►
From YouTube: Everything EOS #1
Description
Everything EOS is a weekly podcast from ICO Alert that follows the EOS ecosystem: dApp spotlights, VC partnerships, announcements, and more!
A
B
Kick
off
this
new
weekly
podcast
to
introduce
you
our
listening
audience,
a
really
innovative
project
in
the
blockchain
space
that
we're
super
excited
about.
So
a
quick
note
before
we
get
started.
This
is
not
a
sponsored
podcast.
We
are
not
being
paid
to
record
this.
We're
just
super
excited
members
of
the
EOS
community
and
as
a
quick
note
of
disclaimer
in
disclosure,
we
do
hold
heõs
tokens,
but
none
of
this
podcast
should
be
construed
as
legal,
financial,
tax
or
professional
advice
in
any
way.
We're
simply
stating
our
opinions
about
a
technology
that
we
love
on.
B
A
Podcast
we
will
be
introducing
what
use
is
and
discussing
who
is
behind
the
project,
what
makes
it
different
and
why
we're
so
excited
about
it
without
further
ado,
let's
get
to
it
all
right,
Rob,
so
you're,
like
the
eos
expert
of
this
company,
you've
been
a
big
fan
of
use
since
the
ico
launch
yeah.
Do
you
want
to
tell
us
how
you
got
started
on
the
not
start
on
the
project,
but
how
you
learned
about
the
project
originally
and
what
got
you
excited
about?
It
originally.
Definitely.
B
So
I
stumbled
upon
actually
the
block
one
link
blocked
out
one,
it's
all
the
website
and
saw
that
they
had
two
logos
on
their
website,
one
of
which
I
had
heard
of
aetherium
and
the
other
which
I
had
it,
which
was
cos
and
I
started
looking
into
it
and
saw
a
presentation
that
I
believe
Brendan,
bloomer
and
I.
Think
Dan
also
gave
it
consensus
in
2017
that
big,
like
crypto
conference
in
New,
York
City,
so
I
started
poking
around
watch.
B
The
presentation
was
super
super
interested
in
it
eventually
read
the
white
paper
and
was
like
wow.
You
know,
I
have
to
be
a
part
of
this.
How
can
I
get
in
on
this,
and
essentially
for
those
that
don't
know,
I
think
we
want
to
do
kind
of
an
introduction
as
to
what
EEOC
is
yose
in
one
sentence
is
a
platform
that
allows
you
to
build
hosts
and
deploy
your
own
decentralized
application.
B
So,
theoretically,
these
software
is
supposed
to
be
so
easy
to
use
that
if
you
can
build
a
web
app
or
a
website,
you
can
run
a
decentralized
app
on
you
know.
So
it
should
be
pretty
exciting
to
see
if
you
know
those
promises
come
to
fruition
here
in
June
when
the
blockchain
actually
launches,
but
that's
kind
of
what
it
is
in
a
nutshell
and.
A
As
far
as
my
background
with
us,
I
bought
my
first
year's
tokens,
late
October,
shortly
after
starting
with
IC
o----
alert
about
the
project
through
Rob
I
did
my
own
due
diligence
and
I
became
attached
to
it.
It's
it's
almost
it's
so
exciting.
It's
almost
an
addiction
to
read
more
about
it.
I,
don't
think
you
mentioned
it,
but
the
platform
launches
officially
on
June
1st
they've
been
running
a
year-long
ICO,
so
they
started
the
ICO
last
last,
June
I
believe.
B
Yeah
June
or
July
I
think,
and
there
are
350
23
hour
periods
that
keep
running
and
they're
doing
it
that
way,
so
that
they
can
have
the
widest
possible
token
distribution.
Yes,
now
is
the
most
widely
distributed
ICO
ever
and
the
23
hour
periods
are
so
that
each
contribution
period
ends
at
a
different
time
zone
every
single
day,
but
basically
the
why
we're
so
excited
about
iOS
is
for
two
main
reasons.
So
two
main
problems
that
I
think
users
is
solving
in
the
blockchain
space,
so
the
first
is
scalability.
B
So
if
you
think
about
you
know
current
platforms,
Bitcoin
and
aetherium
in
terms
of
the
number
of
transactions
they
can
process
per.
