►
Description
Everything EOS is a podcast hosted by Rob Finch (Cypherglass) and Zack Gall (ICO Alert) that follows the EOS ecosystem: dApp spotlights, VC partnerships, announcements, and more!
---------
Cross-Posted on the following YouTube channels:
http://www.everythingeos.io
https://www.youtube.com/c/icoalert
---------
Follow us on Twitter at
@icoalert
@finchify
@BlockchainZack
---------
LINKS/TOPICS MENTIONED IN EPISODE 25:
2:30 - Vaeon Protocol - https://vaeon.io
10:45 - Eva Coop - https://eva.coop
12:45 - IDPass - https://www.idpass.org
17:00 - EOS Alliance Board Retreat - https://medium.com/@eosalliance1/inaugural-eos-alliance-board-retreat-highlights-and-recap-86b637a1d862
A
All
right
welcome
to
the
25th
edition
of
everything.
Yes,
I'm
Zack
go
and
ico
data
analyst
at
ICO
ler,
the
trusted
ICO
discovery
platform
visit,
ICO
alert,
comm,
the
most
complete
calendar
of
all
active
and
upcoming
icos
and
I'm.
Here
today,
remote
from
Munich
Germany,
with
the
founder
and
CEO
of
cypher
glass,
Rob
Finch.
Thank.
B
You
all
so
much
for
joining
us
for
yet
another
episode
of
everything.
Yes,
if
you're
listening
to
us
right
now
on
the
podcast
version-
and
you
want
to
see
us
on
video-
we
are
still
doing
video
today,
even
though
Gaul
is
out
in
Munich
Germany
head
over
to
everything,
EOS
dot
IO,
and
you
can
see
the
video
version
of
this
podcast.
We
appreciate
the
feedback
and
comments
that
we're
getting
about
the
show.
So
please
continue
leaving
those
and
get
this
really
motivated,
really
pumped
really
hyped
up
to
see
you,
alcohol,
enjoying
the
show
so
continue.
A
On
what
Rob
said
about
the
video
format,
we're
posting
it
on
YouTube
on
two
different
channels.
We
have
the
everything
year's
channel
which
just
as
exclusive
everything,
yes
content,
and
we
also
posted
to
the
ICO
alert
main
channel,
which
has
other
great
non-us
related
podcasts
as
well.
So
if
you
want
to
subscribe
to
just
just
this
podcast
go
to
the
everything
yes
channel.
If
you
want
to
subscribe
to
all
of
the
ICO
alert,
channel
or
podcast,
go
to
the
I,
see
other
channel
and.
B
Before
we
get
started,
I
do
need
to
mention
that
this
is
not
a
sponsored
podcasts.
I
call
I
are
just
too
excited
members
of
the
EOS
community,
passionate
about
this
open
source
software
and
as
a
matter
of
disclosure.
We
both
do
hold
us
tokens
ourselves
before
we
get
started
as
well.
Please
do
not
take
anything
that
we're
saying
here
any
of
our
opinions
as
legal,
professional,
tax,
financial
or
any
other
kind
of
advice,
just
our
opinion,
and
you
should
always
do
your
own
research
before
you
make
any
financial
decisions.
Let's.
A
So
this
week's
kind
of
crazy
we
flip-flopped
you're
in
Europe
last
week,
I'm
in
Europe,
this
yeah
the
world,
but
this
time
I
figured
out
how
to
get
us
both
on
video
I
apologize
to
all
of
the
Watchers
and
listeners
who
didn't
get
to
see
Rob's
beautiful
face
last
week,
Ida
limit
it
to
audio
only
but
the
reason
I'm
in
Munich
Germany
I
just
want
to
mention
real,
quick
I'm
here,
because
a
new
company
got
funded
they're
the
first
u.s.
VC
funded
company
from
Finland
Aichi.
A
A
This
Friday
right
today,
if
you
guys,
are
watching
this
and
it's
gonna
cover
their
announcement
of
what
they're
doing
on
EOS
I'll
be
meeting
the
team
for
the
first
time
in
person
tomorrow,
I'm
looking
forward
to
asking
them
plenty
of
questions
about
what
they're
doing,
but
the
thing
that
stood
out
to
me,
the
most
is
that
the
violins
parent
companies
called
in
staff,
oh
and
in
staff.
