►
From YouTube: Starting up in Web3
Description
Join us for a day of content dedicated to exploring what’s possible using Web3 technology like Filecoin, IPFS & Ethereum.
A
So
yeah,
let's
talk
about
starting
up
in
web
3.,
so
the
opportunities
are
massive
and
I
want
to
dig
into
why
the
the
landscape
is
pretty
challenging
and
you're
going
to
run
into
all
kinds
of
problems
as
you
get
get
going
and
you
start
building
and
and
there's
a
ton
of
complexity
and
so
on,
and
the
good
news
is
that
we're
here
to
help
so
the
this
is
one
of
the
most
open
and
collaborative
industries
on
the
planet,
maybe
the
most
open
collaborative
industry
in
the
planet-
and
this
is
a
really
an
amazing
space
where
you
can
lean
on
so
many
other
people
that
will
just
help.
A
You
figure
it
out
figure
all
kinds
of
problems
out
and
so
the
you
know
almost
no
matter
what
challenge
you're
gonna
encounter.
You
can
find
somebody
in
the
community
community.
That's
going
to
be
not
only
able
to
help
you
but
super
willing
and
happy
to
help
you
so
the
you
know,
big
opportunities,
hey
there's
going
to
be
a
bunch
of
challenges,
don't
worry
about
it!
We're
here
to
help.
A
I
wanted
to
just
give
a
quick
description
of
why
web3
matters
in
a
larger
context.
I
find
it
useful
to
always
reflect
on
this,
because
it's
very
easy
to
get
caught
up
on
the
kind
of
normal
stuff
that
that
is
happening
day-to-day
or
the
current
projects
and
so
on,
and
it's
very
useful
to
kind
of
keep
a
north
north
star
on
where
the
whole
movement
is
going,
and
why
why,
at
the
end
of
the
day,
these
platforms
end
up
mattering.
A
So
much
so
you
can
think
of
web3
as
the
next
evolution
of
the
internet,
and
you
know
it's
good
to
step
back
and
reflect
that
in
just
80
years.
Computing
has
radically
transformed
humanity.
So
today
we
have
superpowers
you
and
I
can
lean
on
superpowers
that
our
parents
and
grandparents
and
ancestors
would
have
never
imagined,
and
the
fact
that
we
were
communicating
live
right
now
through
this
entire.
A
Just
computational
medium
is
amazing
and
so
we're
just
a
different
species
already
than
we
were
maybe
even
just
80
years
ago,
and
this
change
is
accelerating.
So
just
keep
that
keep
that
in
mind.
Now,
in
this
integrated
computing
environment
with
humans
and
and
just
silicon
computers,
and
so
on
and
robots,
this
is
just
connecting
billions
of
people
and
trillions
of
devices
and
we're
learning
new
and
better
ways
of
organizing
ourselves,
and
actually
I
should
update
a
slide.
A
So
this
like
highly
integrated
world
brains
or
so
to
speak,
is
is
functioning
through
this
computational
medium
and
every
year,
more
and
more
and
more
stuff
gets
integrated,
and
you
know
most
of
our
activity
now
is
riding
through
through
the
internet
pipes
and
all
of
these
different
applications
give
us
superpowers,
and
one
of
the
one
of
my
favorite
things
about
the
internet
is
that
an
individual
or
a
small
group
of
people
can
get
together
design
a
thing
design.
A
superpower
write
some
software
design.
A
Some
really
good
product
interfaces,
bundle
it
up
and
deploy
it
to
everybody
around
the
world
effectively
for
free
and
that's
just
a
an
amazing
environment
that
yields
all
kinds
of
permissionless
innovation,
and
just
this
super
fast-paced
growth
of
possibilities-
and
this
you
know
broad-based
deployment
of
these
superpowers.
Now,
there's
a
lot
of
people
around
the
world
that
don't
yet
have
access
to
to
these
amazing
superpowers
and
that's
a
a
pro,
an
important
problem
to
solve
and
go
out
there
and
increase
increase
access.
A
And
you
know
you
can
also
go
and
deploy
some
new
amazing
power
and
kind
of
upgrade.
The
the
whole
species-
and
you
know
the
the
thing
to
keep
in
mind-
is
that
this
change
is
accelerating
and
it's
gonna
go
through
a
lot
of
different
kind
of
interfaces.
