►
From YouTube: Filecoin Space Race // Opening Ceremony
Description
Welcome to the SPACE RACE OPENING CEREMONY! We had presentations from across the team, including what to expect from the competition and some more details on what we have planned for Space Race.
Presentations:
00:00 Welcome with Aayush Rajasekaran
02:13 Filecoin Space Race Liftoff with Juan Benet
33:51 Space Race Overview - 48 Hours In with Michelle Lee
40:00 Frequently Asked Questions with Ian known as Ian, Darrow
46:56 Space Race Events with Angie Maguire
49:08 Wrap Up with Aayush
Register to participate live, or to check out all our upcoming events at:
https://spacerace.filecoin.io/events
A
A
lot
of
slack
messages
and
zoom
calls
happen
to
get
us
here,
but
here
we
are,
we've
had
really
really
good
stability
and
throughput
of
the
network.
A
There
really
haven't
been
any
issues
we
released
a
couple
of
like
quick
patches,
but,
but
certainly
the
networks
run
really
smoothly,
which
at
least
kind
of
for
me
personally
makes
me
think
the
month
of
calibration
that
we
did
was
really
really
well
spent
and
puts
us
in
a
really
good
place
to
kind
of
improve
on
our
last
few
things
to
get
to
get
mainnet
ready
from
the
engineering
point
of
view
right
now.
A
All
we
want
to
do
is
kind
of
collect
feedback
from
you
folks
and
improve
things
as
we
can
to
to
launch
filecoin
soon,
which
which
everyone
is
very
excited
for.
As
always.
Thank
you
all
for
your
support
for
the
amount
of
effort
that
went
into
you
all
preparing
for
this,
and
for,
as
always,
for
your
patience
and
and
support
of
the
fivecoin
project
and
for
joining
today
yeah.
A
So
so
that's
what
we're
doing
here
today
in
terms
of
our
agenda,
we'll
hear
from
file
coin
founder,
juan,
who
will
kind
of
talk
about
well,
where
we're
at
and
then
ma
mash
or
michelle
lee
we'll
be
talking
taking
us
through
the
space
phase
program
itself
and
ian
darrow,
who
many
of
you
might
be
familiar
with
as
well
we'll
kind
of
run
through
the
rules
of
the
competition
and
go
over
some.
A
Some
questions
that
have
been
been
coming
up
a
lot
and
at
the
end
of
this
I
think
angie
mcguire
will
talk
about.
Essentially
the
events
calendar
that
we
have
for
space
race
to
cover
all
of
the
stuff
that
will
be
happening
over
over
the
next
three
weeks
feel
free
to
be
vocal
in
the
chat
we
kind
of
we
always
love
hearing
from
you.
So
please
share
your
thoughts,
feedback
with
us
and
yeah.
I
hope
I
hope
everyone's
as
excited
as
I
am
this
is.
A
This
is
a
very
cool
time
of
the
project,
so
yeah,
let's
get
started.
Our
first
speaker
will
be
juan
so
juan
if
you
wanna,
if
you
wanna
jump
on
and
share
your
screen,
that'd
be
great
I'll.
Stop
sharing
mine
thanks.
B
B
All
right
can
folks
see
that,
can
we
give
it
a
thumbs
up
great
perfect.
B
All
right,
so
we
have
liftoff.
This
is
a
really
exciting
time.
I
wanted
to
just
check
in
a
little
bit
on
why
web3
matters
and
why
we're
all
here
so
today
in
this
intro,
I'm
gonna
remind
ourselves
of
why.
Why
we're
all
working
on
what
we're
working
on?
How
wife,
alcohol
matters
and
then
dive
into
kind
of
the
purpose
of
space,
race
and
and
where
we're
going
from
here.
B
So
you
know
the
there's
all
kinds
of
really
important
revolutions
in
technology.
The
last
you
know,
100
years
or
so
have
been,
have
seen
all
kinds
of
improvements
in
our
civilization.
B
We
have
all
kinds
of
of
important
things
happening
in,
especially
in
the
areas
of
computing
and
in
the
creation
of
the
internet.
This
amazing
kind
of
nervous
system
that
connects
all
of
us
and
from
there
kind
of
like
the
latest
shift
and
improvement
in
the
internet
is
web3.
So
you
know
when
you
look
back
and
you
think
of
the
last
80
years,
computing
has
really
transformed
who
we
are
and
how
we
work
and
and
how
we
live
and
and
everything
about
about
the
species.
B
So
we're
kind
of
going
through
this.
This
phase
transition,
where,
as
we're
building
this
technology
as
we're
building
all
this
computing
infrastructure,
we're
we're
melding
with
our
with
our
machines
and
so
on,
and
in
just
a
very
short
time
span.
It's
radically
transformed
what
we're
able
to
do.
B
We
have
amazing
deeply
amazing
superpowers
that
are
absolutely
indistinguishable
from
magic
in
the
past
and
and
and
really
defy
the
imagination
of
our
ancestors,
and
this
is
a
really
phenomenal
phenomenal
thing,
and
a
lot
of
it
is
is
driven
by
by
the
contributions
of
of
small
groups
of
people
who
who
create
some
new
piece
of
technology,
and
then
that
gets
larger
and
larger
groups
of
people
interested
in
it,
and
then
it
kind
of
diffuses
to
to
all
of
society,
and
so
those
kinds
of
contributions
have
been
really
pivotal
in
in
this,
this
improvement
rate-
and
today
you
know
the
internet
is
this
amazingly
permissionless
environment,
where
we
can
we
get
to
make
those
kinds
of
changes
just
checking
in
with
with
our
society.
B
Today
I
mean
there's:
there's
billions
of
humans
and
trillions
of
computers
living
and
working
together
deeply
integrated
every
year.
It
gets
harder
to
count
the
number
of
computers
that
you
interact
with
every
day,
and-
and
you
know
when
you,
when
you
look
ahead,
it's
that
number
is
going
to
be
much
much
much
larger
and
so
all
of
the
all
the
computing
infrastructure
we
use
and
the
rules
for
how
those
systems
work
and
the
rights
that
we
have,
and
so
on
really
matter
right.
So
the
who
controls
these,
what
what?
B
What
are
the
rules
and
the
protocols
who
has
who
can
stop
giving
them
giving
us
access
all
of
those
kinds
of
things,
become
incredibly
important
when,
when
the
level
of
integration
is
this
deep,
you
know
these
days.
B
Most
human
activity
is
assisted
by
computers
and
the
internet
is
is
constantly
granting
us
these
new
superpowers,
so
everything
from
our
work
from
our
play
from
how
we
learn
how
we
communicate
with
it
with
each
other
how
we
hang
out,
especially
in
this
time
in
in
this
kind
of
crazy
2020
year
with
a
pandemic.
B
All
of
these
systems
are
are
are
seeping
into
every
corner
of
human
life
and
the
the
pretty
amazing
thing
is
all
you
have
to
do:
to
grant
people
new
superpowers
is
build,
build
an
application
or
build
a
new
system,
deploy
it
to
the
internet
and
and
get
users,
and
so
that
level
of
permissionless
innovation
is
amazing,
is
really
truly
truly
powerful
and
the
crazy
thing
is
that
even
as
transformative
as
computing
has
been,
it's
going
to
be
even
more
so
there's
very
large
changes
coming
ahead.
