►
From YouTube: Ethereum.org Community Call - November 2021
Description
These calls are an opportunity for the Ethereum community to learn about the latest updates to Ethereum.org and to share feedback.
Website: https://ethereum.org/
Translation program: https://ethereum.org/en/contributing/translation-program/
Discord: https://discord.gg/rZz26QWfCg
A
Okay
and
we're
live
so
hi
everyone
and
welcome
to
the
ephedium.org
2021
community
call.
Most
people
here
have
probably
read
the
rough
agenda,
but
for
the
people
here
in
attendance,
just
because
you
heard
there
might
be
a
pull-up
I'll,
do
a
quick
explanation
of
what
we're
going
to
go
over.
A
Our
aims
with
these
are
to
firstly
update
the
community
on
what
we're
working
on
as
well
as
just
as
importantly,
why
we're
working
on
it
allow
community
members
and
contributors
to
voice
what
they
think
is
important
work
and
be
involved
in
shaping
the
roadmap
going
forward
and
also
just
helping
on
board
contributors.
A
A
So
before
we
get
started
on
the
road
map,
I
guess
we
can
do
some
very
quick
introductions
to
the
team,
I'm
already
speaking
so
I
guess
I'll
start,
I'm
joshua
from
glasgow
and
scotland.
I
work
as
a
community
leader
in
the
ethereum
dork,
I'm
saying
fairly
early
in
my
crypto
journey.
I
joined
the
team
back
in
july
before
starting,
I
just
persistently
annoyed
them
on
discord
and
github
until
they
eventually
gave
me
a
job.
A
B
C
I
I'm
from
buenos
aires,
argentina
and
well
basically,
I'm
a
front-end
developer.
I
like
to
build
things
for
the
for
the
web,
my
entire
career,
I
developed
things
for
the
web
2
and
since
the
end
of
last
year,
I
I
started
to
get
more
involved
in
developing
for
web3
using
web3
technologies.
So
I'm
interested
in
that
I'm
interested
in
in
ethereum
and
I
would
say,
the
crypto
space
in
general.
D
Hey
guys,
I'm
corwin,
I
started
in
june
as
well
at
the
ethereum
foundation.
I
also
work
as
a
web
developer
on
ethereum.org,
and
before
this
I
was
working
as
a
mobile
and
full
stack
developer
at
an
agriculture
tech
company
yeah.
That's
me.
E
Hey
everyone
I'll
go
next
paul
wacker.
I
joined
the
ef
with
ethern.org
website
team
back
in
january
this
year,
my
former
life
was
actually
in
healthcare.
I've
been
transitioning
over
the
past
couple
years
into
the
computer
science
realm.
I've
been
down
the
ethereum
rabbit
hole
really
ever
since
heavily
since
the
covert
crash,
but
been
involved
loosely
in
the
crypto
space
for
the
past
few
years
and
likewise
love
building
stuff
for
web3.
I
think
this
place
is
super
exciting.
F
Hey
guys,
my
name
is
sam
from
boston
in
the
us
currently
living
in
california.
F
I've
worked
with
the
ethereum
foundation
for
a
little
over
two
years
now
worked
on
a
handful
of
projects,
as
a
software
developer
primarily
focused
on
on
this
right.
Here,
though,
ethereum.org-
and
I
guess
just
like
quick
point
to
say
is
that
you
know
this
is
what
the
ethereum.org
core
team
technically
is,
but
I
think
worth
mentioning
you
know
like
ethereum.org
is
largely
community
driven,
and
you
know
we
have
hundreds
of
content
and
code
contributors,
thousands
of
translator
contributors.
F
F
We
really
see
ourselves.
As
you
know,
the
portal
for
for
ethereum.
We
serve
ourselves
as
the
front
door
to
ethereum,
so
we
think
about
just
like
what
are
the
best
ways
that
we
can
onboard
people
into
the
space,
whether
that's
acquiring
their
first
east,
finding
a
wallet
figuring
out
how
to
run
a
node,
how
to
stake,
how
to
actually
build
a
dap.
How
to
just
like
get
introduced
to
all
the
various
communities
in
the
ecosystem,
so
yeah
really
excited
to
have
you
guys
here
and
be
a
part
of
this?
This
open
source
community.
A
Thank
you,
sam
with
that,
I
guess
we
can
get
stuck
into
a
few
of
the
items
on
our
roadmap.
Obviously
we
don't
really
have
enough
time
to
cover
everything,
but
we've
selected
a
few
things
we'd
like
to
share
and
get
some
feedback
on.
Maybe
one
of
the
the
first
things
that
we're
working
on
is
a
revamp
for
our
learn
section.
