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From YouTube: The Firebase for IoT - Start it Up Wednesday
Description
Are you interested in building smart home devices? Moiz Husnain is lowering the barrier for IoT development with Grandeur, a backend-as-a-service platform for IoT.
Join us TODAY at 2 pm ET/ 11 am PT to learn how you can get started on your first IoT project!
A
A
A
A
Hello,
everybody
I
was
just
quickly
trying
to
tweet
out
that
we're
live
and
I
was
also
trying
to
put
it
on
Blue
Sky
I,
don't
know
if
people
know
about
blue
sky
yet
but
new
to
it
new
social
media
app.
But
if
you're
new
to
this
stream
and
I
already
see
someone
watching,
they
said
yay,
a
new
stream
I'm
glad
to
see
one
for
startups
awesome.
A
If
you
are
new
to
this
stream,
it's
a
weekly
stream
that
I
do
a
weekly
show
called
start
it
up
Wednesday,
where
I
chat
with
startup
Founders
about
their
projects.
A
lot
of
these
people
are
part
of
the
GitHub
for
startups
program
and
I'll
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
help
for
startups
near
the
end
of
our
stream.
A
But
basically
this
is
a
program
that
helps
to
empower
new
startups
in
leveraging
GitHub
I'm,
giving
them
the
features
that
they
need,
giving
them
extra
seats
for
or
not
extra
sheets,
but
giving
them
seats
for
their
their
Enterprise
companies
for
a
year
and
I'll
I'll
go
into
more
detail
near
the
end,
but
I
definitely
want
y'all
to.
Instead
of
focusing
on
that
for
now
focus
on
our
guest
today,
name
Moyes
I,
let
him
introduced
himself
and
then
we'll
get
into
the
conversation.
B
Thank
you
so
much
Brazil
and
the
entire
GitHub
Community.
It's
been
an
amazing
experience.
I
mean
starting
up
literally,
you
know.
First
line
of
code
I
think
it
literally
started
with
GitHub,
and
now
it's
been
a
magical
couple
of
years
with
the
startup
ending
up
here
you
know
it's
always
like
a
dream
sort
of
come
true,
so
yeah
excited
to
be
here
and
then
very
short
introduction.
So
I'm
always
I
am
founder
and
CEO
of
grandeur.
It's
a
two-year
startup
two-year-old
startup
and
we're
building
Firebase
of
iot
in
one
sentence.
B
I
would
describe
this
platform.
As
you
know,
we
trying
to
reinvent
Cloud
for
Hardware
developers
and
the
ambition
is
to
make
it
possible
for
more
and
more
developers
to
get
started
into
hardware
and
iot
space
building
smart
devices.
You
know,
for
example,
building
next
next
Tesla
or
next
you
know,
could
be
like
lime
or
smart
bikes
or
all
these
examples
there.
So
yeah.
That
is
a
very,
very
sharp
art
introduction.
Yeah.
A
Love
it
wait,
also
love
that
you
were
like
it's
interesting,
that
you
wrote
your
first
lines
of
code
on
GitHub
now,
you're
you're,
building
a
startup
on
GitHub
I
feel
like
I
I,
don't
know
if
it's
just
me,
but
I
I
also
relate
with
you
and
like
I,
can
just
think
back
to
years,
when
I
first
tried
to
code
on
GitHub
and
now
I
work
at
GitHub.
So
it's
like
a
full
circle
moment
for
everyone.
A
Also
I'm
really
excited
when,
when
you
described
yourself
as
the
Firebase
of
iot
I
saw
or
the
pro
the
company
I
saw,
that
on
on
your
website
or
somewhere
that
you
you
described
it
that
way
and
I
was
like.
That
seems
really
interesting
and
I
do
feel
like
the
maybe
it's
because
I'm
not
embedded
into
the
hardware
industry
but
I,
don't
see
that
much
things
that
are
happening
for
it.
I,
don't
see
people
making
the
cloud
for
Hardware,
making
things
easier
and
more
accessible
for
people
to
get
started.
A
So
I'm
really
excited
to
learn.
More
I
do
want
to
quickly
say
hi
to
a
couple
of
people
that
are
in
the
chat
already
I
love
to
like
interact
with
folks.
So
someone
said:
hi
everyone
on
Twitch,
so
hey
back
I,
know
Garrett
from
the
GitHub
for
startups
team
is
is
watching,
so
he
did
a
little
wave
and
people
are
just
saying
happy
to
be
here
feel
free
to
tell
me
where
your
your
tuning
in
from
I'd
love
to
see
like
people
from
all
over
the
country.
A
Sometimes
it's
like
or
not
the
country
all
over
the
world.
Sometimes
there's
people
from
India,
sometimes
there's
people
from
Portugal,
so
I
love
that
so
you
you
talk,
you
gave
like
a
little
one-liner
about
your
project.