Oh
they've
been
around
since
2014
they're
German
company.
They
have
user
date
of
30
million
users
already
on
their
platform,
currently
on
their
non
blockchain
platform.
A
B
Was
good
aside
from
you
know
some
food
poisoning
some
sickness
some,
you
know
other
things
that
happen.
It
was
a
really
good
time,
so
I
missed
the
DAC
bond.
I
came
home
early,
but
our
community
manager
Adriana
was
there
and
fortunately
grabbed
me.
Some
merch
so
I
appreciate
that,
but
she
was
there.
You
know
solve
the
three
different
teams
that
ended
up
winning
first
place
was
a
company
called
yo
shield
that
sort
of
lets
people
know
when
they're
interacting
with
a
smart
contract?
That's
you
know
safe.
They
can
trust
it
versus
one.
That's
not
safe.
B
Second
place
was
chestnut,
which
is
actually
run
by
one
of
the
team
members
from
the
freedom,
proxy
ash
or
ro
chestnut
was
basically
a
way
to
protect
your
us
accounts.
You
can
set
limits
and
and
do
other
stuff
like
that
I
forget
who
the
third
person
was
we'll
have
to
to
look
come
back
to
it.
But
ultimately
the
hackathon
was
great.
I
had
a
really
good
presentation
and
sort
of
speech
about
the
future
of
blockchain
and
why
I
think
the
future
of
bloodshed
is
yo
set.
B
C
A
B
And
I
think
what
we're
seeing
now
is
a
lot
of
these
people
just
getting
on
the
ground
looking
for
as
many
projects
as
they
can
find.
So
right
now
you
know
encrypt,
though
in
general
there
aren't
a
ton
of
projects
being
built
that
you
know
people
are
sort
of
picking
which
platform
but
I
think
the
main,
not
necessarily
issue,
but
the
main
thing
that
the
VCS
are
running
into
now
is
just
you
know:
they
need
to
find
more
projects
so
that
then
they
can
filter
them
down
and
pick
the
best
project.
B
So,
if
you're
out
there
you're
building
a
decentralized
app,
let
us
know
we
have
direct
contacts
to
all
these
eos
vc
people
and
would
love
to
forward
along
your
project.
So
reach
out
to
us
on
twitter
zack
is
at
blockchain
zack
with
a
k'
and
I'm
at
Finch
fi.
Let
us
know
if
you're
building
something
cool
on
EOS
and
maybe
you'll
get
VC
funding
getting
back.
A
B
Think
it
was
the
top
five
teams
actually.
So
it
was
those
three
and
then
I
think
to
the
one
sort
of
consolation
prize
Awards
that
I
think
are
$3,000
each
or
so,
which
is
you
know,
still
a
good
amount
money.
You
went
out
and
you
had
fun
in
London.
You
got
to
meet
all
those
people
and
you
win
a
couple
grand.
That's
that's
pretty
awesome,
so
I
think
they
all
got
to
pitch
I.
A
Like
how
they
stepped
it
up,
III
remember
when,
before
the
very
first
u.s.
hackathon,
they
said
that
after
the
grand
finale,
which
is
at
the
end
of
this
year,
those
winners
would
get
to
pitch
in
front
of
the
u.s.
VCS.
But
now
it
seems
like
at
each
hackathon
they're
getting
an
opportunity
to
pitch
in
front
of
them
and
it
I'm
sure
it
helped
that
a
lot
of
the
VC
funds
were
actually
at
the
hackathon
to
watch
the
demos
whether
they
presented
themselves.
Not
they
had
people
on
the
ground.
Well,.
B
B
A
So
so
one
more
thing
about
the
hackathon
was:
there
was
a
total
of
468
participants
from
over
44
countries
that
participated
and
III
don't
know
if
anyone
keeps
the
official
statistics
on
this,
but
all
the
press
releases
I
saw
said
that
this
was
the
largest
hackathon
ever
and
that's
not
just
blockchain.
