►
From YouTube: Space Race 2: Slingshot Kickoff Event
Description
Join us for the SR2 Slingshot Kickoff!
SR2 Slingshot is a community competition for storage clients and developers that rewards the storage of real, valuable, and usable data onto the Filecoin Space Race network (testnet).
Learn more about the competition, including upcoming workshops and events, and check out the competition standings: https://slingshot.filecoin.io/
00:00 Introduction
06:40 Colin Evran
20:19 Pooja Shah
32:58 Andrew Hill
52:42 Juan Benet
A
Hey
everyone,
if
you're
just
joining
we'll
get
started
in
a
couple
of
minutes.
If
you
want
to
maybe
introduce
yourselves
in
the
chat,
maybe
with
your
name
and
where
you're
from
that
would
be
awesome,
we'd
love
to
know
who's
who's
joining
for
today's.
A
A
A
Very
excited
to
have
you
here
also
in
case
this.
Your
default
setting
sends
all
messages
to
all
panelists.
You
can
change
that
to
all
panelists
and
attendees
to
make
sure
that
you're
sending
your
messages
to
everyone
who's
attending
today
and
if
you're,
just
joining,
welcome
again
really
excited
to
have
you
here
we'll
get
started
in
a
couple
of
minutes,
so
feel
free
to
introduce
yourself
in
the.
A
A
Alrighty,
well,
I
think
we
will
go
ahead
and
get
started
if
you
are
just
joining
feel
free
to
keep
introducing
yourselves
in
the
chat.
I'm
really
excited
to
see
the
global
audience
so
far.
Let
me
start
sharing
my
screen,
so
hello,
everyone
and
welcome.
My
name
is
pooja
and
I'm
on
the
filecoin
team,
and
this
is
the
kickoff
event
for
the
space
race,
2,
slingshot
competition.
A
A
But
first
I
wanted
to
briefly
just
congratulate
everyone:
the
entire
file
queen
ecosystem
on
a
really
successful
space
race,
one,
as
most
of
you
probably
know
over
the
last
several
weeks,
we've
seen
the
file
queen
mining
community
brings
staggering
amounts
of
storage
capacity
to
the
filecoin
decentralized
storage
network.
A
Earlier
this
week
we
had
the
great
honor
of
celebrating
the
teams
in
space
in
the
space
race,
closing
ceremony
and
also
in
the
final
space
race
report,
so
we'll
send
out
the
links
to
these.
These
are
you
know,
on
on
youtube,
but
if
you
haven't
gotten
a
chance
to
page
in
just
the
awesome,
you
know
results
final
results
of
this
competition
and
how
it
all
ended
up
shaking
out.
I
highly
recommend
that
you
check
out
these
videos.
It's
pretty
exciting
to
see
so
space
race.
A
One
was
a
huge
result
for
the
entire
final
queen
ecosystem
and
we're
really
excited
to
keep
this
momentum
going
with
sr2
slingshot.
So
with
this
competition,
our
main
goal
is
to
work
with
the
filecoin
storage,
client
and
developer
communities
to
accomplish
a
few
main
goals.
A
As
you
probably
know,
the
way
this
competition
is
structured,
we're
really
excited
to
onboard
massive
amounts
of
real
valuable
and
usable
data
to
the
filecoin
network
and
to
make
it
usable
and
explorable
by
others
in
the
ecosystem,
as
well
as
part
of
this,
we're
looking
to
see
a
lot
of
really
creative
and
inspiring
applications
and
uis
that
are
built
on
top
of
the
data
that's
being
stored
to
the
network,
we'd
like
to
stress
test
file,
coin
data
storage
and
retrieval
flows.
And,
of
course,
all
participants
in
this
competition
will
be
earning
massive
file.
A
Coin
rewards
in
the
process
during
today's
kickoff
we'll
cover
a
number
of
topics,
we'll
start
with
a
bit
of
you
know
the
motivation
and
vision
behind
this
competition,
a
whirlwind
tour
through
the
final
queen
ecosystem.
We'll
talk
a
little
bit
about
what
to
expect
over
the
next
three
weeks.
A
A
So
with
that
before
we
dive
into
the
details
and
how
the
competition
will
be
structured,
I'd
like
to
introduce
colin
everin
who's,
the
ecosystem
lead
for
the
filecoin
project
to
provide
an
overview
of
the
motivation
and
vision
behind
sr2
slingshot,
and
why
it's
a
particularly
good
time
for
you
to
participate
in
the
competition
and
join
the
filecoin
ecosystem.
B
Sure
can
awesome
well
welcome
everyone.
My
name
is
colin,
but
my
friends
call
me
protocollin
and
I'm
the
ecosystem
lead
for
the
filecoin
project.
I
wanted
to
say
a
huge
huge
thank
you
to
everyone
joining
us
on
the
call
today
and
for
all
the
developers
and
entrepreneurs
participating
in
the
falcon
ecosystem.
B
B
Falcon's
mission
is
to
create
a
decentralized,
efficient
and
robust
foundation
for
humanities
information.
We
truly
believe
that
humanity's
most
valuable
resource
is
information
and
we
are
so
incredibly
passionate
about
storing
and
protecting
that
valuable
resource
in
an
efficiently
priced
and
distributed
way.
B
But
it's
really
important
to
note
that
filecoin
is
not
just
software.
Filecoin
is
a
rapidly
growing
ecosystem
of
thousands
of
talented
people
working
towards
the
common
goal,
and
that
momentum
is
like
a
high-speed
train
and
it
cannot
be
stopped
every
day,
more
talented
developers,
entrepreneurs,
partners,
community
members,
join
the
ecosystem
and
it's
the
strength
and
growth
of
that
ecosystem.
That
makes
filecoin
incredibly
unique.
It's
also
why
my
job
here
as
the
ecosystem
lead
in
the
filecoin
project
is
incredibly
easy.
B
B
Only
seven
percent
of
the
total
data
in
the
entire
world
that
gets
generated
every
day
actually
gets
stored.
Today.
Today,
we
generate
58
zettabytes
of
data
every
every
year
in
2020,
but
only
seven
percent
of
that
actually
gets
stored
and
you'll
notice
that,
while
that
58
zettabytes
of
data
that
gets
generated
every
day
is
growing
dramatically
to
over
175
zettabytes
in
2024,
the
ratio
of
the
amount
stored
is
actually
decreasing
down
to
five
percent
in
the
next
four
or
five
years.
B
As
the
data
we
produce
as
a
species
increases
at
a
rate
that
the
current
cloud
storage,
infra
infrastructure
cannot
support
and
the
reason
for
that
isn't
because
we
don't
want
to
store
that
data.
It's
not
because
it's
not
useful
or
important,
but
it's
because
it's
either
too
expensive
to
store
today
using
the
current
cloud
storage
providers
that
you
have
to
ask
a
company
or
a
central
authority
for
permission
to
store
it
and
oftentimes.
You
yourself
have
to
be
a
credible
organization
or
at
least
have
a
credit
card
or
third
storage
that
you
use
today.
B
Today,
first
I'll
highlight
some
of
the
incredible
organizations
that
are
already
investing
tremendously
in
the
filecoin
network
and
collaborating
on
the
test
net.
There
are
over
85
of
them
and
they're
super
super
interesting
and
then
second
I'll
highlight
the
more
than
250
teams
and
more
than
1
000
people
that
are
entering
the
filecoin
ecosystem
through
hackathons
and
accelerators
as
part
of
filecoin
ignite.
B
Now
I
I
would
be
behoove
to
go
into
some
of
the
falcon
ecosystem
without
first
mentioning
that
we
are
tremendous
benefactors
of
the
ipfs
ecosystem
and
the
growth
that
that
has
generated
over
the
last
five
years.
B
I
also
want
to
highlight
the
number
of
open
source
developers
that
are
contributing
to
the
protocol
into
our
various
github
getupricos
increases
every
day.
This
is
even
slightly
dated
right
now.
I
just
checked
in
and
we're
close
to,
1600
contributors
that
have
contributed
to
our
various
repos
stemming
from
these
two
is
an
incredible
landscape
of
applications,
clients,
token
infrastructure,
developer,
tooling,
protocol
implementations
and
ecosystem
partners
that
are
absolutely
exploding
over
time.
B
This
literally
increases
every
week
in
in
the
filecoin
project
today,
and
so
today,
I'll
just
highlight
just
a
few
subset
a
subset
of
these,
and
I
I
would
be
happy
to
go
into
detail
on
all
all
of
these
at
a
later
time.
B
So
we'll
start
with
applications
and
clients.
Fleek's
space
application
is
one
of
my
favorites.
It's
an
open
source,
private
storage
sharing
and
collaboration
platform
built
on
filecoin,
ipfs
and
powergate.
B
You
can
think
of
space
as
a
private
encrypted
peer-to-peer
version
of
dropbox
or
google
drive,
and
it's
beautifully
designed
next
vootify
and
biddle
labs
are
both
building
decentralized,
video
applications
on
top
of
live
peer
and
file
coin
technologies,
and
so
it's
going
to
be
a
huge
explosion
of
video
video
use.
Cases
for
the
filecoin
network,
openbazaar
and
haven
have
actually
already
integrated
filecoin
as
a
payments
mechanism
for
their
decentralized
marketplaces,
and
so
that's
just
yet.
B
Another
use
case
for
the
filecoin
token
and
filecoin
discover
is
actually
going
to
seed
the
network
with
really
valuable
and
culturally
important
data
sets
that
include
many
of
the
logos
that
you
see
here
from
genomics
data
to
blockchains
and
many
others,
and
finally,
slate
slate
is
just
an
absolutely
best-in-class
experience
for
uploading,
collecting
and
sharing
media,
it's
totally
open
source
and
provides
a
reference
implementation
for
how
you
can
use
filecoin.
So
if
you
haven't
tried
slate,
please
get
on
board
it's
an
incredible
incredible
product.
B
Next
I'll
touch
briefly
on
some
of
the
developer,
tooling.
That
folks
have
built
on
top
of
filecoin
as
well.
Powergate
is
one
of
the
most
popular
developer,
toolkits
that
allows
any
developer
to
deploy.
Multi-Tiered
storage
across
filecoin
and
ipfs
truffle,
recently
released,
preserve,
which
simplifies
the
process
of
preserving
long-lived
application.