A
A
Obviously,
the
early
adopters
of
ethereum
were
primarily
developers
or
very
technical
people,
but
as
that
dynamic
is
starting
to
shift
where
we've
got
a
lot
of
non-technical
non-technical
people
who
are
interested
in
ethereum.
Ideally,
we
don't
want
these
people
who
have
very
technical
documentation
to
get
started.
A
A
Our
plan
is
to
redesign
the
current
learn
page,
which
is
just
this
page
here,
as
you
can
see,
just
a
collection
of
random
links,
somewhat
organized
one
thing
that
we've
been
inspired
by
as
our
developers
hub
so
similar
to
this
page,
where
we
try
to
teach
people
about
the
fundamentals
of
actually
developing
on
ethereum
itself,
and
we
want
to
create
a
structured
page
that
will
teach
people
the
basics
with
as
little
technical
jargon
as
possible
and
then
arrange
that
in
a
way,
that's
very
easy
to
navigate
for
them
to
go
through.
And
the
hope
with.
D
Yeah,
I
guess
next
I'll
talk
about
our
wallets
page
right
now,
we're
looking
at
kind
of
revamping,
especially
the
find
wallets
page.
One
of
the
main
reasons
is
because
it's
really
unwieldy
for
new
users
coming
into
the
space
one
of
the
first
things
that
you
do,
I'm
sure,
as
most
of
you
know,
is
getting
an
ethereum
wallet.
That's
how
you
interact
with
the
network
and
applications
on
it
right
now,
when
you
land
on
that
page
there's
just.
I
can't
remember
what
we're
at
like
37
wallets
or
something
like
that.
D
Without
you
know,
king
picking,
but
we
may
go
down
the
route
of
having
a
bit
of
an
editor's
choice
for
the
time
being,
just
to
make
it
easy
for
someone
new
to
come
to
the
page
and
see
some
wallets
that
we
have
like
decided
to
be
kind
of
like
easy
to
onboard
into
the
space
with
and
then
in
addition
to
that,
we're
going
to
take
a
look
at
some
of
our
filters
that
are
used
for
filtering
products.
D
This
space
has
definitely
changed
a
lot
since
this
page
was
created.
There's
nfts
now,
nft,
support
and
wallets
aren't
great
at
the
moment,
and
we
definitely
want
to
highlight
some
of
the
ones
where
that's
supported
in
them,
as
well
as
kind
of
looking
at
some
other
filters
to
make
it
easier
for
users
to
filter
down
to
the
wallets
moving
forward
after
they've
kind
of
like
onboarded
in
the
ecosystem.
C
Yeah
another
goal
we
have
for
this
quarter
is
accessibility.
C
C
C
Then
we
will
give
a
priority
to
those
those
tasks
and
and
after
that
we
may
create
github
issues
and
we
can
start
working
on
them
and
probably
you
you
will
be
able
to
to
help
us
and
contribute
to
those
tasks.
A
second
thing
that
we
have
like
the
idea
to
work
on
this
accessibility,
epic,
is
like
adding
up
an
automated
process
that
runs
periodically
and
which
will
run
benchmarks.
C
That
will
throw
us
like
a
report
or
a
score
on
on
accessibility
terms,
so
that
we
can
start
comparing
these
scores
and-
and
we
can
take
conclusions
if
we
can
improve
on
top
of
what
we
already
have
or
if
we
are
better
or
worse
than
than
before.
Basically,
so
yeah,
that's
the
the
goal
for
accessibility.
C
I
would
like
to
take
the
opportunity
to
basically
request
or
actually
ask
you
guys
if
you
have
a
if
you
already
have
detected
some
issues
on
accessibility
terms,
please
let
us
know
in
the
channels
or
send
me
a
message
so
that
we
can
add
those
things
in
in
this
list
and
then
we
can
start
working
on
them.
E
Nothing
can
happen
from
there
paul
again.
One
of
the
other
initiatives
that
we're
going
to
be
focusing
on
coming
up
is
education
around
running
a
node.
We've
got
some
instructions
on
this
right
now
that
are
relatively
buried
inside
the
developer
docs,
and
we
are
looking
to
make
this
more
of
a
high-level
page,
something
that's
a
little
bit
more
user-friendly.
E
I'd
like
to
provide
with
that
education
around.
Why
running
a
node
is
actually
important.
The
benefits
of
that
beyond
just
staking
kind
of
clearing
up,
maybe
some
misconceptions
about.
Oh,
I
need
to
be
a
miner
to
run
a
node
and
presenting
it
in
a
more
user-friendly
way
that
kind
of
guides
users
through
are
you
somebody
who's
comfortably
with
command
line?
