►
From YouTube: Ethereum.org Community Call - February 2022
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/...
Discord: https://discord.gg/rZz26QWfCg
A
So
hi
everyone
welcome
to
the
february
ethereum.org
community
call
we'll
start
with
a
quick
round
of
introductions.
After
that,
luca
is
going
to
spend
some
time
talking
about
dev
connect
and
our
translator's
turn
base
and
corwin
will
provide
us
an
update
on
our
thinking
and
progress
around
layer.
Two
we've
got.
A
I've
got
sam
here,
but
I
believe
pablo
is
actually
going
to
be
introducing
our
redesigned
ecosystem
support
program
website
and
sarah
from
the
esp
team
will
be
speaking
a
little
bit
about
the
academics,
grant
strength
that
they're
just
about
to
start
running
and
finally,
we've
got
paul.
Who'll
speak
a
little
bit
about
staking
ux
and
we've
got
some
time
for
q
a
as
well.
A
So
I
can
start
quickly
with
the
intros.
I'm
joshua
the
community
lead
for
ethereum.org.
B
C
Paul
here
front
end
dev
been
on
the
team
for
a
little
over
a
year,
I'll
be
chatting
with
you
soon
about
staking,
I
hope
everyone's
having
a
good
day
I'll
pass
it
along
to
pablo.
D
Basically,
working
on
yeah
web
development
for
a
bunch
of
years
now
working
for
decentralized
applications
and
web
3
yeah.
I
think
me
if
you
are
interested
in
that,
pass
it
to
not
sure
who
is
missing
some.
E
Hey
good
day,
everybody
thanks
for
being
here
yeah.
My
name
is
sam.
I'm
a
web
developer
for
a
while.
Now
now
also
yeah
team
lead
on
the
ethereum.org
team
thinking
all
things
ethereum.org,
I'm
also
samajamman
on
discord
and
github.
If
you
ever
want
to
connect
happy
to
get,
you
involved
I'll
pass
it
over
to
nuno.
F
Hello:
everyone,
I'm
nuno,
I'm
new
to
the
team,
so
I'm
going
to
be
doing
product
design
and
helping
out
the
tutorial
websites
and
all
things
related
to
design
nice
to
meet
you
all
and
I'll
pass
it
to
jacobs.
G
H
Hey
guys,
thanks
for
joining
I'm
corwin
or
corwin
teens
on
pretty
much
all
socials,
I'm
a
web
developer
on
ethereum.org
and
yeah
mainly
been
focusing
on
layer,
2
stuff
lately,
which
I
will
talk
to
in
a
little
bit.
If
you
have
any
questions
about
development,
stuff
yeah
definitely
feel
free
to
reach
out
in
the
code
channel
or
dm
me.
If
you
have
any
questions
around
development
for
ethereum.org.
A
Yeah
awesome.
Thank
you.
Everyone,
I
think.
That's
everyone.
I'm
not
sure
that
I
can
count
that
high,
so
yeah
we've
also
set
up
a
slidell
for
the
call
as
normal
and
just
allows
anyone
to
ask
any
questions
they
have
for
the
team
in
advance.
If
you
check
out
the
community
call
chat
channel,
you
can
find
the
link
to
that.
A
If
you
do
have
any
questions
and
and
once
again
I'll
just
reiterate
that
this
is
a
community
call
for
ephedium.org
website
and
we
don't
represent
the
the
network
or
the
protocol
directly,
and
so
with
that
in
mind,
try
to
keep
your
questions
focused
on
feeding.org
or
things
that
ethereum
door
can
do
to
support
the
ecosystem
or
broadly
yeah.
So
I'll
stop
sharing
my
screen
just
now.
A
And
hello,
yes,
so,
first
up
we
have
luca
who
is
going
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
dev
connect
and
our
translator's
term
base.
B
This
means
that
if
you
hold
either
r5p
pr
po
app
given
to
contributors
who
have
opened
five
prs
in
a
repo
in
2021
or
our
10kpo
app
given
to
contributors
who
have
translated
10
000
words
in
our
translation
program,
you
can
reserve
your
spot
for
deafconnect.
Now,
if
you
are
eligible
and
plan
to
attend,
please
reach
out
to
me,
so
you
can
be
added
to
the
list.
All
you
need
to
do
is
share
your
email
address,
so
we
can
share
that
with
the
devcon
team
and
reserve
your
spot
for
the
co-working
space.
B
That
that
should
be
pretty
much
it
just
wanted
to
announce.
This
we've
already
announced
it
in
the
announcements
channel
and
next
we
would
like
to
highlight
one
of
our
newest
initiative,
the
the
latest
in
our
series
of
efforts
to
provide
our
translators
with
some
high
quality
resources
to
make
their
work
easier
and
further
improve
the
quality
of
the
translations
on
the
website.
B
Let
me
share
my
screen
here,
so
we
want
to
make
the
glossary
as
reliable
as
possible
so
that
the
translators
can
be
certain.
The
translations
it
contains
are
accurate
and
use
it
as
a
source
of
truth.
When
translating
the
website,
this
will
ultimately
lead
to
better
quality
translations
and
make
translations
of
key
terms
more
consistent.
B
So
just
just
a
brief
overview
of
how
the
crowding
glossary
works
if
you've
participated
in
the
translation
program
before
you're,
probably
familiar
with
this.
