►
From YouTube: FVM and Where We Go From Here - Juan Benet
Description
"Countdown to FVM was a one-day event leading up to the launch of Filecoin’s Virtual Machine on mainnet (which happened March 14th, 2023).
This jam-packed event featured exclusive FVM content, builders showcase, and so much more.
Tune in to learn about the possibilities unlocked by FVM and hear from the pioneers building on FVM!
Follow us for updates here: https://fvm.filecoin.io/"
A
I
want
to
talk
about
a
bunch
of
opportunities
for
Builders
and
different
kinds
of
applications
that
are
possible
and
I
want
to
also
give
a
quick
snapshot
at
what
building
startups
in
this
space
looks
like
and
how
this
community
has
been
has
formed
one
of
the
most
helpful
environments
for
building
new
things,
so
we're
at
the
last
stages
of
what
is
has
been
a
very
long
road.
A
We
started
designing
the
beginnings
of
the
fem
in
late
21,
early
22,
even
building
on
ideas
that
have
been
around
for
over
four
or
five
years,
so
the
fem
team
building
this
from
from
scratch,
has
been
hard
at
work
for
close
to
two
years
now,
and
this
major
Milestone
is
going
to
be
this
huge
moment
for
the
entire
network
and
for
all
of
the
builders
in
the
in
the
whole
ecosystem.
A
Now
the
the
fevm
going
live
on
mainnet
is
going
to
be
the
opening
of
the
floodgates
for
all
kinds
of
applications
on
the
ecosystem.
You're.
Finally,
going
to
be
able
to
imbue
your
data
with
programmability
in
a
way
that
so
far
has
not
been
possible
across
across
web3.
So
that's
going
to
be
super
exciting,
a
bunch
of
really
neat
cool
use.
Cases
are
going
to
emerge,
there's
some
Milestones
beyond
that,
so
things
like
muscle,
2.2,
which
is
brings
wasm
smart
contracts
and
so
on
and
then
later
some
some
other
improvements.
A
So
there's
still,
you
know
some
long
road
ahead,
but
this
is
going
to
be
like
the
major
big
milestone
that
the
culmination
of
you
know
two
years
of
work
for
a
ton
of
people,
so
I
think
a
lot
of
people
have
spoken
about
all
the
different
kinds
of
things
that
fem
unlocks
I
want
to
highlight
a
few
here.
So
things
like
data
dials,
we've
been
talking
a
lot
about
them
and
they've
been
kind
of
difficult
to
build
between
other
chains
and
filecoin.
I.
A
Think
one
of
the
key
components
that
was
missing
is
the
ability
to
couple
the
Dow
activity
with
the
smart
contracts
themselves,
storing
the
data
or
potentially
Computing
over
the
data,
so
I
think
those
we're
likely
going
to
start
seeing
those
these
data
that
was
emerging,
there's
a
whole
range
of
I
kind
of
gave
the
stock
at
Phil
Lisbon.
Talking
about
a
request
for
startups.
Go
watch
that
because
there's
a
ton
of
different
ideas
here
for
Builders
I'm,
especially
Keen,
to
see
different
kind
of
social
applications
now
being
possible.
A
So
far,
social
has
not
really
taken
off
in
web
3
because
it's
extremely
difficult
to
deal
with
the
scale
and
volume
of
data
and
computation
that
you
need
to
actually
power
a
social
application.
So
now,
with
this,
we're
starting
to
get
to
have
all
of
The
Primitives
that
you
need
to
build
these
kinds
of
social
applications,
not
all
of
them.
Yet
I
think
some
of
the
computer
data
networks
still
have
to
land
to
be
able
to
do
some
some
of
the
things.
A
A
A
We
gotta
fix
that
I
I,
think
it
gives
are
going
to
be
a
huge,
a
huge
part
of
this
I,
because
so
far,
games
in
other
blockchains
haven't
been
able
to
deal
with
putting
all
of
the
game
assets
themselves
into
the
chain
itself
or
being
able
to
start
using
the
outputs
of
smart
contracts
in
the
game,
logic
and
altering
entire
worlds,
and
so
on.
So
those
kinds
of
things
will
suddenly
become
possible.
That'll
be
pretty
pretty
interesting.
A
A
I
wanted
to
speak
a
little
bit
about
how
the
fem
fits
into
the
broader
filecoin
Vision,
so
the
mission
of
awkwardness
to
build
a
decentralized,
efficient
and
robust
foundation
for
humanities
information
that
requires
bringing
programmability
to
the
data.