That's
not
just
comparing
it
to
a
theory
and
that's
comparing
it
to
any
organization.
That's
ever
really
wow,
that's
impressive!
Yeah
I
mean
don't
well.
A
B
Yeah
I'm
looking
into
being
a
mentor
there,
so
it
should
be
kind
of
cool
to
be.
You
know
the
to
the
guys,
Charles
and
somebody
else
from
svk
where
were
mentors
their
entrepreneurial
mentor,
so
stayed
up
the
whole
time
for
the
hackathon
and
like
talked
with
people
about
you
know
how
to
formulate
their
pitch.
How
to
you
know,
change
their
idea
a
little
bit
to
appeal
of
the
B
C's.
So
it
should
be
a
fun
time
in
San
Francisco
in
November,
I'm.
A
B
Let
me
know,
maybe
you'll
you'll
come
up
with
something
and
I'm
winning
the
prize,
so
you.
A
B
Yeah
I
think
a
lot
of
people
missed.
They
were
expecting
some
bigger
announcement,
like
the
wallet
which
Dan
you
know
showed
off
the
hardware
wallet
to
some
people
in
person
at
the
hackathon
and
some
other
people
who
said
they
saw
it
and
said
it
was
cool.
But
beyond
that
there
were
six
projects
that
really
came
out
and
debuted
a
blockchain
live
and
I
think
it's
worth
going
through
all
them,
because
a
lot
of
them
are
things
that
people
may
not
have
heard
of
yet.
The
first
is
Zimbra,
which
I
think
we
talked
about
last
week.
B
It's
Zimbra
on
us
I
owe
you
can
check
it
out
and
sign
up
for
the
beta,
but
it's
more
than
email
I.
Nobody
talked
about
email
before,
but
it
says
Zimbra
X,
an
open-source
communications
platform
built
on
es
IO,
provides
a
business
class
collaboration
and
productivity
suite
with
account
provisioning
ownership
and
payment
tracked
by
a
smart
contract
on
a
yes,
so
pretty
interesting,
they're
taking
the
most
crucial
pieces
of
that
sort
of
business
suite
and
putting
them
on
the
blockchain.
B
So
you
know
you
know
when
they're
read
person
logs
and
there's
a
lot
of
security
benefits
you
get
from
that.
But
beyond
that
we
had
Eva
Eva
a
which
is
basically
a
decentralized
uber.
So
you
know
directly
matching
riders
and
drivers
without
those
fees
in
the
middle
we
saw
a
bit
joy,
which
is
this
cool
gaming
platform
that
allows
you
to
basically
interact
with
other
people
in
the
video
game
community.
So
if
you're
watching
somebody
on
Twitch,
you
can
interact
with
them,
send
them
tokens.
B
Do
a
bunch
of
different
stuff
like
that
emanate,
which
is
a
music
distribution
and
royalty
platform.
So
a
good
way
for
you
to
distribute
your
music
and
make
sure
that
you're
getting
all
the
royalties
you
deserve
everything's
verifiable
on
the
US
blockchain,
then,
beyond
that
we
also
saw
ID
pass,
which
was
a
new
take
on
digital
identity,
which
is
pretty
interesting.
If
you
got
an
ID
pass
that
org,
you
can
read
about
that
and
then
last
but
not
least,
we
had
es
fin
X,
which
is
a
fully
decentralized
high-performance
exchange
built
on
eNOS.
B
They
announced
way
before
the
main'
launched
I.
Think
a
couple
months
before,
and
you
know,
we've
now
seen
them
finally
come
out
with
a
beta
version,
show
people
what
it's
all
about,
and
Brendan
bloomer
the
CEO
block.
One
actually
came
out
and
tweeted
about
it.
Saying
him
and
Dan
were
impressed
with
it.
So
I
thought
that
was
cool.
A
C
A
C
A
So
what
I
really
liked
about
this
is
how
they
explained
the
payment,
so
basically
the
end
user.
Never
whoever
is
hailing
the
ride
with
this
uber.
They
don't
even
know
that
they're
using
a
blockchain,
they
don't
know
they're
on.
Yes,
they
don't
need
to
know
what
a
private
key
is
a
public
key.