Data
on
ipfs
and
filecoin
and
they're
actually
released
the
beta
of
their
ganache
integration,
which
enables
developers
to
spin
up
a
local
filecoin
simulator
for
quick
development
and
testing.
B
A
few
other
cross-chain
use
cases
similar,
but
slightly
slightly
different
than
the
ethereum
ones
I
mentioned
include
p2p.org,
which
is
working
on
a
multi-block
chain,
etl
for
polka
dot
and
filecoin
and
ethereum
classic
labs,
which
is
adding
support
for
filecoin
through
an
open
rpc
for
lotus
and
finally,
of
course,
proto
school
has
released
a
whole
set
of
courses
to
onboard
you
develop
or
new
developers
onto
the
filecoin
ecosystem
and
then,
in
terms
of
token
infrastructure,
lots
of
exciting
things
here
and
tools
that
folks
can
use
as
they
build
applications
on
top
of
filecoin
and
store
different
files
and
and
videos
on
top
of
filecoin,
including
ledger,
which
now
supports
filecoin.
B
Today
you
should
download
you
should
download
the
apoc
application
on
your
nano
x
or
nano
s.
The
glyph
cell
posted
web
wallet,
which
is
an
incredible
self-hosted
web
wallet
with
the
ledger,
integration
itself,
metamask,
which
should
be
available
shortly,
and
I've
seen
a
couple
incredible
demos.
Here
they
look.
They
look
really
really
easy
to
use
and
trust
wallet
as
well,
which
is
available
shortly.
B
Okay,
so
that
was
a
quick
rapid
fire
overview
of
some
of
the
few
ecosystem
examples
and
some
of
the
amazing
organizations
that
are
collaborating
on
the
network
today.
I
next
wanted
to
just
go
through
a
few
examples
of
filecoin
ignite.
This
broader
umbrella
program
of
of
events,
where
folks
can
learn,
build
and
launch
applications
and
various
things
on
top
of
filecoin,
and
it's
important
to
note.
There
are
already
over
250
teams
entering
the
filecoin
ecosystem
already
to
the
invest,
events
that
exist
and
thousands
of
people
that
are
engaged
in
that
process.
B
So
a
few
events
I'll
highlight
from
file
queen
ignite,
the
first
of
which
is
hackfest.
This
was
a
hackathon
completely
run
by
eth
global
that
occurred
in
july
and
early
august
took
place
over
the
course
of
one
month.
There
were
470
hackers
that
participated,
134
projects
that
were
submitted
over
50
countries
and
19
time
zones
represented,
and
there
are
over
52
public
events
that
you
can
watch
on
youtube
on
how
to
build
things
on
file
coin
and
different
showcases
of
those
of
those
projects
that
you
could
take.
B
A
look
at
sponsors
included
the
ethereum
foundation,
consensus,
textile
fleek
and
many
others,
and
if
you
want
to
take
a
look
at
some
of
the
applications
that
were
built,
check
out
this
link
that
showcases
the
134
projects
that
were
submitted
and
details
them
out
and
links
you
to
those
various
projects.
It's
really
truly
an
incredible
display
of
how
many
things
can
be
built
on
falcon
in
such
a
short
amount
of
time.
B
Similarly,
spark
hackathon,
which
was
run
by
the
encode
club,
had
over
800
participants,
100
teams,
40
universities
and
six
continents.
Filecoin
was
a
part
of
it,
and
30
teams
built
projects
on
the
filecoin
network
during
the
month
as
well.
B
This
is
going
to
be
a
great
program
for
projects
to
go
from.
You
know
an
mvp
that
they
have
into
a
product
or
a
project
that
people
really
use
and
develop
that
into
the
next
stage
and
then
finally,
falcoin
launch
pad,
which
is
powered
by
tachyon,
is
an
accelerator
program
where
15
to
20
teams
who
are
building
serious
companies
and
organizations
on
the
filecoin
network
can
endeavor
to
participate
in.
Those
teams
actually
will
receive
80
000
investment
over
three
months
of
intense
mentorship
and
a
demo
day
where
they
can
attract
for
their
investment.
B
We
received
over
100
applications,
or
at
least
tachyon
did
from
over
15
countries
across
a
whole
variety
of
use
cases.
I
am
so
so
excited
to
announce
who's
going
to
participate
in
this
program.
I've
taken
a
look
at
all
those
applications,
they're
incredibly
strong
and
you're,
going
to
be
amazed
by
the
wide
breadth
of
use
cases
that
are
going
to
appear
coming
out
of
this
program.
That
program
should
kick
off
relatively
shortly
and
there's
many
many
more
to
come.
B
B
So
with
that,
I
wanted
to
step
back
and
just
say
a
heartfelt
thank
you
to
all
the
organizations
and
individuals
that
are
so
committed
to
developing
the
filecoin
ecosystem.
Obviously,
the
folks
on
this
call
the
applications,
the
open
source
contributors,
the
mining
community
are
just
a
subset
of
individuals
and
organizations
that
are
active
on
our
slack
and
our
communities.
B
So
we
really
want
to
thank
you
for
believing
in
our
mission
for
participating
in
space,
race
and
slingshot
and
for
investing
in
our
test
net
to
make
sure
it's
safe
and
secure
you're,
all
hoping
you're
all
helping
make
foulcoin
a
tremendous
reality
and
we're
very
grateful
to
be
building
alongside
you,
and
I
wanted
to
leave
with
this
parting
thought
and
this
big
audacious
goal
of.
Let's
enable
a
market
where
the
93
of
humanity's
information
that
currently
gets
thrown
in
the
trash
or
not
stored
today
can
be
preserved
for
the
benefit
of
humanity.
A
Awesome,
thank
you
so
much
colin.
It
was
a
great
presentation,
always
super
excited
to
see
the
really
awesome
growth
in
the
filecoin
ecosystem
and
hopefully,
at
the
end
of
the
slingshot
competition.
We
will
have
many
more
great
projects
to
showcase
as
exemplars
at
the
end
of
these
three
weeks.
So
really
looking
forward
to
that,
thank
you
and
I
will
continue
sharing
so
okay.
A
So
now
that
you
kind
of
have
you
know
a
bit
of
a
framing
for
where
slingshot
fits
into
like
the
entire
final
queen
ecosystem,
let's
jump
into
some
of
the
details
of
what
you
can
expect
over
the
next
three
weeks,
so
just
as
a
high-level
overview.
Slingshot
is
a
community
competition
for
storage
clients
and
developers
that
rewards
the
storage
of
real,
valuable
and
usable
data
onto
the
filecoin
space
race
network.
A
And
officially,
as
of
this
moment,
we
are
already
off
to
the
races
the
competition
started
earlier
today,
september
23rd
2020
at
1800
utc.
So
I
believe
it's
a
little
bit
over
two
hours
ago
and
is
already
going
strong.
A
There
are
already
dozens
of
projects
that
are
participating
in
slingshot
and
you'll
be
able
to
see
these
projects
later
today
when
our
leaderboard
officially
launches
so
we're
currently
planning
this
competition
in
two
in
roughly
two
phases:
the
first
phase
we're
calling
the
onboarding
phase
and,
during
the
course
of
these
first
three
weeks
so
phase
one
is
kind
of
you
know
the
first
three
weeks
of
the
competition
we're
aiming
to
onboard
one
pebby
byte
of
data
and
that
target
is
associated
with
a
100
000
file
coin
price
pool
phase
two
of
the
competition
is
the
scale
phase
and
for
this
phase
we're
aiming
to
onboard
10
peppy
bytes
of
data
by
the
end
of
the
competition.
A
There
are
two
main
components
that
are
necessary
in
order
to
participate
in
slingshot.
The
first
is
that
you
must
store
a
valuable
data
set
to
filecoin
and
the
second
is
you
need
to
build
an
application
or
ui
that
will
use
this
data
in
an
interesting
way.
There
are
several
different
ways
that
you
can
accomplish
this
mandate,
so
I
wanted
to
give
a
couple
of
examples.
A
One
is
you
can
choose
to
build
an
end
user
facing
application
like
slate
colin
briefly
touched
on
you
know.
Slate
is.
Is
this
this
application
that
has
been
it
was
launched
a
few
weeks
ago
and
is
intending
to
make
the
end
user
experience
of
storing
data
to
the
ipfs
and
filecoin
networks,
extremely
seamless
and
really
fun
so
for
an
application
like
this?
You
know
slate
is
storing
user
data
to
the
file
coin
and
ipfs
networks
and
is
also
making
this
data
retrievable
through
an
easy
to
use.
A
Ui
these
sorts
of
applications
are
totally
legitimate,
excellent
projects
to
participate
in
the
slingshot
competition,
but
if
you're
looking
for
something,
maybe
you're
starting
from
scratch
and
you're.
Looking
for
some
inspiration
for
how
to
participate
in
slingshot,
we
have
a
list
of
curated
data
sets
that
the
slingshot
admin
team
has
been
maintaining
and
you
can
take
a
look
at
these
data
sets
they're
on
the
slingshot
github
repo.
Today
you
can
choose
one
decide.
A
You
know
a
data
interest
process
and
a
data
structure
for
how
you're
going
to
actually
structure
that
data
and
make
it
storable
on
the
filecoin
network
actually
store
that
data
to
the
filecoin
network
and
then
ultimately,
to
accomplish
the
second
piece
of
participating
in
the
competition
then
build
an
application
to
explore
the
information
that
you
have
now
stored
to
filecoin.
A
A
The
pr
template
will
ask
for
a
few
a
few
questions
about
your
project,
such
as
what
your
application
or
ui
does,
which
data
set
you're
planning
on
using
whether
that's
one
of
the
curated
data
sets
data
for
for
your
application
or
or
ui,
or
a
new
data
set
that
you
would
like
to
suggest.
It'll.
Also
ask
you
how
much
data
you're
planning
on
storing
to
the
network,
how
you're
planning
on
architecting
your
back
end
for
for
this
project
and
a
few
other
questions.
A
The
primary
purpose
of
this
pr
is
for
us
for
us
to
give
you
feedback
on.
You
know
how
you're
taking
how
you're
thinking
about
building
this
project.
There
are
a
lot
of
things.
We've
learned
about
how
to
build
applications
on
file
coin,
that
we
would
love
to
share
to
help
point
you
in
the
right
direction,
so
that
your
project
is
successful.
