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From YouTube: Glif Wallet and Ledger
Description
This wallet showcase introduces the Glif wallet and ledger app created by the folks at Infinite Scroll. To learn more, visit https://www.glif.io/
Join us for Filecoin Liftoff Week, an action-packed series of talks, workshops, and panels curated by the web3 community to celebrate the Filecoin mainnet launch and chart the network’s future. https://liftoff.filecoin.io/
Events take place all week, October 19-23, 2020. #FilecoinLiftoff
For more information on Filecoin
- visit the project website: https://filecoin.io/
- or follow Filecoin on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Filecoin
Get Filecoin community news and announcements in your inbox, monthly: http://eepurl.com/gbfn1n
A
Yet
the
past,
like
eight
nine
months,
I've
been
working
on
this
sort
of
umbrella
brand
called
glyph,
which
includes
a
few
different
things.
So,
most
importantly,
for
today
is
the
wallet
the
vault
is,
is
basically
like
a
limited
version
of
what
kubo
was
just
showing
you.
It's
it's
a
ui
for
a
filecoin
multisig.
A
A
We
have
this
filecoin
verification
service,
which
is
going
to
be
coming
out
soon,
and
it
basically
allows
you
to
authenticate
with
github
to
prove
your
identity
and
get
a
verified
data
allowance,
which
means
essentially
that
your
data
is
marked
as
real
on
the
file
coin
network
and
and
hopefully
miners
should
be
rewarded
for
storing
real
data,
so
you
might
get
cheaper
service,
cheaper
storage
or
better
service
and
the
nodes.
A
The
protofire
team
is
now
managing
these,
but
we
helped
at
the
beginning,
just
spin
up
all
the
sort
of
kubernetes
stuff
but
yeah,
let's
start
with
the
wallet.
So
this
is
basically
what
you
see
when
you,
when
you
go
to
wallet.glyph.io,
there's,
there's
different
options
here.
So,
if
you're,
just
if
you
just
want
to
get
started
and
start
sending
around
little
bits
of
file
coin
or
just
generate
an
address
for
whatever
reason
you
can
use
these
test
accounts,
this
would
be.
A
You
know
like
generating
that
24-word
seed
phrase
which
you
can
use
in
other
wallets
or
here
again
by
importing
it,
if
you,
if
you're,
actually
planning
on
using
filecoin
to
store
or
using
glyph
to
store
a
good
amount
of
file
coin
in
a
wallet.
I
would
definitely
recommend,
like
cuba
was
saying
to
use
a
ledger.
Hardware
wallets
are
much
safer
than
anything
happening
in
the
browser.
A
So
definitely
keep
that
in
mind
as
you
use
this
glyph
wallet
so
anyways
we
could
step
inside.
I
have
so
right
now.
I
have
my
ledger
on
me.
I
have
the
filecoin
app
open
here,
it's
kind
of
hard
to
see,
but
the
filecoin
app
is
available
on
ledger
live
and
there
are
some
blog
posts
that
I
can
link
to
after
this
talk
to
explain
how
to
actually
get
it.
A
So
here
I'm
just
gonna
go
into
the
wallet
and
I'm
looking
up
the
transaction
history,
and
here
yeah
this
is
account
an
account.
I
use
clearly
a
lot
for
testing
and
yeah.
This
is
basically
like
the
gist
of
of
the
wallet.
It
doesn't
do
too
much.
The
important
things
to
note
are
you
can
send
filecoin
by
clicking
this
button
and
I'll
I'll
go
through
that
in
just
a
moment.
A
A
So
if
I
click
this
button,
I
see
on
my
ledger
device
the
address
and
that's
going
to
be
impossible
for
you
to
read,
but
that
matches
up
with
this
and
the
reason
why
that's
important
is
because
you
want
to
make
sure
that
this,
like
what
you're
seeing
on
the
screen
matches
what's
on
the
device,
and
you
don't
have
any
chrome,
extensions
or
other
sort
of
things
interfering
with
what
you
see
on
this
on
the
screen.
A
A
So
this
one
I'm
going
to
copy
this
address
because
we'll
send
it
some
file
coin
and
go
back
up
to
maybe
this
address
and
and
send
some
file.
So
I'm
going
to
paste
in
my
other
ledger
address,
maybe
give
it
a
tenth
of
a
or
a
hundredth
of
a
coin,
and
here
this
transaction
fee
is
is
paid
in
autofile.
This
is
pretty
small,
so
I'm
just
gonna.
Let
that
be
the
idea
here
with
transaction
fees
in
case
this
is
something
that's
unfamiliar
in
the
blockchain
space,
but
this
works
a
lot.
A
Similarly
to
other
blockchain
networks.
Is
that
sort
of
the
more
you
pay,
the
faster
your
transaction
will
get
confirmed
in
the
network.