So
the
fem
is
like
the
linchping
pin
piece
that
connects
the
adding
of
data
and
preservation
of
the
data
to
making
it
useful
for
the
world.
A
So
in
addition
to
just
being
able
to
Archive
it
and
store
it
or
serve
it,
you
want
to
be
able
to
do
something
useful
with
that
data,
and
the
fem
is
the
first
part
of
that
picture.
So
we've
talked
about
the
filecoin
master
plan
in
terms
of
these
Three
Steps
step.
One
is
to
build
the
world's
largest
decentralized
source.
Network
we've
done
that,
so
you
know
huge,
actually
random
Applause
for
a
lot
of
people
that
have
worked
so
hard
for
a
long
time
to
make
this
happen
and
step.
A
Two
we're
doing
we're,
making
great
progress
on
step.
Two
we've
onboarded
I
think
have
we
broken
200
petabytes
of
and
he's
600
petabytes
of
it
yeah
yeah.
It
was
looking
at
some
old,
slides
and
I
yeah
600
was
amazing.
That's
huge!
That's
enormous!
We're
almost
gonna
hit
a
Next
Bite.
When
are
we
going
to
hit
a
Next
Bite,
probably
by
June
yeah?
A
You
heard
it
here.
That's
an
enormous
amount
of
data
just
to
put
that
into
context.
A
We've
done
this
estimations
of
like
the
scale
of
certain
data
sets,
and
so
things
like
YouTube,
for
example,
are
in
like
the
single
exabytes,
like
maybe
five,
maybe
seven
exabytes
of
content,
and
so
that
that
is
a
testament
to
the
scale
that
you
can
achieve
with
Falcon,
which
is
way
way
outside
the
rest
of
web
3
right.
So
most
of
the
data
in
web3
outside
of
Falcon
is
something
like
10,
petabytes
or
less.
So
that's
kind
of
the
you
know
the
massive
scale
difference.
A
So,
let's
go
back
to
compute.
The
fem
is
what
is
going
to
enable
all
of
this
computation
to
to
arrive
so
there's.
Also,
this
great
diagram
from
Raul
who's
been
shaping
the
vision
for
fem
as
the
kind
of
computation
over
State.
That's
required
to
be
able
to
build
other
kinds
of
computation
on
top.
So
you
first
deploy
the
fem
to
enable
the
smart
contracts
to
work,
and
then,
on
top
of
that,
you
can
then
build
all
kinds
of
other
computation
systems.
A
So
think
of
you
know,
compute
over
data
projects
like
bacalao
and
other
kinds
of
things
where
you
can
now
run
large-scale
Computing
pipelines
on
top
of
your
data.
A
So
we
first
launched
the
fem
and
that's
kind
of
the
first
piece
of
bringing
computation
and
that
seeds
the
ground
for
all
these
other
larger
scale,
compute
compute
pieces,
so
I
think
one
of
the
things
that
everybody
here
should
be
paying
attention
to
is
how
this
space
is
going
to
emerge
because
we're
going
to
start
to
see
lots
of
different
kinds
of
company
rotational
oriented
l2s
up
here
on
top
of
Falcon.
A
So
so
things
like
things
that
kind
of
map
into
this
large
space
of
of
different
kinds
of
computational
networks
that
achieve
verifiability
and
privacy
in
different
ways
will
likely
fit
as
different
kinds
of
l2s.
So
there's
going
to
be
a
great
opportunity,
as
soon
as
that,
VM
lands
for
people
to
create
those
l2s
to
to
bring
that
kind
of
computation
into
into
the
space
Not
Just
operating
over
smart
contract
data,
which
is
very
small
but
now
operating
over
large
scale.
Large
data
sets
and
large
user
data.
A
So
you
know
today
most
of
the
web
3
space
when
it
we're
thinking
about
zero
knowledge,
proofs
and
so
on.
We
tend
to
think
about
it
in
terms
of
smart
contracts
and
doing
very
verifying
smart
contracts.
We're
not
yet
talking
about
verifying
the
activity
directly
on,
say
a
social
network
or
verifying
the
activity
on
a
say.
Look
at
like
a
housing
Marketplace
to
check
that,
like
inspections
actually
happened,
or
the
data
collected
about
a
specific
from
a
meter
is
correct
and
so
on.