So
please
make
sure
to
fill
out
all
of
these
questions
in
sufficient
detail.
A
A
Slingshot
community
reviewers
are
members
of
the
filecoin
ecosystem,
who
have
consistently
demonstrated
their
deep
commitment
to
the
long-term
health
of
the
filecoin
network.
So
you
can
see
some
of
these
really
wonderful
people
on
on
this
slide.
This
is
our
initial
panel
of
community
reviewers.
They
include
dedicated
members
of
the
mining
community
who
participated
in
space,
race,
long-term
community
members
and
the
ipfs
and
falcon
developer
ecosystems.
A
So
you
know
we
have
several
for
folks
from
textile
fleek,
of
course,
filecoin
the
p2p
chainsafe
and
fiera
pinata
slate
and
and
ipfs
main
as
well,
and
over
the
next
few
days,
we'll
also
be
announcing
a
couple
of
additional
community
members
who
will
be
added
to
this
review
panel.
A
These
community
reviewers
will
review
your
pr
with
an
sla
of
around
40
for
48
hours
as
a
turnaround
time,
and
if
they
accept
your
project,
they
will
merge
your
pr
to
the
singshot
repo
and,
after
a
brief
period
of
time,
you'll
also
be
able
to
see
your
project
details
reflected
onto
the
slingshot
leaderboard.
If
they
don't
immediately
accept
your
project,
don't
worry,
they'll,
provide
feedback
on
the
pr
and
ask
for
more
information
so
that
they
can
reconsider
your
application.
A
You'll
have
until
the
final
week
of
the
competition
to
register
and
finalize
your
pr
for
consideration.
So
you
haven't
missed
anything
if
you
haven't
happened
to
register
yet
there's
plenty
of
time
to
test
out
filecoin,
build
applications
and
compete.
A
So
because
this
is
a
kickoff,
I
wanted
to
make
sure
we
covered
a
couple
of
the
the
main
rules
for
this
competition
to
be
eligible
for
filecoin
rewards
at
the
end
of
slingshot.
You'll
need
to
have
followed
these
rules
throughout
the
competition.
First,
of
course,
is
you
know,
as
I've
mentioned,
please
make
sure
that
you
have
completed
the
proper
registration
process.
A
Next
is
just
to
make
sure
that
you
know
you
you're
doing
what
is
in
the
spirit
of
this
competition
and
storing
real,
valuable
and
usable
data
to
the
filecoin
network,
we'll
be
running
some
checks
throughout
the
competition
to
make
sure
that
accepted
projects
are
following
the
rules
here.
The
third
rule
is
generally,
you
know
we're
looking
for
some
sort
of
application
or
ui
that
allows
other
users
to
explore
this
data
in
a
meaningful
way.
Your
project
must
pass
community
review,
as
I
just
described.
A
Another
important
requirement
for
this
competition
is
that
the
data
you
store
must
be
retrievable
by
anyone.
It's
important
to
be
pretty
thoughtful
about
how
you're,
storing
your
data
on
the
network
so
that
it's
properly
structured
and
can
be
efficiently
retrieved
from
filecoin
and
we'll
also
be
testing
for
this
periodically
throughout
the
competition.
A
And,
lastly,
all
participants
will
need
to
participate
in
the
slingshot
showcase
after
the
competition
ends.
So
what
is
the
slingshot
showcase?
The
slingshot
showcase
is
going
to
be
this
really
exciting
event
at
the
after.
The
competition
is
over
to
demo
to
the
community.
A
3
of
the
competition
really
looking
forward
to
this
event,
and
just
a
quick
note
on
disqualification
just
because
this
is
a
competition,
it's
possible
that
your
team
may
become
disqualified
at
any
point
of
the
competition
if
you
violate
the
competition
rules
or
are
found
to
be
gaming,
the
competition
in
any
way,
if
you
plagiarize
other
projects,
so
you
know
we're
just
a
brief
reminder
that
we're
running
this
competition
to
help
support
the
file
coin,
storage,
client
in
developer
communities.
A
So
we
would
love
it
if
you
would
follow
the
rules
and
honor
the
spirit
of
this
competition
and
help
make
filecoin
a
really
incredible
storage
network.
For
all
of
these
wonderful
use
cases
that
you're
that
you're
bringing
to
filecoin
today
so
because
of
this
because
of
the
potential
for
disqualification
at
any
point
in
the
competition,
the
leaderboard
results
will
not
be
truly
final
until
shortly
after
the
competition
ends,
and
after
this
slingshot
showcase.
A
All
right
so
really
quickly.
Now
that
you're
familiar
with
some
of
the
logistics
I'd
like
to
spend
just
a
few
brief
moments
to
share
some
guidance
for
developers
to
help
you
get
off
to
a
smoother
start.
One
common
question
that
we
receive
from
a
lot
of
developers
is
which
tech
stack
should
be.
Should
you
be
using
if
you
want
to
both
store
data
to
the
filecoin
network
and
interact
with
this
data
through
an
application
or
ui?
There
are
several
different
technologies
that
you
can
use
to
accomplish
this.
A
But
one
thing
to
note
is
that,
due
to
the
security
parameters
of
the
filecoin
network,
retrieving
data
directly
from
the
filecoin
network
from
filecoin
miners
is,
in
most
cases,
significantly
slower
than
retrieving
from
say
a
caching
layer
or
another
solution
like
ipfs,
thus
most
developers
that
are
building
applications
and
uis
use,
hybrid,
multi-tiered,
storage
solutions.
A
A
Then,
when
you
need
to
retrieve
data
for
the
purposes
of
your
application,
you
can
use
the
same
content,
hash
or
cid
to
retrieve
the
file
from
the
hottest
storage
layer
where
that
data
is
available,
whether
that's
a
local
copy,
whether
it's
from
the
caching
layer
or
ipf
or
the
ipfs
network,
or
from
filecoin,
we
recommend
that
most
developers
use
one
of
the
following
solutions
for
this
competition,
which
is
powergate
or
textile
buckets
and
andrew
hill,
who
is
the
co-founder
and
ceo
of
textile?
A
It's
the
amazing
team
that
has
been
building
these
technologies
and
maintaining
them
for
the
last
several
months
will
will
tell
us
a
little
bit
more
about
exactly
what
these
projects
can
do
and
how
you
can
build
on
them
for
slingshot.
But
just
as
you
know,
one
brief
reminder.
We
we
do
not
actually
recommend
that
developers
who
are
primarily
interested
in
storing
data
and
retrieving
it
from
the
filecoin
network
use
lotus.
Lotus
is
fairly
low
level.
A
There
are
much
nicer
products
that
are
oriented
towards
developers,
they're
much
easier
to
use
and
again
because
of
some
of
the
performance
considerations
I
mentioned,
we
really
do
recommend
that
you
use
one
of
powergate
or
textile
buckets
or
a
solution
like
that.
So
that's
it.
Those
are
the
most
important
details
to
be
aware
of
so
that
you're
successful
during
the
slingshot
competition
and
next
I'd
love
to
introduce
andrew
co-founder
and
ceo
of
textile
to
share
more
about
how
you
can
use
textile
technologies
throughout
the
slimshot
competition
over
to
you,
andrew.
C
C
Okay,
so
if
you're
joining
today
and
you've
been
building
things
in
the
ipfs
or
file
coins
ecosystems-
previously,
you
might
have
seen
me
sharing
things
over
the
last
few
months
about
what
we've
been
building.
C
But
I'm
really
excited
to
be
here
today
and
be
taking
part
in
the
slingshot
project
and
being
here
to
support
teams
and
so
at
textile.
We're
really
thinking
deeply
about
how
how
to
accelerate
the
developers
in
getting
their
projects
onto
these
networks
and
getting
real
usable
products
out
there
to
end
users,
and
so
we've
put
a
lot
of
thinking
and
a
lot
of
work
into
what
we've
been
building
the
layers
that
we've
been
building
to.
C
Do
that
and
we're
ready
to
give
those
things
to
you
and
have
you
start
testing
and
pushing
the
limits
of
those
products
and
and
really
pushing
the
limits
of
the
network.
Hopefully,
and
so
let
me
just
share
a
little
bit
about
what
we
have
available
for
you
throughout
this
competition
and
how
you
can
use
it
to
really
get
data
onto
filecoin.
C
And
I
think
I
think
I
really
appreciate
what
colin
was
saying
before
about
the
motivators
of
getting
data
onto
this
network,
and
I
think
that's
really
one
of
the
biggest
reasons
why
textile
is
here,
because
we
really
believe
in
that
mission
and
we
really
believe
in
the
importance
of
data
for
humanity
and
that
a
lot
of
data
is
still
out
there
to
become
part
of
the
of
humanity's
legacy
for
future
generations.
C
And
so,
if
you're
working
on
those
projects,
we
want
to
work
with
you.
And
so
let's
talk
about
that.
So
we
can
help.
You
launch
your
idea
over
the
next
weeks
in
a
couple
of
different
ways,
three
ways
now
and
then
I'll
kind
of
end
it
on
the
fourth
way,
but
the
the
first
one
is
infrastructure.
C
And
so
a
lot
of
the
teams
that
are
going
to
be
adding
data
to
the
filecoin
network
are
going
to
want
to
use
one
of
a
handful
of
different
technologies
to
build
their
pipeline.
To
get
data
in
into
the
network
and
like
puja,
was
saying
you
may
go
to
you.
C
May
you
may
go
to
a
a
lotus
note
directly,
but
if
you
want
to
get
some
some
sort
of
nice
apis
built
around
that
that
are
specifically
designed
for
application
developers,
we've
built
a
technology
called
powergate
and
I'll
talk
about
the
specifics
of
powergate
in
a
second.
But
one
thing
to
note
is
that
powergate
has
a
few
different
ways
that
you
can
use
it
and
run
it.
C
It
has
ways
that
you
can
run
it
in
developer
mode
that
are
fast
and
lightweight,
and
you
can
really
test
whether
your
approach
will
work
before
you
start
doing
things
on
the
public
network.
Then
we
have
roll
your
own
versions.
We
have
dockerized
instances
and
we
also
have
an
opportunity
for
you
to
get
hosted
access
to
hosted
instances
that
we're
actually
running
where
you
can
get
dedicated
apis
for
your
project
on
our
infrastructure
and
I'll
give
you
links
to
all
of
that.