B
Things
like
augmented
reality,
virtual
reality,
brain
machine
interfaces,
things
like
autonomous
driving
and
autonomous
vehicles,
artificial
intelligence
of
various
different
sorts
and
and
even
potentially
someday
artificial
general
intelligence,
which
is
a
whole
other.
You
know
all
better,
all
off
kind
of
kind
of
situation.
So
when
you
look,
you
know
when
you,
when
you
think
about
2020
and
where
we
are,
and
you
look
back
in
the
last
80
years
and
the
progress
of
computing,
it's
been
pretty
breathtaking
and
amazing.
B
What
what
we've
been
able
to
achieve
as
a
species
and
the
superpowers
we've
been
able
to
to
grant
to
people,
but
when
we
look
ahead
in
the
next
80
years,
things
are
really
hazy
and
it's
very
hard
to
predict.
What's
going
to
happen
so
there's
this
amazing
quote
from
alan
kay
who
worked
on
all
the
personal
computing
stuff
and
invented
a
lot
of
the
things
we
used
today.
B
You
know
the
best
way
to
predict
the
future
is
to
invent
it,
and
so
that
really
means
that
ensuring
good
futures,
you
know
predicting
good
futures-
is
really
up
to
us
to
invent
them,
and
so
that
you
know
thinking
thinking
about
how
we
use
computers,
how
we
use
our
systems,
how
they
work,
and
so
on.
All
of
that
you
know
really
fits
into.
B
Why
we're
here
today,
why
we're
building
the
things
we're
building
and
why
the
just
both
the
falcon
project
and
the
weaponry
ecosystem,
and
so
on,
is
here
because
of
that,
and
so
the
the
weathering
environment
is
the
next
iteration
of
the
web
is
trying
to
build
a
a
trying
to
evolve
the
application
platform
into
making
it
a
read.
B
Write
trust
medium,
making
adding
verifiability
across
the
stack,
adding
verifiability
to
transactions,
adding
verifiability
to
to
storage,
adding
verifiability
to
all
kinds
of
of
important
systems,
and
you
can
shifting
kind
of
beyond
just
the
read,
write
interactivity,
but
now
making
sure
that
our
protocols
and
systems
can
give
us
certain
assurances
and
they're,
not
gonna,
not
gonna,
break
or
not.
Gonna
cease
to
give
us
give
us
access
and
so
on.
So
the
ability
to
rely
on
the
systems
is
one
of
the.
B
You
know
really
important
fundamental
next
steps,
and
you
know
some
of
the
web
3
values
it
kind
of
described
them
as
as
this
in
the
past,
where
you
know
things
like
freedom
of
speech,
primo
assembly
being
able
to
kind
of
securely
publish
information
securely,
communicate
own
and
control
our
data
being
able
to
transact
freely
with
each
other
not
be
able
not
relying
on
central
control
having
verifiability.
All
of
these
kinds
of
things
are
some
of
the
potential
web3
values.
B
This
is
my
take
on
it,
of
course,
like
there's
a
lot
of
other
folks
who
who
have
a
different
different
list
here,
but
they
usually
kind
of
intersect
on
on
some
of
these
things,
and
I
think
one
of
the
one
of
the
really
important
things
coming
ahead
is
building
infrastructure
for
societies
where
we
can
have
self-sovereign
identity,
self-serve,
sovereign
communication
systems
and
so
on,
so
that
we
don't
have
to
rely
on
on
on
centralized
corporations
that
might
not
have
our
best
interests
at
heart
or
or
potentially,
governments
who
might
disallow
us
from
communicating
in
certain
ways.
B
So
web
3.0
is
kind
of
this
combination
of
the
decentralized
web
tech,
so
things
like
ipfs
and
and
other
protocols
that
are
about
kind
of
making
the
web
peer-to-peer,
the
combination
of
blockchain
systems
and
verifiability
and
game
theory
and
in
the
whole
crypto
tokens
world
and
the
idea
of
having
link
data
and
representations
of
of
databases
and
so
on
that
are
fully
accessible
by
anybody,
not
just
not
just
kind
of
behind
an
api.
B
So
all
of
those
three
things
put
together
really
give
us
what
what
web
3.0
is
I'll
leave
it
at
that.
If
you
are
interested
in
more
if
you're
new
to
web3-
and
you
want
to
find
out
more
I've,
given
these
two
talks
talking
a
bit
more
about
it
and
there's
a
whole
host
of
other
really
amazing
talks
and
materials
from
from
a
lot
of
other
people,
so
yeah
just
look
up,
search
for
it
or
on
youtube.
B
You'll
find
really
great
stuff
out
there
great
shifting
gears
to
falcone
we're.
You
know
it's
time
to
start
mining.
You
know
the
tesla
has
been
here
for
for
a
while.
It
is
now
we're
getting
to
to
the
space
race
soon
we're
very
close.
We're
on
the
you
know,
weeks
away
from
from
for
minute
launch-
and
you
know
that'll
be
the
time
to
to
to
really
start
providing
storage
services
to
other
folks
and
and
earn
earn
falcon
for
doing
so.
B
The
mission
of
popcorn
is
to
build
and
to
create
a
decentralized,
efficient
and
robust
foundation
for
humanities
information.
So
there's
a
lot
there
and
each
of
these
words
is
chosen
carefully.
So
we
want
the
system
to
be
decentralized
and
free
from
from
center
control.
We
want
all
of
the
assurances
and
values
of
the
web3
world.
We
want
those
kinds
of
guarantees.
We
also
want
the
system
to
be
efficient.
We
want
it
to
be
a
an
efficient
allocation
of
resources.
We
don't
want
a
lot
of
wasteful,
wasteful.
B
You
know
kind
of
proof
of
work
or
systems
like
that.
That
wastes
resources.
We
want
to
be
able
to
tap
into
all
kinds
of
of
market
systems
that
enable
us
to
get
better
and
better
quality
of
service
and
better
and
better
resource
distribution
and
allocation,
and
in
our
view,
you
know
kind
of
proper,
open,
permissionless
markets
are
the
way
to
way
to
get
there
and
not
kind
of
the
more
centralized,
very
large
kind
of
monopoly
monopoly
environment
of
the
cloud
of
today.
B
We
want
these
systems
to
be
robust.
We
want
them
to
be
systems
that
are
hard
to
break
that
are
hard
to
that.
Many
people
participate
in
serving
where,
even
if
you
take
down
one
part
of
the
network,
the
rest
of
the
network
survives
where
you
can
take
down
one
organization
and
that's
fine.
No
problem
like
the
rest
of
the
system
continues.
We
want
a
robust
foundation
that
that
many
folks
can
can
really
build
on
and
build
other
applications
and
other
systems
on.
So
so
we're
designing
falcoin
to
be
able
to
do
that.
B
Of
course,
that's
the
really
tall
order,
there's
a
lot
of
work
that
that
can
that
is
required
there
to
be
able
to
yield
this,
and
so
you
know
it's
taken
many
years
to
to
get
where
we
are
now
and-
and
it's
going
to
take
many
more
years
to
to
really
build,
build
out
that
foundation
and
get
it
super,
stable
and
and
rock
solid,
where
all
kinds
of
applications
and
other
systems
can
can
just
hook
on
top
of
falcon
and
just
kind
of
really
rely
on
it
in
a
way
that
nobody
relies
on
on
other
cloud
storage.