A
So
all
of
that
is
going
to
be
be
made
possible
by
these
computational
l2s
and
there's
not
that
many
people
building
these.
Yet
so,
there's
there's
a
huge
open
field
here
for
people
seeking
to
to
build
these.
These
kinds
of
things
one
other
thing
worth
highlighting
is
that
filecoin
has
always
been
highly
collaborative
with
many
other
ecosystems,
and
we
try
to
build
Bridges
to
many
other
chains
and
so
think
of
being
able
to
mix
now
with
the
fbm,
it's
going
to
make
it
dramatically
easier
to
interconnect,
5.
A
storage
to
these
other
chains.
So
this
also
creates
opportunities
for
launching
kind
of
Falcon
specific
smart
contracts
in
all
of
these
other
networks
connect
making
it
so
that
you
can
call
out
Perpetual
storage
on
filecoin
from
those
networks.
So
you
can
imagine
calling
contracts
from
any
one
of
these
networks
straight
in
writing
through
to
filecoin
and
so
the
the
fem
with
the
missing
piece.
A
Now
that
we
have
that
we're
going
to
be
able
to
do
this,
and
so
using
all
of
these
things
we
can
finally
get
to
large-scale
web3
Applications,
the
entire
web
3
space
is,
is
not
yet
able
to
produce
something
like
YouTube,
something
like
Tick
Tock,
something
like
Instagram
and
Twitter
and
so
on,
and
this
is
like
the
large,
a
very
large
step
towards
that.
Once
we
do
this
and
we
build
a
computational
networks,
then
at
that
point
we'll
be
ready
for
those
kinds
of
applications.
A
So
this
this
is
the
next
step
and
then,
after
that,
the
the
computational
networks
cool.
So
that's
that's
the
how
the
fem
fits
in
the
Falcon
master
plan.
The
last
thing
I
wanted
to
talk
about
is
just
how
to
start
startups
in
this
ecosystems.
You
heard
a
lot
from
many
Builders
earlier,
but
I
just
wanted
to
kind
of
break
down
the
space
into
a
set
of
steps.
A
I
gave
a
version
of
the
stock
at
eth
India,
and
it
was
one
of
the
things
that
helped
a
number
of
people
to
get
started
in
their
Journey,
so
I
figured
I
would
repeat
it
here.
So,
first
off
you
know,
you
have
to
start
by
learning
a
ton
about
the
world.
This
means.
Usually
this
starts
with
people,
either
in
in
other
jobs
or
in
school,
and
so
on,
learning
a
ton
about
technology
and
development
and
products
and
so
on.
A
Now
after
that
moment,
if
you
find
one
of
these,
if
you
go
through
these
hackathons
and
you
find
something
that
maybe
has
some
legs
and
you'll
get
that
as
feedback
from
from
other
people
in
the
hackathon,
OR,
judges
and
so
on,
you
can
then
choose
to
pursue
that
and
start
working
on
it
more
and
you
get
into
this
moment
of
validation
like
you
want
to
validate
that
idea
and
see
if
it
is
actually
gonna
going
to
work
in
the
market,
and
that's
where
you
turn
your
hack
into
kind
of
a
minimum
product,
not
yet
a
minimum
viable
product.
A
You
can't
actually
like
necessarily
launch
that
into
the
world,
but
at
least
you
can
get
it
into
like
the
shape
of
what
could
potentially
be
a
product,
and
this
is
where
you
want
to
talk
to
and
and
potential
users
and
so
on,
to
really
assess
whether
the
thing
you're
building
is
going
to
solve
somebody's
problem
and
it's
going
to
create
a
viable,
a
viable
product,
a
viable
business.
A
A
This
is
a
great
space
for
accelerators,
so
this
is
where
accelerators
really
fit
in.
They
help
you
get
from,
like
you
know
the
early,
hacks
and
kind
of
the
early
validation
stages
into
starting
the
startup,
building
the
minimum
viable
product
and
starting
to
scale
it,
and
then
from
there
you
go
into
getting
traction
so
like
the
next
thing
that
you
need
to
really
focus
on
is
how
do
you
launch
your
thing
and
get
traction
as
relevant
to
your
products?
A
So
some
products,
you
can
kind
of
get
done
quickly,
build
them
and
then
start
building
a
network.
Other
products
take
a
lot
longer
to
build,
and
so
traction
might
be
might
be
different.
