►
Description
Everything EOS is a weekly podcast from ICO Alert that follows the EOS ecosystem: dApp spotlights, VC partnerships, announcements, and more!
—————————————
The ICO Alert Podcast showcases exclusive, in-depth interviews with founders of past, present, and future Initial Coin Offerings. New episodes are released weekly. If you’d like, you can request a guest to appear on a future episode by tweeting us @icoalert
The ICO Alert Podcast is available on iTunes and anywhere podcasts are found.
ICO Alert Podcast: https://blog.icoalert.com/podcasts/home
ICO Alert: https://www.icoalert.com/
Cypherglass: https://www.cypherglass.com/
Twitter: @Cypherglass
A
Welcome
to
everything
yes,
I'm
Zack
gall
and
I
CEO
data
analyst
at
ICO
alert
the
trusted
ICO
discovery
platform
visit,
icy
alert,
calm,
the
most
complete
calendar
of
all
active
and
upcoming
icos
to
discover
the
latest
projects
and
opportunities
like
EOS,
I/o
and
I'm.
Here
today,
with
the
founder
of
icy
alert
and
current
CEO
of
cypher
glass
rub
Finch.
B
Thank
you
all
so
much
for
joining
us
for
another
episode
of
everything
heõs.
We
do
appreciate
the
feedback
and
comments
that
we
get
about
the
show,
and
we
hope
that
you
continue
to
share
your
thoughts
and
opinions
and
help
us
continue
to
grow
and
improve
if
you
did
enjoy
the
show,
please
let
us
know
by
liking,
subscribing
or
following
the
podcast
on
YouTube
iTunes,
SoundCloud,
Spotify
or
wherever
you
may
be.
Listening
on
today's.
A
Podcast,
we
will
be
detailing
the
latest
news
and
announcements
around
the
sio,
including
a
new
exchange
listing
new
tools
and
development
updates
being
released,
the
upcoming
global
hackathon
and
more
additionally,
we
will
be
releasing
a
second
bonus
episode
of
everything.
Yes,
this
weekend
with
the
founder
of
lumiose
alley
is
where
we
discuss
the
recent
beta
launch
of
their
mobile
app,
as
well
as
his
past
experiences
as
a
theorem
developer,
and
how
it
compares
to
developing
on
e
OS,
as
well
as
their
future
airdrop
before.
B
We
get
started
I
do
need
to
mention
that
this
is
not
a
sponsored
podcast.
I
also
need
to
mention
that's
a
call
and
I
both
hold
es
tokens
ourselves
as
a
matter
of
disclosure,
but
we're
just
simply
too
excited
members
of
this
community
talking
about
open
source
software
again,
the
should
not
be
construed
as
legal
professional
tax
or
any
other
kind
of
advice,
or
simply
two
people
passion
about
EOS
and
talking
about
our
thoughts.
A
A
Now,
I
don't
know
anyone
that
really
uses
polo
as
much
by
Nance
kind
of
took
over
for
the
alt
coins.
I'd
say
definitely,
but
it's
still
a
major
exchange
and
I
think
the
most
noteworthy
piece
of
it
is
one
it's
US
based
which
is
huge
and
two
they're
required
by
circularly
others
here
and
if
you're
not
familiar
with
what
circle
is
it's
a
payment
application
and
it's
owned
by
Goldman,
Sachs
yeah?
A
B
Big
yeah,
it's
huge
and
I.
Think
the
the
one
thing
that
you
pointed
out
to
me
when
it's
actually
got
listed
is
that
they
have
a
very
similar
sort
of
digital
asset
listing
framework.
This
is
a
more
to
coin
base,
so
you
know
many
changes
that
are
outside
the
US
that
aren't
subject
to
the
same
regulatory
scrutiny
in
the
US,
just
sort
of
lists
things
when
they
want
to
list
things.
B
They
may
have
some
kind
of
a
review
process,
but
it's
certainly
not
as
stringent
as
us-based
companies
like
say,
coinbase,
cracking
and
now
circle,
which
is
owned
by
a
company
in
the
US,
but
they
have
this
listing
framework
to
make
sure
that
when
they
list
a
coin,
it's
safe
from
a
regulatory
perspective.
So
if
you
want
to
comment
on
that
and
what
you
mean,
yeah.
A
B
A
The
G
Dax
did
a
digital
asset
framework
was
the
first
of
its
kind
and
later
on
earlier
this
year,
circle
and
and
Paul
and
X
actually
released
their
framework
and
it's
almost
a
mirror
image
of
what
what
G
Dax
put
together
and
it
basically
covers
criteria
about
their
financial
system,
their
technology,
their
team,
their
governance
models,
if
it's
scalable
code
audits,
market
demand,
liquidity
things.
Things
like
that.
A
The
other
interesting
note
that
I
thought
of
that
I
haven't
released
mentioned
on
any
blogs
or
other
YouTube
channels
anywhere
is
block
one
actually
brought
on
a
man
by
the
name
of
Lee
Schneider
about
a
month
ago,
and
he
was
brought
on
to
be
the
leader
of
General
Council
and
he
started
on
June
5th
and
he
actually
contributed
to
a
securities
law
framework
for
blockchain
tokens
which
was
developed
by
coinbase.
He
also
played
a
hand
in
that.
A
The
the
G
Dax
coin
framework
I
mentioned
earlier
and
he's
recognized
as
one
of
the
leading
voices
in
blockchain
regulation
and
compliance,
and
it's
no
surprise
to
me
that
within
his
first
month,
I
actually
first
two
months
of
being
with
block
one.
All
the
sudden
we're
seeing
us-based
exchange
is
picking
it
up.
Oh
absolutely,.
B
I
think
he
may
be
going
around
knocking
on
their
doors.
Saying
hey.
Have
you
seen
we
check
off
all
the
boxes
on
your
regulatory
compliance?
Here's?
Why
we're
not
a
security?
You
know:
hey
I
wrote
the
the
framework
fit.
You
guys
are
using,
so
maybe
he'll
be
knocking
on
poin
Bass's
door.