B
Today
and
finally,
you
know
we
really
want
it
to
be
used
for
all
kinds
of
information
for,
for
you
know
everything
that
humans
are
using
our
computing
infrastructure
for
today,
all
kinds
of
of
really
you
know
valuable
data
sets
and
everything
from
important
public
data
to
personal
data
sets
to
you
know
your
personal
data
or
organizations
data
all
of
that
kind
of
stuff.
B
We
want
to
make
falcoin
capable
of
serving
all
of
those
needs
and
we
there's
some
specific
areas
and
some
specific
applications
that
will
work
sooner
and
so
we'll
be
as
a
whole
community,
we'll
we'll
probably
be
be
be
focused
on
some
specific
areas
and
some
segments
of
of
that
large
large
quantity
of
information.
But
over
time
we
want
to
create
something.
B
That's
super
general
and
super
capable
of
of
meeting
the
needs
of
of
humanity,
long
term
and-
and
that
really
means
also
a
level
of
scale
that
many
other
systems
are
not
are
not
oriented.
For
you
know
the
the
the
amount
of
data
the
amount
of
information
that
human
is
generating
is
now
in
the
zettabytes
scale,
and
so
we
want
falcon
to
be
able
to
scale
to
that
size.
B
B
So
it's
a
long
journey
between
now
and
and
being
able
to
serve
at
that
level,
but
that'll
be
an
evolutionary
pathway
that
that
we
take
as
a
journey
will
take
together
and
we
want
at
the
end
of
the
day,
we
want
an
open
and
permissionless
market
where
our
digital
future
is
up
to
the
community
serving
serving
our
data
together,
and
we
want
an
environment
where
anybody
can
be
a
miner.
B
Anybody
can
store
the
data
of
clients
and
serve
it
and
where
filecoin
is
very
good
and
efficient
at
putting
content
and
data
on
various
different
corners
of
the
world
where
it's
needed.
B
You
know,
at
the
end
of
the
day,
the
all
of
falcon
is
about
providing
a
service
to
users.
So
it's
not
just
mining
and
transaction
processing,
like
other
blockchains
falcon,
has
the
very
explicit
goal
of
making
sure
that
all
this
data
is
stored
by
users
so
core
to
the
entire
system,
is
clients
working
with
miners
to
to
to
store
their
data,
and
so
miners
competing
to
win
storage
contracts
and
so
on.
So
a
lot
of
mechanisms
in
the
system
are
built
entirely
around
that
and,
of
course,
five
minute.
B
Miners
must
prove
that
they're,
storing
the
data
properly
and
and
not
lose
it,
and
so
on,
and
a
lot
of
the
mechanisms
and
systems
in
popcorn
are
there
to
to
make
sure
that
happens.
B
You
know
longer
term,
you
know
for
retrieval.
This
is
a
whole
other.
You
know
area
of
of
interesting
problems
around
being
able
to
find
copies
of
the
data
that
are
close
by
being
able
to
move
content
to
certain
regions
where
it
might
be,
might
be
hot
and
requested
a
lot
and
so
on,
and
we
tend
to
refer
to
this
as
the
as
the
retrieval
market,
so
there's
sort
of
the
storage
market
side
and
then
the
retrieval
market
side,
virtual
market
kind
of
stretches
all
the
way
into
kind
of
cdn
territory
where
you
want.
B
You
want
the
system
to
respond
to
to
requests
and
be
able
to
kind
of
move
around
move
around
the
data
move
around
two
to
various
different
nodes,
depending
on
on
the
demand.
This
stuff
is
very
much
in
the
early
earlier
stages.
Where
we
are
today
is
the
majority.
The
the
main
area
is
the
storage
market,
and
all
of
that
is
built
out,
and
so
we
can
get
get
fat
coin
going.
B
A
lot
of
the
result
market
is
in
early
days,
basic
retrieval
is
there
and
you
can
find
and
retrieve
things
quickly
and
so
on,
using
payment
channels
and
and
whatnot,
but
but
the
cdn,
the
full,
auto
scaling
cdn
capability
will
be
built
out
by
the
community
over
time
and
kind
of
the
vision
for
the
long
term
is
to
really
enable
anybody
with
with
mining
rigs.
B
To
from
you
know,
a
small
small
home
setup,
all
the
way
to
really
large
large-scale
data
centers
to
come
together
into
this
market,
bring
their
storage,
bring
their
services
and
and
have
a
robust
economy
that
we
can
all
that
we
can
all
use,
and
so
really
we
we
want
to
make
sure
that
folks
can
mine
at
any
scale
already.
B
B
So
you
can
think
of
the
the
first
few
months
and
and
maybe
year
of
the
falco
network
as
being
able
to
focus
primarily
on
kind
of
web
3
applications
and
applications
that
can
use
the
that
already
kind
of
require
something
like
popcorn
and
so
on,
and
then
use
that
time
period
to
prove
out
the
the
network
build
out
a
lot
of
features
that
maybe
clients
need
to
use
and
then,
from
there
kind
of
expand
out
to
to
a
lot
of
the
the
rest
of
the
world,
so
really
helping
web3
cross.
B
B
We've
had
a
really
amazing
year
with
a
whole
bunch
of
test
nets
and
the
ecosystem
growing
we're
kind
of
in
the
space
race
moment
and
then
kind
of
after
this
we
we
can
finally
launch
the
mainnet
I
do
want
to
flag,
though
that
you
know
minute
launch
is
not
the
end
for
at
all
made.
It
is
really
just
the
beginning
for
for
a
whole
host
of
of
of
activity
that
the
ecosystem
is
gonna
do
together,
and
so
you
know
just
like,
like
in
in
ethereum.
B
If
folks
remember
the
there
was
a
long
long
stretch
of
work
between
you
know
the
inception
of
the
project
and
the
main
at
launch,
but
then,
after
that,
a
ton
of
the
exciting
activity
and
application
development,
and
so
on
happen
happen
after
so.
You
know
this
is
a
very
important
time
with
space
race
very
important
time
with
maine
coming
up
and
then,
after
that,
it's
it's
all
of
the
you
know.
Waves
of
improvement,
the
community
and
the
ecosystem
is
gonna,
is
gonna
drive
we
don't
know.
B
What's
gonna
happen,
you
know
things
like
things
like
defy
recently
in
in
ethereum.
Ecosystem
have
been
these
amazing
explosions
of
activity.
We
have
no
idea
what
kind
of
new
and
amazing
things
falcon
is
going
to
enable.
So
I'm
especially
looking
forward
to
to
the
synergy
between
file
coin
and
and
next
generation
blockchain
systems
like
ethereum,
2
and
a
whole
bunch
of
others.
B
All
the
things
that
we're
gonna
be
able
to
to
to
build
at
that
point
are
gonna,
be
gonna,
be
really
interesting,
so
you
can
think
of
you
know
test
net
as
like
the
the
the
rocket
being
tested
out
in
the
hangar
and,
like
you
know,
we're
putting
it
into
all
kind
of
final
stresses
and
so
on
and
making
sure
that
everything
is
good.
I
can
think
of
the
space
races
like
finally
like
getting
up
getting
getting
rocket
ready
to
go
and
we're
heading
over
to
maina.
B
So
this
this
moment
is
a
really
really
important
moment
for
for
the
entire
network.
Just
a
quick
update.