A
That
is
that
are
going
to
do
changes
even
more
so
augmented
reality
virtual
reality,
brain
computer
interfaces,
robotics,
ai
and
agi,
and
so
on
are
coming
in
the
coming
in
the
deck
in
the
next
decades
and
each
one
of
those
things
will
just
convolve
with
everything
that's
on
there
right
now
and
again
change
our
experiences
and
how
we
work
and
how
we
integrate
and
how
we
collaborate
and
so
on.
So
we're
on
this.
Like
super
fast-paced
technological
evolution
curve.
A
Now
and
just
you
stay,
you
know
it's
like
a
way
that
you
have
to
surf,
and
you
know
one
of
the
really
important
things
here
is
for
every
single
one
of
these
technologies.
A
It's
really
important
that
they
go
well
and
that
you
know
we
aim
for
really
good
outcomes
for
for
tons
of
people
on
the
planet
and
they
don't
kind
of
yield
a
lot
of
powers
for
for
groups
that
will
kind
of
abuse
that
power
or
any
kind
of
like
this
very
lopsided,
centralized
way
where
that
kind
of
yields,
control
or
some
kind
of
way
that
just
massively
advantages.
One
group,
as
opposed
to
as
opposed
to
everybody,
so
you
know,
keep
on
like
work
on
building
technologies.
A
A
One
thing
that
I
like
doing
is
kind
of
it's
so
difficult
to
think
about
time
and
how
quick
technology
changes
that
it's
good
to
kind
of
put
it
on
on
a
graph
like
this,
so
that
you
can't
just
look
back
in
the
years
and
then
think
80
years
ahead
and
just
kind
of
get
a
sense
of
just
how
much
things
are
going
to
change
over
the
coming
decades,
because
it's
just
so
easy
to
lose
sight
of
how
quickly
everything's
changing
great
so
back
to
web3.
A
So
how
does
this
all
affect
my
three
it
as
the
next
evolution
of
this
amazing
platform
for
deploying
super
powers?
What
web3
is
is
doing
at
the
end
of
the
day
is
that
it's
adding
verifiability
to
the
network
and
it's
making
the
read:
write
web
of
web
2,
a
thing
that
you
can
act.
A
Trust
because
you
have
the
ability
to
check
correctness
or
create
structures
that
just
reduce
the
level
of
individual
trust
that
you
might
have
on
an
entity
and
so
by
by
building
kind
of
an
anti-fragile
system
you,
you
can
now
trust
the
system
trusted
system
itself
because
of
its
verifiability,
and
so
that's
at
the
end
of
the
day,
the
you
know
the
core
primitive,
that's
being
added,
and
it's
rewiring
all
kinds
of
things
to
just
work
in
a
more
trustless
way.
A
A
I
recommend,
in
the
spirit
of
web3,
make
your
own
list
and
put
it
out
there
and,
and
let's
borrow
from
each
other,
you
use
usually
these
values
map
to
a
specific
set
of
technologies
that
you
that
you
can
think
of
as
achieving
that
that
value-
and
you
know
it's
cool-
to
reflect
on
just
how
much
is
happening
in
web3.
A
It's
it's
still
pretty
small
relative
to
web
2
and
relative
to
the
amount
of
users
that
that
kind
of
global
platforms
have
especially
social
networks
and
so
on,
but
just
there's
just
tons
of
projects
and
thousands
of
applications.
Developing
and
so
web3
is
changing
all
kinds
of
things
around
the
around
the
world
already
so
protocol
is
a
group
that
is
kind
of
working
on
this.
This
deck
and
we're
organized
in
a
way
that
lets
us
work
on
a
number
of
different
projects
and
we
are
very
open
source
oriented.
A
We
try
to
build
things
in
a
way
that
kind
of
our
community
oriented
and
trying
to
just
make
everything
super
permissionless
for
everybody
to
work
on.
So
what
I
kind
of
wanted
to
share
is
some
lessons
that
we've
learned
along
the
way
in
building
our
projects
and
and
also
in
how
we
can
potentially
be
helpful
to
you
along
the
way.
So
just
for
background,
we
work
on
things
like
lipidop
ipfs
platform
and
so
on
great
so
back
to
the
key
messages.