Next
I
know
you
were
saying
that's
kind
of
a
meme
at
this
point
being
listen,
one
coin.
New
coins
have
been
added,
but
yes,.
A
See
they
keep
talking
about
it,
we'll
see
what
happens
but
I'm
excited
about
the
Polo
listing,
mostly
because
of
the
affiliation
with
circle
circle
acquired
polo
earlier
this
year
for
400
million
dollars,
and
if
you
want
to
learn
more
about
circle,
I
highly
recommend
go
back,
listen
to
Laura,
shins,
Unchained
podcast,
and
she
had
the
the
CEO
of
circle
on
there
and
he
kind
of
explained
what
all
is
on
the
roadmap
and
basically
you're
gonna
be
able
to
buy
EOS
with
Fiat
from
a
mobile
app
very
soon
yeah.
It's
gonna
be
really
cool,
so
I'm.
B
Yes,
circles
had
an
interesting
history
before
we
move
on
to
the
next
topic.
They
were
one
of
the
first
sort
of
smaller
companies
to
support
way
before
they
got
acquired.
This
was
several
years
ago
to
support
just
buying
Bitcoin
with
cash,
then
went
away
for
I,
think
like
two
or
two-and-a-half
years
and
didn't
support
it
at
all
and
they
were
using
Bitcoin
on
the
back
end
for
transfers
and
settlement
in
some
way
and
now
they're
coming
back
again
saying:
hey,
you
know
they
just
bought
polo.
Obviously,
but
through
the
circle
mobile
app
you
can
buy.
B
A
Woke
up
in
the
middle
of
the
night,
we're
recording
this
on
Thursday
I,
woke
up
in
the
middle
and
I'd
always
check
my
phone
look
at
the
prices
and
I
crapped,
my
pants
I
didn't
have
any
tokens
on
the
exchange
and
I
probably
was
too
tired
to
do
anything
about
it
anyway,
I
figured
the
pump
would
be
short
lasted
because
everyone
was
air-dropped.
The
tokens
for
free
everyone's
been
hurting
in
this
market.
Let's
be
honest,
it
would
have
been
a
tempting
time
to
dump,
but
the
thing
I
noticed
the
most
was
the
increase
in
volume.
A
The
reason
the
price
declined
so
much
on
IQ
was
one
market
sentiment.
The
whole
markets
down
absolute,
but
the
other
was
just
lack
of
volume.
You
you
couldn't
buy
or
sell
more
than
a
couple
thousand
dollars
on
BitFenix.
Without
clearing
the
order
book.
Oh
wow,
seriously.
Yeah
there
is,
there
was
like
it
looked
like
there's
a
pretty
high
spread
between
the
the
buy
and
sell
orders
Wow.
So
you
usually
it's
good.
A
B
I
should
mention
also
I
saw
a
lot
of
reports.
I
haven't
individually
confirmed
any
of
them,
but
people
were
saying
that
during
this
sort
of
like
200%
pump,
when
I
got
listened
on
up
it
change.
The
exchange
that
I
have
sort
of
you
know
mentioned
before
in
the
podcast
and
promoted
a
little
bit
apparently
shut
down
there
with
drawers
and
we're
not
allowing
people
to
withdraw
and
blamed
it
on
some
kind
of
a
technical
issue,
but
just
something
to
keep
in
mind
when
you're
picking
in
exchange.
B
B
B
A
B
B
Honestly,
just
pure
speculation,
I'm
hoping
that
we
see
something
about
the
first
depth,
that
they're
gonna
release
and
I'm,
really
hoping
that
it's
either
number
one
a
decentralized
exchange
which
they
may
do,
but
I
have
a
feeling.
Since
Biff
index
is
one
a
bloc
ones
biggest
investors
and
your
logic
is
phonetics
that
they're
probably
not
going
to
try
to
compete
there.
So
I'm
hoping
we
see
something
about
their
social
media
network
that
they've
been
teasing
for
months
and
months
and
months
that
maybe
they'll
say
hey
version
one.
A
Cannot
wait
until
whatever
we
want
to
call
it?
Everyone
mostly
just
cause
it's
team
2.0,
that's
obviously
not
gonna,
be
called
that
it's
gonna
be
bigger,
better
and
faster
than
steam.
That's
more
decentralized
than
steam
and
I
can't
wait
till
it
comes
out
just
so.
We
can
start
posting
the
podcast
to
it.
Yeah.
B
B
A
B
A
A
Samms
you
go
on
their
website
and
look
at
how
many
positions
they're
hiring
for
oh
yeah,
they're,
hiring
devs
in
every
single
category,
they're
hiring
community
relations,
people
all
over
the
globe,
they're
they're
doing
everything
they
need
to
do
to
lay
the
groundwork
to
make
this
something
truly
amazing
like
we
believe
it
will
be.
Oh
absolutely
and
like.
B
A
B
A
And
and
they've
been
working
on
it
because
we've
getting
some
leak
releases
here
and
there
on,
like
us,
updates,
yeah
but
I,
think
more
of
the
resources
are
being
poured
into
the
DAP
development
because
they've
even
stated
that's
how
they're
gonna
be
profitable
as
a
company
as
bloc,
one
yeah.
They
don't
own
any
of
these
chains,
so
they're
gonna
remain
profitable
by
building
dabs.
Absolutely.
B
Well,
if
you,
if
anybody
tuned
in
for
how
many
episodes
ago,
was
it
two
or
three
where
we
talked
about
Peter
Thiel
and
his
investment
and
how
they
basically
explicitly
stated
they're
trying
to
disrupt
Facebook
and
uber
and
airbnb
another
blue
chip
organization,
so
I
think
in
addition
to
disrupting
something
like
steam
with
this
steam,
2.0
I
think
it's
also
gonna
be
like
a
Facebook
or
a
Twitter,
or
maybe
both.
You
know
that
kind
of
disrupter
trying
to
knock
those
giant
incumbents
out
of
power
with
some
kind
of
token
incentive.