Or
would
you
prefer
some?
E
You
know
pictures
of
you
like
a
gui
and
helping
to
guide
people
through
those
steps
to
easily
start
spinning
up
the
node
and
contributing
to
the
decentralization
of
this
glorious
network
with
that
is
also
going
to
be
kind
of
advancing
some
of
the
education
material
around
staking
itself
they're,
not
exactly
the
same.
Obviously,
you
can
run
a
node
without
necessarily
staking,
but
if
you're
a
staker
you're
going
to
have
to
run
a
node
somehow
but
stickers.
E
The
other
important
thing
with
this
is
going
to
be
emphasizing
the
importance
of
client
diversity.
This
has
been
a
big
topic
on
the
with
all
the
network
upgrades
lately,
we
are
right
now
kind
of
it
sounds
like
things
are
slowed
down
for
the
merge,
because
we
want
to
make
sure
that
the
network
is
safe
before
we
actually
go
through
with
that,
that's
more
on
the
core
dev
side.
That's
not!
You
know
some
official
thing.
It's
just
a
matter
of.
E
We
need
to
work
on
client
diversity
on
the
on
the
consensus
layer
side
with
things
like
prism,
having
a
majority
of
clients
right
now.
So
we
want
to
provide
some
education
about
that.
Why
it's
really
important
to
aim
to
run
a
minority
client
if
you're
going
to
be
staking
and
running
your
own
home
network,
so
that
type
of
content
is
coming
as
well.
F
Hey
guys,
sam
again
and
one
initiative,
I'd
like
to
call
out
that
we're
trying
to
get
done,
this
quarter
is
hiring,
so
our
team
is
looking
to
hire
a
product
designer
this
quarter
and
just
I
guess
quick
reminder
like
so.
We
are
funded
by
the
ethereum
foundation,
but
we
are,
for
the
most
part,
a
small,
independent
team.
F
There's
the
six
of
us
here
that
have
been
talking
that
make
up
this
core
team
as
of
now
so
we're
looking
to
yeah
bring
in
a
product
designer
if
you
are
enthusiastic
about
open
source
and
designing
in
public,
if
you
love
ethereum
and
want
to
help
improve
the
experience
for
a
diverse
range
of
people
coming
into
the
ethereum
space,
we'd
be
really
excited
to
to
potentially
work
with
you,
so
this
would
be
full-time
contract
position.
F
You'd
really
be
coming
in
as
our
lead,
sole
designer,
so
helping
from
initial
storyboarding,
creating
wireframes
all
the
way
from
lo-fi
sketches
to
prototypes
and
high-fidelity
visual
designs.
If
you
love
prototyping
in
tools
such
as
figma
or
sketch,
you
want
to
work
on
a
collaborative
remote
team
and
you're
excited
about
the
idea
of
just
working
on
a
small
scrappy
team
and
potentially
wearing
many
hats.
F
F
We
do
have
a
jobs
channel
in
there,
that's
for
just
like
broad
ethereum
jobs
in
the
space.
I
guess
call
it
to
that
if
you're
just
looking
to
hire
or
are
looking
for
a
role
in
the
ethereum
community,
more
broadly,
that
can
be
a
good
spot
to
look
in
our
discord
channel.
But
if
you
are
specifically
interested
in
this
role
definitely
feel
free
to
reach
out
and
yeah
looking
forward
to
chatting
with
a
bunch
of
you
on
that.
B
Cool
so
luca
again,
I'm
gonna
be
talking
a
bit
about
the
translation
program.
Let
me
just
start
off
by
sharing
my
screen.
B
Basically,
the
translation
program
is
an
initiative
to
translate
the
website
into
as
many
languages
as
possible
to
make
the
content
available
to
everyone.
Ethereum.Org
is
an
open
source
website.
The
translation
program
is
managed
in
the
same
spirit
as
in
it
allows
everyone
to
contribute.
It
allows
bilingual
community
members
to
contribute
by
helping
to
translate
the
website
to
their
language.
B
B
B
The
scope
of
the
program
and
variety
of
contributors
has
been
growing
ever
since
the
website
is
currently
available
in
37
languages
planning
on
adding
more
very
soon.
B
B
B
This
shows
how
much
demand
there
is
for
translated
content,
for
example.
In
december
you
can
see
this
increase
in
december.
This
corresponds
with
a
lot
of
new
translated
content
being
added
to
the
website,
and
this
increase
shows
that
the
demand
is
there
and
as
much
translated
content
as
we
can
make
available.
The
more
people
are
going
to
be
interacting
with
it,
basically
next
up
a
quick
overview
of
the
translation
process,
so
how
it
actually
works.