It
might
be
in
terms
of
like
letters
of
Interest
or
or
intents
to
use
a
thing
and
so
on.
So
it
kind
of
varies
by
product.
A
You
get
into
kind
of
like
the
seed
stage
of
startups
which
which,
which
is
kind
of
like,
where
you're
finding
your
strong
sense
of
product
Market
fit,
and
at
that
point
you
start
growing
the
business
you
know
in
in
ancient
times,
like
you
know,
15
years
ago,
precedent
seed
would
have
been
like
seed
and
series
a,
but
nowadays
because
all
of
the
scales
have
like
shifted
now
we
sort
of
like
call
them
this
way.
A
I
guess
you
know
in
even
more
engine
history
than
that,
like
20
25
years
ago,
seed
would
have
been
like
the
early
validation
part,
but
whatever
one
of
the
key
things,
though,
with
all
of
this,
is
that
our
community
has
built
a
super
successful
way
of
supporting
people
across
all
of
these
stages.
So
there's
programs
dedicated
to
support
people
going
through
each
one
of
these
stages
in
the
Journey
of
building
building
a
startup.
You
heard
about
them
from
the
panel
that
just
happened.
A
You
heard
a
lot
about
people
in
the
kind
of
startup
startup
stage
in
the
accelerators
area,
and
you
also
heard
from
many
of
the
founders
and
Builders
who
are
like
already
now
growing
growing
the
business.
So
I
wanted
to
take
a
moment
to
highlight
folks
like
who,
here
kind
of
like
started
a
business
or
started
a
product
started
a
company
in
this
community.
Can
you
erase
your
hand?
A
That's
awesome,
huge
congratulations
and
how
many
of
you
started
with
a
hackathon
in
this
in
this
community,
one
two,
three,
four:
five:
six:
seven,
eight,
nine
ten!
That's
awesome!
Yeah!
A
So
there's
a
huge
Testament
to
this
community
to
be
able
to
build
this
entire
structure
to
help
folks
I
wanted
to
just
invite
a
couple
people
to
just
come
up
for
a
moment
and
just
share
a
little
bit
about
their
stories
of
how
they
got
started
with
those
hackathons
I
usually
want
to
come
up
and
tell
us
a
little
bit.
B
So
my
journey
has
been:
we
participated
in
either
Global
hacker
first,
so
I
think
this
similar
structure
exact
this.
This
is
the
replica
which
we
had
created
where
it
was
East,
Global,
hack,
Ms,
2020
done
by
protocol
labs
and
ethereum
ethereum
in
general,
where
the
ideas
were
disabled
was
30
day
hackathon
and
what
we
are
building
essentially
at
1001
is
a
communication
toolkit
for
web
3..
B
When
we
saw
that
everybody
was
talking
about
decentralization
with
3.0,
but
all
their
meetings
are
happening
over
Zoom
Google
meet
or
Microsoft
teams,
and
that's
it
that
hey.
You
know
what,
if
we
are
talking
so
much
about
web
3.0,
why
not
build
a
platform
which
essentially
has
imbibes
that
kind
of
culture
into
it?
So
that's
how
we
build
Hotel
zero
one
in
those
30
days
of
hackathon,
suppose
that
hackathon
we
got
into
we
got
grants.
Basically,
in
hackathon
we
won
a
couple
of
prizes.
We
won
audio
track
from
PL.
B
That
was
one
of
our
that
led
us
to
bootstrap
our
team
build
a
team,
and
then
essentially
we
got
a
couple
of
more
grants
posts
that
we
got
into
techon
accelerator
and
also
into
longash
accelerator.
That
saw
it
all
the
Journey
of
how
to
build
the
product.
How
to
do
customer
interviews
that
started
off
the
pivots
happened,
so
the
HUD
will
start
off
as
a
web.
Three
like
we
wanted
to
use
the
infrastructures
ready
like
file
coin
for
recording
so
at
1001.
B
If
you
just
type
it
right
now,
you
can
just
do
all
the
things
you
can
do
on
Google
meets
Zoom.
You
can
use
your
guest
login
or
join
by
a
metamask
or
your
wallets
and
do
all
the
things
you
can
do
on
these
platforms.
But
your
recording
gets
stored
over
ipfs
on
the
hot
layer
and
files
are
on
the
code
layer.