Basically
every
word
that
is
included
in
the
glossary
is
underlined
in
the
crowdin
editor.
So
you
can
see
the
description
of
these
terms
in
the
trend
and
their
translation
in
your
language
just
by
hovering
over
them.
B
B
B
The
instructions
on
how
to
fill
this
out
are
available
in
the
second
tab
of
the
spreadsheet.
Once
we've
gotten
some
more
input,
we
will
sort
through
the
translations
and
import
them
into
the
crowding
glossary
which
I
showed
before.
So
that's
the
in
built-in
glossary
that
all
the
translators
see
and
use
by
default
when
translating
the
website,
thanks
to
everyone
who
has
already
added
some
translations
to
this
turn
base
and
everyone
who
will
be
adding
them
to
the
future,
so
you
already
have
quite
a
few
terms
in
some
languages,
some
not
so
much.
B
And
finally,
one
last
thing
I
wanted
to
touch
on
was
just
highlighting
some
of
the
language
updates
we've
made
to
the
website.
In
february,
it's
been
a
great
month
for
translations
on
ethereum.org,
as
we
have
added
some
completely
new
languages
to
the
site
and
also
updated
a
lot
of
existing
translations.
B
We've
had
the
updated
translations
for
the
home
page
and
site
navigation,
for
example,
in
over
20
languages,
also
added
georgian
to
the
website.
For
the
first
time
we
have
updated
the
use
ethereum
pages,
which
include
some
of
the
most
basic
pages
on
the
website,
like
what
is
ethereum.
What
is
ether?
B
B
And
finally,
we
are
currently
in
the
process
of
updating
the
remaining
pages
in
some
of
our
most
active
languages
like
chinese,
simplified
indonesian,
italian,
portuguese,
brazilian
most
of
the
website
has
been
translated
into
these
languages,
so
you
are.
If
you
are
a
native
speaker
of
any
of
these
languages,
you
will
be
able
to
browse
pretty
much
the
entire
website
in
your
native
language
in
the
coming
days.
B
That
should
pretty
much
cover
what
I
wanted
to
talk
about
just
wanna
end
with
another
big.
Thank
you
to
all
of
our
contributors,
who
make
the
website
great
and
a
special
shout
out
to
our
translators
for
allowing
us
to
make
this
content
available
to
everyone,
regardless
of
their
language.
That
is
the
purpose
of
the
translation
program
and
again,
if
you're
looking
to
get
involved,
help
us
translate
the
website,
we
have
a
translation
channel
or
you
can
reach
out
to
me
at
any
time.
E
Awesome
yeah
sam
here
just
to
tack
on
to
that
real
quick
with
some
numbers.
For
you
like
big
shout
out,
I
know
there's
a
lot
of
translators
on
the
call
right
now
like.
Thank
you
guys
for
doing
what
you
do.
I
know
the
large
majority
of
you
are
just
volunteering
your
time
for
a
long
time.
You
know
english
has
dominated
traffic
on
ethereum.org,
but
it's
cool
to
see
that
basically,
every
single
month
we're
hitting
record
months
in
terms
of
just
like
non-english
page
views.
E
We
had
almost
600
000
in
february
and
yet
to
see
like
english,
as
as
the
majority
of
traffic
going
down
over
time
like
for
the
first
time
ever
last
month,
it
was
under
85
of
total
page
views,
and
we
can
just
see
you
know
like
record
months
for
specific
languages
across
the
board,
so
really
huge
to
see
like
continued
adoption
and
like
people
clearly
gaining
value
from
all
the
translations.
You're
doing
so
appreciate
you
guys.
A
If
you
have
any
questions
related
to
devconnect,
the
term
base
or
the
translation
program,
just
more
generally
feel
free
to
ping
luca
moving
along
a
little
bit.
I
think
corwin
is
going
to
provide
us
an
overview
on
our
progress
and
his
thoughts
around
the
layer,
2
resources
and
some
work
he's
been
doing
on
that
lately
for
sure
just
gonna.
H
Share
my
screen
here
all
right
so,
as
you
might
have
seen
on
our
roadmap,
we're
looking
to
expand
our
resources
on
layer
twos.
I
think
it's
pretty
well
known
now
at
this
point
that
using
mainnet
on
ethereum
is
both
cost
preservative
for
everyday
user.
Gas
fees
are
going
up
and
block
space
is
full
on
ethereum.
H
Basically,
transactions
are
getting
expensive
because
there's
so
much
demand
for
it
and
with
that
there
are
scaling
solutions
coming
online
called
layer
twos
which
looking
to
bring
more
information
and
help
onboard
users
to
these
networks.
So
with
that
we're
working
on
a
kind
of
beginner
to
intermediate
friendly
use,
ethereum
page
on
layer
twos.
H
What
we're
looking
to
provide
for
information
on
this
page
is
basically
walking
through
what
is
a
layer
one
like
what
does
it
mean
to
be
a
layer
one,
and
why
do
we
need
layers
twos
and
so
going
into
some
of
the
main
talking
points
of
faster
transactions,
inheriting
security
on
the
the
layer
from
the
layer,
one
lower
transaction
fees,
application,
specific
layer,
twos
like
immutable
x,
just
trying
to
highlight
why
users
would
and
should
use
layer,
twos
and
then
going
into
what
are
layer
twos?