A
So,
let's
dive
into
the
opportunity
as
being
massive
right,
so
the
the
core
of
it
is
it's.
The
software
is
eating
law
and
when
software
eats
law,
that
means
contracts
all
kinds
of
arrangements.
Law
underpins
government,
so
all
of
that
is
getting
bundled
into
software.
All
financial
transactions
are
flowing
into
this,
so
you
you,
we
end
up
in
a
sorry.
A
We
end
up
in
a
world
where
every
single
thing
that
you
can
represent
in
a
in
a
normal
legal
contract
or
a
legal
agreement
is
now
up
for
grabs
in
terms
of
software
and
that
changes
the
transaction
costs.
It
changes
the
deployment
structures
that
changes
the
runtime
execution
environment
like
right
now.
You
have
code
now
checking
this,
so
it
means
that
so
much
about
how
humans
operate
is
gonna,
be
eaten
by
by
web3,
and
it's
sort
of
this
matter
of
time
thing.
A
It's
a
matter
of
time,
given
a
large
and
robust
developer,
community
and
builder
community.
That
is
going
to
go
out
and
make
these
things,
but
you
can
just
sort
of
see
this
happening
in
waves.
You
know
every
you
know,
you'll
see
that
every
two
three
years
just
entirely
new
ranges
of
applications
will
and
will
come
online.
They
could
just
kind
of
keep
on
knocking.
You
know
sets
of
sets
of
industries
and,
and
so
on
and
over
time.
I
feel
like
what
this
is
sort
of
doing.
A
Is
it's
creating
this
internet
jurisdiction
where
an
internet
first
an
international
worldwide
jurisdiction
where
you
can
build
contracts,
you
can
build
organizations
you
can
govern
and
so
on
and
there's
so
much
that
we
have
to
do
to
figure
this
out
and
figure
out
how
it
works
and
how
it
interfaces
with
traditional
governments
and
how
it
interfaces
with
and
how
to
preserve
its
rights
for
people
and
so
on,
like
we
have
no
good
notion
of
quartz,
yet
as
an
example,
but
there's,
but
it's
a
super,
exciting
environment,
and
it's
also
really
amazing
that
it's
really
easy
to
deploy
and
operate
whole
new
mechanisms,
new
contracting
mechanisms,
different
financial
instruments,
incentive
structures,
governance
systems,
trustlesses
businesses.
A
All
of
this
kind
of
stuff
is
super
simple
to
deploy.
You
just
have
to
design
it
construct
the
contracts
and
then
ship
them
now,
there's
a
whole
bunch
of
change
management
that
you
have
to
worry
about,
but
the
fact
that
it's
that
easy
and
that
it's
that
permissionless
and
that
you
know
you
don't
have
to
kind
of
convince
a
large
group
of
parties
to
try
something
new
is
incredibly
promising.
So
we
live
in
an
environment
where
a
group
could
decide
to.
A
You
know,
create
something
like
ubi
and
try
it
out
and
build
it
and
deploy
it.
And
now
it's
live
like
you,
don't
have
to
go
and
convince
all
sorts
of
governments,
and
so
on
that
this
is
a
good
idea
or
that
we
should
try
it
or
that
we
should
learn,
and
so
just
puts
us
in
a
place
where
we
can
experiment
a
lot
and
we
can
learn
from
those
experiments
and
we
can.
A
We
can
feed
that
back
in
itself
and
improve
all
these
systems
and
kind
of
get
away
from
this
kind
of
stifled
innovation,
environment.
Where
you
know
you
can't
you
can't
easily
create
new
countries,
you
can't
easily
create
new
economic
structures.
A
You
can't
you
know
you
can't
like
solve
the
the
ills
of
of
the
current
economic
structures,
because
the
innovation
of
that
is
just
so
locked
down,
but
in
this
environment
you
can
and
you
can
go
and
try
things
out
and
if
they
work
at
scale,
then
they'll
blow
up
pretty
quickly
right,
and
so
you
can
tinker
with
all
of
these
mechanisms
and
instruments
and
so
on,
deploy
them
into
the
network.
If
they
really
work,
then
they'll.
A
And
all
this
is
super
open
and
permissionless.
It's
international,
it's
all
kind
of
remote
first,
and
so
this
is
really
the
internet
coming
into
its
own.