C
C
In
a
product
that
we
built
called
the
textile
hub
and
the
textile
hub
itself
has
multiple
different
components,
one
of
which
is
called
buckets,
and
so
you've
heard
of
buckets
already
in
today's
call
and
I'll
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
that,
but
that's
a
really
great
product
for
a
lot
of
projects,
probably
coming
to
slingshot
and
then
and
then
finally
scaling
data,
interoperability
and
documentation.
C
Those
are
all
things
that
we
think
about
every
day
at
textile
and
you
can
really
see
that
in
in
what
we
focus
on
in
building
apis
in
building
modules,
in
formatting
data,
that's
getting
onto
these
networks
and
in
in
publishing,
tutorials
and
documentation,
and
so
you
can
really
lean
on
us
there
and
look
at
what
we
have
available
and
hopefully
learn
something
and
get
you
get
you
building
and
publishing
faster
so
about
these
kind
of
two
primary
technologies,
which
I
think
will
be
the
touch
points
for
teams
in
this
competition.
C
The
first
one
is
powergate.
Like
puja
already
mentioned,
it's
a
multi-tiered
storage
system
that
bridges,
ipfs
and
filecoin
it
actually
bridges,
ipfs
filecoin
http
a
lot
of
other
things,
but
you
can
really
think
of
it
as
a
system
that
you
can.
You
can
build
into
your
own
stack
in
order
to
use
filecoin
as
a
as
a
as
a
storage
layer,
in
whatever
application,
you're
building
powergate
is
itself
a
collection
of
technologies.
C
It
it
runs
a
lotus
node
inside
of
it
it
runs
not
inside
of
it.
It
runs
a
lotus
node.
It
runs
an
ipfs
node.
It
has
its
own
set
of
technologies
to
do
things
like
long-term
deal
management.
State
management,
wallet,
address
management,
a
lot
of
helpful
tools
there,
and
then
it
has
a
a
huge
api
surface
area
where
you
can
build
applications
on
top
of
and
then
clients.
C
Of
course
we
have
clients
as
well,
and
so
you
can
find
our
javascript
client,
for
example,
for
connecting
to
that
instance,
and
so
the
documentation
is
really
pretty
thorough.
So
you
can
find
that
on
github.
You
can
also
find
that
on
our
on
our
documentation,
site
and
here's
a
few
links
for
you,
just
grab
a
screenshot
here
or
we'll
share
these
slides
after
the
call
as
well,
but
the
the
github
repo
great
place
to
go,
learn
about
the
nuances
of
the
technology
stack.
C
If
you
want
to
roll
your
own,
that's
a
great
place
to
go
and
and
check
out
the
code.
If
you
want
to
get
access
to
hosted
versions
of
powergate,
we
have
a
form,
a
simple
form
you
can
fill
out.
Tell
us
about
your
project,
we'll
get
you
in
the
queue
and
then
the
documentation
site
for
textile
has
a
lot
more
there's,
also
a
channel
in
the
filecoin
slack
dedicated
to
powergate
users,
where
we're
just
giving
support.
C
So
if
you
have
technical
questions
about
running
your
own
about
using
the
hosted
apis
about
feature
requests,
this
is
a
great
place
to
jump
in
share
your
ideas.
Ask
your
questions
and
we'll
get
we'll
get
back
to
you
as
fast
as
we
can,
or
other
people
in
the
community.
We'll
get
back
to
you
like
we've
been
seeing,
which
is
awesome.
C
The
other
piece
is
textile,
buckets
and
so
textile
buckets
are
dynamic
directories
that
are
stored
on
ipfs
through
another
technology.
C
You
don't
have
to
worry
about
today
called
threads,
but
it
allows
you
to
create
these
dynamic
folders
that
you
can
push
to
remote
peers
and
we
host
one
of
those
remote
gears
that
you
can
leverage
very
easily
and
and
that
pier
is
connected
to
a
powergate
instance
itself,
and
so
this
is
really
for
people
that
are
building
applications,
building
complex
pipelines
where
they
want
to
use
a
very
simple
api,
and
it's
it's
really
really
simple,
and
so
here's
a
real
example
of
how
quick
you
can
get
onto
the
filecoin
network
today
using
buckets.
C
C
I
push
the
contents
of
that
bucket
and
then
I
I
call
archive
and
that
gets
added
to
a
queue
to
create
a
deal
on
filecoin
and
that
takes
time,
but
it
you
can
sit
there
and
watch
it
or
you
can
come
back
later
and
check
the
status
of
that
deal
and
and
retrieve
that
data,
and
you
can
take
the
the
metadata
for
any
deal
and
you
can
you
can
leave
the
textile
hub.
You
can
stop
using
buckets
entirely.
C
You
can
go
back
to
a
lotus
node,
for
example,
and
take
that
deal
information
and
get
it
back
out
of
the
network.
But
you
can
also
use
all
of
this
set
of
apis
to
do
it
right
here
as
well,
and
so
again,
there's
a
ton
of
documentation
out
there
about
how
to
use
buckets
through
the
command
line,
running
your
own
bucket
daemons
or
just
using
the
javascript
library
or
one
of
other,
our
other
client
libraries
again
documentation.
C
So,
if
you're
going
to
jump
into
this,
if
you
have
questions,
if
you
want
more
links
or
pointers
here,
go
to
the
filecoin
slack
and
join
the
buckets
users
channel,
and
we
can
get
you
answers
as
fast
as
you
can
ask
them
hopefully-
and
so
I
want
to
return
to
this
now,
just
to
kind
of
now
that
you've
seen
these
two
technologies
and
and
what,
where
they
really
fit
in
the
file
coin,
data
flow
so
again,
infrastructure
run
your
own
power
gates,
sign
up
to
get
hosted
power
gates
or
use
buckets
on
the
hosted
infrastructure
available
through
the
textile
hub
apis
and
access
control.
C
That's
you
know,
that's
something
that
is
really
available
through
the
textile
hub.
Powergate
is
really
a
user
agnostic
system.
It
doesn't
have
any
strict
access
control
rules
that
you
have
to
use,
so
you
can
really
build
your
own
systems
on
top
of
it.
C
If
that's
the
direction
you
want
to
go
and
then
scaling
interopera
interoperability
and
docs,
I
shared
a
bunch
of
docs
links,
so
hopefully
that
will
get
you
started
there,
but
there
is
a
fourth
thing,
which
is
really
one
of
the
valuable
pieces
of
building
on
textile,
and
that's
our
community
and
there's
really
great
projects
that
are
building
on
textile
today
and
they're.
Very
active.
Most
of
them
are
open
source.
Many
of
them
are
very
vocal,
and
so
you
can
find
them
on
the
file
coin.
C
Slack
channel
you
can
find
them
on
our
community
check
slack
channel
and
many
of
them
are
more
than
willing
to
share
their
experiences
and
and
help
out.
If
you
have
questions,
but
also
they
help
us
learn
how
to
scale
these
systems
faster
and
faster
every
day,
and
so
we're
still
improving
this
stack
and
we'll
continue
to
continue
to
improve
it.
C
During
this
competition,
even
and
so
hopefully
you'll
experience
these
things
even
getting
better
every
day,
but
that's
so
much
because
of
our
community
and
because
of
how
quickly
they're
building
on
these
things
and
how
much
feedback
they're
giving
us
and
so
join
it
lean
on
them
lean
on
us
we're
here
to
help
you
we're
here
to
bring
data
to
the
network
and
really
make
this
awesome,
and
so
thanks
so
much
for
the
all
the
help
and
the
support
from
the
filecoin
team
on
building
these
things
and
puja
and
peter
and
jimmy
and
everybody
else.
C
That's
been
really
spending
time
with
us,
making
sure
that
we
can
get
these
things
to
you,
and
now
it's
ready,
and
now
it's
it's
yours
as
developers.
So
let's
get
racing
and
and
launch
this
thing.
One
last
note
is
that
textile
we're
offering
office
hours
weekly
first
one
is
tomorrow.
I
think
it's
a
shorter
one,
30
minutes
and
then
next
week
we'll
be
having
office
hours
as
well
and
also
kicking
off
a
couple
of
master
classes
which
are
kind
of
deep
dives
into
these
technologies.
A
Awesome
thanks
so
much
andrew
yeah
and
for
folks
who
haven't
seen
andrew
and
many
other
members
of
the
textile
team
have
created
some
really
really
great
videos
and
workshops
and
and
so
on
in
the
past.
So
we
will
have
on
the
filecoin
slingshot
repo
I'll
link
to
some
learning
resources
that
you
can
use
as
well,
if
you're
looking
to
get
started
with
these
technologies,
so
really
really
excited
that
they
exist
great.
A
So
I'm
going
to
talk
talk
a
little
bit
about
rewards
and
prizes
very
exciting
portion
of
this
competition.
A
So
the
way
that
the
slingshot
prize
prizes,
work,
slingshot,
will
distribute
a
prize
pool
amongst
all
participants
who
are
eligible
for
rewards
and
the
size
of
the
price
pool
is
determined
by
the
total
amount
of
data
that
is
stored
on
the
network.
The
more
data
that
we
all
store,
collectively,
the
greater
the
size
of
the
price
pool
that
will
be
unlocked
for
this
competition
so
and
the
way
that
we're
planning
on
you
know
distributing
rewards
at
competition.
End
is
essentially
proportionally.
A
So
whatever
fraction
of
the
total
data
onboarded
comes
from
your
project
is
roughly
proportionally
how
much
of
the
total
price
pool
you
will
earn
as
a
reward
at
the
end
of
the
competition
to
illustrate
the
concept.
Briefly,
let's
say
that
you
know
at
the
end
of
the
this
three
weeks,
we've
reached
the
one
heavy
byte
target
and
we've
unlocked
the
one
peppy
byte
prize
pool
of
a
hundred
thousand
file
coin
tokens.
A
A
One
note
is
that
these
rewards
will
be
vesting
linearly
over
six
months
from
the
moment
of
mainnet
launch
or
the
end
of
the
competition.
Whichever
is
later
so.
These
are
our
current
reward
price
polls,
as
you
can
see,
on
the
slide
and
they're
all
leading
up
to
the
largest
prize
pool,
which
is,
if
we,
you
know
collectively
onboard
more
than
10
peppy
bytes
of
data.
We
unlock
the
500
000
filecoin
prize
pool
so
very
very
exciting.