H
What
are
what
are
rollups
as
that's
like
how
their
twos
are
being
built
and
basically
section
on,
do
some
on
your
own
research?
We're
gonna
be
highlighting
l2b
a
lot
on
this
page,
it's
a
great
resource
for
learning,
about
risk
and
technical
assessments
of
layer
twos,
and
it's
a
great
team
there,
who's
capable
of
auditing
these
projects.
H
So
I
highly
recommend
that
resource
when
looking
into
layer
twos,
I
want
to
touch
a
little
bit
on
like
what's
the
difference
between
a
layer,
two
ultel1
and
a
side
chain,
they're,
very
distinct
differences,
but
it's
kind
of
kind
of
gray
when
you're.
First,
looking
into
some
of
this
information,
so
we
want
to
try
and
help
clear
up
some
of
that
confusion
for
users.
H
Next,
we
want
to
go
into
like
how
to
use
layer
two.
So
if
you
have
funds
in
your
wallet,
how
do
you
bridge
over
onto
a
layer
two
from
main
net,
and
if
your
funds
are
on
an
exchange?
How
would
you
get
from
an
exchange
on
to
layer
two,
so
there's
gonna
be
some
l2s
that
are
supported
from
exchanges,
for
example
arbitrum.
H
You
can
withdraw
and
deposit
on
exchanges
like
coinbase
and
binance,
so
looking
to
have
a
component
there
to
help,
let
a
user
be
like.
I
have
my
funds
on
finance,
for
example,
and
then
showing
that
you
can
withdraw
deposit
from
there
and,
if
not
we'll,
come
up
with
some
information
on
how
to
get
your
funds
off
of
an
exchange
and
then
bridging
up
from
there
as
well.
H
H
H
How
can
you
get
a
holistic
view
of
your
your
assets
among
all
these
networks,
so
looking
at
highlighting
like
xerion
and
zapper,
and
the
bank,
which
lets
you
go
to
one
application
and
see
all
your
assets
on
all
the
networks
that
they
are
currently
supporting,
highlighting
the
dat
portals
so,
for
example,
arbitrary
and
optimism
have
really
good
pages,
highlighting
the
ecosystem
that
currently
exists
on
those
networks
so
trying
to
make
it
easier
for
users
to
go
to
a
web
page
like
portal.arbitrum.1,
I
think,
is
theirs
but
go
linking
out
to
those
pages
there.
H
So
users
can
get
a
holistic
view
of
like
the
ecosystem,
which
they
may
be
entering
as
well
want
to
highlight,
like
the
different
fees
that
exist
on
these
different
l2s,
so
linking
out
to
l2
fees
as
well
as
explorers
for
these
l2s.
H
So
you
can
use
just
etherscan.io
you'd
have
to
find,
for
example,
arbitrom.etherscan.io
so
linking
out
to
block
explorers
that
make
it
easier
for
users
to
utilize
the
network
and
have
the
same
tools
that
they
currently
have
for
mainnet
and
as
well
want
to
link
out
to
token
lists
that
exist
on
the
appropriate
l2s.
H
I
know
when
I
or
onboarded
on
tele2
I
was
looking
to
get
certain
assets
on
that
layer
and
trying
to
find
the
contract
for
those
tokens
was
a
bit
of
a
challenge
so
looking
to
try
and
bring
some
of
that
information
into
ethereum.org,
to
make
it
easier
for
users
to
get
that
information
from
a
trusted
resource
so
that
they're,
not
you,
know,
worried
about
finding
the
wrong
token
address.
H
That's
spoofing,
some
project
that
you
want
to
buy
on
an
l2
as
well
as
we're
going
to
have
some
frequently
asked
questions
that
maybe
don't
quite
fit
into
the
content
that
we're
looking
that
I
went
over
but
would
still
be
kind
of
frequently
asked
and
deserves
a
spot
on
the
website,
even
if
it
can't
be
integrated
with
the
content.
That's
already
been
written
and
as
well
we'll
have
a
final
note
on
some
scaling.
H
That's
coming,
for
example,
sharding
looking
to
highlight
that,
in
addition
to
this
use,
ethereum
page
we've
done
some
work
on
breaking
out
our
developer
docs
for
layer
twos.
So
before,
when
you
were
on
this
page.
Under
this
scaling
tab,
we
had
a
layer,
two
page
and
that
layer,
two
page
included
all
the
content
for
what
is
the
layer,
2
optimistic,
rollups
and
zk
roll
ups.
H
What
we're
doing
now
is
layer,
2
is
our
scaling
solution,
so
we've
included
that
now
on
to
just
the
base
scaling
page
and
we're
working
with
l2
projects
in
the
space
to
help
bring
more
fleshed-out
content
for
optimistic
and
zero-knowledge
roll-ups,
so
looking
to
also
build
out
our
technical
resources
on
these
pages
working
with
the
experts
in
the
space,
that's
basically
what
we
have
in
mind
and
what
we've
been
working
on.
H
I
definitely
would
like
to
hear
some
feedback
from
you
guys
if
you
think
that
we're
on
the
right
track
with
this
we're
really
hoping
to
provide
a
good
resource
for,
like
I
was
saying,
beginners
and
intermediates,
and
how
to
help
onboard
them
into
the
space.