So
so.
A
I
guess,
while
we're
on
the
topic
of
bloomer
kind
of
being
very
active
on
on
telegram
and
Twitter
I'll
read
one
of
his
tweets.
He
proposed
a
couple
days
ago.
He
said
we
are
proposing
a
removal
of
the
4%
inflation
for
WPS,
along
with
distribution
of
network
trading
fees
to
eos
voters.
This
can
more
than
offset
the
inflation
cost
of
running
the
network
and
grow
as
more
services
are
added.
So
why
don't
you
explain
what
that
kind
of
means
yeah,
so
something.
B
That
a
lot
of
people
don't
know
exists
is
what's
called
the
worker
proposal
fund.
So
right
now,
4%
of
the
5%
total
inflation
on
the
network.
4%
of
that,
which
is
a
huge
chunk,
is
actually
going
into
this
account
or
worker
proposal.
There's
no
way
to
get
to
it,
yet
that
the
system
hasn't
really
been
built
to
distribute
those
funds.
B
But
the
original
intention
was
to
essentially
have
community
voted
projects,
sort
of
like
a
giant
Dow
that
happened
on
aetherium,
obviously,
without
the
the
critical
bug
to
let
somebody
drain
it,
but
I
could
propose
something
like
hey
I
want
to.
You
know,
build
this
DAP
or
I
want
to
put
together
this
coalition
to
make
sure
blog
cruises
are
independent
or
something
like
that
and
I
could
get
the
token
holders
to
vote
and
allocate
a
certain
amount
of
those
funds
to
me.
B
But
there's
been
a
lot
of
concerns
about
you,
know,
whale
manipulation
or
big
players
coming
in
and
basically
just
allocating
more
years
to
themselves,
even
if
they
don't
follow
through
with
the
project.
So
what
Brendon
bloomer
is
basically
they're,
saying
they're,
proposing
a
removal
of
that
entire
system,
which
will
bring
that
us
inflation
from
five
percent
down
to
just
one
percent
and
we've
seen
already
the
RAM
fees
offsetting
that
one
percent
that's
paid
to
the
block
producers,
so
this
will
actually
make
yose
deflationary,
at
least
in
the
short
term.
If
Ram
trading
continues,
yeah.
A
B
A
Changing
that
number
is
okay
with
me,
but
getting
rid
of
it
completely
from
from
the
road
map.
I
I'm
completely
against
that,
because
I
think
there's
a
lot
of
value
to
it,
because
there's
a
lot
of
projects
that
that
are
going
to
come
along
and
needed
to
be
built
that
aren't
necessarily
going
to
be
profitable
projects,
but
they
benefit
the
community
yeah
and
those
projects
need
to
get
funded
and
the
block
producers
are
getting
a
1%
inflation.
I
know
they're
sponsoring
some
projects
here
and
there.
A
B
Sooner
I
agree
with
you,
I
mean
I
think,
rather
than
just
removing
it
completely
I
would
rather
see
you
go
from
4%
to
something
like
another
1%,
so
match
what
the
block
producers
are
getting
and
at
least
try
it
if
it
doesn't
work
after
six
months
or
a
year,
and
we
find
out
that
people
are
draining
it
through.
You
know
fake
projects
or
something.
Maybe
then
we
consider
shutting
it
down,
but
it
feels
to
me
almost
like
just
giving
up
on
something
that
I
agree
with.
A
Yeah
I
think
there's
just
a
lot
of
hurdles,
yeah
like
what
you
said
well
manipulation
to.
Basically,
when
a
when
any
funding
for
any
project
you
want,
because
you
control
the
vote,
but
from
what
I
understand
from
my
knowledge
of
where
they're
at
on
that
their
work
with
the
system
contract
for
that
was
for
for
version,
one
of
the
WPS.
They
were
only
gonna
fund
like
mission,
critical
or
emergency
project
interesting,
and
they
weren't
really
going
to
take
applications
for
just
anyone
to
submit
for
any
project.
B
A
Be
laid
with:
how
do
we
filter
these
projects?
How
do
you
prevent
spamming
projects
so
there'd
probably
be
a
fee
involved?
The
closest
thing
to
the
WPS
is
actually
something
that
has
actually
has
something
very
similar
where
you
can
propose
work
in
exchange
for
funding,
but
I
think
there's
I'm,
not
sure
the
exact
feed
in
the
hundreds
of
dollars
they
to
submit
a
proposal.
You
have
to
stake,
hundreds
of
dollars
and
I,
don't
think
you
get
it
back.
I
think
they
did
that
through
the
github.
Don't.
A
A
B
Yeah,
so
he
went
back
on
it,
so
ash
or
Oh,
a
sh
e
oro
oro
was
tweeting
them
on
twitter,
basically
tweeting
at
Dan,
and
at
Brendan
saying
you
know,
hey
our
CPU
tokens
gonna
be
added.
What
a
CPU
token
basically
would
be
is
that,
instead
of
just
staking
your
EOS
for
bandwidth
and
CPU,
your
EOS
would
sort
of
create
more
CPU
and
bandwidth
tokens
over
time.
They
were
going
to
tokenize
the
CPU
aspect
and
then
users
could
choose
whether
they
wanted
to
sell
it
or
keep
it
or
whatever.
B
But
Brendan
came
back
and
then
said
in
a
tweet
that,
instead
of
doing
that,
what
they're
gonna
do
is
in
order
for
you
to
claim
the
rewards
by
staking
your
es,
you
cannot
utilize
the
CPU
associated
with
that
account.
So
basically,
if
I
have
a
hundred
you
staked
50
of
those
are
used
for
staked
for
CPU
and
the
other
50,
or
just
stick
for
voting
I'll
get
paid
from
the
new
rewards
that
are
gonna
be
paid
out
to
use
token
holders
I'll
get
paid
for
just
the
50,
not
the
400.
So.