It's
a
big
target.
A
I
think
we
can
hit
it
and
we
may
add
more
rewards
throughout
the
course
of
this
competition
as
well.
So
so,
please
take
stay
tuned
on
the
slingshot
announcements
channel
as
we'll
be
updating,
as
as
the
competition
progresses,
and
now
I'm
going
to
turn
it
over
briefly
to
david,
who
is
one
of
the
coordinators
for
the
slingshot
competition.
Also
a
member
of
the
ipfs
and
file
coin
teams.
A
D
Hey
thanks,
puja
nice
to
meet
everyone,
I'm
david
as
fuji
mentioned,
and
I
help
out
with
ipfs
and
filecoin
ecosystems,
I'm
here
to
chat
through
some
of
the
next
steps
for
you
all,
so
the
competition
calendar
some
of
the
events
to
look
forward
to
and
where
to
go
to
get
help.
I
know
we're
running
a
little
bit
behind
so
I'll
try
to
get
through
quickly,
but
I
guess
no
promises.
D
So
here
is
a
high-level
overview
of
the
phase.
One
competition
calendar
phase,
one
is
scheduled
for
three
weeks
overall
spread
over
four
calendar
weeks.
One
thing
to
note
here
is
that
we'll
be
accepting
submissions
for
the
competition
on
a
rolling
basis
until
the
competition
closes
in
week
four.
So
there
isn't
a
deadline
for
submission
until
phase
one
is
over
and
you
can
find
more
details
in
the
competition
rules
on
this
across
these
next
three
weeks.
D
We
have
really
a
ton
of
awesome
events
coming
up
to
to
meet
you
all
to
help
think
through
your
projects
and
how
to
use
filecoin
and
and
related
ecosystem
technologies,
and
we're
also
really
looking
forward
to
learning
from
you
all
hearing.
D
What's
working
well
and
not
so
well,
and
seeing
just
the
amazing
things
that
you're
building
and
eventually
at
the
end
of
week,
four
or
even
in
week,
four
at
the
end
of
the
competition
celebrating
your
hard
work
and
really
just
some
of
the
first
use
cases
built
on
top
of
the
biocoin
protocol.
D
Here's
a
more
detailed
calendar.
I
really
would
like
to
for
you
all
to
zoom
in
on,
what's
going
on
in
the
next
week,
which
is
more
solidified.
The
events
after
that
are
still
kind
of
in
flux,
but
we'll
keep
an
up-to-date
calendar
on
on
the
events.
Tab
of
of
the
website,
yeah
just
saw
posted
in
chat
and
over
the
next
seven
days
we
have
some
master
classes
on
file
coin,
coming
up
to
cover
the
basics
of
file
coin:
how
to
make
deals.
D
Splitting
up
large
files
use
cases
for
the
current
network
capabilities,
as
well
as
some
master
classes,
from
textile
as
andrew
mentioned
on
how
to
use
powergate
and
buckets
and
and
office
hours
as
well.
To
for
you
to
ask
more
pointed
questions
and
get
some
more
one-on-one
time
there
and
yeah.
If,
if
you
go
to
the
events
tab
on
on
the
website,
you
can
rsvp
for
events,
skip
links
for
for
the
youtube
streams
and
and
I'll
just
get
the
latest
slate
of
events.
So
please
stay
tuned
there.
D
So
stepping
away
from
events
specifically
want
to
just
mention
the
different
channels
where
you
can
go
to
to
get
help.
So,
as
the
competition
progresses,
you'll
definitely
have
questions
and
we
would
love
for
you
to
get
those
answered.
So
here's
a
list
of
some
of
the
best
resources,
one
of
the
first
places
to
go,
would
be
the
slingshot
website
for
details
on
the
competition
faqs.
D
Those
will
be
updated
over
time.
So
please
check
those
continuously
and
then
also
the
the
slingshot
github
repo,
that's
where
you'll
be
submitting
your
project
and
where
the
review
process
will
be
taking
place.
But
it's
also
where
a
lot
of
the
information
on
how
that
works
is
held.
So
please,
please
take
a
look
at
that
too,
and
if
you
don't
have
your
questions
answered
by
the
above,
join
us
on
file
coin
slack
highlighted
some
of
the
some
of
the
channels
that
are
most
useful.
D
Potentially
so
the
slingshot
channel
is
for
questions
about
the
competition.
Your
specific
submission
things
like
that
filecoin
help.
Some
other
filecoin
channels
are
for
falcoin
technical
questions.
D
Andrew
mentioned
two
channels
where
textile
lurks
quite
a
bit,
so
powergate
users
and
buckets
users
for
for
help
on
the
textile
stack
and
technical
questions
there
and
then
slingshot
announcements,
not
a
channel
for
you
to
ask
questions
but
there'll
be
announcements
there
regarding
slingshot
event
starting
and
that
sort
of
thing,
and
then
really
quickly.
This
probably
shouldn't
be
at
the
bottom
of
the
list,
but
please
utilize
the
the
file
coin
docs
and
the
textile
docks,
as
well
as,
if
you're,
using
ipfs
as
part
of
your
app.
D
D
And
then,
finally,
I
just
wanted
to
introduce
the
slingshot
admin
team
that
you'll
see
around
slack
trying
to
answer
questions
as
quickly
and
as
best
as
they
can.
It's,
not
an
exhaustive
list
of
everyone
who
will
be
helping
out,
there'll,
be
other
friendly
faces
from
ecosystem
project
teams
and
protocol
labs
and
then
also
love
to
see
the
the
activities
so
far,
even
from
all
you
all
and
other
community
members
chiming
in
and
answering
questions.
So
please
continue
to
do
so
and
yeah.
I
think
that's
all
I
have
back
to
you.
Fuji.
A
Awesome,
thank
you
so
much
david
and
thank
you
for
the
whole
team,
who
is
managing
slingshot
events
and
programming
and
supporting
all
the
participants
as
well,
so
really
excited
to
see
the
slate
of
events
that
are
coming
up
awesome.
A
And,
lastly,
I
think
this
is
our
last
presentation
for
today
for
today
it's
my
pleasure
to
introduce
juan
who's,
the
founder
of
protocol
labs
in
the
file
coin
project,
to
share
more
about
some
of
the
motivation
and
vision
behind
slingshot
and
why
this
is
a
particularly
great
moment
to
jump
into
the
final
queen.
E
A
E
Great,
thank
you
super
excited
for
for
slingshot.
This
is
going
to
be
a
really
amazing
period
for
the
network
really
excited
about
all
of
the
presentations
that
you
saw
today.
So
I'm
going
to
try
and
keep
it
pretty
brief.
E
I'm
going
to
focus
on
a
couple
of
things
really
remind
us
why
web3
matters
and
and
what
we're
doing,
and
then
I'm
going
to
shift
most
of
the
most
of
what
I'm
going
to
talk
about
to
just
giving
you
a
lot
of
ideas
for
for
different
kinds
of
data
sets
and
and
data
and
applications
that
you
might,
you
might
consider
as
competitors
in
the
in
sync
shot.
E
So
web3
is
an
evolution
and
a
next
technological
revolution
and
part
of
the
internet.
So
computing
is
one
of
the
most
important
things
that
is
happening
to
our
species.
The
internet
is
one
of
the
biggest
and
most
important
components
of
our
species.
E
Now,
in
the
sense
that
that
is
it's
just
beyond
a
technology,
we're
sort
of
integrating
all
of
our
all
of
our
systems
and
organizations
and
ways
of
working
together
through
through
computing
and
web
3
is
a
very
important
movement
to
try
and
establish
architectures
and
systems
that
give
control
of
data
to
to
the
users
and
humans
and
and
groups
involved
in
in
producing
that
data
and
establishing
a
very
important
set
of
rights
in
in
the
internet.
E
So,
as
we
look
back
in
the
last
80
years,
computing
has
dramatically
transformed
humanity.
We
have
superpowers
beyond
what
our
ancestors
imagined
so
in
a
very
very
short
time.
So
again,
80
years
is
not
not
a
long
time
by
by
any
kind
of
stretch
of
imagination.
It's
it's
a
very
short
time
slice
in
our
in
our
even
in
the
history
of
most
of
most
of
the
nations
in
many
nations.
Today,
it's
a
very
short
time
slice
in
terms
of
human
history.
E
It's
a
very,
very,
very
tiny,
minuscule
time
slice
in
terms
of
our
planet's
history.
So,
in
a
very
very
short
time,
computing
has
radically
transformed
how
how
we
operate
and
the
you
know
these
days.
E
Billions
of
humans
are
working
together
and
integrating
with
computers
in
all
kinds
of
ways
and
are
generating
vast
amounts
of
data,
and
all
of
that
data
and
information
gets
integrated
into
applications,
and-
and
you
have
this-
this
amazing
combination
of
of
of
programs
coupled
with
data
that
the
grand
superpowers,
so
what
people
all
you
have
to
do
if
you
want
to
grant
a
new
superpower
to
humanity
today
in
this
amazing
era,
is
build,
an
application
that
you
can
distribute
over
the
internet
and
connect
it
to
a
bunch
of
data
sources
and
be
able
to
store
that
data
again
in
the
medium
of
the
internet.
E
And
if
you
do
that,
you
can
now
grant
people
an
amazing
superpower
right
now,
we're
speaking
through
these
kinds
of
of
amazing
superpowers,
we're
running
an
application
together,
we're
running
a
system
through
through
the
internet,
the
data
that
we're
producing
right
now
together,
the
video
stream,
the
chat
all
that
kind
of
stuff
is
getting
stored
somewhere,
that
store
data
storage
can
be
accessed
by
other
people
and
and
so
on.
E
But
now
it
really
matters,
then,
who
gets
access
to
that
data?
Who
can
can
view
it?
How
it's
stored?
Is
it
gonna
persist?
Is
it
gonna
be
around
in
a
year
and
two
years
and
so
on?
So
this
is
where,
where
web3
really
comes
in
and
can
can
help
establish
good
properties
in
the
in
the
infrastructure?
E
You
know
one
significant
step
right
now
and
kind
of
helping
helping
bring
a
bunch
of
really
useful
and
valuable
data
sources,
so
that,
then
you
know
people
can
take
the
initial
applications
you
build
or
or
build
other
applications
around
that
so
also
looking
ahead,
you
know
and
kind
of
why
this
matters,
if
we,
if
we
can
establish
really
good
properties
to
our
infrastructure
layers
today
and
we
can
build
a
better
application
distribution
platform.