It's
been
pretty
amazing
to
see
just
the
the
all
of
the
activity
across
the
ecosystem,
so
the
testings
that
we've
had
so
far
have
shown,
just
like
the
amazing
amazing
scale
that
we
can
reach.
You
know
the
the
tesla
2
reached
32
petabytes,
which
is
a
huge
huge
deal.
B
You
know
today
we're
already
at
16
petabytes
with
with
a
space
race
which
is
pretty
amazing
and
there's
a
whole
bunch
of
other
other
things
going
on,
though,
that
I'll
dive
into
so
earlier
this
year
I
put
out
a
call
for
for
pictures
of
various
different
mining
setups,
and
I
got
this
just
overwhelming
and
awesome
set
of
images.
I
would
love
to
get
more.
I
would
love
to
get
kind
of
like
updated
pictures
and
potentially
video
of
folks
and
their
setups.
B
I'm
gonna
try
and
collect
a
lot
of
that
so
that
we
can
kind
of
feature
it
during
the
space
race
and
and
so
on.
So
if
you're
watching
this
and
you
you
are
mining,
take
pictures
of
your
your
setups
or
video
send
us
a
greeting
and
then
we'll
figure
out
what
to
do,
how
to
put
all
of
that
together
and
and
feature
it
for
for
the
whole
community.
B
But
just
this
is
amazing,
like
the
level
of
quality
and
in
the
search
facilities
that
we're
seeing
is
just
it's
just
awesome
and
you
know
there's
a
ton
of
organizations
mining-
and
this
is,
you
know,
outdated
already,
but
this
is
just
a
just:
a
a
snapshot
of
a
whole
bunch
of
folks
that
that
are
mining
falcon
already.
You
know
around
the
world,
there's
there's
folks
all
over
the
place
and
really
exciting.
B
There
are
some
some
folks
who
who
went
out
and
produced
this
really
really
cool
set
of
videos,
and
you
know
they're
they're
claimed
to
have
like
really
huge,
staggering
scale
of
storage.
So
we'll
see
we'll
see
how
that
that
turns
out
in
in
mainnet.
B
But
you
know,
hopefully
we
can
get
to
the
exit
by
scale
this
year
and
I
want
to
give
a
huge
shout
out
to
all
of
the
different
community
leaders
who
are
who
are
really
building
out
the
falcon
community
by
by
hosting
meetups
organizing
conferences
spreading
the
word
about
what
falcon
is
that
is
super
super
useful
and
valuable
to
to
the
whole
network.
Thank
you
so
much
for
for
doing
that
and
for
for
taking
the
time
to
explain
how
things
work
and
and
helping
grow
the
community.
B
That's
a
really
really
important
part
in
all
of
these
open
open
systems,
and
especially
open
source
and
and
blockchain
protocols.
So
really
thank
you
to
all
the
community
leaders
out
there
and
so
yeah.
It's
been
you
know,
kind
of
where
we
sit
today
is
just
this
amazing
amazing
ecosystem
with
a
whole
host
of
participants,
and
I
think
you
know
I
speak
for
for
everybody
involved
with
the
project,
not
just
that
at
pro
class,
but
but
in
many
other
organizations
and
companies.
B
It's
just
amazing.
It's
really
breathtaking
to
be
to
be
part
of
such
an
active
ecosystem.
So
much
going
on
it's
really
hard
to
keep
track
at
this
point
really
great
work
going
on
all
over
the
place.
Super
vibrant.
It
can't
wait
to
to
see
where
the
next
next
year's
take
us.
B
I
want
to
give
a
huge
shout
out
also
to
the
youth
global
folks
and
and
the
entire
hack
fest
set
of
set
of
hackers
over
the
last
month
or
so
around
600
people
worked
super
hard
to
build
a
whole
bunch
of
applications.
The
you
know,
first
generation
things
built
on
ipfs
and
filecoin,
and
so
on,
using
tooling,
like
textiles,
powergate
and
fleek
and
a
bunch
of
others.
B
This
was
a
really
really
amazing
event
and
really
the
the
apps
that
people
are
making
are
already
kind
of
web
2
quality
and
they're
built
entirely
on
bit
fast
and
popcorn,
and
it's
it's
really
really
amazing,
so
go
go
and
check
that
out
in
the
hackerfest
showcase,
and
I
really
hope
to
see
a
bunch
of
these
in
in
the
falcon
mainnet,
especially,
you
know
shout
out
to
to
folks
who
are
like
working
on
bridges
to
ethereum
and
things
like
rap,
phil
and
so
on
to
to
bring
d
fight
to
department,
so
kind
of
like
a
next
important
stage
is,
is
going
to
be.
B
You
know
a
lot
of
the
the
ipfs
applications
that
have
been
using
iphones
for
a
very
long
time
now
can
start
using
using
popcorn
and
start
storing
their
data
there,
especially
the
ones
that
are
built
with
with
textile
buckets
and
so
on.
We'll
find
it
super
easy
to
use
power
gate
and
then
transition
over
others
will
will
find
you
know
kind
of
a
smooth
path
as
well
with
with
other
tools
but
but
now,
like
I'm,
super
excited
to
see
all
of
these.
All
of
this
amazing
data.
B
That's
on
ifas
today
now
migrate
over
to
over
to
platcoin,
and
it
would
be
really
really
cool
to
be
able
to
do
this.
Some
of
this
before
even
the
maintenance
happens
like
just
doing
it
directly
on
on
space
race,
so
some
of
us
are
gonna,
be
trying
to
run
some
some
tests
and
trying
to
do
some
do
some
deals
to
store
a
bunch
of
like
really
useful
data
already
on
space
race.
B
So
I
wanted
to
give
a
little
bit
of
a
preview
on
on
some
crypto
econ
documents
that
we're
going
to
be
sharing
later
later
on
this
week
or
or
maybe
early
next
week.
This
is
these:
are
the
this
set
of
documents
kind
of
describe
how
the
falcon
economy
is
supposed
to
work?
Why
a
lot
of
the
mechanisms
are
there
and
so
on,
and
so
I
wanted
to.
B
You
know
really
stress
at
the
moment
why
a
lot
of
the
space
race
conditions
are
are
about
not
just
providing
storage
and
mining
the
blockchain,
but
also
making
sure
to
get
to
serve
deals
correctly.
At
the
end
of
the
day,
all
of
falcon
really
relies
on
on
this
interaction
between
miners
and
clients,
clients,
bringing
data
minus
storing
that
data
and
providing
that
service.
B
That's
at
the
end
of
the
day,
why
why
falcon
is
here,
so
you
can
really
think
of
filecoin
as
an
export
economy,
where
you
can
think
of
kind
of
like
an
island
nation
with
with
raw
materials
and
production
and
and
kind
of
exporting,
the
service
of
cloud
storage
to
the
rest
of
the
world,
and
so
what's
going
to
make
the
network
utility
and
the
value
of
it
over
time
grow
is
is
the
is.
B
Is
that
entire
kind
of,
like
close
to
production,
of
taking
the
raw
materials
like
disks
and
and
power
and
computers,
and
so
on?
Organizing
it
with
like
the
work
of
miners
and
the
work
of
kind
of
researchers,
building
protocols
and
improving
the
protocol
and
developers
building
applications?
All
of
that
kind
of
piece
together
into
these
storage
related
goods
and
services,
which
are
then
kind
of
providing
utility
to
clients
that
are
kind
of
coming
from
outside
of
the
island
nation
and
kind
of
coming
into
the
economy?