B
The
first
step
is
exporting
the
contents
for
translation
from
github,
where
our
website
lives
and
adam
gets.
The
crowd
in
crowding
is
the
localization
tool
that
we
use
to
handle
all
of
our
translation
and
review
needs.
It
contains
a
lot
of
great
crowdsourcing
functionality
and
a
number
of
professional
translation
and
review
tools
that
help
increase
the
productivity
of
our
translators
and
the
quality
of
the
translations.
B
Once
this
content
is
uploaded
to
crowdin
community
members
start
translating
it,
we
provide
them
with
some
of
the
functionality.
So
translation
memory,
glossary
screenshots
for
context,
we're
also
there
to
help
answer
any
questions
and
issues
that
they
might
have
and
try
and
resolve
yeah
try
and
resolve
any
issues
that
might
they
might
run
into
while
working
on
the
project.
B
B
B
B
B
B
B
B
That's
pretty
much
it
for
our
recent
developments
and
finally,
some
of
the
things
that
we're
looking
to
add
moving
forward.
These
are
basically
our
goals
for
the
next
quarter.
B
First
of
all,
we
want
to
further
acknowledge
our
translators
and
ways
of
showing
them
how
much
we
appreciate
their
contributions
and
try
to
support
them
as
much
as
possible,
so
in
q4
we're
going
to
be
creating
translation,
leaderboards
we're
going
to
be
creating
a
credits
page
where
we're
going
to
be
listing
all
of
our
translators
on
the
website
also
planning
on
creating
a
certification
plan
for
professional
translators
or
upcoming
translators,
who
are
looking
to
further
their
careers.
B
B
Something
else
we
want
to
focus
on
is
automating
and
optimizing
as
much
of
the
translation
workflow
as
possible,
as
well
as
continuing
to
build
out
our
translator
resources,
better
resources
lead
to
better
productivity
and
translation
quality
and,
finally,
we're
always
trying
to
help
other
projects
within
the
ethereum
ecosystem
set
up
or
upgrade
their
own
translation
efforts
sharing
some
of
our
experience
and
best
practices-
that's
pretty
much
it
this.
You
can
use
this
qr
link
to
visit
the
translation
program
page
on
the
website
that
contains
all
the
relevant
information
and
links.
B
A
E
A
Yeah,
so
there's
a
community
up
channel.
If
you
click
on
that
you'll
see
the
poet
bot.
If
you
just
message
the
bot
and
should
get
the
pop-up
sent
to
you,
you
messaged
the
pull-up
with
the
password
which
was
ethereum.org
right.
Yes,
ethereum
slash,
dot,
slash
org,
so
I've
got
it
here.
A
Great
well
everyone's
doing
that,
I
guess
we
can
move
on
to
the
next
section,
which
is
where
we
just
like
to
select.
You
know
some
questions,
some
feedback,
just
an
open
discussion
with
anyone
here,
that's
on
the
call
who
wants
to
share
something
about
ephedium.org,
maybe
something
that
we've
spoke
about
and
the
the
epics
we've
highlighted
from
a
roadmap
or
just
maybe
some
just
that
you've
noticed
a
question
that
you've
got
anything
like
that.
A
There's
quite
a
lot
of
people
here.
So
I
don't
know
if
people
have
questions
if
they
want
to
just
maybe
raise
their
hand,
and
we
could
call
on
them
might
be
a
good
way
to
do
it.
C
F
I
have
a
question
for
folks
on
the
call.
Yeah
I'd
just
be
curious.
Everyone
here,
I
mean
feel
free
to
just
write
in
the
chat,
if
that's
the
easiest
way
but
like
what
are
the
the
communities
within
ethereum,
whether
that's
you
know,
discord,
servers,
subreddits,
twitter
lists.
What
have
you
like
just
curious
to
hear
what
you,
what
you
find
to
be
the
most
like,
welcoming
and
and
useful
communities
within
within
the
ethereum
ecosystem?
I'd
be
really
curious
to
just
see
like
how
people
have
learned
how
to
get
into
this
space.
H
I
am,
I
am
happy
to
go
first,
I
I
just
recently
discovered
crypto
and
ethereum,
probably
this
past
summer,
I
would
say
I
think,
what
you
guys
do
at
eth.
You
know
east.org
is
awesome,
so
I'd
kind
of
put
that
at
the
top
of
my
list
and
then
I
think
after
that,
I'm
primarily
a
discord
user,
and
so
the
other
one
I've
found
helpful
is,
I
think,
there's
an
eth
staking
server,
and
that
was
a
great
resource
for
me.
When
I
was
figuring
out
like
what
is
pooling.