Second
Bitcoin
can
process
about
3
transactions
per
second,
now,
three
thousand
just
three
and
aetherium.
At
its
best
can
process
15,
maybe
20
transactions
per
second
on
a
really
good
day.
So
a.
A
Good
example
of
the
scalability
problems
we've
seen
with
blockchain
over
since
it's
pretty
much
been
invented,
is
if
you
look
at
crypto
kitty's
crypto
kitty's
was
a
phenomenon
that
occurred.
Was
a
December
January
this
year,
something
like
that,
but
how
many
transactions
were
they
doing
per
second
I?
Don't
remember.
B
The
number
of
transactions
per
second,
but
they
had
39,000
users
not
at
once,
but
over
nine
days,
and
it
brought
the
etherium
Network
essentially
to
a
halt.
They
took
up
like
25
percent
of
a
theorems,
total
transactional,
throughput
and
basically
skyrocketed
transaction
fees
on
the
platform.
So
it
was
very,
very
difficult
to
get
her
transaction
to
go
through
and
with.
B
But
it's
actually
June
3rd
I
think
the
ICO
ends
on
June
1st,
but
it
looks
like
a
lot
of
block.
Producers
are
planning
to
actually
launch
the
community
network
on
June
3rd,
so
it'll
be
sometime
in
that
first
week
of
June
when
all
this
stuff
goes
live
and
you
can
actually
use
the
network.
So
scalability
is
kind
of
the
first
main
piece
that
it
solves
it's
horizontally
and
vertically
scalable.
So
what
that
means
basically
is
you
can
do
thousands
of
transactions
per
second
in
a
single
thread,
but
then
it's
also
multi-threaded.
B
So
if
you
think
about
single
threaded
is
basically
like
a
single
lane
road.
If
a
car
in
front
of
you
is
a
transaction,
you
have
to
wait
for
that
car
to
go
through
before
you
can
then
go
through
because
you
can't
change
lanes
and
go
around
whereas
multi-threaded,
which
will
allow
us
to
scale
to
millions
of
transactions
per
second
and
theoretically
scale,
infinitely
as
it
needs
to
it's
kind
of
like
a
multi
Lane
superhighway
with
a
very
fast
speed
limit.
So
there's
a
transaction,
that's
a
little
bit
slower
in
the
right
lane.
A
One
of
the
other
things
that
I
was
me:
the
most
excited
is
its
its
felis
transactions
yeah.
Whenever
you
think
about
an
aetherium
transfer,
if
I,
if
I
want
to
send
Rob
$100
of
worth
of
aetherium,
it's
gonna
cost
me
anywhere
between
two
five
dollars,
sometimes
more
if
the
network's
congested
and
and
if
you
think
about
a
business
application
or
an
enterprise
level,
application
you're,
sometimes
needing
hundreds,
thousands,
like
even
millions
trend
of
transactions
per
second,
a
good
example
that
the
EOS
team
uses
is
comparing
it
to
Facebook.
A
Now,
if
you
could
imagine
Facebook
being
on
a
blockchain
every
single
time,
you,
like
a
post
comment
on
a
post,
add
a
new
friend,
D
friend,
someone
that
would
all
be
a
transaction
on
the
blockchain.
So
for
a
blockchain
technology
to
ever
get
mainstream
acceptance.
You
you
got
to
eliminate
the
fees
there's
no
other
way
around
it
absolutely.
B
And
this
is
kind
of
like
the
the
second
main
thing
that
you
saw,
which
is
usability
and
the
transaction
fees
I
think
are
the
biggest
pain
point
that
that's
stopping.
These
platforms
were
being
usable
by
people
like
my
mother
or
my
grandmother,
or
you
know
my
friend
who's,
not
very
tech,
savvy
and
the
gauls
point
I
mean
it
makes
it
kind
of
sense.
If
you
have
an
app,
let's
say
you
have
a
decentralized
facebook.
B
If
I
want
to
send
a
message
to
somebody
and
I
have
to
pay
even
ten
cents
or
five
cents
to
do
it.
Nobody
is
gonna
use
that
platform.
If
I
told
my
mom
hey
mom
every
time
you
send
me
a
of
your
cat
on
Facebook,
it's
gonna
cost
you
five
cents,
you
would
say
well.
Why
would
I
use
that?