B
You
can
use,
live
viewer
for
doing
rtmp
out
and
a
lot
of
other
things
like
nft
as
an
AR
filter
and
all
those
other
things
as
well,
and
that
that's
how
it
all
started
off
with
and
then
post
our
hackathon
journey.
We
actually
raised
our
first
fund.
We
raised
our
Angel
round,
I
think
which
one
also
mentioned
about.
That
was
the
get
traction
stage
we
raised
some
50k
from
couple
of
angels
and
in
whole,
this
process,
as
one
was
also
mentioning
about.
B
We
got
help
from
the
layer
of
from
each
Global
hack
FS,
where
we
got
like
help
from
protocol
labs
for
the
grants
to
how
to
the
office
hours,
which
was
really
really
important
for
us
to
the
stage
of
Grants
to
the
stage
of
accelerator
again,
where
we
got
brewed
completely
we're
fairly
raw
at
that
time.
In
the
last
two
years,
we
actually
matured
a
lot
in
that
in
that
format.
What
was
that
you?
B
B
In
all
the
my
rate
of
departments,
you
can
think
of
is
supremely
underrated,
I
recently
tweeted
about
that
as
well,
and
that's
how
we
actually
raised
so
I
just
wanted
to
like
give
a
big
round
of
applause
to
the
protocol
is
great
the
kind
of
help
we
got
we
wouldn't
have
been
here
if
protocol
I
was
suddenly
there.
Now
we
are
at
a
stage
of
where
we
raise
our
precede
round
our
seat
round,
and
now
we
are
a
team
of
22
people
and
building
strong.
B
We
build
the
the
product
layer,
the
infrastructure
layer
and
also
the
protocol
layer
now
so
yeah
thanks
to
the
team
and
thanks
for
having
me
yeah.
C
Thanks
for
the
invite,
thanks
for
the
invite
yeah
a
little
bit
of
a
different
story,
but
that's
a
really
inspiring
one
generally
I
think
this
was
in
2018
or
2017.
I
was
working
at
consensus
and
I
learned
of
ipfs
and
filecoin
and
a
few
months
later
quit
to
start
an
ipfs
Dev
shop,
and
you
know
about
six
or
eight
months
into
doing
that.
Protocol
Labs
hit
me
up
and
they
said
hey
do
you
want
to
build
the
wallet
and
I
was
like
yeah
and
then
I
was
like?
C
Do
you
want
to
run
some
nodes
and
yeah
I
was
like?
Do
you
want
to
build
the
multi-sig
and
help
us
with
this
app
yeah
and
like
this?
Was
the
birth
of
glyph
and
basically
like
we
had
so
much
support
from
the
protocol,
labs
and
filecoin
Foundation
teams?
We
would
not
be
in
the
business
that
we
are
if
we
didn't
have
that
support,
but
it
looks
really
similar
to
this.
C
Like
I
learned
a
lot
about
the
world
at
consensus,
I
experimented
with
ideas
when
I
was
you
know,
running
the
dev
shop.
C
I
worked
with
a
lot
of
really
like
moonshot
web3
protocols
that
didn't
make
it
until
eventually,
we
got
hit
up
about
grants
to
build
the
wallet
and
and
the
multi-sig-
and
you
know
now,
like
we've
had
time
and
and
support
from
protocol
labs,
to
focus
on
the
product
that
we
feel
really
strongly
convicted
about,
which
is,
you
know,
staking
infrastructure,
and
so
now
we've
kind
of
made
it
to
the
I.
C
Don't
know
if
we're
in
the
grow
the
business
stage
yet
but
like
I,
feel
like
we're
right
there
we're
right
there
we're
right
there
yeah
we're
starting
to
think
about
marketing.
So
you
know
it's
all
fun,
but
thank
you
so
much
and
yeah
I
welcome
you
to
like
just
get
involved,
there's
so
much
opportunity.
This
ecosystem
is
really
mature,
but
it's
also.
It
needs
a
lot
of
help
and
and
we
need
more
smart
bright
people
to
to
contribute
so
yeah
come
join.
A
Cool
so
I
wanted
to
end
by
flashing
some
of
these
again,
like
there's
a
ton
of
really
interesting
things
to
build,
enabled
by
fem
and
just
give
a
huge
I
want
to
end
with,
like
a
huge
round
of
applause
for
all
of
the
people
involved
in
making
fvm
a
reality,
because
this
has
been
a
two-year-ish
journey.
So
thank
you
so
much
to
everybody.
Working
on
FM.