You
know
the
all
the
kind
of
waves
of
innovation
in
the
past
and
in
the
development
of
the
internet,
where
kind
of
fail
in
comparison
to
this
level
of
permissionless
innovation,
remote,
first
shared
innovation
and
so
on.
A
So
this
is
part
of
what
makes
it
so
fast
and
and
promising
and
massive,
because
so
many
people
around
the
planet
are
coming
up
with
new
things
and
convolving
them
with
each
other,
and
so
that's
one
other
component.
Part
of
why
the
opportunities
are
massive
here
is
that
everybody's
building,
composable
primitives
everybody's
building,
smaller
and
smaller
things
that
have
broader
applicability
and
kind
of
our
more
robust
components
that
then
get
pieced
together
into
larger
and
larger
solutions.
And
this
is
you
know
one
of
the
big
successes
of
all
of
the
d5
world.
A
Is
that
composability?
The
fact
that
you
can
compose
these
things
and
people
can
use
them
in
ways
that
you
didn't
predict
or
that
maybe
you
predicted,
but
you
just
didn't,
have
time
to
build.
So
many
projects
out
there
get
stuck
on.
You
know
these,
like
super
long
road
maps
that
are
hard
to
make
it
through,
because
you
know,
as
a
team,
you're
you're
limited
in
what
you
can
do
and
so
on.
A
And
so,
if
you
make
composable
things,
then
whoever
wants
to
use
it
can
go
and
kind
of
build
the
next
thing
and
and
so
on.
So
if
you
focus
on
composability
and
and
then
you're
gonna
build
a
much
stronger,
a
thing
that
many
people
can
can
build
on
and
that
will
feed
into
kind
of
this
explosive
innovation,
because
you'll
make
a
thing
that
builds
on
other
people's
things,
then
now
people
can
go
and
convolve
your
thing
with
whatever
they
were
building
or
the
new
things
that
they
might
be
building.
A
And
so
these
this
kind
of
constant
combination
and
compounding
of
innovation
is
part
of.
What's
making
web3
move
at
a
super
accelerated
pace,
I'm
very
like
I've
studied
a
lot
of
kind
of
technological
revolutions
and
so
on
and
and
I've
been
in
the
crypto
space
for
for
a
long
time
like
basically
since
early
just
in
10
11.
A
When
I
first
like
heard
about
bitcoin
and
so
on
and
just
every
year,
I
get
more
impressed
by
how
fast
and
how
much
more
there
is
like
the
rabbit
hole,
goes
super
deep
and
there's
more
and
more
and
more
stuff
every
year,
and
so
the
pace
in
which
we're
going
is
pretty
breathtaking,
and
so
many
things
that
were
kind
of
like
really
important
two
years
ago
are
suddenly
totally
replaced
by
by
new
constructions
and
so
on.
A
So
you
know,
I
really
encourage
you
to
be
to
read
nimble
and
figure
out
how
to
build
composable
primitives
and
you
know,
keep
keep
surfing
the
wave.
A
This
is
like
a
example
of
like
the
device
explosion
and
so
on,
even
in
falcon
like
we're
thinking
about
these
composable
primitives,
like
kind
of
like
this,
none
of
this
has
happened
yet,
and
it's
like
you
know,
kind
of
around
the
corner.
It's
like
later
this
year,
people
people
will
go
out
and
build
all
these
things,
and
so
on
and
and
yeah.
A
One
of
the
other
cool
things
to
see
is
like
these
ecosystems
can
ramp
up
super
quickly,
like
just
you,
deploy
an
incentive
structure
into
the
network
and
suddenly
tons
of
people
come
out
of
of
nowhere
to
to
be
part
of
these
systems
and
grow.
A
massive
amount
of
scale
super
fast,
so
what's
happening
in
in
just
the
platform.
A
Mining
system
is
breathtaking,
like
just
exabytes
of
storage
appearing
out
of
you
know
in
a
super
fast
speed
that
no
cloud
has
ever
assembled
this
much
storage,
this
fast
and
you
know
tons
of
new
applications
and
systems
and
so
on,
being
built
and
experimented
on
and
so
on.