H
Do
I
have
to
run
my
own
node
like?
Can
I
have
someone
else
hosted
what
if
my
computer
sucks,
because
I
have
or
my
wi-fi
sucks,
because
I
have
comcast
because
I'm
in
boston
and
why
I
find
the
east
coast
is
never
good
so
that
that's
been
super
hell,
I
think,
generally
there's
I
haven't
seen
kind
of
pockets
of
ethereum
that
have
been.
E
Yeah,
I
can
pick
it
back
on
that.
I
actually
also
kind
of
entered
into
this
space
quite
heavily
through
the
east
taker
community.
Actually,
the
e-sticker
discord.
I
think
I
saw
in
vatican
the
call
at
some
point
you
might
have
bounced
at
this
point,
but
I
remember
the
ethos
over
there
when
I,
when
I
was
starting
to
get
involved,
was
welcoming
first
and
knowledgeable.
Second,
I've
tried
to
carry
that
with
me,
at
least
through
to
ethereum.org
as
well
in
our
community.
E
We
want
to
make
this
a
place
where
anybody
can
come
in
potentially
ask
questions,
speak
up
voice
their
opinion
and
not
just
be
shut
down,
or
you
know
people
just
disregard
their
opinion.
I
want
everybody
to
feel,
welcome
in
this
space
and
have
a
place
where
they
can
ask
questions,
and
we
can
you
know
bounce
feedback
between
each
other
in
a
comfortable
way,
but
yeah
the
e-sticker
community,
definitely
a
plus
one
on
that
one
and
I've
been
in
touch
with
those
folks
as
well.
F
Yeah,
I
mean
suggestion
for
people
with
no
coding
background
to
get
involved
with
the
community.
I
think
it's
a
great
question
and
I
think
it's
honestly
an
honest
misconception
that,
like
you,
need
to
be
a
developer
or
some
cryptography
researcher
software
engineer
in
order
to
contribute
to
ethereum,
and
I
think,
like
more
and
more,
I
think
it's
getting
easier
for
really
anyone
to
be
able
to
come
in
whether
that's
you
know
just
like
writing
content
to
help
educate
whether
that's
participating
you
know
in
discord.
Communities
coming
on
community
calls
such
as
this.
F
You
know
taking
call
notes
joining
some
of
the
the
developer
roadmap
discussions
elsewhere,
translating
like
luca
just
talked
about
if
you're,
if
you're
bilingual
at
all,
I
think
there's
yeah
a
lot
of
ways
to
come
in
and
make
an
impact,
and
I
would
say,
if
you
are,
you
know,
potentially
interested
in
getting
a
job
full-time
within
the
ethereum
ecosystem.
F
There's
plenty
of
job
boards
out
there
we
list
a
few
on
ethereum.org,
but
companies
are
hiring
or
projects
are
hiring
for
the
entire
spectrum.
You
know
operations
marketing
support
communications,
not
just
the
technical
fields.
I
think
it
really
is
getting
to
a
point
where
yeah
companies
and
projects
are
recognizing
that
you
know
we
need
more
than
just
developers
to
make
the
vision
of
you
know
the
ethereum
a
reality.
So
yeah
definitely
feel
free
to
to
ask
follow-up
questions
again
in
our
discord,
if
you're
just
not
sure
the
best
way
to
get
involved.
I
Yeah
I
mean
so
for
me.
I
have
no
coding
experience
and
I
guess
I'm
fairly
new
to
the
community
as
well,
but
I
found
that
the
discord
server
has
been
phenomenal
with
just
you
know,
answering
questions
and
being
pretty
helpful.
Like
I
don't
know,
it
seems
like
maybe
in
other
areas.
That's
not
always
the
case,
I'm
not
sure
sure
how
people
normally
act
or
react,
but
I've
never
really
seen
any
bad
bad
actors
at
all
on
the
server.
I
So
I
think,
that's
quite
quite
phenomenal,
with
what
you
guys
have
have
kind
of
instilled
with
the
community.
F
F
I
can
design,
I
can
do
operations
and
I
think,
that's
a
great
way
of
just
kind
of
letting
yourself
be
open
to
those
opportunities
like,
for
instance,
many
projects
need
help
with
just
documentation,
given
how
fast
the
space
is
moving,
and
that
can
be
a
great
way
to
just
get
your
foot
in
the
door.
F
Prove
that
you're,
a
competent
person
that
you're
reliable
there's
so
many
dows
out
there,
for
instance
that
need
help.
They
just
need
people
who
can
prove
that
they'll
actually
follow
through
and
do
stuff
when
asked.