B
And
so
this
is
like
the
if
you're,
if
you're
kind
of
looking
for
a
model
for
how
to
think
about
falcon
and
how
to
think
about
the
falcon
economy-
and
this
is
this-
is
a
really
good
one.
It's
not
the
only
one.
There
are
other
models
and
other
folks
might
might
have
have
have
other
other
perspectives.
But
this
is
what
we've
been.
We've
been
thinking
about
around
and
modeling
things
after.
B
I
want
to
point
out,
like
the
the
very
important
and
symbiotic
relationship
between
all
the
different
different
folks
in
the
in
the
ecosystem,
so
miners
clients
developers,
token
holders
and
ecosystem
partners.
All
of
these
are
you
know,
loose
groups,
there's
a
lot
of
other
smaller
groups
as
part
of
part
of
these
larger
groups
and
there's
all
kinds
of
important
relationships
that
these
groups
bring
to
the
table
as
participants
in
this
economy
right.
B
So
miners
aggregate
the
the
the
the
resources
use
the
protocols
built
by
developers
and
provide
the
storage
services
for
clients
who
then
use
and
buy
those
storage
services
and
then
do
so
by
by
paying
for
them
with
with
a
token
which
they
get
from
from
token
holders
and
so
on.
B
And
then
ecosystem
partners
are
a
really
really
important
part
of
the
picture
where
these
groups
are
helping
helping
spot
areas
of
the
ecosystem
that
might
need
new
infrastructure
or
new
systems
or
new
applications
and
are
working
on
developing
and
developing
them.
And
so
you
can,
you
can
think
of
the
you
know,
different
stages
of
the
economy,
with
with
different
levels
of
emphasis
and
kind
of
revenue
driving,
and
so
you
can
think
of
different
stages
in
the
system.
B
As
you
know,
like
the
first
stage
of
the
network
is
really
about
building
out
capacity
and
and
proving
out
the
quality
of
the
network,
doing
the
first
iterations
of
use
cases
with
early
applications,
ipfs
users
and
so
on,
having
kind
of
pretty
basic
retrieval
and
really
orienting
kind
of
the
the
a
lot
of
the
revenue
streams
for
for
miners
and
others.
B
Around
kind
of
the
block
reward
and
the
block
minting
and
so
over
time,
we'll
transition
that
to
sage
two
with
a
much
more
scalable
chain,
reducing
a
lot
of
the
cost
of
production.
Much
you
know
more
efficient
proofs
and
retrieval
and
then
kind
of
start
shifting
into
into
kind
of
kind
of,
like
more
of
the
of
the
baseline
minting
minting
level
and
and
hopefully
at
that
point
like
the
quality
of
service
of
the
whole
network,
is
improving
and
and
suddenly
deal
payment
starts
picking
up
as
an
important
revenue
driver
as
well.
B
So
so
we,
you
know
the
stage
one,
the
block
reward
is
kind
of
dominant
in
stage
two
kind
of
is
still
dominant,
but
but
the
deal
payment
is
starting
to
come
in
and
then
kind
of
in
stage
three
in
the
long
term.
It's
really
about
you
know
a
you
know:
the
full
suite
of
applications
and
products
around
the
popcorn
ecosystem
being
able
to
to
you
serve
all
kinds
of
use
cases
having
a
very
strong
brand
and
and
as
a
system
and
reputation.
B
Think
of,
like
the
network
effects
that
that
ethereum
and
other
systems
like
that
have-
and
you
know
the
quality
of
service
at
that
point,
you
know,
after
you
know,
kind
of
years
of
iteration
or
improvement
should
at
that
point
really
not
just
match
but
greatly
exceed
the
quality
of
service
of
other.
You
know
centralized
systems
and
at
that
point
kind
of
deal
payment
will
then
take
over
and
become
a
really
significant
revenue
flow
for
for
miners
right.
B
So
this
this
whole
transition
arc
is
about
how
the
the
whole
falco
network
will
bootstrap
will
gain,
will
build
out
a
large
amount
of
capacity
and
serve
it
quality
of
service
over
time
and
kind
of
improve
that
and
optimize
it
to
get
to
a
really
high
quality
quality
of
service.
So
the
good
news
is,
we
have
thanks
to
things
like
the
block
award.
B
We
have
quite
a
bit
of
time
to
to
be
able
to
do
that
by
the
end
of
the
day
it's
going
to
come
down
to
to
the
ecosystem,
the
applications
that
are
developed
and
so
on
to
really
yield
this,
and
so
the
you
know,
the
space
race
now
and
kind
of
the
early
days
of
the
network
are
really
about
the
life
cycle
of
mining,
being
able
to
kind
of
create
miners,
commit
capacity,
start
producing
blocks
and,
and
you
know,
take
deals
store
things
do
all
the
proofs
and
so
on,
so
that
that's
space
race
is
greatly
focused
on
that
and
in
kind
of
the
early
main
end
will
as
well.
B
But,
but
I
do
want
to
stress
how
important
making
deals
and
taking
storage
from
clients
is
and
kind
of
in
the
long
term
later
on
really
kind
of
the
referral
market
and
that
whole
area
of
being
able
to
to
really
achieve
high
quality,
cdn
style
style
environments
is
kind
of
further
out.
B
B
I
want
to
touch
a
little
bit
on
space
race
progress.
It's
really
amazing
to
see
the
the
level
of
of
participation
already
I'm
super
blown
away
by
by
how
much
storage
has
been
amassed.
16
petabytes
is
huge
in
two
days.
That
is,
that
is
really
a
staggering
scale
and
it's
just
been
awesome
to
see
how
many
deals
actually
succeed
like
the
deal
success
rate
is,
is
super
high.
The
retrieval
success
rate
is
also
super
high.
I
look
forward
to
trying
it
out.
B
I'm
gonna
try
and
put
my
blog
in
a
a
bunch
of
talks
and
videos
and
so
on
on
the
network
and
try
to
serve
them
later
on.
So
so
look
forward
to
to
see
how
that
that'll
that'll
play
out
shout
out
to
all
the
all
the
block
explorers
who
have
been.
You
know,
working
with
the
new
testaments
and
so
on
and
and
they're
super
useful.
It's
awesome
to
see
the
distribution
of
miners
there.
B
It's
telling
them
to
see
the
all
the
activity,
it's
great
to
see
like
the
eip,
the
the
the
gas,
the
gas
structure
that
we
that
we
that
we
ended
up
implementing
working
really
well.
So
that's
that's
super
exciting
to
see-
and
it's
also
great
to
see
like
the
historical
growth
of
the
of
the
storage
in
the
network.
These
kind
of
layered
kind
of
like
the
layers
of
power
and
in
phil
scott
here
looked
really
really
cool
and
it's
awesome
to
see
just
how
many
miners
we
have
around
the
world.
B
It's
it's.
It's
super
super
exciting
to
see
this
many
active
facilities,
each
one
of
these
miners
is
like
a
often
a
huge
facility
with
like
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
machines
going
on
there.
So
it's
really
great
to
see
folks
in
in
every
continent,
and
you
know
a
lot
of
concentration
in
different
different
areas.
B
Just
to
give
you
a
sense
of
scale,
16
petabytes
in
two
days.