They
don't
need
to
know
any
of
that
stuff.
It's
completely
abstracted
away
from
them.
They
just
got
to
worry
about
I
ordered
to
get
picked
up.
A
It's
an
interesting
staking
mechanism
because
it's
almost
like
time
staking
so
it's
almost
like
the
drivers
have
to
stake
their
tokens
for
a
certain
amount
of
days
until
payday,
whenever
they're
allowed
to
cash
them
out
I'm,
looking
forward
to
seeing
more
about
their
token
economics,
because
just
from
this
little
60-second
video
that
es
New
York
shared
it
got
me
super
super
interested
in
this
project.
That's
awesome
and
out
of
the
other
ones
you
mentioned.
A
C
A
Were
the
ones
that
had
the
biometric
wallet
creation
that
we
talked
about
a
while
ago,
where
they
like
they
do
like
a
retina
scan,
Wow,
yeah,
so
I
kind
of
want
to
dig
into
them
more.
They
didn't
even
have
a
website,
I,
don't
think
back
the
first
time
we
talked
about
them,
but
whenever
I
saw
your
tweet,
obviously
its
ID
Pass
org,
so
I'm
whenever,
whenever
I
get
some
more
time,
I
really
want
to
dig
into
understanding
what
they're
doing
a
lot
more
because
we've
talked
about
this
biometric
identity
in
the
mobile
wallet.
A
B
A
B
Yeah
something
interesting
speaking
of
the
wallet
and
sort
of
the
block
wind
apps
that
Brendan
came
out
before
the
hackathon
I'm
saying
like
hey
we're,
not
gonna,
you
know
announce
our
adapts
during
this
time
in
London,
we'll
have
our
own
event
for
that.
I
saw
a
really
interesting
video
with
him.
It
was
an
interview
with
Bloomberg,
Markets
and
I
treated
about
that
as
well,
but
it's
a
tour
through
minute
video
and
he
talks
about
you
know.
The
current
state
of
video
is
the
future
of
block
one
and
she
asked.
When
are
you
gonna?
B
B
I
think
it's
gonna
be
something
along
steam,
2.0
a
social
network.
So
the
context
in
which
he
said
that
it
was
you
know
they
were
talking
about.
Peter
Thiel,
coming
on
board
or
people
feel
their
recent
investment
round
with
all
these
strategic
partners
saying
when
we
come
out
at
the
end
of
this
year
or
early
next
year
and
announce
what
we've
been
working
on,
these
strategic
partners
will
make
sense.
B
So
leave
it
to
him
to
know
so
much
about
Facebook
how
they
got
started,
how
they
were
there
from
the
beginning
how
they
got
this
network
effect
to
then
come
over
and
build
a
decentralized
version
with
block
1
makes
a
ton
of
sense,
so
maybe
we'll
even
see
a
new
value
transfer
system
with
a
stable
coin
or
something
similar
to
PayPal.
Who
knows
but
I'm
pretty
excited
so.
A
We've
talked
about
how
it's
exciting,
whenever
a
person
like
Peter
Thiel
one
wants
to
get
on
board
with
block
one
to
see
what
they're
up
to
and
help
in
whatever
ways
he
can
through
his
connections
his
money.
Whatever
else
he
brings
to
the
table
a
lot
of
experience,
but
the
recently
some
articles
came
out,
and
did
you
see
the
articles
about
the
former
block
one
employees
yeah.
B
A
Thought
it
was
talking
about
yeah,
there's
good
news
and
as
FUD
by
some
people,
the
head
I
made
it
sound
like
all
these
people
are
leaving
block
one
I
wonder
why.
But
it
was
really
because
that's
their
limited
by
working
for
block
one,
especially
on
like
governance
issues,
because
the
chain
is
a
community
chain
block.
One
can't
yeah
like
manage
certain
things
through
a
lot
of
reasons.
B
Yeah
I
mean
that's
why
people
like
so
some
of
the
people,
one
of
them,
was
Brock
Pierce.
The
other
was
Thomas
Cox
to
people
who
are
now
involved,
pretty
big
with
the
es
Alliance
there
so
probably
needed
that
legal
separation,
but
also
burnin
mentioned.