Why
don't
I
just
use
a
free
platform
I
think.
A
We're
all
waiting
for
mainstream
acceptance
of
this
technology.
What
we
want
to
see
the
big
killer,
DAP
yeah
and
it
just
hasn't-
happened
yet
and
what
I
think
is
before
that
can
happen.
The
technology
has
to
be
above
and
beyond
better
than
what
we're
currently
using.
Definitely-
and
if
you
imagine
this,
the
speed
of
other
blockchains
and
we
could
use
the
Facebook
example,
if
I
like
a
post
I,
don't
want
to
have
to
wait.
A
15
minutes
for
the
block,
the
block
to
come
around
for
the
blush
tits
firm
I
like
to
actually
hit
the
block
chin
and
for
everyone
else
to
see
it
like
that.
That
just
doesn't
make
sense
to
me
and
I
think
what
Leo's
focus
is
on
is:
is
this
speed
and
scalability
the
felis
transactions
and
they
want
to
create
enterprise
level
applications
yeah.
B
And
a
couple
other
cool
things
to
mention
them
to
the
usability
front,
one
would
be
human,
readable,
account
names.
So
right
now
you
know
if
you
have
an
aetherium
or
a
Bitcoin
address.
If
you
set
a
transaction
before
and
you
have
this
really
long
string
of
digits,
you
know
100
digits
of
basically
letters
and
numbers
that
you're
sending
to
someone.
So
if
you've
ever
sent
a
transaction,
you
find
yourself
triple
checking.
B
You
know
quadruple,
checking
that
address
to
make
sure
you
haven't
hit
backspace
on
the
last
digit
and
then
you're
gonna
send
this
money
to
an
address
that
doesn't
exist
and
basically
lose
your
money.
So
yose
changes
that
by
default
and
at
the
very
core
operating
system
level,
everybody
will
sign
up
and
get
their
own
username.
So
you
know
I
could
send
to
Gaul
and
send
a
hack
call.
I
know
very
clearly
a
time
setting
to
him.
A
So
I
guess
we've
been
talking
about
the
speed,
scalability
felis
transactions,
what's
good
about
it,
to
make
it
a
felis
transaction.
It
is
not
done
on
a
proof-of-work
platform
like
aetherium
and
bitcoin.
For
those
who
don't
know
are
a
proof-of-work,
which
means
they
create
their
tokens
via
mining
and
by
using
a
lot
of
electricity,
whereas
yose
is
on
a
platform
called
delegated
proof
of
stake.
Yeah.
Now
you
want
to
explain
to
everyone
about
de
Paz
Rob.
Definitely
so.
B
Why
are
we
wasting
all
of
our
computational
power
on
solving
this
arbitrary
mathematical
problem,
when
we
can
put
all
that
that
CPU
throughput
that
computational
power
to
actually
verifying
transactions
and
increase
the
throughput
of
the
network
increase
the
number
of
transactions
the
number
of
cars
on
that
superhighway?
In
the
analogy
we're
talking
about
earlier
so
delegate,
a
proof
mistake
basically,
in
order
to
you
know
prevent
that
actors,
the
top
21.
It's
really
121
different
block
producers
that
are
validating
these
transactions
on
the
blockchain
I
actually
voted
in
by
the
community.
B
A
Essentially,
what
it's
doing
is
with
something
like
Bitcoin
or
theorem,
or
any
proof
of
work,
assisting
that
they're
dedicating
on
those
platforms,
millions
of
dollars,
if
not
hundreds
of
million
dollars
every
year
into
electricity,
yeah,
and
that
money
is
going
to
the
electricity
companies
and
it's
being
wasted.
And
it's
honestly
not
helping
with
global
warming.
Yeah.
B
In
New
York,
it's
not
sustainable,
oh
it's
not
at
all
in
the
state
of
New.
York
now
is
actually
charging
Bitcoin
miners
more
money
than
other
people
who
are
using
electricity.
So
it's
the
whole
thing
is
kind
of
crazy
and
I
think
it's
only
a
matter
of
time
until
people
realize-
and
they
think
it's
kind
of
happening
now,
but
when
people
realize
just
that
the
negative
effects
that
proof-of-work
is
having
on
the
world
and
on
you
know
the
economy
in
general,
if
electricity
prices
get
jacked
up
and
everybody.