That
is
maybe
a
bit
of
an
oversimplification,
but
generally
that
that's
the
rule
to
follow.
A
I'm
I'm
not
going
to
show
you
because
it's
really
small,
but
you
see
a
bunch
of
the
parameters
of
that
message
on
my
device,
so
I
can
click
through
and
just
make
sure
again
that
it
matches
like
the
value
that
I'm
sending
and
the
recipient
address
and
stuff
like
that.
A
So
now,
I've
just
signed
the
message
on
my
ledger
and
now
that
transaction
is
confirming
and
I
can
go
in
there
and
you
know
I
can.
I
can
see
if
it's
on
filefox,
but
I
doubt
it
will
be
there
quite
yet
yeah,
so
that
transaction
is
not
found
and
as
we
wait,
I
can
switch
back
to
the
address
that
should
receive
the
file
and
hopefully
we'll
see
the
balance
just
pop
up
by,
however
much
I
sent,
which
was
a
hundredth
of
a
file.
A
So
this
should
take
a
couple
seconds.
I
guess
while
I,
while
I
do
this,
I
can
show
you
just
some
of
the
modules
that
we
made.
Let's
see,
I
think
it's
github.com.
A
So
these
are
the
packages
that
we
use
in
a
number
of
the
file
coin
or
in
a
number
of
the
glyphs
that
we
make,
and
so
the
the
ones
that
I
think
are
the
most
helpful
file
coin
number
is
surprisingly
helpful
for
basically
choosing
between
different
types
of
denominations,
so
it
will
just
run
the
conversions
for
you,
the
filecoin
wallet
provider.
A
This
is
a.
This
is
a
if
you
wanted
to
make
your
own
wallet.
This
has
some
handy
methods
associated
with
it.
That
will
basically
allow
you
to
do
things
like
check
the
balance
of
an
account
check.
You
know
how
much
a
transaction
cost
and
stuff
like
that.
The
rpc
client
is
a
package
that
allows
us
to
communicate
with
a
lotus,
node
and
yeah.
So
I
I
mean
this
is
a
good
place
to
look
to.
If
you
ever
wanted
to
build
your
own
glyph
all
right.
A
Let's
see
if
we
go
back
here
there
we
go
so
this
has
updated,
that's
a
good
sign,
and
if
I
refresh
the
transaction
history,
maybe
it
hasn't
appeared
on
filefox
yet,
but
hopefully
or
maybe
it
did,
but
that's
maybe
a
small
bug
anyways.
That
is
generally
how
the
wallet
is
working.
I
have
a
couple
minutes
left.
A
I
want
to
show
you
just
the
vault,
which
is
what
we,
what
we
use
to
basically
interact
with,
with
a
multi-sig
and
and
right
now
the
the
vault
has
some
limited
functionality,
so
the
first
limitation
is
that
it
only
works
with
single
sign
or
multi-sigs.
It's
actually
quite
like
difficult
to
show
in
the
ui,
like
hey,
there's
a
number
of
proposed
transactions
and
allow
people
to
cancel
them
or
reject
them
and
and
stuff
of
that
nature.
A
So
the
complexity
when
you
have
many
signers
really
makes
the
complexity
increases
so
right
now
I
see
all
of
my
ledger
addresses
on
the
screen
again
and
I
need
to
choose
the
one
that's
going
to
be
the
signer
of
whatever
multi-sig
I
want
to
interact
with,
so
I
know
that
this
account
has
some
multi-sigs.
A
I
know
my
multi-sig
address,
which
I've
gotten
from
creating
a
multi-sig
elsewhere.
Maybe
in
the
future,
we
might
allow
you
to
create
multi-sigs
from
the
glyph
wallet,
but
now
I
can
step
into
the
multi-sig
and
see
a
couple
things
one.
I
see
that
multisig
actor
address
that
I
just
entered
on
the
previous
screen,
and
this
is
you
could,
if
you're
familiar
with
like
ethereum
development.
This
is
a
lot
like
the
smart
contract
address
of
your
multisig
smart
contract
wallet.
A
It's
pretty
analogous,
and
this
is
the
the
ledger
address.
That's
the
single
signer
of
this
multisig
wallet,
and
so
those
two
are
kind
of
linked
together.
A
Right
now
I
can
see
the
available
balance
and
the
vesting
balance
and,
and
so
the
filecoin
multisigs
allow
you
to
basically
put
some
funds
into
the
multisig
and
linearly
allow
those
funds
to
be
available
for
withdrawal
over
time
so
as
more
blocks
get
added
to
the
chain,
you're
able
to
take
out
more
file
coin
from
your
multi-sig,
and
so
since
this
multi-sig
has
no
vesting
or
it's
been
a
while.
A
Maybe
it's
already
fully
vested
here
is
this
is
yeah
now
I
can
withdraw
all
of
the
file
coin
from
this
multisig,
and
so
it
looks
a
lot
very
similar
right.
