tools,
building
out
our
glossary
and
translation
memory.
I
You
know
exploring
machine
translations
to
to
help
you
be
more
productive,
super
excited
about
potential
stuff
in
the
pipeline
there
and
I
guess
I
just
end
is
like
you
know
like
what
else
we
work
on
as
a
team
and
as
a
community
like
very
much
up
to
you.
So
let
us
know
whether
it's
in
Discord
calls
like
these
GitHub
Twitter.
I
Let
us
know
what
you
think
we
should
work
on
and
let
us
know
what
you
want
to
work
on
and
we'll
do
our
best
to
try
to
empower
you
to
get
out
there
and
make
a
difference.
So
thanks
a
lot
and
yeah
looking
forward
to
to
seeing
you
all
in
2023.
A
Thank
you,
Sam
with
that.
We
are
basically
through
with
all
the
things
we
wanted
to
chat
about.
I'm
gonna,
give
it
over
to
Josh.
E
Hello,
my
this
time,
I
get
to
be
the
hero
and
come
on
sharing
my
screen.
We
do
have
a
couple
of
other
things
that
Luca
is
about
to
go
through.
So
I
just
thought
that,
let's
start
this
just
now
and
we
can
leave
up
for
the
rest
of
the
call
while
we
chat
yeah
so
sharing
my
screen
just
now.
If
you
get
some
sort
of
QR
scanner,
you
can
scan
the
pull-up
code
and
that
will
allow
you
to
claim
your
report
with
an
address
or
your
ens
and
I
guess.
E
Lastly,
just
what
we're
giving
shouts
when
I
give
a
shout
out
to
Scott
oneapp
who
I
did
see
on
this
call,
not
sure,
if
he's
still
here,
but
he
has
helped
us
a
lot
with
creating
co-ops
across
the
year,
all
of
the
ones
for
the
community
calls,
but
also
a
bunch
of
others
that
I'm
sure
a
lot
of
you
have
already
claimed
and
yeah
so
shout
out
to
Scott
and
I'll
pass
it
back
over
to
Luca.
Just
to
finish
us
up,
we'll
use,
claim
your
waps.
A
First
of
all
events,
so
the
ethereum.org
team
has
attended
a
couple
this
year,
where
we've
been
learning
attending
talks,
meeting
new
people
meeting
up
with
our
contributors.
We
ran
a
booth.
We
also
gave
a
couple
of
talks:
I'm
gonna
be
sharing
the
links
to
Sam's
and
my
talks
at
Defcon
in
Bogota,
in
the
chat
right
now
with
Sam
talking
about
education
as
a
public
good
and
the
history
of
ethereum.org.
A
While
my
topic
was
growing,
the
global
ethereum
community,
Through
localization
feel
free
to
check
them
out
if
you're
interested
and
with
that
being
said,
I'm
sure
other
people
on
the
team
would
like
to
share
a
word
or
two
about
in
real
life
events
and
the
value
of
attending
them.
So
let's
open
up
the
floor
and
hear
from
some
of
them
as
well.
D
Yeah
some
of
the
highlights
that
have
come
from
attending
these
events
comes
from
one
meeting,
the
community
members.
It
was
really
awesome
at
Devcon
to
have
that
booth
and
have
a
space
for
people
to
come
up
and
meet
us
in
person
and
to
talk
about
all
the
work
we're
doing
on
ethereum.org
as
a
community.
D
Other
highlights
that
have
come
from
being
able
to
go
to
these
events
is
connecting
with
people
who
are
able
to
help
us
build
out
these
resources
and
are
more
and
our
experts
in
the
domain
that
we're
trying
to
build
our
content.
For
so
an
example
that
comes
to
mind
would
be
like
the
bridges
page
we
talked
about.
We
met
the
guys
that
work
at
li-fi
at
a
conference
and
they
helped
contribute
to
our
website
or
the
layer
2
website.
D
We
met
a
bunch
of
L2
companies
in
East
Denver
who
helped
us
like
verify
the
information
we
were
putting
out
and
make
sure
we
were
making
a
good
resource
for
everyone
to
look
at
so
like
a
lot
of
the
value
comes
from
being
able
to
meet
people
who
are
either
experts
in
the
domain
or
interested
in
this
project
as
a
whole
and
just
like
really
awesome
to
meet
the
community
members
through.
All
of
this.
A
Yeah,
exactly
a
lot
of
different
benefits,
also
I
would
say,
as
really
applicable
to
anyone
who
wants
to
get
more
involved
in
ethereum
in
the
space
in
the
community
in
general
is
to
go
to
an
in
real
life
event
or
two.
It's
a
great
opportunity
to
learn
and
to
connect
with
people
and
to
share
ideas
and
to
pick
up
ideas.
A
So
yeah,
that's
that's
one
thing
we
wanted
to
call
out
also,
if
Porto's
happening
next
year,
seeing
Nuno
just
mentioning
that
so
a
new
event.
If
you
want
to
check
that
out,
if
you
like,
sunny
weather,
probably
good
place
to
be.