A
Loses
now
I
guess
this
would
be
a
good
segue
into
talking
about
a
person
that
we're
both
big
fans
of
danly
remarks.
Oh
yeah
Danny
Boy,
there
Dan
Larimer
for
those
who
don't
know
he
is
the
founder
of
bitshares,
the
founder
of
steam
it
and
now
he
is
the
chief
technology
officer
of
black
dot,
one
which
is
the
company.
That's
developing
the
EOS
platform
and
Dan
actually
invented
delegated
proof
of
state
act.
I
said.
B
Dan
has
been
around
for
a
while
it's
kind
of
interesting,
his
biggest
criticism
in
the
space
is
that
he's
left
these
previous
projects.
So
when
he
started
bitshares,
he
eventually
left
it
when
he
started
steam
it.
He
eventually
left
it
and
kind
of
let
both
of
those
platforms
be
run
by
the
community
and
I.
Think
it's
interesting
that
that's
a
point
of
criticism
when
I
actually
see
that
as
a
really
positive
thing.
B
B
But
dan
has
really
looked
at
this
differently
and
said:
hey
I'm
gonna
build
these
platforms
from
the
ground
up
that,
where
they're
not
relying
on
one
single
key
man,
they're
not
relying
on
him,
he's
building
truly
decentralized
systems,
but
then
he
can
move
on
from
and
the
community
can
actually
still
run.
Those
platforms
like
they
should
in
a
truly
decentralized
system
and.
A
I
think
he's
been
quoted
before
to
where
he
brings
the
experience,
like
you,
you
think
about
all
the
other
top
names
in
the
blockchain
space
and
you
look
at
their
work
experience
and
most
of
them
have
one
project.
He
has
two
projects
on
theirs
belt
and
they're
very
niche
like
use
cases,
whereas
with
es
he
wanted
to
build
a
general
use
platform
that
would
allow
and
any
developer
to
build
their
own
steam
it
without
having
to
develop
their
own
blockchain
yeah.
B
That
makes
a
lot
of
sense
too,
because
if
you
think
about
bitshares
and
steam,
it
has
these
two
kind
of
decentralized
apps.
These
two
DAPs.
He
basically
knows
a
lot
of
the
different
commonalities
between
the
apps
that
a
developer
would
need
to
build
their
own
death,
whether
it's
an
exchange
or
a
social
media
platform,
or
something
completely
different.
B
So
now,
with
EEO
C's
building
that
general
purpose
platform
with
all
the
right
pieces,
all
the
right
puzzle
pieces
there
at
bells
and
whistles
to
then
enable
him
to
build
more
DAPs,
which
he's
gonna
start
working
on
after
June
and
kind
of
left.
The
50-plus
person
dev
team
at
block
one
continue
to
work
on
the
software.
While
he
moves
on
and
builds
DAPs,
which
I
think
is
pretty
cool
and
we
should
see
some
some
pretty
exciting
stuff
come
out
of
that.
You
know.
A
I've,
if
you,
google,
dan
Larimer
a
special
word,
search
him
on
YouTube,
there's
some
really
interesting
stuff,
because
he's
been
in
the
space
as
long
as
cryptocurrency
has
been
around
yeah.
If
you
actually
go
back
and
search
through
the
Bitcoin
talk,
forums,
you'll
actually
see
him
arguing
against
proof-of-work
Whitsitt
Satoshi
himself.
B
It's
crazy,
dude
good,
it's
basically
say
like
hey
Satoshi
I
looked
at
your
code
and
I
can
tell
that
you
know
all
the
problems
we're
having
today
are
gonna
happen.
He
was
basically
saying
you
know:
transaction
fees
are
gonna,
get
out
of
control
which
is
happening
now.
You
know
this
isn't
gonna
be
scalable,
which
is
happening
now.
So
just
by
looking
at
the
code
back
in
2009,
he
knew
hey
bitcoins,
not
gonna
work
out
in
the
long
run.
Proof
of
work
is
kind
of
a
flawed
system
and.
A
B
I
think
one
of
the
the
main
feature
points
that
we
kind
of
missed
under
usability
is
something
called
hacked
account
recovery.