A
What
this
all
comes
down
to
between
all
these
proposals
are
block,
one
is
trying
to
figure
out
a
way
and
many
others
and
in
the
community
as
well,
are
trying
to
figure
out
a
way
to
incentivize
meaningful
votes.
So
we
want
as
many
people
to
stake
their
tokens
for
voting
in
the
system
as
possible
and
the
way
we're
gonna
do
that
is
through
some
sort
of
incentivization
model
where
revenue
generated
through
a
OS.
A
The
plateau
revenue
will
be
generated
for
the
people
who
have
those
tokens
staked
for
voting,
but
it
and
you
can
only
earn
that.
Let's
call
it
interest
I,
guess
very
similar
to
interest.
You'd
only
earn
interest
if
you're,
not
using
CPU
or
RAM
right.
So
basically
you're
not
using
the
network,
but
you're
staking
your
tokens
to
have
a
say
in
the
network
because
you're
voting
for
your
block
producers
and
you
could
also
participate
in
referendum.
Voting
right.
A
B
B
Mean
I
keep
all
my
you
a
stake
so
I'm,
basically
hoarding
a
significant
amount
of
CPU
and
bam,
I
think
pretty
much
everybody
is
that
keeps
its
day
if
it
isn't
doing
anything
with
it
and
to
be
able
to
sort
of
allocate
that
back
to
the
system
and
let
other
people
use
it
and
just
collect
rewards
is
dead
I'm.
So
on
board
with
that,
we'll
see
what
happens
so.
A
Let's
kind
of
give
a
rundown
a
summary
of
all
the
different
ways
that
es
IO
can
generate
revenue
that
will
be
distributed
to
token
holders
yeah.
So
there's
the
RAM
market
yeah.
This
was
announced
back
in
May.
It
was
released
with
the
genesis
of
Eos.
What
the
RAM
market
does
is
allows
you
to
buy
and
sell
RAM
for
a
OS
on
chain
and
every
transaction
there's
a
1%
trading
fee
yeah
and
because
the
trade
volume
is
so
high
in
the
hundreds
of
millions
of
dollars
per
day,
it's
actually
deflationary
because
I
have
the
1%
fee.
A
So
right
now
we
have
the
block
producers
earning
1%,
blitt
up
amongst
all
of
them
per
day
and
inflation,
but
then
there's
at
least
1%
of
deflation
because
of
the
RAM
trading
fees
and
the
volume
of
it.
So
that
that's
what
we
mean
by
a
deflationary
system,
there
there's
also
the
account
naming
raffle
yeah
raffle.
It's
more
of
an
auction.
B
It's
more
of
an
auction.
So
basically,
if
you
want
a
name
less
than
the
current
12
character,
account
name,
you
can
make
one
of
those
right
now.
You
know
just
like
you
would
any
normal
account,
but
if
you
want
a
special
one
like
com
or
IO,
where
I
want
Rob
or
something
like
that,
you
have
to
actually
bid
through
this
system.
So
the
way
it
works
is
that
the
highest
bid
out
of
all
of
the
names
will
be
sold
once
it
hasn't
been
bid
on
for
24
hours.
B
So
so
far
only
looks
like
8
custom
names
have
been
sold.
One
was
actually
calm
for
150
thousand
years
to
the
start:
ESI
OBP.
Basically,
what
they're
gonna
do
with
that
seems
is
when
you
own
a
name
like
comm,
you
own
all
of
the
sort
of
sub-account
names,
so
they
own
google.com
as
an
account
name
and
facebook.com
as
an
account
name.
B
They
own
all
of
the
coms,
basically
and
now
the
iOS
and
and
are
buying
some
of
the
others,
but
all
of
those
fees,
one
hundred
fifty
thousand
years
they
paid
for
that,
the
fifty
thousand
years
they
paid
for
díos.
All
of
that
gets
put
in
another
account.
So
when
you
combine
the
RAM
fee,
which
right
now
is
almost
two
million
iOS
plus
the
looks
like
another
300
thousand
from
the
name,
the
name
bidding
that's
going
on
right
now,
there's
already
a
huge
amount
of
us
that
could
be
distributed
to
the
eos
token
holders.
B
Just
from
that
alone,
which
doesn't
take
into
account
future
things
like
the
potential
Aram
futures
market,
which
Dan
has
proposed
called
Pegram,
which
we'll
talk
a
little
bit
about,
but
basically
over
time
a
massive
amount
of
us
could
be
returned
to
the
token
holders,
and
the
best
part
is
is
that
it's
not
coming
through
inflation?
It's
not
new
tokens
that
are
being
created,
it's
just
tokens
being
taken
as
fees
for
you
know,
speculators
on
the
platform
or
people
buying
names,
we'll.
A
A
Haven't
used
it
yet
I'll
be
honest,
but
I
am
closely
following
years.
Phenix
and
I'm
also
familiar
with
an
etherion
project
called
ZRX
yeah.
So
ZRX
is
a
decentralized
asset
trading
platform
with
a
shared
liquidity
pool
and
I.
Don't
know,
I,
don't
think
this
has
been
announced
with
us
Phenix,
but
I
hope
that
this
is
what
it
turns
into
so
with
ZRX.
A
It
allows
anyone
to
basically
run
their
own
decentralized
exchange
in
order
books,
but
if
you
want
to
have
the
shared
liquidity
pool,
which
means
that
all
the
decentralized
exchanges
would
share
their
buy
and
sell
order
books
that
additional
liquidity
to
multiple
exchanges,
you
have
to
charge
fees
in
ZRX
tokens
right.
So
you
could
go
felis
transactions,
but
you
don't
get
access
to
the
shared
liquidity
pool
or
you
could
have
the
ZRX
token
involved,
and
that
would
give
you
access
to
the
shared
liquidity
so
that
what
I'm
hoping
happens
with
iOS
is
they.
A
B
Percent
and
I
think
I
forget
the
name.
Do
you
remember
the
name
of
that
rule
that
they
said
that
they
were
gonna
release
us
Phenix?
It
was
like
a
lunar
or
something
like
that,
but
anyway
they're
building
a
very,
very
similar
open-source
tool
similar
to
ZRX.