As
as
we
all
know,
gas
fees
are
very
high,
and
this
is
kind
of
the
next
evolution
for
where
users
should
be
using
ethereum
moving
forward
as
you'll
get
a
better
user
experience,
both
through
faster
transactions.
H
A
Awesome,
thank
you.
Corwin
yeah.
I'm
really
excited
about
getting
this
page
out
in
march.
If
anyone
has
any
thoughts
or
ideas
about
how
to
make
this
content
better
we'd
love
to
hear
from
you
or
even
if
you
have
questions
around
letters,
please
ask
them
in
the
ethereum
channel
and
we
can
then
use
that
to
better
serve
users
on
this
page,
hopefully
and
cool.
So
next
up
we've
got
collapse.
A
Yeah,
so
here
are
instructions
for
claiming
the
coax
and
if
you
click
on
the
view,
video
you'll
be
able
to
see-
and
I've
just
put
the
passcodes
into
this
notion
dock
as
well,
so
to
claim
your
co-app,
you
just
go
on
our
discord,
server
and
the
top
right
or
just
under
the
fpdm.org
team.
Actually
ob
now
and
you'll
see
the
pull-up
bot.
A
If
you
send
a
direct
message
to
the
bot
with
the
secret
word,
which
is
l22,
so
that's
capital,
l,
two
to
two,
the
poet
bot
should
respond
to
you,
send
your
claim
link
and
then
you
can
claim
that
and
so
I'll
just
leave
it
a
minute
or
two.
Just
as
everyone's
doing
that.
A
A
Awesome,
I
think
we
can
move
on,
so
I'm
gonna
stop
sharing
my
screen
now.
Next
up
we
have
pablo
who's
going
to
be
speaking
a
little
bit
about
the
ecosystem,
support
program's
website
redesign
and,
following
after
pablo
we're
going
to
have
sarah
who'll
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
academic
grant
trend.
B
If
you're
having
problems
with
this,
you
can
use
discord
in
the
browser
instead
of
the
app
that
usually
works,
better.
D
D
D
D
D
If
you
are
a
person
or
you
are
working
in
a
project
related
to
ethereum,
you
can
apply
for
the
different
type
of
grants
that
the
esp
program
is
offering.
Is
they
have
you?
Have
these
three
different
type
of
grants?
You
can
enter
each
one
of
them.
You
can
read
and
learn
more
about
them,
and
and
then
you
can,
you
can
apply
here.
D
Yeah,
that's
pretty
much
the
site
you
can
learn
more
here
in
the
about
section,
and
the
last
thing
to
to
mention
is
that
if
you
find
any
bug
or
you
you
see
something
that
is
not
working
as
expected,
you
can
rise
an
issue
in
the
esp
website.
Repo
or
you
can
you
can
provide
some
feedback
on
our
discord
channels?
We
would
really
appreciate
that
not
sure
if
anyone
wants
to
add
something
to
the
sp.
If
not,
then
I'm
back
to
use.
A
Looks
like
yeah,
so
thanks
very
much
for
giving
us
a
quick
run-through
of
that
pablo
looks
absolutely
gorgeous.
Next
up,
we've
got
sarah
who's
going
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
ecosystem,
support
academics,
grant
strength.
I
Hi
everyone
thanks
josh.
Yes,
my
name
is
sarah
and
I'm
part
of
the
ethereum
foundation
team.
What
I
wanted
to
share
with
you
today
is
that
the
ethereum
foundation
just
launched
a
new
wave
of
grants,
specifically
targeted
targeting
ethereum
related
academic
research.
So
basically
we
will
be
supporting
researchers
in
universities.
I
Think
thanks
phd
students
and
research,
centers
and
others
interested
in
creating
open
source
knowledge
to
further
advance
the
ecosystem.
So
this
grants
round
has
up
to
700
us
dollars
in
total
and
it
is
live
now
on
the
dot
org
page
in
the
grants
section
and
also
in
the
esp
that
pablo
just
showed.
I
This
grants
round
is
open
until
april
22nd,
so
make
sure
you
submit
on
time
if
you
have
any
project
proposals
and
again
feel
free
to
share
among
the
networks
who
may
be
interested
in
applying
for
these
grants,
I'm
happy
to
clarify
any
questions
that
you
might
have
and
if
not,
then
I
will
get
back
to
josh.
But
let
me
know
if
you
have
any
questions.
A
A
A
Okay,
so,
finally,
then
we
can,
we
can
move
on.
We've
got
paul,
who
will
be
talking
a
little
bit
about
our
user
experience
for
staking
and
how
we're
working
to
improve
that.
C
Let's
screen
see
your
screen:
okay,
so
yeah.
My
name
is
paul
front
and
developer
with
ethereum.org
team.
I'm
going
to
chat
a
little
bit
about
the
topic
of
staking
today,
quick
disclaimer.
Of
course,
this
is
just
the
ethereum.org
website
team.
I'm
speaking
on
behalf
of
this
is
not
a
protocol
level
discussion
here.
C
That
being
said,
we're
trying
to
open
up
staking
for
as
many
people
as
possible.
Essentially
when
the
beacon
chain
went
live
in
december,
2020
32
eth
was
required
at
that
time.