So
you
know
in
a
lot
of
cases,
we've
seen
all
these
major
hacks
with
aetherium,
where
you
know
the
parity
wallet,
e
parity
wallet
exploit
or
hundreds
of
millions
of
dollars
in
total,
billions
of
dollars
has
been
lost
through
people,
hacking
into
wallets
hacking
into
exchanges
with
AOS.
They
introduced
something
called
hacked
account,
recovery
or
lost
password
recovery.
So,
let's
say
gul.
B
B
B
So
a
lot
of
the
horror
stories
that
have
been
hearing
about
in
the
blockchain
space
should
be
solved
by
this
hacked
account
recovery
and
lost
password
recovery
and
basically
enable
people
to
you
know,
continue
to
secure
their
property
rather
than
having
it
stolen
by
by
some
hacker
on
the
internet.
I
I.
A
Think
something
else
that's
really
exciting
about
ia's.
Is
that
they're
raising
a
lot
of
money?
Yeah
I
mean
they
started
their
there
crowd,
sale
there
ICO
last,
really
June
or
July
I
wasn't
in
it,
so
I'm
not
as
smooth
with
the
dates,
but
it
almost
a
full
year
of
ICO
funding
and
those
all
through
the
bull
market.
B
Are
many
six
million
dollars
a
day
and
what's
crazy,
what
are
the
biggest
criticisms
about
block
one?
You
know
for
a
lot
of
different
legal
reasons.
There's
a
lot
of
speculation
around
it.
They
basically
said:
hey
they're,
not
launching
the
blockchain.
The
community
is
gonna
launch
the
blockchain,
which
will
be
a
group
of
those
block
producers.
B
You
know
the
first
week
of
June
that
actually
pushed
the
network
live,
but
they've
also
said
that
the
money
that
they're
collecting
is
not
going
towards
the
use
development,
which
is
true,
they
have
their
own
development
fund
set
aside,
but
what's
interesting
about
it
and
what
kind
of
proved
a
lot
of
these
haters
wrong
was
block
one
coming
out
and
announcing
that
they're
taking
a
billion
dollars
and
dedicating
it
in
a
basically
a
venture
capital
fund
towards
funding
decentralized
application.
I
am
so.
A
Excited
for
this
yeah
in
January
they,
they
announced
their
first
VC
partner
yeah.
So,
with
this
billion
dollars,
Brendan
bloomer
their
CEO,
explained
to
everyone
who's
enough,
South
Korea
meetup.
It
was
announced
that
the
1
billion
dollars
you
mentioned
there
they're
gonna,
match
these
they're
gonna
take
venture
capital
companies
in
the
blockchain
space,
who
are
already
familiar
with
all
of
the
major
projects
coming
up
that
we
haven't
even
heard
about
yet
yeah
and
they're
gonna
tell
them
pretty
much.
Instead
of
doing
an
IC
o----.
A
A
They're
gonna
go
with
yose,
because
what
they're
gonna
do
is
they're
going
to
take
these
VC
funds,
which
is
going
to
be
a
mix
of
from
the
VC
itself
and
also
the
money
that
block
one
is
donating
to
the
development
community
and
they're
gonna
build
their
platform,
and
the
first
example
of
this
is
a
company
code.
Ever
a
pedia
Rob's,
a
huge
fan
of
rivers.
A
B
Definitely
so
a
burpee
is
basically
a
decentralized
Wikipedia,
so
there
are
a
lot
of
problems
with
Wikipedia,
mainly
censorship,
the
notability
rule,
where
99
and
100
pages
are
actually
deleted
from
Wikipedia
that
are
submitted
because
they're,
not
famous
enough
or
they're,
not
notable
enough.
So
every
pedia
solves
a
lot
of
that
and
also
adds
an
incentive
layer
into
Wikipedia.
So
you
can
get
paid
for
submitting
accurate
content
for
citing
sources
for
approving
other
accurate
content
and
we're
gonna
actually
do
a
deep
dive
on
every
pedia
in
one
of
our
future.
B
A
Every
PD
it
was
just
the
first
of
many
many
projects,
I
think
Brooke
Pierce
mentioned
that
there
may
be
up
to
a
thousand
apps
that
come
out
this
year,
some
of
them
at
the
start
of
the
blockchain
in
June.
But
lately
you
said,
Everett
PD
is
just
the
first
of
many.