Where
you
know,
0x
is
limited
to
e
rc
20
tokens
on
aetherium,
whereas
something
like
this
would
be
built
directly
on
EOS
and
then
could
sort
of
provide
that
you
know
shared
liquidity
across
different
es
to
centralized
exchanges
and.
A
A
B
B
A
B
A
B
B
So
effectively
what
that
means
is
that
the
amount
of
RAM
will
double
every
year,
so
there
will
be
a
new
64
gigabyte
chunk
of
RAM,
gradually
every
single
block
every
half-second
over
the
course
of
a
year.
Basically,
what
this
did
was
it
sent
a
signal
to
the
speculators
who
were
speculating
on
RAM,
saying:
hey,
we're
gradually
increasing
the
amount
of
RAM
you're
gonna
have
to
put
in
this
much
more
money
just
to
maintain
the
current
Ram
price.
B
So
what
we've
seen
is
that
speculator
market
kind
of
dip
off
fall
off
where
people
started
selling
their
RAM
that
did
weren't
actually
using
it.
They
were
just
speculating
on
it,
and
now
the
price
is
slowly
declining
and
becoming
much
much
more
affordable
for
DAP
developers
that
are
actually
going
to
use
it.
So
in
some
ways
the
rim
issue
has
kind
of
already
been
solved.
I
think
will
be
solved
more
once
we
have
side
chains
with
additional
RAM,
but
for
now
the
prices
has
dropped
dramatically,
which
is
a
very,
very
good
thing.
So.
A
Sorry
to
all
the
rainbows
out
there
we're
speculating
Rambo,
but
that's
what
they
were
calling
themselves:
no
rainbows.
Oh
my
god.
Yeah.
B
A
B
First,
real
quick,
actually
on
that
Ram
proposal,
I
want
to
mention
it's
it's.
This
is
pretty
historic
that
this
has
happened.
So
quickly
is,
if
you
think
of
any
other
blockchain,
where
you
know
you
would
have
to
do
a
hard
fork
to
implement
something
like
this
on
Bitcoin
or
aetherium
on
ES.
This
was
voted
in
in
two
days
by
fifteen
out
of
the
21
of
the
top
blog
producers
and
seamlessly
updated
without
a
hard
fork
without
pausing
the
chain.
So
just
something
to
keep
in
mind,
it's
pretty
amazing
I!
Take
it
for
granted.
Oh.
B
A
Think
about
Bitcoin
here,
so
the
RAM
markets
at
at
64
gigabytes
in
it.
There
are
issues
with
the
size
of
the
RAM
allotment
right.
Some
people
wanted
more
RAM
or
bigger
blocks.
Some
people
wanted
the
RAM
to
stay
the
same,
so
they
keep
speculating
exactly
what
what
did
Bitcoin
have
to
do?
Last,
there's
almost
one
year
ago,
to
the
day
on
the
list
was
when
Bitcoin
cash
was
created
when
it
worked
off
from
Bitcoin
to
ad
oh
yeah,
official
size
and.
B
That
was
years
after
the
discussion
started
like
when
I
found
Bitcoin
in
2013
people
were
then
talking
about
the
block
size.
Hey.
Should
we
increase
the
block
size
I
know
in
the
future,
we're
gonna
like
start
hitting
that
cap?
Shall
we
increase
it?
So
it's
been
a
discussion
going
on
for
years
and
was
never
even
really
resolved.
It
just
resulted
in
a
hard
fork
that
has
sort
of
torn
apart
the
community
so
to
have
this
governance
model
is,
is
amazing,
I.
B
A
B
A
Yeah
I
was
about
to
talk
about
some
of
the
the
tools
and
it
kind
of
ties
into
the
RAM
market,
because
we've
always
talked
about
these
air
drops
and
how
it's
a
new
way
of
funding
for
new
DAP
projects
where
it
lets
the
market
decide
the
token
price
essentially,
but
one
of
the
problems
there
are
a
few
problems.
The
first
problem
was
that
the
RAM
was
so
expensive
that,
if
you
wanted
to
do
an
airdrop,
you
would
need
to
stake
the
equivalent
of
I.
A
A
B
That's
the
part
I
don't
like
is
that
you
still
have
to
go
and
opt
in,
although
I
do
like
the
fact
that
this
will
allow
devs,
who
don't
have
20
grand
or
now
maybe
more
like
five
or
ten
grand.
Now
that
ram
has
come
down.
You
know,
if
you
don't
have
several
thousand
dollars
to
do
an
airdrop.
You
can
do
it
this
way
and
sort
of
let
people
do
it
for
you.
So
I
do
like
that.
It's
making
it
more
accessible,
but
I
don't
like
that.
B
A
So
AOS
New
York
shout
out
the
Kevin
Rose
in
the
year's
New
York
team
released
the
EO
snapshot
tool
a
couple
days
ago
and
in
their
blog
post
they
mentioned
that.
Basically,
what
they're
gonna
do
is
they're
gonna
take
a
daily
snapshot
once
per
day
that
could
be
used
by
developers
their
job
tokens,
it's
as
simple
as
that
yeah
something
as
simple
as
that
wasn't
available
until
now.
A
B
Even
though
this
tool
seems
very
simple
like
oh,
they
just
they're
taking
a
new
snapshot
every
day
and
I
can
go
and
see
it
that
the
mechanics
behind
it
are
actually
very,
very
complex,
generate
generate,
has
tried
to
release
a
tool
for
air,
drops
that
I
had
highlighted
that
apparently
doesn't
actually
work.
The
way
that
they
say
it's
supposed
to
so
II
use.
B
New,
York
RIT
wrote
two
separate
tools
so
that
they
can
verify
that
the
snapshots
are
being
taken
accurately,
so
their
system
automatically
compares
them
every
day,
make
sure
the
balances
line
up,
and
then
they
release
the
snapshot
so
huge
shout
out
to
use
New
York
for
this
tool
it.