A
So
it's
tons
of
explosion,
and
so
all
of
this
is
gonna,
go
even
faster
as
new
networks
deploy
like
new
layer
ones
and
and
layer,
twos
and
so
on,
as
we
get
just
much
faster
transaction
throughputs,
as
we
kind
of
connect
all
these
networks
with
chains
and
so
on,
so
bridges
and
and
and
so
on,
and
so
think
of,
like
all
the
composibility
across
all
of
these
things
that
people
are
building
that's
just
kind
of
amplifying
and
magnifying
over
time.
A
Now,
of
course,
it's
all
kind
of
you
know
complex
and
we'll
get
to
that
in
a
moment,
so
the
challenges
opportunities
are
massive,
but
this
is
a
pretty
challenging
environment.
So
there's
just
a
ton
of
complexity.
Stuff
is
happening
all
the
time
all
over
the
place
and
it's
just
difficult
to
keep
up
with
the
information
flow.
What
everybody's
doing
and
so
on.
A
So
this
is
pretty
complex
software
when
you,
when
you
deploy
so
the
contracts
themselves
and
the
mechanisms
and
so
on,
might
be
small,
but
when
you
think
of
those
pieces
composing
with
other
things
that
just
the
complexity
blows
up
and
we
don't
have
good
tools
to
analyze
the
stuff
or
to
reason
about
how
these
things
are
going
to
work
once
you
kind
of
put
together.
So
this
is
in
great
need
of
new
tools
and
so
on
to
reason
about
how
to
build
and
deploy
the
software,
but
yeah
so
you'll
have
for
now.
A
While
we
don't
have
those
tools,
you'll
have
to
navigate
this
individually.
You
have
to
navigate
this
by
by
just
applying
very
good
software
design,
principles
and
software
engineering
principles
around
managing
the
the
deployment
of
these
things
and
kind
of
reasoning
about
the
the
potential
problems.
Thankfully,
we've
learned
a
lot
now
from
all
the
exploits
of
the
last.
You
know
decade.
So
now,
teams
are
just
a
lot
better
at
deploying
much
safer
software
than
we
used
to
this
also
yields
complex
products.
A
It's
just
difficult
to
use
all
these
components,
and
it
just
gives
users
this.
You
know
tons
of
opportunities
and
flexibility
and
so
on,
which
is
difficult
to
learn
and
so
part
of
what's
going
on
with
web3,
and
why
it's
diffic,
not
that
many
people
around
the
planet
are,
are
really
using
web
3.
Yet
is
because
of
this
complexity
of
the
products
you
have
like
layers
and
layers
of
power
users,
like
you,
don't
have
you
know,
power
users
and
then
kind
of
broader
base,
consumers.
No!
A
It's
like
a
large
gradient
with
many
different
groups
that
understand
deeper
and
deeper
notions
of
complexity,
and
so
you
see
this
show
up
in.
A
Like
wallets
and
in
even
like
you
jump
into
things
like
decentralized,
crypto,
voxels
and
and
there's
just
a
lot
of
crypto
native
complexity
there
that
just
makes
the
the
systems
hard
to
access
for
a
lot
of
other
people,
and
so
that
means
both
it's
a
lot
of
product
challenges
for
us
to
figure
out
how
to
make
all
of
these
things
more
learnable,
more
accessible
and
so
on.
A
But
you
know
it's
not
about
hiding
the
primitives,
it's
about
making
the
primitives
easy
to
use
and
easy
to
learn
and
so
on.
But
you
know
this.
This
just
makes
the
products
harder
to
build
and
then,
on
top
of
that
you're
building
economies
and
deploying
economy.
A
So
all
the
mechanisms
that
you're
building
you
have
to
reason
about
how
those
are
going
to
yield
different
types
of
behaviors
and
groups
and
so
on,
and
you
have
to
worry
about
exploits
and
you
have
to
worry
about
how
to
align
incentives
and
all
that
kind
of
stuff.
So,
as
you
build
these
things,
you're
now
worrying
about
economic
design,
which
just
adds
this
whole
other
layer
of
complexity.
To
the
picture
then
you're
dealing
with
potentially
building
organizations
that
have
never
been
built
before
directly
on
chain
or
in
groups
and
so
on.
A
So
this
just
adds
yet
another
layer
of
complexity
where
you
have
to
now
not
only
reason
about
the
complexity
of
your
software,
your
product
economy,
you're
building,
but
also
the
organizations
that
you're,
creating
and
and
sometimes
implicit
organizations
that
you
didn't
think
were
there,
because
your
economic
structure
yielded
some.