E
A
better
super
power
distribution
platform
then
we'll
be
able
to
establish
a
much
better
framework
for
how
to
how
to
compute
together,
especially
as
dramatic
shifts
in
computing,
are
land
right.
So
things
like
augmented
reality
virtual
reality
brain
machine
interfaces.
All
these
kinds
of
things
are
roughly
around
the
corner
and
how
you
know
the
the
access,
rights
and
abilities
of
people
to
participate
in
those
in
those
new
forms
of
computation
together
will
be
based
heavily
on
on
the
systems
of
today,
so
how
the
web
works
now,
how
app
stores
work?
E
Now
you
have
like
this
very
different
world
of
you-
know
very
controlled,
centralized
app
stores
versus
a
much
more
decentralized
web
where
you
can
distribute
anything.
You
want
those
kinds
of
models
are
going
to
be
picked
by
the
the
people,
building,
augmented
reality
and
virtual
reality
systems.
In
fact,
they're
building
built.
E
Many
of
them
are
being
built
right
now
and
there's
going
to
be
a
very
significant
battle
ahead,
probably
in
the
next
three
to
three
to
ten
years,
maybe
maybe
a
bit
longer
where
all
of
these
different
frameworks
are
going
to
be
played
out
and
we'll
see
whether
whether
we're
headed
towards
a
future
that
is
open
and
free
or
closed
and
heavily
controlled.
E
And
so
I
really
think
this
is
a
critical
time
period
for
us
to
establish
much
better
infrastructure
layers
that
are
that
bake
in
those
those
important
rice
and
models
and
and
really
to
prove
it
out.
We
really
have
to
show
that
the
vast
amounts
of
data
that
augmented
reality
and
virtual
reality
systems
are
going
to
to
require
is
best
served
by
an
open
system
than
a
closed
one.
E
The
web
was
best
served
by
an
open
system
than
a
closed
one,
and
it
won
out.
The
social
media
world,
though,
was
best
served
so
far
by
a
closed
system,
and
so
that
has
won
out
for
now.
Hopefully,
it'll,
it'll,
open
up
and
hopefully
we'll
be
it'll,
be
in
the
long
run,
better
served
by
an
open
at
one,
but
but
that
battle
is
not
in
a
good
place
today.
E
It
is,
I
think,
extremely
important
that
in
the
future,
these
other
mediums
of
communication,
augmented
reality
and
virtual
reality
are
built
on
on
very
strong,
open
foundations
and
and
to
get
there.
We
really
have
to
prove
out
in
this
period
that
we
can
handle
that
kind
of
scale
of
load
we
can
handle
all
of
the
all
of
the
assets
we
can
handle
the
connectivity
we
can
handle
the
distribution
information
and-
and
I
think
that
that
the
falco
network
can
right
now
play
a
really
important
part
in
that
role.
E
By
establishing
a
vast,
you
know,
storage
network
and
prove
out
that
we
can
handle
those
kinds
of
sizes.
It's
fine,
if
it's,
if
it's
slow
at
first,
it's
fine
if
it's
kind
of
clunky
and
hard
to
move
around
data.
But
if
we
can
deal
with
that
kind
of
capacity
and
that
kind
of
storage
level,
then
we
can
work
as
a
separate
step
on
on
improving
access
and
improving
distribution
and
all
that
kind
of
stuff.
E
So
I
think
you
can
connect
what
we're
doing
today
and
what
we're
doing
in
this
very
competition
to
that
longer
term
vision
and
that
longer
term
hope
for
a
better
future,
and-
and
I
really
want
to
encourage
you
to
to
you-
know-
think
ahead
as
you're
as
you're
building
things-
and
this
is
more
of
like,
like
a
longer
term
thing,
step
back
and
reflect
on.
You
know
the
last
80
years
and
try
to
look
ahead
into
the
next
80
years.
E
What
are
the
kinds
of
things
that
are
really
going
to
matter
that
are
really
going
to
push
humanity
in
good
directions?
What's
going
to
make
a
difference,
and
then
just
zoom
back
into
like
the
next
10
years,
the
next
five
years
the
next
year,
the
next
month
and
think
of
how
you
can
incrementally
push
for
a
better
outcome
by
helping
build
something.
E
That's
open,
helping
build
systems
that
that
help
others
to
do
other
things,
and
you
know
simply
just
sometimes
grabbing
a
data
set
and
putting
it
a
really
important,
valuable,
open
access
data
set
and
putting
it
in
a
mode
that
is
easy
to
distribute
and
easy
to
access
can
save
other
people
hundreds
of
hours
of
work.
So
imagine
scientists
that
are
trying
to
gather
data
and
use
it
and
so
on.
E
If
you
can
help
them
just
save
100
hours
or
save
a
thousand
hours
by
by
making
it
easier
to
access
right
now,
you've
already
improved
the
speeches
quite
a
bit
because
those
1000
hours,
those
scientists
were
going
to
spend
doing
like
data
transformations
and
trying
to
move
the
data
and
so
on.
They
can
now
spend
in
the
analysis
or
the
or
the
writing
of
results
or
or
in
future
work.
E
So
I
think
right
now
as
tool,
builders
and
and
application
and
system
builders,
very
small
actions
can
have
can
can
have
tremendous
dramatic
impact
in
the
long
term
by
by
just
helping
other
humans
save
time
and
by
moving
moving
things
into
into
a
better,
better
direction.
You
know
when,
when
we
look
back,
you
know
the
people
who
were
building.
You
know
simple,
incremental
next
steps
we
can
connect
and
see
how
important
and
valuable
those
things
were,
but
at
the
time
they
were,
they
felt
small.
E
They
felt
like
experimental
things
and
so
on.
So
really
don't
don't
just
just
try
and
and
follow
the
gradient
of
how
to
help
others,
and
I
think
we'll
be
in
really
good
shape.
E
Maybe
the
last
thing
I'll
mention
around
this
is
that
really
the
the
goal
for
web3
is
to
bring
all
kinds
of
of
properties
to
the
web
by
by
hooking
into
verifiable
principles.
So
we
want
to
make
data.
That's
that's!
You
can
authentically
show
that
is
authenticated
software,
where
you
know
where
it
came
from
to
some
extent,
or
you
can
prove
its
veracity.
You
can.
E
You
can
show
that
maybe
something
was
a
picture
or
a
video
was
indeed
taken
and
not
a
deep
fake
or
something
like
that
or
you
can
do
things
like
actually
assure
other
people
in
the
future
that
this
data
is
going
to
be
stored
for
some
period
of
time
and
want
to
create
algorithms
for
making
sure
that
can
indeed
happen.
E
You
can
make
sure
that
transactions
between
parties
can
are
verifiable,
so
all
of
the
all
of
the
great
work
of
web
3
connects
into
in
some
way
or
another
making
transactions
and
parts
of
the
systems
verifiable,
and
you
know
think
about
the
kinds
of
of
rights
that
you
would
want
to
have
and
how
to
how
to
build
them
into
into
systems
and
algorithms
and
so
on,
so
that
we
can
indeed
count
on
these
miguel
mentioned
that
you
know,
I
really
see
web3
as
a
combination
of
various
different
movements,
the
decentralized
web
movement,
the
blockchain
movement
and
the
link
data
movement.
E
Each
of
these
is
pretty
different
on
its
own.
They
have
very
different
properties
and
so
on,
but
at
the
end
of
the
day
it
all
boils
down
to
how
we
store
access
and
distribute
data,
and
what
rights
and
properties
we
can.
We
can
keep
and
assure
about
them
right
so
are
the
transactions
legitimate
are?
Is
the
data
going
to
be
accessible
can
do?
I
have
to
depend
on
another
party
to
view
this
data?
E
Can
I
relate
the
information
to
others
on
my
own,
or
can
I
relate
it
in
a
in
a
way
where
the
sources
of
information
are
very
clear?
All
of
this
kind
of
stuff
boils
into
into
web3.
So
I
really
encourage
you
to
kind
of
in
this
competition
think
about
what
kind
of
important
data
sets
from
these
communities
can
be
can
be
pulled
into
into
file
coins
so
that
we
can
build
interesting
applications.
E
The
lint
data
world
has
been
accumulating,
really
really
valuable,
open
access
stuff
for
about,
probably
you
know
close
to
20
years
now.
So
there's
all
kinds
of
really
important
valuable
data
sets
there.
It
might
not
be
really
big
data
because
it's
it's
a
small
small
files,
but
it
might
yield
some
really
cool
and
interesting
applications.
E
Likewise,
blockchains
have
been
accumulating
now.
Larger
stores
of
you
know
single
stores
of
a
bunch
of
transactional
data.
All
that
you
can
actually
take
all
of
the
all
of
the
blockchains
things
like
the
bitcoin,
blockchain
and
theorem
blockchain
and
so
on,
and
take
those
and
put
them
onto
onto
filecoin,
like
that.
E
That's
kind
of
a
fun
fun
thing
that
you
might
might
do
and
then,
in
terms
of
kind
of
the
decentralized
web,
like
really
look
at
what
kinds
of
applications
are
already
being
built
in
the
web
3
world
and
think
about
just
bringing
those
assets
into
into
falcon
and
being
able
to
kind
of
link
link
them
in
you
can
anything
that's
built
on
top
of
ipfs.
E
You
can
just
backup
directly
to
falcon
easily
right
and
it'll
you
can
you
can
plug
in
falcon
as
a
data
storage
medium
and
then
that
that
can
can
bring
it
online
and
persist
it
in
a
different
way,
and
so
you
know
really
think
about
so
I'll.
Remind
us
all
of
the
mission
of
hot
coin:
we
wanted
to
create
a
decentralized,
efficient
and
robust
foundation
for
humanities
information,
and
I
really
thank
you
for
being
part
of
this,
this
this
mission
and
this
project
and
this
this
ecosystem.
E
I
am
this
is
an
amazing
moment
for
all
of
us
and
it's
amazing
to
be
able
to
look
back
over
the
last
six
years.
For
me
and-
and
you
know
one
two,
three
four
years
for
many
other
people
and
and
just
see
the
this
movement
growing
together
and
this
this
amazing
thing
that
we're
building
together
is
a
a
great
condition
and
it
has
an
amazing
promise
for
the
future,
and
I
really
hope
that
you,
you
make
the
most
of
it,
and
it
can
be
be
helpful
to
you.