It
is
very,
very
well
done
easy
to
verify
that
the
snapshots
been
taken
correctly
and
now
I
think
is
going
to
result
in
a
lot
more
people
sort
of
coming
back
into
us
that
may
have
sold
out
of
the
Genesis
snapshot
because
they
see
oh
wow.
B
A
So
those
were
the
two
big
tools
in
relation
to
like
the
brand
market
and
air
drops,
which
we're
all
excited
about
the
other
thing
it's
not
out
yet,
but
es
Phenix.
They
put
out
a
new
blog
post,
the
other
day
or
maybes
block,
one
that
put
out
the
blog
post
about
them
block
one.
They
had
a
little
Q&A
in
there
where
they
were
describing,
and
it's
basically
they're
developing
a
the
first
high-performance
trustless
trading
platform
built
on
es
io
technology.
It's
gonna
be
completely
open
source.
So
anyone
who
wants
to
build
their
own
decentralized
exchange.
A
They
basically
have
the
code
libraries
to
be
able
to
do
it
quickly,
so
that
they
could
focus
on
the
user
facing
features
like
the
UIs,
and
it
sounds
like
that,
instead
of
the
nuts
and
bolts
of
how
the
transactions
are
actually
being
relayed
back
back
and
forth
between
the
buyers
and
sellers.
So
that's
a
big
deal
a
couple
days
ago,
yeah
our
block
one
actually
released
an
update
of
a
tool
called
D,
mocks
yeah,
and
this
told
drew
inspiration
from
the
flux
architecture
protocol,
our
pattern
and
redux
from
Facebook.
B
A
A
One
really
made
a
big
deal
about
it
and,
as
far
as
the
technology,
what
it
does
is,
it
basically
creates
a
mirror
of
the
state
of
the
blockchain
at
any
given
time
and
it's
verifiable
and
it's
it
stores
a
mirror
version
of
that
on
a
standard
web
application
database
like
MongoDB
or
progress,
and
what
it
does
is
it's.
It
solves
a
problem
that
has
kind
of
plagued
blockchain.
Is
it's
really
hard
to
run
complex
queries
against
a
blockchain,
but
it's
something
that
that's
fairly
typical
in
standard
web
application.
A
Development
I'm,
not
sure
if
I
understand
that
completely
I'm,
not
an
engineer
but
from
the
way
I
understand
it
and
and
from
reading
what
block
one
put
out
and
no
knowing
what
I
do
know
about
web
development
is.
If
I
wanted
to
run
a
complex
query
on
on
all
the
es
transactions,
let's
say,
for
example,
I
wanted
to
run
a
query
where
I
wanted
to
look
at
all
of
the
transactions
that
happened
on
July
1st,
with
the
following
stipulations.
A
B
Understanding
of
it
from
like
a
use
case
perspective
also
is
there
are
certain
apps
where
you
don't
want
the
entire
decentralized
app
to
be
running
on
the
blockchain,
but
you
just
want
to
verify
certain
parts.
So
a
good
example
of
somebody.
That's
using
this.
They
were
I
think
building
something
on
their
own
before,
but
it's
company
called
test
loop,
it's
basically
a
ride-sharing
service
for
Tesla's
in
the
future,
but
they
have.
B
They
were
quoted
in
an
interview
saying
not
verbatim,
but
basically
saying
that
what
they're
gonna
use
the
EOS
blockchain
for
is
to
just
have
a
verifiable
record
of
different
actions
that
the
cars
take
so
they're
using
this
for
their
insurance
right,
so
their
insurance
company
could
fight
them.
If
one
of
their
Tesla's
is
self-driving
and
gets
in
an
accident,
their
insurance
company
could
fight
them
by
saying
hey,
you
altered
what
happened
to
the
car
in
your
centralized
database.
B
So
what
they're
doing
is
they're
basically
mirroring
a
lot
of
that
from
their
centralized
database
and
mirroring
those
actions
on
that
use
blockchain.
So
then,
if
their
insurance
company
comes
to
them
and
says,
hey
you
tampered
with
your
centralized
database
to
you
know,
file
a
claim
illegally
or
against
our
Terms.
They
can
say
no,
no,
we
have
it
on
a
blockchain
here,
it's
approved.
B
You
know,
here's
cryptographic,
proof
we
couldn't
have
altered
this,
so
there
are
a
lot
of
different
applications
where
you
know
you
don't
necessarily
need
to
run
the
whole
thing
on
a
US
or
on
a
blockchain,
but
certain
parts
of
it
need
to
be
verifiable
on
a
blockchain,
so
it'll
be
interesting
to
see.
What's
built
with
this
and
I
have
a
feeling
that
block
one
social
media
app
is
going
to
use
this
tool
as
well
to
sort
of
store
proofs
of
the
different
messages
on
their
blockchain,
but
not
the
entire
message
itself.
A
A
Very
verifiable
me
right
was
the
difference.
Was
now
it's
verifiable
using
the
de-mux
tool,
but
basically
what
it
does.
Is
it
captures
states
at
any
given
time
because
I,
don't
I,
don't
think
states
always
captured
on
the
blockchain
you
can.
You
could
follow
the
blocks
from
one
transaction
to
the
next,
but
to
to
replay
back
to
a
given
States
somewhat
difficult,
yeah.
B
A
A
We
usually
release
those
on
Fridays,
the
the
second
episode
we
either
come
out,
Friday
night
or
Saturday
morning,
but
I
sat
I
write
in
sadhanas
virtual
I
with
the
founder
of
lumiose
and
he
actually
worked
on
betoken,
which
is
a
pretty
major
aetherium
token
that
that
I
think
I
see
owed
in
February
and
he
he
kind
of
talked
about
some
of
the
differences
and
some
of
the
problems
with
aetherium
and
and
building
on
es.
Now,
a
lot
of.
B
Think
we're
gonna,
see
more
and
more
of
that,
as
time
goes
on
and
as
more
people
build
successful
taps
like
every
PD,
which
is
now
live
on
the
es
blockchain
more
and
more
people
moving
over
from
aetherium,
because
in
order
to
make
their
roadmap
that
they
promised
work,
they're
gonna
have
to
move
to
a
platform
that
will
actually
support
it.