It
was
a
little
bit
more
reasonable
if
you
go
back
a
couple
years
for
users
to
accumulate
that
much
we're
trying
to
make
that
shift
now
towards
focusing
more
on
solo,
staking
and
or
sorry
pooled
staking
options.
C
Basically,
because
most
people
at
this
point
are
are
not
going
to
be
able
to
contribute
a
full
32
week
so
that
that
focus
is
shifting
and
we
are
planning
on
updating
this
page
with
some
more
resources.
Not
much
has
changed
so
far.
Essentially,
this
is
the
existing
page.
If
you
notice
down
here,
we
do
have
the
two
main
paths
32
with
versus
less
than
32
we're
looking
to
revamp
this.
C
C
Rocketpool
is
one
of
the
options
out
there,
that's
very
low
barrier
to
entry
for
people.
It's
been
audited
by
multiple
firms.
It's
got
an
active
bug,
bounty
out
there
quite
decentralized
as
far
as
the
node
operators
are
concerned,
and
it
offers
users
the
ability
to
self-constitute
their
funds
and
still
maintain
liquidity
through,
what's
called
the
r
eth
token,
which
represents
basically
your
your
steak,
eat,
plus
the
rewards
that
have
been
earned
by
that
eath
essentially,
and
it
gives
a
very
good
option
for
people
to
join
into
the
staking
community
without
necessarily
having
to
run
hardware.
C
So
there's
gonna
be
some
more
resources
on
that
coming
up.
This
is
actually
the
rocket
pool
page
right
there
and
I
will
drop
in
the
chat,
some
links
for
everybody
that
I'm
gonna
go
through
real
quick.
So
this
is
this
is
rockapool
like
I
said,
definitely
encourage
you
to
check
it
out.
There'll,
be
more
information
on
this
plumbing.
As
far
as
a
pretty
solid
option
for
people
to
stake
going
down
the
list,
we
also
still
want
to
encourage
people
to
do
home
staking
and
do
it
in
the
way.
C
That's
most
decentralized
and
beneficial
for
the
network.
Steerium
is
one
option.
That's
going
to
be
discussed
on
the
site
at
some
point
soon.
Stereo
is
basically
a
gui.
It's
a
graphical
user
interface
that
you
can
use
to
tap
into
a
node
that
you
may
have.
So
you
got
a
little
computer
box
in
there
running
linux.
C
You
can
use
this
from
your
mac
or
windows
pc
or
whatever,
to
tap
into
your
node
and
have
a
nice
graphical
interface.
So
this
is
a
nice
option.
That's
out
there
to
make
staking
easier
for
users
now,
of
course,
there's
always
the
command
line.
If
you're
familiar
with
that,
if
you
have
32
eth
I'd
strongly
encourage
you
to
take
that
approach,
but
if
you're
not
familiar
with
the
command
line,
you
want
to
get
involved
with
running
a
different
type
of
node.
C
There's
this
page
as
well,
of
course,
the
run
and
node
page
which
went
live
a
little
over
a
month
ago.
I
encourage
you
to
check
that
out
too,
and
I
do
want
to
chat
a
little
bit
then
going
on
to
the
discussion
of
client
diversity.
This
is
something
we're
going
to
be:
adding
more
information
to
this
site
as
well.
C
Right
now,
there's
a
there
are
multiple
clients,
consensus,
layer,
clients
and
prism
is
the
one
that
has,
as
you
see
here,
a
little
over
a
super
majority
over
66
percent,
so
we're
trying
as
a
community
to
decrease
prism's
majority.
Here,
it's
not
because
prism's
bad
many
people
have
heard
this
before
prism's
an
amazing
client
but
they're
all
really
amazing
clients
and
having
prism
be
used
by
over
two-thirds
of
the
network,
puts
the
network
at
risk.
I
mean,
if
you're
not
familiar
with
how
I'd
encourage
you
to
check
this
page
out.
C
Here
it's
listed
on
the
the
community
called
chat
channel
and
some
more
places
you
can
go
to
get
involved
with
this
type
of
stuff.
Of
course,
the
eatstaker
website
and
you
can
join
their
discord.
There's
going
to
be
some
new
test
nets
coming
up,
there's
the
the
kiln
test
net
will
be
starting
soon.
I'd
encourage
anybody,
who's
interested
in
the
stuff
to
check
that
out
and
then
we're
heading
on
towards,
hopefully,
gurley
and
prodder,
merge
and
main
that
beacon
chain.
Hopefully
come
this
summer
again.
This
is
just
my
hopeful
thoughts.
C
This
is
another
article
here
on
reddit
that
that
I've
been
kind
of
that
super
fizz
put
out
recently
that
I
really
like
I'd
encourage
people
to
check
out
as
well.
This
is
aiding
in
our
decisions
to
be
honest.
As
far
as
how
to
organize
some
of
the
content
going
forward,
really
good
article,
he
put
out
emphasizes
the
most
important
ways
you
can
impact
the
network
at
the
top
and
kind
of
works.
Its
way
down
so
definitely
check
that
out
and,
of
course,
there's
the
whole
state
of
the
state
playlist
on
youtube.