E
E
You
know
right
now
I
wanted
to
mention
you
know:
concurrency
slingshot,
the
space
race,
two
orbital
burn
period
is
happening,
so
a
lot
of
miners
are
thinking
about
growing
their
storage
or
maintaining
operations
and
and
thinking
about
the
the
storage
lifecycle
and
so
on,
and
some
subset
of
miners
are
now
kind
of
looking
ahead
and
starting
to
think
through
how
they
can
be
helpful
to
to
clients
and
to
enter
users
and
so
on,
and
a
number
of
them
are
going
to
be
around
and
participating
in
slingshot,
either
directly
or
in
the
periphery.
E
E
You
know
at
the
end
of
the
day,
this
is
the
marketplace,
and
so
this
is
a
good
opportunity
for
minors
to
get
involved
in
in
helping
out
clients,
sometimes
even
helping
them
find
and
access
the
data,
sometimes
in
helping
build
applications
and
so
on,
and
maybe
in
that
case,
miners
and
clients
start
blurring
in
between,
and
so
you
know
really
really
thanks
for
the
thanks
to
the
miners
that
are
participating
in
slingshot,
I
think
it's
going
to
be
really
important,
really
valuable
and
clients.
E
You
know
this
is
really
your
time
to
shine.
This
is
a
competition
made
designed
much
more
and
specifically
for
you.
This
is
a
period
where
you
can
focus
on
on
on
finding
interesting
and
valuable
data.
Sets
that
you
care
about
and
onboarding
them
into
a
system,
and
you
can,
you
know,
think
about
it
as
you
can
get
really
really
cheap
free
storage
for
valuable
data.
Sets
that
you
care
about.
E
So,
if
you
think
hey,
I
really
care
about
open
access
map
data
around
the
planet
and
that's
kind
of
big
and
it's
you
know
it's
hard
to
store
around
and
so
on.
Hey
put
it
on
falcon
and
then
it's
going
to
be
stored.
You
know.
One
important
thing
is
because
we're
going
to
carry
over
all
of
the
sectors
from
from
space
race
testnet
into
into
the
mainnet.
E
This
is
a
great
chance
for
you
to
just
back
up
tons
of
really
important
and
valuable
information
for
the
future
that
you
care
about,
having
basically
for
free.
So
if
you
want
to
keep
around
a
bunch
of
really
useful
valuable
data,
you
can
just
make
it
part
of
this
competition
and
get
it
into
the
into
the
network
and
then
it'll
be
stored
for
for
a
long
time,
and
likewise
with
that
think
about
the
kinds
of
applications
you
want
to
build
on
that
data.
E
Once
you
have
those
those
archives,
what
can
you
build
on
top
of
it?
What
what
are
the
kinds
of
interfaces
and
uis
and
superpowers
you
want
to
give
give
to
other
people-
and
this
is
you
know
practically
a
very
good
time
for
you
to
to
practice
that
that
that
flow,
think
of
like
get
get
your
bearings
straight,
learn
about
how
to
how
to
make
applications,
deploy
them
into
the
network.
How
to
access
data?
E
How
to
how
to
all
the
different
systems
and
protocols
available
to
you
get
used
to
how
to
use
powergain,
how
to
use
the
underlying
primitives,
how
to
use
even
things
like
like
loaders
and
so
on,
and
get
a
sense
of
all
of
the
deal
flow,
mechanics,
and
so
that
way
you
can.
You
can
will
be
much
better
set
up
for
the
future
when
you
want
to
make
a
lot
of
storage
deals
in
in
the
mainnet.
E
Let's
you
know
this
is
slingshot
is
really
kind
of
focused
more
towards
the
the
kind
of
like
the
left
side
of
of
this
market
picture
where
clients
and
applications
kind
of
come
online
space
race.
One
was
where
we
kind
of
built
up
a
lot
of
capacity,
and
that
was
very
focused
on
storage
miners
and
so
now
with
slingshot.
We
want
to
bring
a
lot
of
really
valuable
data
into
the
picture
and-
and
you
know,
kind
of
like
boot-
this
this
whole
marketplace.
E
So
with
that
in
mind,
some
I'm
going
to
start
giving
you
some
ideas,
really
look
at
the
ipfs
world
of
applications
and
see
which
ones
of
them
have
good
data
sizes,
and
so
on
that
you
want
to
kind
of
bring
on
there's
a
lot
of
cool
stuff
there,
and
all
of
that
data
is
on
ipfs
already,
so
all
you
have
to
do
is
is
replicated
and
back
it
up
into
into
platform.
So
there's
a
lot
of
like
really
cool
applications.
E
There's
also
all
of
the
you
know,
there's
been
a
ton
of
websites
and
systems
deployed
with
through
fleek
and
unstoppable
domains
and
ens,
and
so
all
of
that,
all
that
stuff
is
it's
on
ipfs
as
well,
so
you
can
just
grab
all
of
all
of
those,
all
of
that
those
sites
and
and
kind
of
back
them
up
into
into
popcorn
and
then
there's
really
cool
archives
that
are
specific,
so
things
like
audios,
who
are
who
are
building
whole.
You
know
a
large
archive
of
really
useful
and
valuable
music.
E
You
can
think
of
audio
as
both
the
the
layer
of
kind
of
storage
of
the
music
using
fpfs
and
all
then,
on
top
of
that,
the
protocols
for
how
the
artists
publish
their
music
and
interact
with
their
fans
in
their
community
and
then
the
actual
literal
applications
that
you
use
right.
So
you
can
download
it
the
audios
app
put
in
your
phone.
You
can
look
at
the
audio
top
on
the
web
and
so
on,
but
the
protocol,
the
audio
protocol
and
the
data
set
underneath
all
of
that
is
open
and
an
ipfs.
E
So
so
what
you
can
do
is
if
you
want
a
different
interface
for
audios,
or
you
want
to
do
something
with
the
audio's
music,
then
all
you
have
to
do
is
bring
the
audio
music
into
into
falco
and
build
an
app
on
on
powergate
that
connects
to
that.
To
that
data,
and-
and
now
you
can,
you
can
showcase
like
a
different
thing.
E
It
could
be
like
a
like
a
different
way
to
browse
and
explore
the
music
and
so
on,
and
you
can
really
make
this
web
3
protocol
shine
with
with
a
new
new
kind
of
application.
E
So
one
thing
I
wanted
to
kind
of
remind
us
all
is
you
know
the
world
today
is:
is
a
world
where
there's
kind
of
most
applications
build
their
own
database
and
it's
kind
of
segregated
and
creates
a
sort
of
wild
garden
and
the
large
scale
applications
kind
of
segment
and
split
all
their
data,
and
with
web3
and
and
things
like
thoughtpoint.
E
The
goal
is
to
build
one
very
large
scale,
data
layer
where
all
of
the
applications
can
then
be
sort
of
part
of
that
single
large
layer,
and
so
that
means
that
either
an
application
might
have
their
own
segment
data
within
this
large
storage
system,
or
they
might
actually
share
the
data.
So
so,
for
example,
imagine
that
you
have
a
bunch
of
really
important
and
valuable
data,
something
like
maybe
large
photo
archives
or
music
archives,
or
something
like
that.
E
You
can
have
many
different
applications
and
systems
pointing
to
the
same
data
and
using
it
in
different
ways.
So
the
data
sets
that
you
might
bring
into
the
network.
You
could
build
one
application
or
you
could
actually
build
two
or
three
small
applications
that
showcase
using
that
application
in
different
ways,
and
so
something
like
that
can
be
really
interesting
and
valuable
in
this
period.
E
So
one
important
thing
before
I
start
giving
you
a
bunch
of
ideas,
you
know
check
the
distribution
license,
so
it's
super
important
that
the
data
that
you
that
you
go
and
copy
and
put
into
file
coin
is
prop.
You
know
it
has
proper
and
good
licensing
so
make
sure
that
it's,
you
know
highly
recommend
that
you
stick
to
creative
commons
data
or
data,
because
that's
a
really
easy
license
to
see.
E
Otherwise,
really
you
know
make
sure
that
you,
when
you're,
going
to
copy
a
data
set
and
put
into
falcon
and
so
on,
either
you
are
creating
it,
and
so
you
have
the
right
to
do
that
or,
if
you're
taking
other
people's
data,
really
make
sure
that
you
do
have
the
ability
and
right
to
do
that.
That's
your
you're,
taking
that
action
so
really
make
sure
that
you
check
the
license.
E
So
with
that,
I'm
gonna
talk
about
a
few,
a
few
things
that
that
you
might
wanna
might
wanna
look
at
so
there's
a
ton
of
really
valuable
public
data
sets
where
you
can
find
a
ton
of
really
valuable
scientific
data.
That
is
actually
really
large.
So
you
can
find
data
sets,
as
you
know,
small,
as
you
know,
gigabyte
sizes
to
terabytes
and
even
petabytes.
E
So,
depending
on
your
your
appetite
for
how
much
data
storage
you
wanna
you
wanna,
try
and
onboard,
you
can
find
a
bunch
of
data
sets
of
these
different
sizes
and
a
ton
of
them
are
open
access
and
permissively
licensed.
So
you
can
just
grab
them
and
put
them
put
them
onto
popcorn
and
onboard
a
ton
of
really
useful
valuable
data
and
hey
you're
going
to
be
helping
back
up
this
really
critical
stuff.
E
So
this
all
of
this
data
sometimes
has
trouble
surviving
because
it's
very
expensive
to
keep
around
a
lot
of
data.
Hey
falcon
can
give
free
data
storage
to
these
folks
as
part
of
this
competition.
So
that
would
be
a
really
valuable
thing
that
you
might
do
for
for
these
communities,
but
again,
like
also
make
sure
that
that
you
can
you're
not
going
to
present
like
a
large
load
on
their
system.
So
you
know
handle
with
care
with
that.
E
There's
also
a
ton
of
open
access
paper
archives
where
you
can
take
all
of
the
actual
journals
and
so
on
that
are
that
are
open
access
and
you
can
make
really
different
viewers
and
build
maybe
the
best
and
and
largest
compendium
of
open
access
information
around
highly
recommend.