They
asked
him
this
on
that
Bloomberg
interview
and
he
was
like
these
four
people
were
not
crucial.
They
weren't
high
up
executives,
they're,
just
people
that
went
on
to
sort
of
do
their
own
thing,
but
are
still
supporting
the
US
ecosystem.
A
A
So
you
mentioned
es
Alliance.
Obviously,
Brock
Pearson,
Thomas,
Cox
being
two
big
names
on
there.
They
they
had
a
big
inaugural,
ES,
Alliance
board,
retreat
I
think
it
was
like
last
week
and
they
came
to
some
pretty
big
deal
well
yeah.
So
they
decided
a
few
things,
one
that
they
weren't
going
to
seek
funding
from
the
worker
proposal
system.
Should
the
worker
proposal
system
pass
until
all
board
members
have
been
elected
which
is
expected
to
happen
in
September
2019?
A
So
basically,
what
happened
with
the
CE
OS
Alliance
board
was
they're,
not
elected
and
I,
think
there's
seven
board
members
and
they
were
all
chosen
there
they're
very
popular
people
in
the
community,
but
they
weren't
voted
in.
But
the
way
breath
work
is
one
at
a
time.
Each
board,
member
over
a
course
of
a
certain
period
of
time,
will
be
voted
in
so
eventually
after
seven
elections,
all
seven
members
of
the
board
are
going
to
be
elected
in
through
the
yes
blockchain.
So
there
we
no
complaints.
A
They're
basically
saying
we're
not
going
to
take
any
funds
from
EOS
we're
privately
funded
but
they're
leaving
the
door
open,
because
this
is
something
that
you
would
expect
the
worker
proposal
system
to
fund
should
it
pass
and
I
would
support
that
100%,
but
I
like
how
they
took
the
the
proactive
move
of
saying
we're,
not
gonna
seek
out
funds
until
everyone's
been
elected.
It.
B
Seems
like
the
same
situation,
we're
in
now
with
the
Constitution,
where
the
current
Constitution
we
have
is
temporary
was
just
kind
of
put
in
place
by
the
people
that
launched
the
chain,
essentially
by
that
anonymous
ABP.
It's
there.
It's
sort
of
rules
over
the
chain
but
sort
of
dozen,
and
once
the
referendum
tool
is
complete,
which
should
be
next
month,
I
believe
an
actual
referendum,
a
vote
of
all
the
token
holders
will
be
held
to
vote
in
the
real
Constitution.
A
A
What
would
an
episode
be
without
a
little
bit
of
fun?
You
want
to
talk
about
the
who
Abbey
issue
that
came
up.
Yes,.
B
A
maple
leaf
capital,
add
maple
leaf
cap
on
Twitter,
came
out
and
posted,
something
which
was
allegedly
a
document
from
who
OB
outlining
basically
a
vote
sharing
and
reward
sharing
program.
So
basically
a
bunch
of
BP's
getting
together
in
colluding
to
keep
a
spot
in
the
top
21,
so
who
will
be
was
essentially
taking
a
cut
from
a
bunch
of.
B
But
beyond
that,
the
fact
that
who
OB
is
voting
with
their
customers
tokens
without
their
their
customers
signing
off
on
that
I
think
is
another
pretty
big
issue
as
well.
You
know
I'm
deaf
in
X
at
least
you
can
go
in
there
they're
voting
on
behalf
of
the
token
holders,
because
the
token
holders
are
going
in
and
voting
through
their
tool,
but
on
who
OB
they're,
literally
just
using
their
cold
storage,
wallets
to
vote
their
own
block
producers
in
and
are
then
taking
cuts
from
all
the
people
that
they're
voting.
So
it's
pretty
crazy.
So.
A
Has
that
actually
been
verified
because
I
was
in
the
EOS
voter
proxies
telegram
channel
when
I
had
a
chance
today
and
a
guy
whose
hand
those
who
will
be
Deni,
he
works
for
whoever
he
was
kind
of
trying
to
calm
everyone
down
and
explain
some
of
the
stuff.