Mm-Hmm.
A
So
we
got
these
hackathon
in
Australia
yeah!
That's
coming
up
this
weekend!
That
very
excited.
That's
really
big
news,
because
it
seems
like
all
these
new
tools
that
block
ones
releasing.
They
release
them
early
at
the
hackathons
and
introduce
some
his
development
teams
and
also
it's
getting
more
people
involved
in
the
ecosystem.
A
It's
getting
funding
for
developers
who
win
these
projects
they're,
getting
even
if
they
don't
win
just
being
at
the
hackathons,
is
probably
a
really
big
deal
to
them,
because
it's
getting
them
involved
in
the
ecosystem,
they're,
making
the
connections
they
might
meet
a
VC
at
the
hackathon.
Absolutely.
B
A
B
It's
coming
up,
August
4th
to
5th
in
Sydney
Australia,
so
it
depending
on
your
time
zone,
maybe
sooner
than
August,
4th
or
5th,
but
usually
what
we'll
see
is
early
next
week.
We
should
see
sort
of
a
recap,
video
that
shows
like
the
awards
ceremony
and
then
like
what
they
did
at
the
first
event
was
like
a
five
minute:
promo
video,
just
sort
of
showing
the
highlights
if
you
didn't
want
to
watch
the
whole
hour.
B
Awards
but
I'm
excited
to
see
who's
gonna,
be
there
this
time
and
keep
in
mind
that
the
winner
of
each
of
these
events,
so
the
winner
of
the
first
one
that
we
had
and
or
was
that
in
Hong,
Kong,
Hong,
Kong
and
now
in
Sydney
and
then
in
London
and
then
two
other
to
be
determined
places.
The
winners
of
all
of
these
are
then
going
to
compete
in
the
sort
of
main
global
hackathon.
At
the
end
of
this
year,.
A
It's
actually
just
announced
also
for
the
the
finalists,
the
the
final
like
finale
of
the
hackathon
winners
whenever
they
all
compete
against
each
other
in
the
last
one,
which
is
that
December
I
think
it's
a
December.
They
actually
opened
an
additional
invitation
from
the
hong
kong
hackathon.
I
don't
have
it
in
front
of
me,
so
I
don't
know
the
team's
name,
but
they
won
the
social
impact
award.
Oh,
they
didn't
win
the
hackathon,
but
they
won
the
social
impact
award
and
they
just
got
an
invite
to
the
finals.
Oh.
A
B
A
B
So
we
have
exciting
news
when
it
comes
to
ledger.
There's
really
no
timeline,
unfortunately,
but
somebody
who
has
been
working
on
and
who's
been
releasing
a
lot
of
updates
about.
It
officially
submitted
their
code
to
ledger
so
part
of
claiming
the
bounty
is
that
ledger
has
to
approve
the
code.
So
now
we're
just
waiting
on
ledger,
basically
to
get
back
to
him
and
say:
hey
the
code
looks
good,
we'll
release
it
out
on
all
the
ledger:
naino
assets
and
then
it
it
bodes
well
because
he
actually
built
one
of
the
previous
apps.
B
B
So
we
put
out
a
weeks
ago,
$100,000
Hardware,
wallet
bounty.
This
happened,
I,
don't
know
more
than
a
month
ago
now,
I
think
we
put
out
a
video
about
it.
You
can
search
$100,000
100k,
our
wallet
bounty
on
YouTube
and
it
will
pop
up,
but
basically
50
grand
is
dedicated
to
somebody
building
a
hardware
wallet
app
for
the
ledger,
9os
and
the
other
50
grand
to
somebody
building
a
treasure
map.
A
Yes,
so
I
missed
this
one
at
the
beginning,
when
we
were
talking
about
all
the
new
exchange
listings,
but
who
OB
globe
will
actually
opened
up
the
first
OTC
trading
desk
for
us
yeah,
so
that's
really
big
news.
Whatever
TC
trading
is
is
basically,
if
you
wanted
to
make
a
multi-million
I
mean
it
doesn't
have
to
be
multi
million.
It
can
be
more
than
a
couple
thousand
if
you
want
to
make
a
big
order
on
the
exchange.
You're,
probably
gonna
move
the
order
books
in
price.
A
So
if
you
wanted
to
buy,
let's
say,
for
example,
five
million
dollars
of
Eos,
what
you
do
is
you
work
through
their
trading
desk
and
they
they
find
you
a
buyer
if
you're
trying
to
sell
exact
sell
and
they
find
you
a
buyer
and
you'll-
usually
pay
above
or
below
with
the
market
prices,
but
it
ends
up
being
better
better
for
the
two
individuals
making
the
trade,
because
if
they
wanted
to
make
the
trade
on
the
public
order,
books
on
in
exchange,
they're
gonna
drive
the
price
drastically
up
or
drastically
down
yeah.
Well,.
B
That's
gonna
result
in
slippage,
which
is
basically
them
not
getting
the
same
price
for
all
their
tokens.
So
if
I'm,
a
big
institutional
trader
I
want
to
enter
like
you
said,
five
million
dollars,
they'll
find
me,
you
know
five
other
people
that
all
want
to
sell
a
million
dollars
worth
and
sell
it
all
to
me
directly,
which
is
a
pretty
cool
feature.
It's
something
that
is
in
a
lot
of
major
financial
markets
and
is
how
most
stock
traits
happen.
I
honestly.
A
See
it
as
the
biggest
deal
for
actually
the
block
producer
community
so
right
now
the
is
token
it's
only
sitting
at
like
seven
bucks
right
now,
so
I
think
the
top
couple
we
block
producers
are
earning
about
a
thousand
years
right
and
in
block
rewards
and
you
could
buy
or
sell
that
in
an
exchange.
No
problem,
obviously
they're
not
doing
it
daily,
but
if
they
it's
not
a
large
amount
of
money
for
in
the
order
books
most
likely
handled.