C
A
A
A
A
I
think
paul's
presentation
he
just
done
already
covers
this,
but
we're
looking
at
proof
of
stake
in
q2,
specifically,
as
far
as
I
know,
we're
looking
at
around
june.
But
again
it's
not
something
specifically
that
ephedium.org
deals
with.
I
don't
know
if
anyone
else
in
the
team.
C
Paul
wanna
go
ahead,
yeah
I'll
just
add
to
that.
Just
keep
in
mind.
Of
course,
this
is
the
core
developers
who
are
working
on
this.
There
is
no
specific
date
set
there.
Just
isn't,
like
I
mentioned
before.
The
test
nets
are
rolling
around
long,
currently
consugues
kind
of
being
deprecated
and
going
to
be
switched
to
kiln.
Like
I
said
after
that,
it
sounds
like
the
plan.
I've
heard
is
moving
on
to
the
girly
and
prodder
test
nuts
and
officially
merging
those
as
one
of
the
last
steps
before
mainnet.
C
H
Yeah,
I'm
just
gonna
share
a
video
of
danny
ryan's
talk
at
youth
denver.
He
talks
a
little
bit
about
like
there's
no
exact
date,
obviously
like
that
was
just
mentioned,
but
he
does
talk
about
their
progress
and
how
close
that
that
they
are
when
it
comes
to
it,
and
that
they're
feeling
pretty
comfortable
with
the
current
difficulty
bomb,
but
obviously
that's
subject
to
change
pending
bugs
in
in
the
test.
B
A
Cool
thank
you.
Next
up
anonymous
has
dropped
as
a
link,
blockchain
and
its
community
effect.
A
I
had
to
look
in
advance,
so
the
question
of
this
seems
to
basically
be
are
contentious,
forks
good
for
the
health
of
a
blockchain
protocol,
so
we
actually
have
a
really
good
page
on
ethereum.org
on
ethereum
governance
that
you
should
check
out
that
explains
on
it,
the
utility
of
forking
and
why
it
is
important
personal
opinion,
but
I'd
argue
absolutely
if
there's
strong
disagreements
about
the
ability
it's
just
like
within
the
network,
if
there
is
a
strong
disagreement,
then
being
able
to
fork,
or
at
least
having
the
threat
of
forking
allows
for
compromise.
A
E
Yeah,
I
just
I'm
sorry
sam
here
just
add
real
quick.
I
think
that
reddit
thread
there
was
a
good
answer
of
like
distinguishing
between
the
types
of
forks
of
like
planned
forks
that
are
non-contentious
and
like
a
planned
upgrade,
such
as
the
upcoming
merge
to
proof
of
stake
on
aetherium
versus
what
might
be
a
contentious
fork
and
something
that
results
in
the
in
the
actual
outcome
of
like
two
distinct
blockchain
communities,
cool
misha.
I
see
the
op
the
thread
good
to
have
you
here.
E
I'll
share
a
couple
books
that
I
found
interesting
kind
of
related
to
this
one
is
the
block
size
war?
That's
a
book
about
somewhat
like
the
history
of
forks
within
the
bitcoin
ecosystem.
I
thought
it
was
really
interesting
to
kind
of
just
like
follow
the
history.
E
It
includes
a
lot
of
primary
resources
of
just
like
discussions
in
the
forums
debating
the
bitcoin
block
size.
How
that
ultimately
resulted
in
you
know:
bitcoin
cash
svu,
all
that
good
stuff
and
there's
some
some
pretty
solid
kind
of
like
biographies
of
ethereum.
At
this
point,
the
infinite
machine
being
won.
I
know
lorchen
just
published
a
new
book
that
I
haven't
read
yet,
but
that
could
also
be
a
great
way
to
kind
of
dig
into
the
history
of
these
protocols
and
to
just
see
like
how
these
forks
have
actually
impacted
them.
E
I
know
there's
a
lot
of
debate
on
you
know
is
forking
healthy.
Is
it
not
kind
of
hard
to
say
I
feel
like
it's
not
necessarily
a
black
and
white
thing,
but
certainly
an
interesting
topic
and
yeah
cool
to
hear
you're
digging
into
that.
A
Yeah
and
I
just
finished
laura
shin's
new
book
and
I'd
also
highly
recommend
that
as
well
and
it
does
get
into
the
ethereum
classic
fork
too,
and
next
up
we've
got
brayton.
Are
there
any?
Are
there
any
areas,
and
specifically
ethereum.org
would
like
to
see
greater
community
engagement
and
contribution
loads.
I'd
be
curious
if
anyone
else
in
team
had
any
thoughts
here.
For
me,
it
looks
like
in
the
next
question,
we'll
get
into
design
a
little
bit,
which
I
think
is
something
that
we
could
do
a
lot
better
with.
A
C
C
Onboarding
and
education
is
one
of
the
biggest
things
that
comes
to
mind.
For
me,
I
know
that's
not
necessarily
super
specific,
but
anything
that
can
be
done
to
take
somebody
who's
not
familiar.
Has
questions
about
this
ecosystem
and
giving
them
the
education
they
need
the
tools
they
need
and
the
the
friendly
support
they
need
in
order
to
to
become
a
part
of
this
community.
That's
what
I
would
like
to
see.
A
I
think
we
can
get
into
the
design
question
because
it's
along
the
same
lines
as
well,
so
scott
asks
I'm
enjoying
the
new
design
focus
channel
on
discord.