That's
you
know
about
eight
petabytes
a
day
and
if
we
keep
that
up
during
the
main
net,
that's
three
exabytes,
that's
enormous,
staggering
amount
of
storage.
If
we
can
do
that,
that'll
be
it'll,
be
really
phenomenal,
phenomenal
place
to
be.
B
I
wanna
give
a
one
last
shout
out
to
to
the
set
of
events
around
hopking
ignite,
so
space
race
is
part
of
this.
This
larger
set
of
events
leading
up
to
and
through
the
minute
launch
hackerfest
was
one
of
them.
The
spark
university
hackathon
is
another
two
that
are
coming
up
now.
One
of
them
is
a
polo
that
is
a
partnership
between
bitcoin
and
the
falcon
community
definitely
check
this
out.
B
This
is
a
community
of
builders
that
are
coming
together
to
to
work
on
their
applications
and
work
work
on
systems.
I
highly
recommend,
checking
it
out
and
applying
starting
very
soon
and,
and
the
other
is,
is
the
falcon
launch
pad.
So
this
is
tachyon,
which
is
an
accelerator.
That's
been
very
focused
on
on
on
ethereum
and
web3
in
general,
is
doing
a
whole
falcon
oriented
session
falcon
launchpad
and
that's
the
applications
for
that
close
by
friday.
B
So
if
you're
building
an
application
or
building
a
company
in
web3
in
general,
and
especially
if
you're
using
a
professor,
falcoin
or
ethereum
definitely
applied
by
friday,
this
is
going
to
be
a
whole
bunch
of
support.
So
that's
there's
seed
capital
and
a
whole
amazing
list
of
mentors
that
can
help
you
help.
You
build
your
organizations
with
that.
Congratulations
to
all
the
miners
participating
in
the
in
the
space
race,
we've
had
liftoff
and
it's
going
to
be
a
really
really
awesome
awesome
week.
A
Thanks
a
lot
juan
yeah,
it's
really
nice
to
kind
of
take
a
step
back.
Remember!
What's
what's
motivating
us
all
our
kind
of
what
our
mission
is
and
then
realize
that
we
are
a
future
focus
project
and
mainnet,
like
you
said,
is
very
much
just
chapter
one
of
the
story
and
it's
a
story
being
written
by
this
giant
community
of
miners
developers-
hackers
it's
it's
very
exciting,
I'd
be
lucky
to
be
here.
Yes,
thanks
a
lot.
A
Next
up,
we
have
michelle
lee,
who
many
of
you
are
probably
familiar
with
from
the
slack
channels.
By
now,
who's
been
organizing
a
whole
bunch
of
stuff
around
space
race,
so
so
she'll
be
talking
about
the
space
race
competition
itself.
Over
to
you,
michelle.
C
All
right
so
we're
we're
about
48
hours
into
the
space
race
and
we're,
I
think,
our
whole
foul
coin.
Project
team
and
the
whole
community
are
incredibly
excited
about
this.
I
just
want
to
start
off
by
repeating
our
goal
for
the
competition.
So
if
you
recall
juan
spoke
about
a
decentralized,
efficient
and
robust
foundation
for
humanities
information
and
that's
what
we
want
to
achieve
at
mainnet
and
beyond,
so
the
competition
is
really
about
preparing
us
for
the
mainnet
through
stress
testing
and
improvements.
C
You
know
rapid
and
high
bandwidth
communication
between
the
mining
community
and
the
project
team
and
everyone
else
involved
so
that
we
can
actually
measure
and
improve
our
ability
to
serve
that
mission.
So
you'll
see
a
lot
of
the
rules
and
incentives
during
the
space
race.
C
Competition
are
designed
to
measure
our
ability
to
do
that
so
decentral
decentralization,
we're
testing
and
rewarding
global
connectivity,
we're
testing
and
rewarding
storage
and
retrieval
markets,
and
so
that's
where
a
lot
of
the
rules
come
from
and
that's
where
a
lot
of
the
adjustments
and
minor
configuration
improvements
have
been
made
during
the
calibration
period
and
I
think
we're
really
starting
to
see
that
pay
off
because
of
the
successes
during
the
competition.
So
thank
you.
Everyone
who.
C
A
really
fantastic
network,
so
the
competition
itself
is
a
3d
competition
where
we're
two
days
in
about
two
and
a
half
more
weeks
to
go,
and
there
are
a
series
of
reward
pools,
both
global
and
regional,
that
are
growing
as
more
storage
is
added.
So
it's
both
a
collaboration
and
a
competition.
So
you
can
collaborate
with
your
region
to
unlock
different
tiers
and
then
you
also
compete,
for
you
know
a
bigger
share
of
those
tiers.
If
you
can
add,
more
storage
and
the
total
potential
storage
rewards
add
up
to
four
million
follow
points.
C
So
we're
really,
you
know,
really
motivated
and
excited
to
see
how
minors
respond
and
compete
and
collaborate
to
try.
E
C
Reach
that
goal
and
what
each
individual
minor
is
tasked
with
doing,
is
to
race,
to
add,
sealed
storage
to
the
network,
but
while
maintaining
good
storage
and
retrieval
quality
and
that's
measured
by
the
bots
there's
also
an
additional
100k
file
coin:
that's
going
to
be
split
between
the
top
block
reward
winners
and
that's
intended
to
simulate.
You
know
the
actual
earnings
during
the
main
net
of
you
know
how
how
block
rewards
behave.
C
The
judging
criteria,
the
primary
competition
metric
is
just
raw
byte
storage
power.
So
in
this
competition
verified
deals
are
not
factored
into
your
storage
power,
but
in
mainnet
they
will
be.
The
second
most
important
criteria
is
is
deal
success
rate,
so
our
pass
fail.
Number
is
80
for
both
storage
and
retrieval
and
that
factors
in
you
know
some
pretty
typical
network
glitches
failures.
C
You
know
things
that
happen
in
the
course
of
connecting
information
around
the
web,
but
on
the
whole
you
know
we
want
to
see
miners
aiming
for
90
and
then
that
that
includes
some
buffer
so
that
you
can
still
qualify
for
rewards
at
any
any
threshold
above
80
and
we
see
a
lot
of
miners,
especially
the
you
know,
miners
on
the
first
few
pages
of
this
leaderboard
well
above
that
so
100
or
you
know,
high
90s
as
well.
C
So
that's
that's
been
fantastic
to
see
two
more
small
things
that
are
included
in
judging
or
rewards.
We
want
to
see
miners
demonstrate
that
at
least
one
sector
can
be
upgraded
from
committed
capacity
to
client
deals
and
the
instructions
for
that
are
shared
in
the
channel
and
the
competition
rules.
C
And
the
second
is
that
there's
a
small
bonus
available
for
the
top
block
award
producers
so
that
just
matches
the
main
ever
word
structure,
so
we're
48
hours
in
my
screenshot's
already
out
of
date,
but
we
have
currently
at
last
count
291
miners
participating
from
over
20
countries.
That's
really
really
fantastic
and
over
15.
I
think
we're
past
16
now
petabytes
stored
in
under
two
days.
C
So
that
means
if
we
continue
at
the
same
rate,
we're
on
track
for
150
petabytes
of
storage
by
the
end
of
the
competition,
and
you
can
see
on
the
right
side
of
the
screen.