B
When
it
comes
to
these
IRL
experiences
like
any
any
event
that
popsicles
they're,
trying
to
get
more
involved,
I
would
argue
would
be
valuable
and
beneficial.
They
don't
have
to
be
the
biggest
events
out
there
like
Ethan
or
yeah
Ethan
was
coming
up
in
a
couple
months.
That's
a
very
large
event.
Hopefully
we'll
see
some
folks
there
and
I
encourage
folks
to
to
apply
if
you
can
make
it,
but
if
you
can't
make
it
something
like
that
or
any
type
of
larger
conference
definitely
consider
meetups
as
well.
B
Look
in
your
local
community
try
to
find
other
folks
who
are
also
learning
the
vegetarian
playing
around
building
things.
Try
to
see
what
they're
working
on
any
folks
that
you
can
get
in
touch
with
locally
can
really
have
a
kind
of
miss
your
your
knowledge
and
education
and
access
in
the
space.
So
I
just
want
to
put
that
out
there
as
well,
and
hopefully
we'll
see
some
folks
at
some
different
events
this
year.
A
Yeah,
exactly
moving
on
sorry
go.
E
E
That
means
that
you'll
get
tickets
to
the
event
for
free
in
exchange
for
you
helping
out
with
the
event,
but
I've
had
loads
of
conversations
with
a
lot
of
great
people
who
are
the
volunteer
at
these
events
and
just
by
being
there
and
volunteering,
you
get
to
have
amazing
conversations
with
a
lot
of
really
interesting
people
and
there's
also
the
add
the
benefit
that,
if
you're
interested
you
can
spend
a
bit
of
your
time
going
to
the
talks
which
I
would
highly
recommend
as
well.
E
So,
if
there's
something
near
you
that
you
want
to
go
to
or
even
not
check
out
in
advance,
look
at
the
events
coming
up
and
see
if
you
can
get
on
the
list
as
a
volunteer.
A
Yeah,
exactly
2023
is
coming
up,
there's
going
to
be
a
bunch
of
events
going
on.
If
you
can.
If
and
if
you
have
time
attending
at
least
one
is
usually
a
rewarding
and
beneficial
experience,
but
given
that
we're
already
on
time,
I
want
to
quickly
run
through
to
other
miscellaneous
announcements.
A
First
of
all,
we
published
a
survey
for
translators
a
couple
of
days
ago,
so
we
can
collect
some
feedback
and
evaluate
how
translators
feel
about
contributing
and
the
translation
process
and
hopefully
use
these
takeaways
to
improve
certain
aspects
of
the
contributor
experience.
I
am
sharing
a
link
to
the.
A
Survey
in
the
chat,
please
note
that
this
Channel
and
message
are
only
accessible
to
server
members
with
the
translator
role,
since
we
want
to
make
sure
that
only
translators
are
filling
out
this
survey.
But
if
you
are
a
translator
and
haven't
filled
this
out
yet
please
do
please
share
your
thoughts
and
feedback.
It
means
a
lot
to
us
and
the
more
we
can
learn
about
how
contributors
feel
the
more
we
can
work
on
improving
their
experience.
A
And,
finally,
you
might
have
noticed
that
we've
just
announced
an
nft
for
active
community
members
and
contributors
sharing
the
message
link
with
all
the
details
and
instructions
for
claiming
the
nft
in
the
chat
as
well.
A
Basically,
this
is
just
a
simple
way
of
us
saying
thank
you
to
our
most
active
and
engaged
community
members,
and
maybe
also
the
start
of
us
doing
more
things
like
this.
So
in
short,
this
is
a
regular
nft
on
optimism
that
you
can
claim
if
you
have
any
of
the
following
roles
on
the
ethereum.org
Discord,
so
you
can
find
the
exact
roles
in
this
message.
The
mint
is
free.
You
do
need
to
pay
a
gas
treatment
which
is
usually
around
10
cents
on
optimism.
A
In
case
you
don't
have
funds
on
optimism.
This
seems
like
a
good
time
to
bridge
some
over
and
start
exploring
ethereum's
layer,
2
ecosystem,
which
is
growing
rapidly,
and
it
has
exploded
with
activities
this
year
and,
if
you're
not
eligible
to
claim
this
nft
at
the
moment,
don't
have
one
of
the
roles.
Don't
worry
dealer
will
be
more
opportunities
in
the
future.
A
I
would
say
just
try
to
contribute
to
the
website
in
some
way,
be
active
in
our
community
collect
a
role
if
possible
and
you're
good,
as
always
a
huge
thanks
to
everyone
on
this
call,
as
well
as
all
other
members
of
the
ethereum.org
community.
We've
come
a
long
way
to
the
point
where
we
now
have
a
Vibrant,
Community
and
thousands
of
contributors
to
the
website.
So
all
of
these
great
stats
and
metrics
that
we've
shared
here
today
are
very
much
the
result
of
all
of
these
contributions
and
your
efforts.
So
thank
you.