A
You
know
kind
of
group
that
now
is
all
sort
of
aligned
in
one
sense
and
like
that's
sort
of
an
implicit
organization
that
becomes
explicit
pretty
quickly,
so
you
have
to
think
about
managing
these
organizations
and
so
on
and
there's
also,
you
know
just
super
complex
regulatory
landscape
because
all
of
the
stuff
is
new
and
you
we're
software
seeding
law
and
and
finance,
and
so
that
just
is
a
complex
thing
to
navigate
and
it's
international.
First
there's
no
single
kind
of
regulatory
space.
A
There's
you
have
to
worry
about
a
lot
of
them,
and
so
that's
just
adds
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
complexity
and
and
and
just
kind
of
hurdles
that
teams
have
to
kind
of
reason
about
and
worry
about
as
they
as
they're
building.
A
And
then
you
know
after
you've
handled
all
of
these
hurdles
you
now
have
to
distribute
to
users
and
web3
stuff
is
unfortunately
hard
to
distribute,
because
all
the
traditional
app
stores
want
people
to
use
their
their
kind
of
distribution
flow.
So
mobile-
and
you
know
you
know,
kind
of
intimacy-
I
guess
apple
and
others
were
kind
of
like
banning
all
kinds
of
things
related
to
bitcoin
cryptocurrency,
or
they
were
it's
just
the
deployment
pathway
is
really
really
difficult.
A
Also,
the
web
is
we're
dealing
with
many
new
kinds
of
protocols,
so
the
distribution
into
browsers
is
difficult,
so
this
just
makes
gives
a
whole
other
hurdle
of
making
these
products
accessible
to
a
lot
of
people
just
being
able
to
get
them
to
users
in
a
traditional,
simple
way
is,
is,
is
a
hurdle,
so
you
know
a
bunch
of
complexity.
A
However,
it's
all
surmountable
and
just
remember
that,
like
the
the
space,
is
moving
blazingly,
placing
really
fast-
and
you
know
this
is
both
a
you-
know-
a
benefit
and
a
curse,
because
a
lot
of
things
are
changing
quickly,
but
it's
also
kind
of
a
curse
because
you
might
be
working
on
a
thing
and
by
the
time
you're
done
with
it.
A
It
might
be
irrelevant
because
some
other
thing
has
now
emerged
and
replaced
it
or
or
or
you're,
building
a
thing,
and
suddenly
this
other
new
thing
could
have
saved
you
tons
of
tons
of
work,
so
yeah
keep
up
rest
of
the
information
you're,
also
dealing
with
an
environment
with
like
super
high
super
volatile
markets
and
like
that's
difficult
for
organizations
to
deal
with
we're
constantly
having
to
blaze
new
trails,
there's
not
a
lot
of
organizations,
you
can
point
to
and
say
oh
yeah,
we'll
just
kind
of
do
things
the
way
that
that
group
did
them
kind
of
like
the
web
2
world.
A
This
was
very
common
here.
It's
just
much
harder
with
this
innovation
and
complexity.
Just
you
end
up
with
so
many
new
trails
and
whatnot,
and
so
over
time
you
know
there
aren't
a
lot
of
good
guys
or
best
practices,
but
these
are
getting.
You
know
starting
to
get
built
and
there's
something
that
encourages
the
community
to
to
to
invest
in
and
and
build,
is
just
better
better
guides
for
how
to
get
going.
And
then
you
know,
open
source
is
an
amazing
environment.
Has
lots
of
amazing
good
things?
A
There's
also
some
bad
things
about
working
in
in
you
know
kind
of
super
public
environments,
and
so
when
it
just
makes
innovation
more
difficult
and
then
now
you
can
involve
that
with
money
and
like
that
just
creates
all
kinds
of
complex
incentives
and
so
like
that's
that's
also
a
challenge.
You'll
have
to
reason
about,
and
you
know
the
trolls
and
public
problems
and
whatnot.
A
Now
the
good
news
is
that,
as
you
know
again,
the
opportunities
are
massive.
It
is
challenging,
but
don't
worry
because
the
whole
community
is
here
to
help.