So
I
think
that
can
be
a
great
way
to
actually
lead
to
whether
it's
a
part-time,
full-time
paid
position.
D
And
I've
definitely
seen
a
lot
of
opportunities
in
like
community
management
and
like
content,
specifically
largely
just
due
to
the
fact
that,
like
developers,
kind
of
suck
at
writing
for
your
average
person
and
there's
like
definitely
a
high
demand
for
people
who
can
take
the
technical
jargon
and
distill
it
down
into
something,
that's
like
more
palatable
for
your
average
reader.
I
guess
at
the
end
of
the
day,
because,
like
right
now,
lots
of
people
are
intimidated
by
the
space
just
due
to
like
the
complexity
of
it,
which
is
like
very
valid.
D
A
Great
we've
got
a
question
in
the
chat
for
luca.
B
Yeah
I
mean
the
reviews
are
done
by
our
language
service
provider
right.
B
So
we
have
there's
a
translation
agency
that
we're
cooperating
with,
and
basically
they
review
all
the
content,
which
is
much
easier
than
having
to
someone
having
to
find
someone
to
review
the
translated
content
for
like
25
languages
or
something
and
the
there
have
been
a
lot
of
issues
reported
where
the
already
the
content
that
was
already
reviewed
and
approved
is
incorrect
and
yeah
we'll
be
ordering
a
review
for
those
as
well
at
some
point
to
sort
of
clean
up
all
the
translated
content,
even
the
one
that
has
already
been
reviewed
and
approved.
A
Another
question
in
the
chat:
is
there
a
space
for
product
managed
to
contribute?
I
found
it
challenging
to
find
how
to
contribute
and
work
with
engineers
and
designers.
Like
I
do
in
my
full
time
web
2
job,
I
would
say
that
one
thing
that
I've
definitely
seen
and
largely
in
the
dow
space
is
that
there's
definitely
a
need
for
like
people
in
non-technical
non-developed
roles
like
product
managers,
and
we
actually
have
a
section
on
our.
A
Maybe
it's
not
on
this
page,
but
we
I'll
try
and
find
it
in
a
second
but
yeah.
We
do
have
a
section
on
our
site
that
goes
into
ways
like
as
a
product
manager.
You
can't
get
involved,
but
just
to
go
back
to
what
sam
said
earlier.
A
It's
quite
a
different
mental
model
than
the
whole
web
to
space
or,
if
you
apply
for
a
job,
if
you
have
an
interview
process
and
you
get
a
job
or
not
a
lot
of
people
working
in
this
space
is
quite
scrappy
to
begin
with.
You
know
they
start
doing
little
bits
here
and
there
and
then
that's
noticed
and
then
that
transforms
into
full-time
rules.
A
A
question
for
joshua
in
the
chat:
where
can
you
find
time
to
help
me
finish
and
commit
my
pr
I'll,
try
and
get
back
to
you
and
we
can
work
through
that,
maybe
later
on
and
just
or
if
not
tomorrow,.
D
D
I
think,
if
you
can
like
find
a
bigger
project,
they're,
probably
looking
for
product
managers
of
some
sort,
like
I've,
seen
them
on
ave
chain,
link
kind
of
like
big
big
companies
in
the
space.
That
way,
if
you're
looking
to
do
it
more,
like
small
scale,
then
like
raid
guild,
definitely
has
a
role
for
product
managers.
So
there's
definitely
avenues
to
do
work
like
that
in
the
space.
I
I
had
a
question
you
guys
earlier
you
mentioned
like
the
the
core
team.
I
don't
know
if
that
just
like
chorus
in
like
the
main
people
at
the
ef
or
core
from
like
a
developer
perspective,
but
I
know
that
josh
stark
is
also
I'm
not
sure
if
he's
on
here.
But
can
you
like
talk
about
his
role
at
the
ef
at
all
or.
F
Yeah,
I
can
give
some
quick
perspective
on
that
and
thanks
for
the
question
probably
worth
clarifying,
when
I
mentioned,
I
guess
core
ethereum.org
team
yeah,
I
mean
specifically
to
ethereum.org,
so
the
ethereum
foundation,
more
broadly,
is
about
150
175,
total
people,
a
mix
of
full-time
and
part-time,
how
the
the
foundation
is
organized
might
be
best
to
think
about
of
just
like
autonomous,
individual
startups,
each
working
on
their
own
sector
or
product
or
area
of
research.
F
So
the
theorem.org
team,
the
six
core
members
of
the
ethereum.org
team
that
have
introduced
themselves
and
done
most
the
talking
here
again,
yeah,
that's
just
specific
to
ethereum.org
josh
stark.