Every
week
we
planned
the
spotlight,
adapt
or
a
VC
fund,
the
the
the
VC
fund
that
actually
was
first
announced
as
a
partner
of
block
one
was
galaxy.
A
B
A
basically
through
Eric,
Schmidt's,
venture
capital
fund,
Eric
Schmidt,
the
founder
of
Google,
is
tied
to
it
in
some
way,
he's
put
up
some
money
for
it,
I
believe
indirectly,
but
basically
they
came
out
and
contribute
I
think
it
was
what
70
million
dollar
or
something
like
that,
something
less
than
100
million
dollars.
This
specific
amount
I
forget,
but
then
the
second
one
to
your
point,
what
I
was
like:
bingo
Congrats
galaxy.
A
B
A
What
he
sees
an
EOS
is
the
is
going
to
be
the
gen3
blockchain
that
can
handle
enterprise
applications
yeah.
This
is
going
to
be
potentially
the
blockchain
project
that
goes
mainstream
and
that
that's
what
has
me
the
most
excited,
because
there's
no
other
project
in
this
space
and
we
look
at
hundreds,
thousands
of
icos
lot
last
year,
how
many
ICS
do
we
do?
Eighteen,
eighteen
hundred
and
forty-eight
ICS.
B
A
Yeah,
so
we
look
at
a
lot
of
ICS
and
this
one
has
me
the
most
excited
I've
Bob,
the
most
excited
I
can't
wait
for
June.
The
other
thing
that's
me
excited
buddy
is:
is
the
the
transparency
and
the
community
behind
it?
So
there
there's
a
group
of
people
who
run
a
project
or
community-based
website
called
es,
go
and
it's
really
interesting.
It's
AOS
go
do
and
what
they
do
is
I
guess
the
BACtrack
es
has
about
six
or
seven
telegram
channels
with
all
different
topics.
A
So
there's
a
block
producers
channel,
there's
a
developer's
channels,
there's
a
price
discussion
channel
and
then
there's
the
general
Channel
and
it's
just
so
much
like
a
regular
person
with
a
regular
III.
This
is
my
job
working
in
this
space
and
I
can't
keep
up
with
all
the
communication.
So
what
es
go
does
is
they
have?
A
They
have
a
team
of
community
members
who
screenshot
o
them
all
of
the
most
important
communications
every
single
day
and
put
out
a
blog
post
the
next
morning
that
recaps
it
and
it's
the
coolest
thing,
because
you
know
everything
that's
going
on
in
the
community
and
the
development.
What's
going
on
every
single
day
to
compare
there's
a
lot
of
projects
that
might
put
out
a
monthly
blog
post
that
tells
you
what's
going
on
in
the
project
yeah.
B
And
that's
cool
to
see
dan
Larimer,
the
the
brains
behind
all
of
this
really
jump
into
those
discussions,
especially
I,
think
Thursday.
So
it
was
Thursday
March
22nd
he
came
in.
Did
a
ton
of
q
and
a's
answered
bunch
people's
questions?
It's
been
really
awesome
to
see
him
just
engage
directly
with
the
community.
I've
even
had
him
respond
to
one
of
my
questions,
which
is
pretty
exciting.
B
B
B
Is
a
good
place
to
stop
what
we're
gonna
do?
Like
call
mention,
you
know
in
future
episodes
we're
gonna
be
talking
about
gaps.
We
may
do
in
a
very
pedia
Highland
episode,
I
think
next
week
we
may
you
know,
do
a
deep
dive
on
all
these
different
VCS
that
have
announced
and
kind
of
talk
in
more
detail
about
how
that
works
and
how
the
airdrops
work
around
that,
but
stay
tuned.
It's
gonna
be
a
weekly
show
and
we're
excited
to
share
more
about
us
with
you.
A
All
very
excited
guys,
if
you
want
to
have
if
you
want
to
introduce
any
topics
you
want
us
to
talk
about.
Please
tweet
us
out
at
ICO
alerts
that
pretty
much
wraps
up
Episode
one
of
everything
AOS.
This
is
a
brief
introduction
for
all
of
you
guys
into
the
project,
but
we're
really
excited
to
discuss
next
week,
we're
gonna
actually
spotlight
all
of
the
VC
funds
that
have
been
announced
so
far.