So
this
is
again
one
of
the
most
open,
permissionless
and
friendly
communities
that
that
and
industries
ever
assembled
and
there's
just
this
amazing
spirit
of
shared
innovation
and
shared
building
of
everybody's
kind
of
trying.
A
The
principles
of
the
movement
are
to
kind
of
build
these
composable
primitives
for
more
people
to
work
together
through,
and
that's
just
a
phenomenal
thing
to
to
be
a
part
of
and
to
lean
on,
like
you,
you,
as
a
new
builder,
can
lean
on
all
these
other
groups
that
have
built
things
before
and
you
can
you
can
ask
questions,
you
can
get
answers,
you
can
get
help.
A
You
can
get
support,
you
can
get
funding,
you
can
get
all
kinds
of
things
that
can
help
you
get
going
and-
and
all
you
have
to
do
is
ask
you
just
have
to
you
know,
find
groups
that
that
understand
what
you're
up
to
and
can
can
help
you,
and
you
can
just
ask
for
help
and
we're
here
we'll
help
you
everyone's
super
busy.
Everyone
has
everything
a
ton
of
things
to
do,
and
yet
we
can
all
still
take
time
to
to
help
others
out
and
kind
of
pay
forward.
A
For
the
people
that
helped
us
and-
and
you
know
find
I
encourage
you
to
find
communities
where
you
can
do
that.
So
this
is
a
lot
of
this
is
on
discord
and
on
different
slacks
and
matrix,
and
you
know
different
kind
of
environments
like
that.
So
you
just
hop
on
those
channels
if
you
aren't
already
participate
and
and
over
time
kind
of
ask
for
help
as
you
runs
and
yeah.
A
So
the
there's
a
lot
of
resources
that
get
developed
and
you
can
you
can
lean
on
and
there's
a
bunch
of
organizations
also
that
are
making
it
an
explicit
goal
to
help
others
get
started,
and
you
know
pl
is
one
of
those
orgs.
There's
the
theorem
foundation,
it's
another
one
that
that
has
just
for
many
many
years
been
helping
a
lot
of
other
groups
get
started.
There's
a
bunch
of
other
orgs
around
around
that
that
are
super
helpful.
Each
global
is
a
phenomenal
organization
that
has
just
for
years
now
been.
A
You
know
the
best
pathway
for
for
helping
developers
enter
into
the
ethereum
community
and
the
broader
web3
landscape
and
just
making
it
way
easier
to
understand
how
to
build
things.
Creating
opportunities
for
people
to
get
going
and
hack
can't
wait
to
oh
for
all
of
us
to
get
together
again
in
a
hackathon,
and
you
know,
speaking
of
that,
really
use
hackathons
to
get
started.
This
is
like
a
great
environment
to
learn
a
lot.
Try
things
out,
build
the
thing
see
if
it
works
meet.
A
Other
people
see
what
other
people
are
doing
and
just
kind
of
get
inspired
to
to
build
together
and
you'll.
Just
I
think
getting
into
it
into
the
practice
of
of
hacking.
A
Frequently
and
often
is
it's
just
like
a
a
good
thing
to
do
and
again
support
very
open
and
collaborative
communities
lean
on
others
ask
for
help,
and
you
know
everybody
who's
who's,
building,
something
today
that
you
can
point
to
and
kind
of
recognize
and
so
on
got
a
lot
of
help
from
other
people
before
and
so,
and
everybody's
always
very
good
about
paying
it
forward.
A
So
you
just
again
it
might
be
rate
limited
with
time
and
so
on,
but
but
you
can
usually
find
somebody
who
will
be
able
to
have
the
bandwidth
to
give
you
advice
and
support,
and
so
on
and-
and
you
know,
there's
also
a
ton
of
funding
for
for
groups
that
are
building
new
things.
So
there's
everything
from
grants
to
investments
to
whole
accelerated
programs
now
focusing
on
web3,
and
so
as
you
build
things,
so
you
have
this
mindset
of
hey.
It's
super
cheap
and
easy
to
build
things.
A
You
can
try
things
out
in
a
hackathon
if,
if
one
of
these
things
has
lags,
you
can
maybe
get
get
some
grants
to
get
going
and
start
building
a
thing
and
then
over
time
feed
that
into
into
an
accelerator
or
something
else-
and
you
know
one
of
the
really
awesome
things
here
is
that,
unlike
the
web
2
space
or
the
or
the
first
web
space,
most
of
the
things
being
built,
don't
have
to
be
kind
of
like
a
traditional
company
structure.