We
do
work
with
occasionally
he's
kind
of
somewhat
an
advisor
to
our
team
and
helps
out
from
like
an
editorial
perspective
from
time
to
time,
but
he
largely
deals
with
just
like
general
operations
throughout
the
foundation.
J
Raised
yeah,
I'm
just
curious
sam
just
mentioned
like
the
whole
organization
and
all
that,
and
I
was
just
wondering
how
do
you,
how
do
you
manage
to
like
follow
a
coherent
direction?
If
this
is
off
topic,
you
don't
have
to
answer,
but
it's
just
a
very
interesting
topic
that
I've
been
thinking
about.
J
F
I
mean
for
one
to
be
clear,
like
ethereum.org
or
the
ethereum
foundation.
More
broadly,
we
are
not
a
dow
like
we
are
a
non-profit
foundation.
We
have
a
legal
entity
based
in
switzerland,
but
within
the
ethereum
ecosystem.
There
are,
you
know,
hundreds
if
not
thousands
of
dows
and
I
think,
in
short,
there's
no
silver
bullet
answer
in
terms
of
how
they
accomplish
what
they're
looking
to
do.
F
I
think
it
varies
largely
depending
on
the
dow
from
from
my
personal
experience
and
what
I've
seen
is
just
like
you
know,
a
dow
can
range
from
just
like
a
discord
community
with
a
multi-sig
to
like
a
much
more
specific
and
well
thought
out
like
organizational
structure
for
how
people
get
involved
and
the
road
map
they're
working
towards
whether
it's
you
know
a
product
or
a
group
of
people
just
trying
to
purchase
an
nft
together,
or
you
know
something
more
vague
or
more
ambitious.
F
So
again,
I
think
it
really
depends
on
the
project,
but
I
think
in
large,
like
having
a
community
having
a
a
membership
and
having
like
a
clear
vision,
statement
set
forward,
can
really
help
with
that.
I
think
often
it's
somewhat
similar
to
just
like
an
open
source
software
project.
In
terms
of
you
know,
anyone
can
contribute
to
linux.
D
Yeah
I'd
say
for,
like
the
dows,
the
I've
had
a
like,
really
hard
time
wrapping
my
head
around
it
too.
So
I
don't
it's
a
very
confusing
topic
I
found,
but
I
was
doing
some
like
reading
lately
and
the
handbook
that
raid
guild
has,
I
think,
was
probably
one
of
the
best
like
reading
materials
to
understand
how
I
guess
that
specific
dao
operates,
but
it's
very
clear
on
like
this
is
how
you
enter.
These
are
the
roles
we
have.
This
is
how
you
would
like
become
a
member
move
up.
D
E
Suppose
yeah,
I
dropped
some
links
in
the
chat
as
well
for
those
interested
both
to
raid
guild
and
to
dao
house.
Those
are
two
decent
starting
points
for
anybody.
Looking
to
to
get
more
involved
in
the
stuff
learn
a
bit
there's
some
documentation
on
the
raid
guild
page.
I
would
encourage
you
to
start
hopping
in
the
discords
introducing
yourselves
reading
through
the
ducks
a
lot
of
stuff
out
there
for
sure.
A
Thanks
for
the
question,
is
there
anyone
else
who
wants
to
post
in
the
chat
or
maybe
speak
up
and
ask
a
question.
E
D
F
Yeah,
I
agree,
I
think,
there's
a
lot
of
opportunity
to
you
know,
given
that
we
are
somewhat
the
front
door
to
ethereum.
You
know
millions
of
people
visit
ethereum.org
every
month,
like
we
have
a
unique
opportunity
to
give
people
tangible
exposure
to
the
world
of
web.
Three
right
like
it
can
be
very
intimidating
and
daunting
for
someone
to
buy
their
first
eve
transact
with
that
on
mainnet.
You
know
waiting
for
the
transaction
to
finish
pending.
Are
you
sure
you
sent
it
to
the
right
address?
F
If
this
is
your
first
time
doing
it,
it
can
be
like
really
overwhelming,
and
I
think,
even
for,
like
people
who
are
super
experienced
in
the
space
there
always
is
that,
like
gut-wrenching
moment
after
you
send
a
transaction
of
like
oh
did,
I
do
it
right,
so
I
think
one
simple
like
onboarding
flow
that
we
could
we
could
build
and
I'd
be
really
excited
to
bring
that
to
ethereum.org
you
guys
just
like
helping
people,
you
know
download
a
wallet.
Can
we
give
some
gamification
to
it
like
issue
them
a
po-app?
F
F
What's
the
right
way
to
go
about
this
learning
a
bit
about
you
know
private
key
management,
I
think
there's
a
lot
of
cool
stuff.