A
B
A
There
to
buy
and
sell
their
a
OS,
so
we
don't
want
the
block
producers
tanking
the
price
because
they
got
a
cover,
operating
cost
for
their
data
centers
or
for
the
development
staff,
but
like
they
have
to
sell
some
yose,
because
you
gotta
pay
rent
with
fiat
and
there's
a
lot
of
other
things
you
to
pay.
Employees
with
fiat,
mostly
so
they
are
gonna,
have
to
sell
at
some
point
and
it'll
be
nice
that
they
have
at
least
one
OTC
trading
desk
that
they're
able
to
work
through
now.
Def
night,
yeah.
B
This
month
we
did
an
interesting
experience
in
cypher
glass
for
August
and
paid
everybody
in
directly
from
our
block
hoards.
Just
to
see
you
know
from
an
accounting
perspective,
how
that
will
work
if
people
want
to
hold
a
versus
sell
it,
but
we
may
continue
doing
it,
then
in
the
future,
we're
not
sure
to
kind
of
try
to
offset
that,
but
I
agree
with
you
I
think
OTC
is
it's
definitely
going
to
be
very
much
needed
in
the
future
will
also
help
big
institutional
players
enter.
The
arena
now
have.
A
B
A
B
A
A
Can't
remember
what
block
producer
it
was,
but
on
everyone's
blocker
booster
pager
on
their
steam
it
post
they
kind
of
outline
the
projects
that
they're
supporting
or
what
they're
building
internally
and
on
one
of
them
they
had
a
list
of
projects
and
also
the
amount
that
they're
paying
for
the
development.
It
was
measured
in
u.s.
right.
So
it
was
like
I'm
developing
this
feature
for
an
app
and
I'm
being
paid
200
us
I'm,
pretty
cool
I,
don't
remember
who
it
was
I
like
that,
so
we're
getting
close
to
now
we're
here.
A
B
I
think
it's
now
I
believe
3500.
Let
me
just
pull
it
up
and
check.
If
you
go
to
Yoast
Network
Monitor
data,
you
can
see,
it
looks
like
three
thousand
five
hundred
ninety
transactions
per
second
was
hit
still
on
the
single
threaded
version,
which
is
pretty
nuts,
but
as
part
of
this,
we
also
hit
the
number
one
most
used,
blockchain
by
transaction
volume
in
the
world.
It's
actually,
if
you
take
all
every
single
other
blockchain
in
the
world
combined,
add
up
all
of
their
transactions.
B
Yo
still
is
doing
more
transactions
than
all
of
those
every
day
now,
so
it's
a
number
one
most
use
block
chain
above
bitshares
and
steam,
which
Dan
Larimer
also
built
pretty
crazy.
It's
also
another
historic
moment
that
it's
number
one
on
the
blockchain
activity
matrix
looks
like
today
has
had
more
than
eight
million
transactions
and.
A
B
A
So
the
coolest
part
about
hitting
this
transaction
speed
record
of
three
thousand
plus
per
second,
is
that
we're
using
less
than
1%
of
the
bandwidth
the
capacity
of
the
network
yeah.
So
you
think
about
aetherium.
They
they
fell
to
their
knees
from
a
couple
of
crypto
kitties
yeah
at
their
transaction
limit
of
about
20
per
second
yeah
that
took
him
to
over
100
percent
capacity.
B
Oh
yeah,
one
people
you
got
to
keep
in
mind
on
EOS:
it's
totally
free
to
send
these
transactions
and
on
if
people
are
paying
a
dollar,
sometimes
five
dollars
to
send
a
transaction,
and
it
can
still
only
do
20
transactions
per
second,
because
the
tech
just
does
not
support
it.
It
doesn't
work
alright,.
A
B
So
we
we,
unfortunately
lost
a
couple
huge
whale
votes
in
turnout
down
at
number
34.
Obviously
you
know
we
expected
this
to
happen.
We've
seen
a
lot
of
fluctuation
of
us
being
in
top
21
for
a
couple
weeks
out
for
a
couple
weeks
back
in
so
we
expect
that
we'll
get
back
in
the
top
21
soon,
but
what
we're
really
focused
on
now
is
making
sure
that
that
hardware
wallet
support
comes
to
fruition.
That
ledger
does
approve
it.
That
eventually
treasurer
does
approve
it,
because
I
know
that
there
are
a
ton
of
people
out
there.
B
You
know
that
hold
a
significant
amount
of
es
or
something
that's
significant
to
them
and
are
saying
I,
don't
want
to
vote
until
I
have
a
hardware,
so
we're
really
focused
on
getting
that
out
now
and
also
are
working
on
some
internal
stuff
related
to
gaps.
That's
all
I'll
say
for
now
should
have
some
exciting
announcements
here
in
the
in
the
next
month
to
two
months.
Yes,.
A
B
A
B
I
think
we
just
barely
break
even
on
infrastructure,
basically
infrastructure
cost
marketing
costs
and
then
all
of
our
employee
costs
so
we're
you
know
breaking
even
at
that
point.
Hopefully
we
can
get
it
up
more
and
then
dedicate
more
to
you
know
investing
in
our
future
infrastructure
in
the
expansion
there,
but
we'll
see
what
happens.
I
think
we're
gonna
see
a
lot
of
new
voters.
Once
Hardware
wallet
support
comes
out
and
once
we
have
these
incentives
to
hold
and
vote,
our
AOS
I
think
we'll
see
way
way.
More
votes
come
out
and
really
shake
up.
A
B
Yeah
he
he
recommended
to
some
people.
I
eated
them
I
think
last
week
and
said:
hey
you
know,
can
I.
Can
you
basically
make
your
cold
wallet
support
where
you
sort
of
set
up
a
separate
computer
as
a
cold
wallet?
Can
you
make
this
support?
You
know
signing
token
transfers
offline
to
transfer
some
air
drops
out
and
things
like
that
within
a
week
they
added
a
new
feature.