Looking
at
at
efforts
like
all
the
stuff
that
the
internet
archive
and
open
general
and
things
like
that
have
done,
there's
a
phenomenal
area
to
explore.
E
Then
beyond
the
papers
themselves,
you
can
look
at
the
figures
in
the
data,
so
the
biggest
part
of
scientific
information
is
usually
like
the
data
sets
and
perhaps
the
most
valuable
is
sometimes
the
figures,
the
figures
and
the
analysis
and
the
conclusions
in
the
papers.
Those
kinds
of
things
sometimes
can
be
separated
out
from
the
paper
pdfs
and
stored
and
they
become
valuable
assets
themselves.
Sometimes
these
figures
are
not
just
kind
of
a
2d
representation.
Sometimes
these
figures
are
through
entire
3d
models
and
systems
like
that,
and
they
start
getting
big.
E
When
I
call
out
like
the
picture
there
with
with
all
the
data
sets,
that's
those
are
the
disks
and
hard
drives
of
the
images
taken
of
of
a
black
hole,
and
so
I
think
this
was
a
big
moment.
I
think
it
was
last
year,
but
you
know
this
is
a
lot
of
data.
E
So
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
really
valuable
data
exists
in
the
scientific
community
that
you
can
help
back
up
and
then
there's
also
pre-print
archives,
where
there
are
already
these
large
collections
of
important,
valuable
stuff
that
you
can
maybe
help
back
up.
E
I
think
music
is
a
really
amazing
amazing
collection
of
of
data
as
well
for
for
a
lot
of
people,
audio
I'll
plug
audio
again
here,
because
I
think
this
is
the
easiest
one
to
to
get
going
with
it's
a
you
know:
it's
meant
to
be
open,
it's
meant
to
be
distributed
and
and
shared
in
in
a
web
three
way.
All
of
it
is
already
already
addressed
with
ipfs.
It's
probably
fairly
easy
to
get
going
with
this.
You
know
encourage
you
to
start
there,
maybe
a
lot
of.
E
Maybe
this
can
be
like
your
first
step
into
it,
like
a
few
of
you
can
get
together
and
do
this
and
then
kind
of
try
it
later
on
with
other
other
data
sets
but
yeah,
I
think,
like
building
applications
with
music.
That
would
be
really
awesome
and
we
really
showcase
the
the
value
of
the
network
and
yeah
again.
Just
because
I
mentioned
the
music
like
really
really
make
sure
the
licensing
is
right,
like
only
open
access,
music.
E
Think
about
like
different
kind
of
eth
applications
that
this
kind
of,
like
the
normal
pathway
for
a
lot
of
these
applications.
Now
that
now
that
falcon
is
here,
people
can
start
transitioning
their
storage
from
you
know
normal
public
centralized
clouds
into
into
the
decentralized
network,
so
think
about
a
bunch
of
cool
heat
applications
that
you've
used
and
think
about
bringing
them
to
to
falcon
yeah.
E
There's
a
there's,
a
small
collection
of
ipcs
archives
and
there's
a
web
page
somewhere,
and
I
saw
just
quickly,
though
that's
about
27
terabytes
of
data
all
already
in
ipfs.
So
that's
like
an
easy,
easy
grab
for
a
lot
of
you.
You
can
just
go
and
like
grab
these
replicate
them
and
and
put
them
in
pocket.
E
E
So
you
know,
I
really
think
like
the
in
terms
of
like
the
developer
asset
workflows
with
with
ipfs,
I
think
where
popcorn
can
can
really
shine,
is,
is
in
the
story,
storing
and
distributing
of
that
data,
and
so
I
think
with
slingshot
just
think
about
you
know
what
is
like
the
right
size
like
it's.
You
want
assets
that
are
big
enough,
but
easy
enough
for
you
to
to.
Actually
you
know,
get
and
put
into
five
points.
E
So
maybe
maybe
it's
the
packages,
maybe
it's
containers
vms,
are
also
larger,
but
there's
less
less
good
kind
of
open
access
stuff
there.
I
also
want
to
highlight
video.
So
there
are,
you
know
and
again
also
really
verify
the
licensing.
There's
a
lot
of
really
valuable
video
assets
that
are
open
and
you
can
go
and
help
replicate,
there's
a
lot
of
really
cool
archives.
Video
makes
up
a
huge
part
of
the
of
the
internet
and
the
data
distribution
flows
so
help
back
up
like
really
useful,
valuable,
valuable
video.
E
Now
one
one
that's
near
and
dear
to
to
my
heart,
I
got
into
computing
through
games
and
gaming,
and
so
I
think
you
know
there's
all
kinds
of
really
cool
open
source
games.
Now
the
world
has
changed
a
lot
for
in
the
last
20
years,
there's
just
tons
of
stuff
out
there
that
you
can
find
you
can
help
back
up
the
the
assets
of
these
games
and
help
them
distribute
stuff
oftentimes.
E
The
distribution
is
really
hard
for
for
indie
game
developers,
so
just
help
find
out
find
those
games
back
back
them
up,
replicate
them,
and
you
know,
help
people
download
download
this
game,
so
they
can,
they
can
play
them
and
also
there's
a
whole
bunch
of
game
assets.
So
if
you,
if
you're
pretty
clever,
you
can
build
an
application
where
you
can
make
the
assets
themselves
individually,
addressable,
and
if
you
make
the
assets
individually
addressable,
then
then
you
can
make
games
on
top
of
that
asset
library
directly.
E
So,
instead
of
you
know
today,
when
a
game
developer
tries
to
make
an
a
game,
they'll
grab
all
these
assets,
either
by
making
them
or
taking
them
from
from
libraries
and
then
put
them
together
into
a
game
and
then
distribute
that,
but
on
filecoin,
if
you're
going
to
make
a
game
on
filecoin,
then
potentially
what
you
could
be
doing
instead
is
first
bringing
all
the
game
asset
library
onto
filecoin
and
once
it's
there.
E
If
you
can
individually
address
the
assets,
then
your
game
is
just
the
code
on
top
of
those
assets,
so
maybe
for
slingshot.
If
some
of
you
like
gaming,
you
could
bring
all
these
asset
libraries,
these
open
source,
kms
libraries
onto
filecoin,
help
them
with
the
distribution
and
then
make
it
easy
for
people
to
write
simple
games
that
just
point
to
those
assets.
E
I
think
the
the
tool
I'll
mention
that
I
spend
a
fair
amount
of
time
in
it
are
decentralized
and
cryptovoxels
all
of
this
all
kinds
of
really
cool
creative
data
there
and,
if
you
can
think
of
of
putting
kind
of
the
marriage
of
filecoin
with
with
these,
I
think
it
would
be
phenomenal
to
to
see
these
really
cool
data
sets
a
be
backed
up
and
b
may
be
distributed
in
different
ways
and
potentially
c
use
different
applications
right.
E
So
right
now,
there's
like
one
viewer
for
these
virtual
worlds,
but
potentially
you
can
help
make
people
make
other
viewers
that
can
they
can
look
at
those
those
those
worlds
in
different
ways.
E
I'll
also
mention
nfts,
I
think
right
now
we
have
a
an
amazing
explosion
in
the
web3
space,
with
all
kinds
of
nfts,
where
there's
things
like
cryptokitties
and
and
all
kinds
of
things
like
that
and
there's
also
a
growing
movement
of
putting
art
into
into
nfts,
and
so
a
lot
of
that
art
is
visual.
So
there's
a
lot
of
galleries
and
and
so
on,
that
are
propping
up
in
things
like
crypto,
voxels
and
other
things
like
that.
So
go.
E
Take
a
look
at
that
world
explore
it
and
then
maybe
you
can
help
back
up
all
of
the
all
of
the
nfts
and
and
so
on,
because
most
of
these
that
I've
seen
are
addressed
with
ipfs.
So
all
you
have
to
do
is
just
look
at
all
those
ipps
hashes
and
replicate
them,
and
you
know
that's
the
beauty
of
ipfs,
ips
and
yeah.
E
I
already
mentioned
blockchains,
but
you
know
you
can
take
all
of
the
blocks
from
other
other
blockchains
and
just
help
help
distribute
them
through
through
five
point,
and
maybe
you
know,
I
think
one
one
that
I'll
end
on
that,
I
think
is
both
just
visually
stunning,
naturally
and
and
probably
really
exciting.
E
For
people
you
know
photos
photos
are
one
of
the
biggest
most
important
thing
that
the
internet
has
helped
transform
and
they're
just
a
whole
set
of
archives
of
beautiful
imagery
that
we've
been
collecting
for
the
last
25
years
and
a
ton
of
these
are
open
access,
so
I
believe
most
of
the
stuff
on
flickr.
If
not
all
of
it
is
creative
commons,
some
of
it
you
can't
redistribute
in
certain
ways
so
definitely
check
it.
E
But
a
lot
of
flickr
just
has
tons
of
tons
of
of
cool
archives
that
you
can
help
help
distribute
and
one
of
the
cool
things
is
beyond
distribution.
You
could
build
applications
right,
so
you
can
think
of
different
kind
of
neat
applications.
You
can
build
on
top
of
this
data,
so
step
one
is
get
the
archive
into
into
something
like
falcon
and
then
step.
Two
is
think
of
interesting
and
neat
applications.
E
With
that,
that's
it
so
you
know
good
luck
to
all
the
competitors.
This
is
gonna,
be
a
really
exciting
moment
I'll
hand
it
back
to
back
to
puja.
Thank
you
so
much.
A
Thank
you
juan.
That's
awesome,
some
really
really
great
ideas
and
we
have
a
request
to
add
these
to
the
list
of
data
sets
as
well.
So
we'll
definitely
do
that
and
thank
you
so
much
for
the
presentation
all
right.
Well,
I
think
if
there
are
any
other
questions,
please
definitely
bring
these
questions
to
the
file
coin.
Slack
we're
happy
to
answer
them
there
and
we'll
also
make
sure
that
the
questions
get
reflected
into
the
faqs,
because
we
are
a
bit
over
time.
A
We're
probably
going
to
end
it
here,
but
I
just
wanted
to
say
thank
you
so
much
to
the
whole
team
for
for
kicking
off
slingshot
today
and
welcome
to
all
of
the
competitors
and
best
of
luck.
We're
excited
that
you'll
be
participating,
see
you
very
soon
on
the
leaderboard.