A
You
can
build
dials,
you
can
build
protocols,
you
can
build
tools
and
say
hey.
This
is
just
a
tool.
I'm
building.
I
need
a
grant
for
it
and
then
I'm
done
and
I
move
on
to
something
else
and
that's
possible
in
this
environment
in
ways
that
you
know
the
web
2
world
never
really
allowed,
and
so
there's
just
this
habit
of
community
the
community
funding
really
good
things
that
are
valuable
to
everybody.
A
In
a
way
that
you
know
you
don't
have
to
attach
it
to
to
a
company
or
a
business
or
something
like
that.
So
just
really
think
about
building
valuable,
useful
things
that
that
that
people
want
to
use
and
and
and
you
there
there
will
be
people
around
that
that
if
it's
useful
to
them
they'll
help
you
build
it
and
they'll.
You
know
help
support
you
sometimes
we'll
join
you
and
build
it
with
you
and
sometimes
they'll
be
able
to
fund
it.
A
So
yeah,
think
of
like
this
kind
of
like
pathway
of
resources,
hackathons
accelerators
and
you
know,
kind
of
grants
and
investors,
depending
on
on
whether
you're
you're,
building
a
business
or
or
not,
and
you
know
really
lean
up,
find
the
right
fit
for
the
thing
you're
building
like
many
things,
should
not
be
businesses
and
in
the
web.
2
world
they
kind
of
turn
into
businesses
and
we're
we're
we're.
A
Now
we
have
a
bunch
of
things
that
weren't
supposed
to
be
business
became
businesses
and
now
that
all
the
incentives
are
wonky
and
so
really
encourage
you
to,
like,
you
know,
form
a
business
when
it
makes
sense
or
format
find
some
other
funding
structure.
When
when
that
makes
sense-
and
you
know
you
you-
you
know-
there's
gonna
be
a
lot
of
opportunities
throughout
the
year
and
next
year
and
so
on.
So
you
can
use
it
to
to
build
things.
A
You
know
one
quick
plug
for
how
to
reason
about
layer,
one
economies,
think
of
them,
as
kind
of
like
export
economies,
where,
like
a
whole
group
of
people,
are
aligned
to
participate
in
one
way
and
you
can
think
of
kind
of
joining
that
community
and
that
community
kind
of
all
being
aligned
to
help
each
other
and
support
each
other
and
you're
kind
of.
A
Like
a
you,
know,
city
state
in
a
sense,
that's
transacting
in
some
some
kind
of
way
and
producing
creating
some
value,
creating
some
service
that
you're
now
exporting
to
the
rest
of
the
world.
A
In
fact,
when
we
think
of
this
as
like
we're
building
the
kind
of
like
city
state
that
that
is
providing
commoditized
digital
storage
for
for
the
world
and
kind
of
like
thinking
about
how
to
how
to
export
that
out
to
the
to
the
rest
of
the
world,
great
so
yeah
grandson
accelerators,
you
can
talk
to
us.
If,
if
you
need
any
any
help
with
this
and
and
you
want
resources,
a
bunch
of
us
will
be
around
kind
of
through
the
hackathon
and
reach
out.
A
A
If
I
can
be
helpful,
don't
worry
reach
out
and
it
may
take
me
a
while
to
respond,
but
I'll
get
to
it
eventually
and,
and
you
can
reach
out
to
any
folks
from
pl
or
faulkner
ipfs
and
not
any
other
communities
that
were
that
we're
building
and
and
we'll
try
to
help
as
much
as
you
can
and
we're.
You
know
also
starting
to
do
these
things
of.
A
Like
you
know,
providing
office
hours
for
some
teams
like
if
your
team
is
kind
of
building
a
thing
and
we
can
be
especially
helpful-
then
maybe
we
can.
We
can
give
you
some
office
hours
for
you
to
ask
questions
from
us
and
and
so
on.
So
maybe
if
this
is
of
interest,
you
know
after
the
hackathon,
if
you
want
to
kind
of
pursue
the
thing
you're
building,
let
us
know-
and
maybe
we
can-
we
can
figure
out
some
way
to
actively
help
you
more
cool.
That's
it!
Thank
you.
So
much.