That
happened,
and
he
said
he
called
out
some
of
those
documents
as
being
forged
or
fake,
and
then
he
kind
of
gave
a
little
bit
of
insight
on
how
things
really
are
and
obviously
the
truth
is
somewhere.
Probably
in
the
middle
I
mean.
B
I
think
the
truth
is
the
truth
is
on
the
blockchain,
because
you
can
go
and
look
and
see
all
of
the
coal
storage
wallets
that
who
Obie
has
voting
for
these
different
bps
and
voting
them
in
at
different
times
and
a
lot
of
it
lines
up
with
what
the
document
says,
whether
or
not
they
were
actually
sharing
the
rewards
and
taking
a
piece
from
it
remains
to
be
seen.
I
think
somebody
needs
to
do
a
little
bit.
B
A
What
what
is
your
opinion
on
our
path
forward
from
this,
because
so
far,
I've
seen
where
we
went
from
being
number
one
to
now,
they're
number
two
and
they
might
continue
to
drop
I,
don't
know,
but
as
far
as
like
a
punishment
or
something
like
that
like.
How
do
you
feel
that
this
should
be
handled?
I
mean.
B
I
think
a
lot
of
this
needs
to
first
be
in
the
Constitution.
So
this
is
why
it's
safer
glass!
We
were
so
strong
before
the
main'
that
launched
about
making
sure
that
article
15
that
allowed
block
producers
to
own
up
to
ten
percent
of
other
block
producers,
making
sure
that
that
didn't
make
it
in
the
constitution,
because,
if
that's
in
there,
it
effectively
gives
people
like
Kobe
the
ability
to
own
pieces
of
everybody
else
legally
within
that
constitution
framework,
so
I
think,
first
and
foremost,
the
new
constitution
that
comes
out
when
everybody
votes
on
it.
B
They
need
to
be
voting
for
things
that
are
specifically
anti
collusion,
like
every
VP
needs
to
be
independent,
cannot
own
percentages
of
others
cannot
vote
share
with
other
bp's
things
like
that,
but
beyond
that,
I
think
a
lot
of
is
just
educating
educating
the
community.
So
if
you
have
tokens
stored
in
who
OB
they're
voting
they're,
basically
taking
your
voting
power
and
voting
for
you
and
that's
something
that
you
may
want
to
know,
avoid,
withdraw
your
token
something
exchange.
B
But
I
also
think
some
of
this
will
be
worked
out,
long
run
when
systems
like
Rex
come
out
and
you
can
finally
lease
your
us
token
power
to
developers.
They're
gonna
be
tons
of
people
who
want
to
then
remove
their
tokens
from
exchanges
so
that
they
can
collect
that.
What
is
effectively
interest
on
their
us
token,
so
I
think
over
time.
Voter
participation
will
go
up
because
of
Rex.
B
A
Of
the
other,
so
this
Danny
woo
from
who
Obi
was
in
the
u.s.
proxy
Channel,
and
it
was
interesting
he
they
got
called
out
because
in
their
BP
JSON
file
they
don't
have
any
ownership
disclosure
and
they
don't
have
a
code
of
conduct
as
part
of
that,
and
the
reasoning
was
because
a
lot
of
this
blockchain
stuff
and
mining
and
block
producing
it's
illegal
in
China,
so
there's
a
major
legal
risk
for
any
of
these
Chinese
block
producers
to
disclose
their
ownership.
A
B
If
that's
what
it
is,
I
think
the
people
know
that
they're
participating
in
a
system
where
people
want
to
know
who
their
block
producers
are.
I.
Think
the
fact
that
it's
illegal
in
their
jurisdiction
is
not
an
excuse
for
them
to
community
to
be
anonymous
and
not
sure
their
ownership
structures
if
they
need
to
move
to
another
jurisdiction
or
not
run
a
BP.
There
are
plenty
of
other
bps
that
are
sitting
there
in
the
standby
ranks,
ready
to
take
their
place.
A
A
It
was
because
of
the
uncertainty
with
regulation
in
the
u.s..
They
did
it
to
protect
themselves
but
yeah.
At
the
same
time
they
were
completely
transparent
with
who
owns
them.