I
can
choose
a
recipient
of
the
withdrawal
and
I
can
I
can
take
out
filecoin.
I
think
just
so.
I
leave
some
time
for
questions.
I
probably
won't
go
through
that
whole
process
again,
but
yeah.
I
want
to
see
if
anyone
wants
to
see
something
that
I
didn't
show
or
just
general
file.
B
Great,
thank
you
very
much.
Maybe
one
question
might
be:
is
there
a
multi-sig
support
for
with
multiple
assigners
yet
or
is
that
coming
in
the
future.
A
Yeah,
I
think
that's
something
that
we'd
like
to
support
in
the
future
right
now
that
in
in
glyph,
that's
not
supported.
So
if
I
try
and
if
I
try
and
type
in
a
multi-sig
actor
that
has
more
than
one
required
signature,
it
will
tell
me
hey
sorry,
you
know
we
don't
support
that.
Yet.
B
Yeah,
it
makes
sense
what
other
exciting
features
are
you
thinking
about
now
or
kind
of?
What's
what's
next
on
the
head
for
for
the
set
of
wallets.
A
Yeah,
so
that's
that's
an
open
question
and
if
people
have
opinions
on
this
or
are
people
strongly
want
a
feature
implemented?
That
would
be
really
helpful.
I'd
love
to
hear
from
you
and
and
hear
what
that
is,
so
we're
still
kind
of
temperature
checking
what
people
want
and
need
out
of
this
stuff.
A
A
Maybe
like
a
sign
in
with
email,
I
mean,
and
a
step
above
that
something
that
we've
been
starting
to
think
about
is
essentially
mimicking
a
multi-sig
wallet
and
file
coin
with
people's
social
profiles,
so
that
I
could
safely
put
my
funds
into
a
multi-sig
and
in
order
to
withdraw
them,
I
need
to
tweet
something
click,
a
link
in
an
email
and
authenticate
with
github,
and
I
and
we
can
sort
of
use
those
social
profiles
as
proxies
for
signatures,
so
that
you
know
non-technical
people
can
safely
use
filecoin
with
a
multi-sig
and
and
do
so
in
a
way
that
they're
familiar
more
familiar
with
yeah
makes.
B
Perfect
sense,
maybe
and
question
I
don't
know
if
you
covered
this:
when
would
people
empty
that
slider
between
t
addresses
and
app
addresses?
When
might
people
want
to
choose
that.
A
Oh
yeah,
that's
that's
a
really
good
question,
so
the
the
file
coin
network
has
sort
of
transitioned
from
what
what
seemed
like
a
test
net
into
mainnet
and
sort
of
when,
when
the
test
net
started,
we
had
everyone
using
t
addresses
and
when
mainnet
launches
we
switched
everyone
to
use
f
addresses
really
like
these
are.
I
would
I
would
strongly
recommend
always
using
f
addresses
unless
you
have
some
file
coin
on.
A
A
t
address
that
you
used
before
mainnet
launched
using
an
f
address,
will
allow
your
your
wallets
to
be
compatible
with
other
wallets
in
different
networks.
It's
sort
of
up
to
spec,
where
the
t
addresses
are
are
more
of
like
a
in
in
glyph
wallet,
represent
more
of
like
a
test
network
kind
of
wallet
it.
It
is
a
bit
of
a
different.
It's
it's
a
little
hard
for
me
to
explain
in
just
a
minute,
but
I
would
short
answer
is
use
f,
addresses.
B
Yeah
sounds
great
and
are
the
is
there
anything
else
you
want
to
talk
about
or
mention
to
the
community
either
future
projects
ahead.
A
A
Usually
yeah
yeah.
Well,
so
a
brief
note
on
on
infinite
scroll,
we
used
to
be
open,
work
labs.
We
added
a
couple
other
team
members
and
we
we've
started
a
rebrand
and
don't
be
fooled
by
the
name.
We're
not
proponents
of
infinite
scroll.
Our
kind
of
slogan
is,
you
must
wear
the
skin
of
the
thing
you
wish
to
slay.
A
So
with
that
being
said,
something
that
we're
coming
out
with
in
the
next
month
or
two
we're
trying
to
make
the
easiest
fastest
and
simplest
way
to
build
peer-to-peer
apps
where
the
users
of
those
apps
own
and
control
their
own
data,
and
that's
built
on
ceramic
and
textile
and
a
lot
of
the
existing
tools
in
the
space,
but
doing
so
in
a
way
that
abstracts
a
lot
of
the
complexity
both
for
the
users
and
for
the
developers
and
so
hopefully,
even
a
junior
developer,
with
no
knowledge
of
cryptography
or
blockchains
or
the
d-web
will
really
quickly
be
able
to
start
building
apps
where
they,
where
their
users
are
in
control
of
their
data.