The
final
tier
is
unlocked
at
100,
so
it
sounds
like
we're
very
much
on
track
to
unlock
that
that
the
the
biggest
year
of
global
rewards
and
in
several
of
the
regional
pools
as
well-
and
we
see
the
deal
success
rates-
are
strong
and
trending
upward,
especially
over
the
course
of
the
calibration
period
and
competition.
C
Right
now,
the
asia
region
is
leading
for
storage,
but
these
regions
are
only
calculated
from
miners
who
have
registered
so
please
register
fewer
than
one-third
of
miners
have
registered,
and
we
need
you
to
submit
your
information.
So
we
can
verify
your
location
and
identity
and
be
eligible
for
rewards
I'll
share
this
in
the
slack
channel.
I
think
I
we
already
have
we've
created
new
channels
for
every
region,
so
space,
race,
race,
africa,
space,
race,
dash
asia,
space
race,
australia.
C
So
you
can
connect
and
encourage
other
miners
in
your
region
to
try
to
unlock
these
successive
tiers
of
rewards,
and
you
can
see
that
the
top
of
the
leaderboard
has
a
lot
of
mysteries,
we're
seeing
fantastic
storage
and
retrieval
deal
success.
We're
seeing
mostly
unclaimed
miners
so
far,
so
it'll
be
exciting
to
see
who
emerges
from
the
woodwork
once
you've
registered
and
we
can
see
where
in
the
world
you
are
and
which
organizations
or
groups
or
individuals
these
represent
all
right.
C
Next,
I'm
going
to
turn
it
over
to
ian
for
space
race.
Faqs.
Are
you
sure
you're
doing
the
transition
between
us.
A
I
think
I
think
ian
can
can
come
right
on,
but
thank
you
for
for
that
update
and
yeah
ian.
If
you
want
to
jump
in
here
with
with
some
faqs
that'd,
be
good.
E
All
right,
thanks,
ayush,
thanks
good
to
chat
with
everyone.
I'm
ian,
also
known
as
ian
on
slack
you've,
probably
seen
me
answering
lots
of
questions
helping
with
troubleshooting
and
generally
ensuring
that
the
content
of
the
space
race
goes
as
smoothly
as
possible.
So
what
I
want
to
do
here
is
talk
through
some
frequently
asked
questions.
E
That
have
come
up
throughout
the
course
of
the
space
race
just
to
make
sure
everyone's
on
the
same
page,
about
rules
about
the
way
things
have
gone
so
far
about
procedures
and
sort
of
just
to
give
some
more
confidence
in
the
way
the
competition
is
going.
E
So
the
first
thing
which
marsha
already
touched
on,
but
I
want
to
really
emphasize
so
we
get
tons
of
questions.
How
do
I
register
for
the
space
race?
The
first
step
is
to
just
start
mining,
so
we
have
this
dashboard
running
at
space
race.filecoin.io
as
soon
as
you've
mined
a
single
sector.
The
dashboard
will
automatically
pick
up
your
miner
and
put
it
on
the
dashboard.
That's
step.
One
step
two
is
to
go
to
spacerace.filecoin.io
and
then
click
register
in
the
top
right
corner.
Okay,
there
will
be
a
short
form.
E
You
fill
out,
you'll,
follow
a
few
instructions
on
your
miner
and
then
that's
it
you'll
submit
your
information
and
then
we'll
approve
it.
On
our
end,
it's
so
important
to
register.
You
can't
be
eligible
to
receive
rewards
unless
you
register
the
deadline
for
people
who
are
already
mining
is
monday
august
31st
at
10
pm.
Utc
one
point
that
someone
made
earlier
today
that's
good
to
bring
up
this
ad.
This
deadline
applies
for
people
who
have
already
begun
mining
if
you're
trying
to
join
the
competition
late.
E
That's
fine
and
you're
free
to
register
once
you
start
mining,
but
if
you've
already
begun
mining.
This
is
the
deadline
for
registration.
E
Another
question:
is
there
a
minimum
minor
size
to
receive
rewards?
So
there's
some
confusion
around
this,
because
at
the
file
coin
main
net
there
will
be
a
minimum
miner
size
to
receive
block
rewards,
but
for
the
purposes
of
the
space
race,
there's
not
a
hard
minimum
size.
So
as
long
as
you're
in
the
top
hundred
miles
miners
globally
or
in
the
top
50
within
your
region,
then
you
can
be
eligible
to
receive
rewards.
As
long
as
you
meet
your
storage,
retrieval
and
sector
upgrade
criteria.
E
How
will
aml
kyc
work
for
space
race
rewards
or
a
different
way
of
phrasing?
This
question
is:
how
will
I
you
know
retrieve
my
rewards
once
the
competition
has
ended
if
I'm
eligible,
so
we
work
with
the
folks
over
at
coinlist
and
after
the
competition
ends.
If
you
are
eligible
for
rewards,
they
will
reach
out
via
the
email
that
you
used
to
register
and
they'll
help
coordinate
access
to
your
rewards
and
we'll
encode
those
into
the
genesis
block.
E
So
they'll
start
vesting
over
six
months
and
you'll
have
access
to
the
investing
tokens
as
the
rewards
progress
coinless
will
ask
you
to
do
some
normal
exchange
style
kyc
like
providing
a
government
photo
id
things
like
that.
E
How
will
we
verify
miners
location,
so
this
is
quite
important
to
the
the
integrity
of
the
competition,
because
folks
are
working
in
different
regions
to
claim
different
pools
of
rewards.
So
when
you
register
you'll
be
asked
to
provide
information
about
your
location,
what
will
happen
if
you've
declared
your
location?
Is
that
we'll
reach
out
to
your
registered
email
address
with
some
instructions?
E
And
we
can't
disclose
exactly
what
we'll
ask
you
to
do,
because
we
don't
want
people
to
have
too
much
time
to
prepare
for
the
information
that
we're
requesting,
so
that
should
be
pretty
straightforward.
It'll,
be
very
easy
to
provide
as
long
as
you've
provided
the
correct
location.
Please
take
this
seriously.
If
you
attempt
to
represent
that
you're
from
a
different
location,
then
it
turns
out
you're
from
then
you
won't
be
eligible
to
receive
any
rewards.
E
Can
I
combine
multiple
minor
actors
into
one
for
the
competition,
so
this
is
a
special
rule
that
we've
created
just
for
the
space
race
during
main
or
during
mainnet.
It
won't
really
matter
whether
you're
mining,
with
lots
of
individual
miners
or
one
large
miner,
but
for
space
race.
It
does
matter
because
you're
sort
of
trying
to
make
it
into
that
top
100
or
top
50..
E
So
if
you're
running
multiple
machines-
and
you
don't
want
to
go
through
the
sort
of
technical
overhead
of
figuring
out
how
to
combine
them
into
one
minor,
we
can
help
with
that.
So
all
you
have
to
do
in
this
case
is
register
each
of
your
minor
ids
individually,
use
the
same
email
address
and
then
send
an
email
to
mining
at
filecoin.io
list
out
those
minor
ids
and
then
tell
us
what
your
desired
display
name
is
the
deadline
for
us
to
do
this,
for
you
is
wednesday
september,
2nd
at
22
utc.
E
So
it's
two
days
after
the
registration
deadline
make
sure
you've
gotten
these
in
by
that
time.
If
you
haven't
combined
your
miners
after
this
time,
we're
not
gonna
be
able
to
help
you.