What
plans
did
the
team
have
to
create
more
engagement
in
the
future?
A
Obviously,
at
the
start
of
the
call
we
introduced
nico
and
jacob
for
new
designers
very
early
days,
but
we've
spoke
about
a
couple
of
things
already
about
like
working
in
public
sharing
designs
of
the
community
that
they're
working
on
potentially
office
hours.
Things
like
that,
obviously
we'll
keep
you
posted
and
always
open
to
any
ideas.
A
Does
the
jackal
burn
you
know
either?
If
you
want
to
weigh
in
on
that
at
all.
E
Hey
I'll
just
say
something
real
quick.
This
is
sam
again
of
like
scott,
really
glad
you
brought
up
this
question
thanks
for
thanks
for
bringing
it
to
the
table,
and
I
know
you've
been
one
of
the
few
designers
who
have
like
found
a
way
to
come
in
and
contribute
with
the
pull-up
designs
and
like
the
community
page
redesign.
So
if
you
do
have
input
on
yeah
like
how
to
get
more
designers
from
the
community
involved,
I
think
we'd
love
to
hear
from
you.
E
E
Up
until
now,
we
just
haven't
had
that
resource
internally
on
our
core
team
thankful
to
say,
like
after
a
long
road
of
interviews
and
meeting
people
like
nuno
and
jacob
who
just
introduced
themselves
today,
like
they
literally
just
started
this
week,
tuesday
was
their
first
day,
so
they
probably
don't
have
a
ton
of
just
like
strong
opinions
on
how
to
properly
engage
the
community
just
yet,
but
I
can
assure
you
like
that
is
something
they're
excited
to
think
about
and
yeah.
E
If
you
folks
on
the
call,
do
have
input
on
ways
that
we
could,
you
know
open
up
the
work
we
do
from
a
design
standpoint
on
ethereum.org
how
we
could
collect
input
from
you
and
get
feedback
from
you
folks.
I
think
that'd
be
great,
so
just
a
quick
preface
but
yeah
I'll
hand
it
over
to
to
nino
or
jakob.
If
you
guys
do
you
want
to
touch
on
anything.
F
For
sure
this
is
nuno,
I'm
really
excited
to
join
the
team.
We've
done
this
week
like
sam,
they
said-
and
I
know
that
we
have
a
lot
of
work
to
do
ahead
of
us.
I
have
a
long
wrong
map
and
looking
forward
to
work
with
the
community
to
to
help
us
bring
new
ideas
and
new
approaches
to
design
we're
thinking
about
office
hours
and
some
open,
some
figma
files
or
so,
but
we
haven't
touched
that
in
detail,
so
stay
tuned
for
more
on
this.
A
Awesome
thanks
sam
thanks,
nuno
we're
getting
pretty
tight
on
time,
so
I'm
going
to
skip
over
some
questions
that
are
maybe
not
the
most
relevant
rory
is
asking
aside
from
the
translation
program,
does
ethereum.org
have
any
goals
for
helping
ethereum
reach
and
expand
to
the
next
billion
users?
I
think
this
is
a
really
good
question
that
I
don't
have
like
a
fantastic
answer,
for
I
think
a
lot
of
the
work
that
we
already
do.
A
You
know,
building
up
the
resources
and
engaging
with
the
community
and
getting
the
community
to
help
us
expand
the
knowledge
about
ethereum
that
we
have
on
the
site
is
like
a
really
great
starting
point,
but
there's
lots
of
different
initiatives
happening
as
well
that
we
aren't
related
to
because
we're
obviously
just
focused
on
ephedium.org.
C
I'll,
throw
in
some
words
too
paul
again,
certainly
the
ethereum
foundation
as
a
whole
has
efforts
to
pursue
this
type
of
activity.
You
know
looking
to
what
can
we
do
to
bring
in
the
next
billion
users
that
question
exactly
as
far
as
our
team?
I
know
diversity
certainly
been
something.
That's
been
been
a
topic
recently
amongst
the
ethereum
foundation,
as
well
as
our
specific
team,
something
that
we
had,
you
know
admit.
We
have
a
little
bit
of
work
to
do.
Certainly
we
got
a
growing
team
now.
C
Some
of
you
may
notice
that
it's
pretty
much
all
guys
at
this
point
on
our
team
specifically,
and
that
is
something
that
personally,
I
would
like
to
see
expanded,
see
more
diversity
amongst
our
team
and
the
whole
ethereum
foundation,
not
just
culturally,
but
also
you
know,
gender
as
well
getting
some
more
diversity
amongst
our
users.
So
we
can
help
impact
that
additional
billion
people
and
I
think,
that's
one
one
direction.
We
need
to
go.
E
Yeah
thanks
paul.
I
think
it's
a
great
question
rory.
I
would
just
add
that,
overall,
like
we
try
to
stay
somewhat
focused
as
the
ethereum.org
team
on
just
like
creating
educational
content
that
helps
onboard
anyone
to
ethereum
and
yeah
like
getting
that
website
translated
into
as
many
languages
as
possible
is
a
big
part
of
doing
that
so
open
to
any
ideas
on
how
we
could
help
ethereum
reach
and
expand
the
next
billion
users.