We
could
do
with
ethereum
native
features
directly
on
the
website.
So
that's
definitely
an
area
I'm
looking
forward
to
exploring
and
like
yeah,
if
you
guys
have
ideas
on
stuff
you'd
like
to
see
of
like
hey.
I
wish
when
I
first
learned
about
this
like
I
wish
I
could
have
done
xyz.
B
Yeah
just
to
go
back
to
the
question
of
what
we're
excited
about,
I
would
say:
I'm
excited
about
expanding
the
translation
program,
building
out
the
functionality
there
onboarding
new
translators,
helping
to
support
our
current
translators
and
making
ethereum
content
accessible
to
more
people
and
just
pushing
out
more
translated
content
to
help
grow.
The
global
ethereum
community.
H
Yeah,
I
I
had
one,
I
don't
know
if
this
is
the
right
forum
for
it,
but
just
giving
you
guys
kind
of
have
been
building
this
and
working
hard
on
the
merge.
Just
curious,
just
curious
what
you,
where
kind
of
we
stand
today,
so
question
one
and
then
question
two
is
just
maybe
not.
H
I
know
you
won't,
or
we
should
probably
not
comment
on
specific
projects
out
there
that
are
in
ethereum,
but
just
you
know
the
state
of
scalability
solutions
today
and
there's
a
ton
of
different
approaches
and
there's
a
lot
of
really
smart
people
tackling
it
different
ways.
But
it
is
it's
still
really
hard
for
me
to
buy
a
piece
of
art
on
openc,
so
there's
not
much
on
polygon.
That's
listed
there,
so
I'm
just
kind
of
curious,
giving
you
guys
our
builders,
what
you're
seeing
on
that
side.
Thank
you.
H
E
E
Oh,
no,
you
you,
I
was
gonna,
say,
listen
so
just
to
kind
of
clear
it
up
too,
like
the
team
you're,
seeing
here
we're
the
core
ethereum
dot,
org
website
team.
So
we
are
not
directly
working
on
protocol
level
stuff.
As
far
as
what's
classically
been
known
as
eth2
all
these
upgrades
that
are
going
on
the
merge,
the
beacon
chain
there's
a
whole
other
team,
essentially
teams
working
on
that
the
different
client
teams,
essentially
so
we're
not
directly
involved
in
that,
but
we
do
communicate
with
those
folks
and
yeah.
E
Ultimately,
the
way
I
see
it
is
the
scaling
sharding
is
going
to
be
one
of
the
biggest
solutions.
In
the
meantime,
though,
you
may
have
noticed
the
road
map
for
quote
unquote:
eth2
has
evolved
over
time
where
we've
the
phases
have
kind
of
been
phased
out
in
favor
of
more
of
a
roll-up
centric
roadmap.
Where
we've
you
know,
there's
been
focus
on
arbitrarium
and
optimism,
and
also
zk
roll
ups
trying
to
get
those
to
kind
of
bridge
the
gap
right
now
to
help
with
scalability.
E
F
Yeah
I
just
dropped
a
couple
links
that
I
recommend,
following
both
danny
ryan,
who
works
at
the
ethereum
foundation
and
ben
edgington
who's
the
product
manager
of
one
of
the
the
e2
clients
they
both
post,
like
regular,
updates
about
just
like
the
latest
on
eth2
developments
as
we
approach
the
merge
right
now,
looking
like
potentially
q2
of
next
year,
but
overall
progressing
steadily
along.
I
know
there's
test
net
in
like
an
active
test
net
that
has
executed
the
merge.
I
know
they'll
be
like
releasing
small
test
nets.
F
F
I
just
shared
in
the
chat
that
provides
an
overview
of
a
lot
of
the
projects
that
are
live
and
active.
You
know
what
kind
of
volume
is
happening
on
those
and
just
an
overview
of
like
what
is
this
layered
to
you
know
what
are
the
trade-offs
they
approached
just
so
you
can
do
some
education
for
yourself
of
just
like
you
know
what
are
the
risks
involved
with
bridging
my
assets
over
to
this
layer?
Two,
what
are
what
are
some
of
the
considerations
involved
with
that?
So
definitely
an
exciting
space.
F
D
Yeah,
I
think,
like
keeping
a
tab
on
the
bridging
protocols
for
this
when
you
want
to
move
around
your
nfts
and
other
tokens
will
be
good
as
well.
I
know
like
hot
protocol
is
a
big
one,
but
I
mean
they
are
very
necessary,
but
also
they've
been
some
of
the
biggest
hacked
protocols.
So
far,
so
definitely
an
interesting
thing.