The
only
exception
is,
if
there's
brand
new
miners
that
could
add
to
the
network
once
again,
how
do
we
ensure
that
the
competition's
being
run
fairly?
This
is
maybe
the
most
important
question,
and
this
is
obviously
it's
a
challenging
competition.
People
have
put
a
lot
of
effort
into
it.
E
They
want
to
make
sure
that
you
know
they
succeed
or
fail
based
on
their
own
merits.
So
here's
what
we're
doing
the
entire
duration
of
the
competition
to
make
sure
that
you
have
a
lot
of
confidence
that
it's
being
run
well.
We
constantly
monitor
all
of
the
deals
that
are
being
attempted
by
the
bot.
What
we're
looking
for
is
any
evidence
that
there's
an
issue
either
with
lotus
or
with
the
bots
code.
So
most
of
the
issues
that
we
see.
E
In
fact,
we
haven't
seen
any
issues
so
far
that
we've
been
able
to
confirm
are
not
are
the
results
of
lotus
or
bot
code,
but
we're
constantly
watching
for
it
and
there's
a
few
we're
still
investigating
any
deals
that
we
can
confirm
resulted
from
errors
with
lotus
or
the
bot
will
be
removed
from
the
deal
log,
so
you
won't
be
punished
for
those
failed
deals.
They'll
be
credited
back
to
your
miner.
Essentially,
in
addition
to
that,
we're
always
monitoring
slack
every
single
issue
that
miners
post
to
slack.
E
We
investigate
we
ping
it
to
our
engineering
team.
We
make
sure
that
it's
an
issue
that
we
understand
and
either
you
know,
know
what
caused
it
or
have
a
fix
in
the
way,
we're
also
just
giving
miners
as
much
troubleshooting
assistance
as
possible.
So
if
you're
having
an
issue,
if
you're
seeing
some
error
messages
that
you
don't
understand
just
a
little
bit
of
help
with
your
setup,
you
can
always
hop
on
the
space
race
channel
on
slack
or
the
fil
lotus
channel
just
post
your
question.
E
In
there
we
have
half
a
dozen
engineers
who
are
there
most
times
of
the
day
and
they'll
be
happy
to
help
you
out,
troubleshoot
point
you
to
the
docs,
whatever
you
need,
and
finally,
just
as
a
general
thing
we're
just
watching
to
see
how
the
competition
progresses
see,
how
storage
progresses
in
the
different
continents
etc.
We
want
to
make
sure
that
everyone
who's
put
a
ton
of
effort
into
participating
in
this
competition.
You
know
gets
that
rewarded.
E
We're
super
excited
to
see
all
of
you,
your
early
adopters,
your
real
pioneers,
so
we're
just
watching
that
sort
of
holistically
and
as
we
get
a
little
bit
more
information,
especially
as
people
start
registering
more
we'll,
be
able
to
get
a
sense
of
how
the
competition
is
going
overall
and
make
any
final
tweaks
to
the,
except
that
it's
helpful
with
that
I'll
turn
it
back
over
to
ayush.
Thank
you
all
so
much
for
your
participation
here.
It's
early
in
the
space
race,
there's
a
long
way
to
go.
E
If
you're
having
early
difficulties,
don't
get
discouraged
just
keep
on
there
keep
asking
questions,
keep
fine-tuning
your
setup,
tons
and
tons
of
time
to
recover
and
to
have
a
really
awesome
outcome.
I'll
turn
it
back
over
to
ayush
thanks
everyone.
A
Thanks
a
lot
ian
for
for
that
information
and
for
for
all
of
the
other
work
that
you've
been
doing
to
help
make
sure
this
this
runs
smoothly.
Next
up,
we
have
angie,
who
will
be
talking
about
our
upcoming
events,
calendar
all
of
the
cool
stuff
that
that
we
have
planned
to
as
part
of
the
as
part
of
the
space
race
schedule
over
to
ung.
D
Awesome,
thank
you
so
much
irish
and
thank
you
so
much
everybody
else.
So
we
have
a
very
exciting
few
weeks
ahead
of
us.
I
think
we've
got
about
three
weeks
to
go.
We've
already
kicked
off
our
events
program.
So
let
me
just
take
you
through
bear
with
me
one
second.
D
And
we're
off:
okay,
so
over
the
next
three
weeks,
we'll
be
hosting
a
series
of
events
where
you
can
hear
from
the
falcoid
mining
community.
You
can
find
all
the
latest
information
here
at
space,
race,
dot,
file,
coin
dot,
io,
slash
events.
So,
let's
see
what
we
have
lined
up,
we'll
have
weekly
mining
workshops
hosted
by
falcon
engineers
to
explore
the
many
aspects
of
falcoid
mining.
D
Yesterday
reba
taught
us
about
some
of
the
common
errors
that
you
get
in
in
falcon
mining.
You
can
check
in
here,
so
we
have
three
weeks
of
great
content
ahead.
So,
as
mentioned
peter
hosted
a
workshop
yesterday.
If
you
missed
that
workshop
and
if
you
miss
any
of
the
falcon
events,
don't
worry
we
post
everything
straight
to
youtube.
D
You
can
subscribe
here.
One
on
the
team
will
post
the
link
in
the
chat.
D
Okay,
so
what's
up
for
the
rest
of
the
week
tomorrow,
we've
got
the
minor
show-and-tell,
with
fabulous
folks
from
ipfs
main
and
six
block
they're
going
to
deep
dive
into
their
architecture
and
hardware,
and
tell
us
a
little
bit
more
about
why
they're
excited
to
be
mining
on
filecoin
that
will
take
place
at
6pm
pst
and,
as
I
said,
we've
got
a
ton
of
stuff
coming
up.
So
yesterday
was
a
mining
workshop.
You
can
check
that
out
again
on
youtube.
D
Today's
the
opening
ceremony
tomorrow
tomorrow
is
the
minor
show-and-tell
and
every
friday
we've
got
the
space
race
roundup.
So
what's
the
round
up?
Well,
basically,
we
take
a
look
at
all
the
action
that's
taking
place
on
space
race
throughout
the
week.
We're
also
going
to
be
looking
out
for
community
champions.
So
if
you've
been
helping
people
in
slack,
for
example,
it's
a
great
place
for
us
to
recognize
you
if
you'd
like
to
participate
in
any
of
these
events,
then
please
get
in
touch
with
us.
A
Great,
thank
you
so
much
angie.
All
of
that
is
exciting.
It's
always
lovely
to
hear
from
the
various
other
people
that
are
that
are
part
of
the
filecoin
community.
That's
all
we
have
for
today.
I
believe
thank
you
very
much
to
everyone
who
joined,
I
hope
everyone's
as
excited
as
we
all
are
to
be
to
be
at
the
stage
in
the
journey.
Thank
you
to
all
of
our
speakers
juan
ian
marsh
angie.
It's
always
exciting
to
hear
from
y'all
yeah
and
that's
all
we
have
for
today.
A
Stay
stay
safe,
stay
excited!
Thank
you
again
for
your
continued
support,
and-
and
let's
let's
see
this,
these
final
steps
to
mainnet
go
smoothly.
Good
luck
in
the
space
race,
competition,
everyone
keep
asking
questions
on
slack,
keep
opening
your
shoes
on
github
and
and
let
us
know
how
you're
doing
always
happy
to
hear
from
y'all,
but
with
that
we'll
wrap
up
goodbye.
Everyone.