There
could
have
conduct,
and
everything
like
that
and
III
trust
you
as
New
York,
and
what
they're
doing
I
think
they're
great
for
the
community
and
they're
getting
around
a
regulation
hurdle
with
the
uncertainty
in
the
u.s..
A
So
I
don't
see
that
as
an
excuse,
but
the
one
positive
that
came
out
of
that
conversation
in
the
ES
voter
proxy
Channel
was
that
Danny
Wow
from
who
Obie
said
about
the
code
of
conduct
not
being
in
the
JSON
file.
Was
he
basically
said
that
if
referendum
passes
and
makes
it
mandatory
that
they
will
disclose?
A
Whatever
is
in
the
Constitution
so
interesting,
it
seems
like
they're,
taking
advantage
of
the
fact
that
we
have
kind
of
a
weak
Constitution
right
now
and
it
needs
to
be
rear,
Atta
fide
and
improved
in
the
future,
and
all
that's
going
on
with
the
rights
worker
groups
and
conference
calls
and
I'm
hoping
in
the
next
couple
months.
We
start
seeing
some
referendum
tools
coming
out
and
people
being
able
to
participate
on
that
and
more
governance.
Things
like
that.
A
So
it's
exciting
times
man
and
anyone
who
doesn't
realize
what's
going
on
with
with
us
right
now,
they're
they're,
really
missing
out,
like
I,
think
we
do
a
really
good
job
of
explaining
some
of
this
stuff
to
the
general
community,
who's,
not
as
deep
into
it,
but
it's
only
gonna
get
better
everything
like
within
the
next
one
year.
Timeline
I
I
can't
even
explain
how
excited
I
am
with
the
stuff
that
you
shared
about
what
Brendan's.
B
A
B
I
think
probably
just
more
DAP,
so
like
the
six
dabs
we
saw
it.
Blockchain
live
looking
forward
to
seeing
those
launched
and
see
them
getting
users
that
see
there
just
be
more
adoption,
but
I'm
also
excited
for
things
like
inter
blockchain
communication
with
side-chains.
That
will
take
what
is
already
be
most
Gael
of
the
blockchain
in
the
world
and
make
it
the
orders
of
magnitude
more
scalable.
So
then
we'll
be
able
to
see
new
decentralized
apps
that
maybe
people
haven't
even
thought
of
yet
because
they
didn't
have
the
throughput
for
it
come
where
you
know.
B
A
Obviously
adapts:
have
everyone
excited?
It's
got
me
excited
it's
actually,
the
the
panel
I'm
going
to
be
part
of
tomorrow
for
the
block
tober
fest
conference
here
in
munich.
It's
actually
a
panel
discussion
on
what
are
the
applications
and
use
cases
of
blockchain,
so
I'm,
looking
forward
to
sharing
my
thoughts
on
that
and
a
big
thing,
something
interesting
I
read
today
was
actually
you
remember
what
I'm
stumbling
over
my
words
here
pomp
the
the
podcast
shows
that
what's
his
full
name,
you
mentioned
Anthony.
A
A
Great
podcast,
so
the
day
after
you
recommended
at
my
crack,
your
brother
Mike
recommend
that
it
also
for
the
podcast
that
came
out
after
the
episode
that
you
liked
about
the
ETF's
and
I
started
following
him
on
Twitter
I
probably
should
have
followed
him
a
long
time
ago,
but
he
posted
something
interesting
today
said
unpopular
opinion.
If
you're
presenting
your
application
as
a
DAP,
you're
already
doomed
to
fail.
No
one
cares
that
you
have
a
decentralized
application.
B
A
Agree:
100%
about
that
I
think
the
future
of
DAPs,
and
once
we
have
our
first
killer
DAP,
it's
gonna
be
the
killer
debt,
because
your
grandma
will
be
able
to
use
it
and
not
know
what
a
private
key
or
a
blockchain.
Even
our
III
think
we're
getting
there.
We
still
have
a
long
road
ahead,
but
I
think
within
the
next
year,
maybe
two
years
with
the
help
of
block
one
and
Dan
Larry
MERS,
but
a
vision
and
abilities
to
get
these
out.