E
I
would
just
yeah
tack
on
to
paul's
point
that,
like
there
are
other
teams
within
the
ethereum
foundation,
the
grants
program
that
sarah
and
pablo
touched
on
there's.
Actually,
a
team
focused
on
what
we
call
local
grants
so
actually
doing
more
proactive
outreach
to
communities
across
the
globe,
particularly
underrepresented
areas
and
like
helping
accelerate
adoption
and
just
like
education.
E
On
that
front,
we
actually
have
a
team
within
the
ethereum
foundation
called
the
next
billion,
which
is
a
somewhat
of
a
fellowship
program
that
focuses
on
yeah,
like
empowering
entrepreneurs
across
the
world
to
to
help
address
some
of
these
challenges.
E
So,
in
short,
like
it's
a
much
bigger
problem
than
I
think
the
ethereum.org
team
can
solve
on
its
own,
I
think
what
we
try
to
focus
on
most
is
like
highlighting
those
programs
that
do
exist
to
give
them
more
exposure
and
make
sure
that
people
are
discovering
them
so
that,
if
you're,
an
entrepreneur
who
wants
to
help
solve
these
problems,
if
you're,
you
know
an
academic
researcher.
Looking
for
funding
to
help
on
the
stuff-
or
you
know,
translators,
looking
to
get
involved.
No
matter
who
you
are
the
goal
is
for
us
to
like
help.
E
You
find
the
project
that
can
that
can
push
this
stuff
forward,
but
if
you
do
have
ideas
on
how
we
could
do
a
better
job.
Of
that
I
mean
that's.
Definitely
what
we're
here
for.
H
Yeah-
and
I
think
also
to
add
to
that
like
when
we
build
out
our
road
maps,
it's
something
we
do
somewhat
keep
in
mind
when
we're
trying
to
create
content.
So
some
examples
that
we
have
on
this
roadmap
for
this
quarter
specifically
are
helping
revamp
like
the
wallets
page
and
layer.
Twos
and
real
world,
like
use
case
stuff
that
users,
as
they
onboard
into
ethereum,
will
be
using
so
trying
to
like
provide
good
onboarding
content
for
for
users
who
are
learning
to
like
get
into
the
space.
A
Yeah
absolutely
yeah
we're
very,
very
tight
on
time
I'll.
Ask
the
team
to
maybe
have
a
quick
look
for
the
remaining
questions
and,
if
there's
anything
that
you
feel
is
worthwhile
answering
feel
free
to
hop
in
and
answer,
we've
got
a
question
from
anonymous.
I
haven't
visited
the
site
in
a
while
watch
new
lots.
A
A
Someone
could
pop
a
link
to
our
road
map
and
the
community
call
chat
channel.
I
think
that
covers
just
about
most
of
the
things
that
we're
working
on.
C
I
could
throw
in
an
answer
to
one
of
these
questions
too.
I
see
another
one
by
anonymous
when
soul
is
taking
after
the
penalties
are
unfair.
If
your
validator
goes
down
to
internet
or
power
outage
other
plans
to
reduce
the
penalties.
Honestly,
my
understanding
is
no.
In
fact,
the
altair
upgrade
that
occurred
a
couple
months
ago,
actually
increased
those
penalties
to
their.
I
believe,
their
final
levels,
I'll
drop
a
link
in
the
chat
as
well.
C
If
you
want
to
read
up
more,
that's
the
knowledge
base
page
for
beacon
chain,
you
can
take
a
look
through
there.
It
does
go
through
the
the
penalties,
the
different
types
of
penalties
and
why
they
exist,
keep
in
mind.
This
is
what
makes
a
proof
of
stake
system
work.
There
needs
to
be
penalties,
there
needs
to
be
repercussions
for
users
who
misbehave
and
that's
how
this
system
is
going
to
work.
So,
as
far
as
I
understand,
no
there's
not
going
to
be
any
reduction
to
these
penalties
going
forward.
A
And
like
I
used
to
think
the
same,
probably
the
same
sort
of
mental
model
that
you
have
just
now
and
I
think
paul
done
a
really
good
good
job
explaining
that
to
me.
But
you
might
have
a
misunderstanding
between
how
staking
penalties
work
for
being
offline
and
stakeholding
penalties,
work
for
submarine
and
correct
votes.
C
Real
quick
touch
on
that
there's,
a
difference
between
leaking
some
elixir,
be
by
being
offline,
which
is
a
very
mild
penalty
compared
to
an
actual
malicious
act,
something
that's
threatening
to
the
network
that
results
in,
what's
called
slashing,
which
is
a
totally
different
penalty
that
kicks
you
out
of
the
network.
That's
a
much
more
severe
penalty
and
typically
does
not
happen
just
by
accident.
E
C
A
Thank
you
paul
sorry,
for
anyone
who
asked
questions
that
we
didn't
get
to
and
feel
free
to
pop
questions
in
the
community
call
chat
and
try
and
respond
to
them
after
the
call.
But
that's
just
about
all.
We've
got
time
for
thanks
so
much
for
everyone
for
joining
us
for
taking
the
time
out
of
your
day
to
spend
this
arrow
with
us
and
we
hope
it's
been
educative
and
informative
yeah
and
we'll
be
back
towards
the
end
of
this
month.