Do
you
want
to
tell
us
the
name
of
it?
I,
don't
think.
We've
we
haven't
said
the
name
and
maybe
give
a
little
bit
more
detail.
B
Okay,
sorry
I
think
that
is
where
I
feel
really
excited
about
I
mean.
So
when
we
started
in
this
space
there
were
always
this.
You
know
desire
that
why
Hardware
sucks
I
mean
buy.
Cannot
you
start
your
own
iot
startup,
pretty
much
how
you
can
start
a
software
startup
of
your
own
I
mean
you,
don't
need
a
CS
degree
to
start
a
next,
for
example,
Facebook,
and
why
do
you
need
so
many
expertise
to
probably
start
next
Tesla?
B
And
that
was
this
desire,
and
you
know
we
started
freaking
out
or
figuring
out,
and
you
know
dividing
everything
into
bits
and
pieces
and
we
figured
out
it
just
you
know
a
lot
of
learning.
You
want
to
start
next
Tesla,
you
need
your
own
Hardware.
You
need
to
learn
your
own.
You
know
how
to
build
applications
and
then
also
how
to
you
know
literally,
go
ahead
and
make
that
devices
talk
to
each
other
or
talk
to
the
end
users.
So,
like
very
simple
example,
think
of
the
next
thermostat
in
your
home
home.
B
If
you
want
to
go
ahead
and
start
that
startup
there
are
like
loads
of
steps
and
may
a
lot
of
engineering
that
you
just
required
to
done
in
order
to
just
go
to
market.
So
that
is
what
we
wanted
to
solve.
We
figured
out
that
you
know
Hardware,
Engineers,
they're,
very
good
with
Hardware,
but
software.
It
just
don't
make
sense
and
it
just
takes
a
lot
of
time
for
them
to
just
figure
it
out.
B
So
what
if
you
could
just
make,
for
example,
AWS
more
accessible,
like
maybe
Heroku,
of
iot
or
like
Firebase
or
fired
like?
Why
do
we
need
to
set
up
IAM
roles
just
to
bring
one
device
online
I
mean
it
needs
to
be
simple
accessible.
You
could
just
code,
you
don't
need
to.
You
know,
manage
infrastructure.
That
was
the
idea,
so
you
know
minus
all
the
infrastructure
minus
all
the
app
development
you're
live
as
soon
as
you
have
a
hardware
ready.
A
I
love
that
I
actually
think
that's
great
I
feel
like
that
could
be
a
barrier
to
entry
for
a
lot
of
folks
like
you're,
saying
and
yeah
like.
Why
isn't
it
just
as
easy
as
like
software,
like
people
built
blue
sky
or
Twitter,
whatever
just
like
everyone's
always
talking?
Oh
I,
just
did
this
in
my
garage
or
my
basement,
but
what
like
a
hardware
startup,
it
does
seem
like
you,
have
to
get
a
lot
of
different
tools
and
have
a
lot
of
different
knowledge.
A
So
I'm
really
excited
to
see
this
and
I
love
and
I
understand
the
the
inspiration
you
make
you
have
behind
this.
So
do
you
have
a
I'm
just
curious?
You
have
like
a
hardware
engineering
background
or
something
yeah.
B
I
am
an
electrical
engineer
and
actually
so
does
most
of
my
team,
and
this
is
how
it
started
we,
fortunately
you
know
we
started
as
a
hardware
startup,
so
we
wanted
to
build
smart
home
devices
and
started
as
a
kid
when
I
wanted.
All
of
my
devices
to
talk
to
me,
I
mean
universe.
Is
too
busy
and
I
wanted
my
air
conditioner
to
just
turn
on
in
itself.
Whenever
I
want-
or
maybe
you
know,
my
lights
to
automate,
so
that
is
where
it
started
and
we
were
like
you
know
this
is
doable.
B
Let's
do
it
and
then
I
think
it
took
us
a
couple
of
years,
just
to
figure
out
the
hardware
and
then
another
year
to
figure
out
the
software
and
by
the
time
we
were
you
know,
just
had
an
MVP.
We
were
pretty
much
out
of
budget
to
just
go
live.
You
know
there
was
not
enough
budget
for
us
to
go
and
manufacture
our
device.
B
So
you
know
it
took
us
so
much
time
there
was
so
much
burned
out
and
there
was
so
much
also
burnout
in
terms
of
finances
that
your
our
Hardware
startup
failed,
and
that
was
the
aha
moment.
You
know
what
have
we
could
make
it
possible
whatever
you
know
you
could
you
know,
sort
of
like
modernize
the
dev
tool
in
this
space
and
just
make
it
possible
for
more
and
more
people
to
build
these
experiences
and
Frankly
Speaking.
B
It
is
very
heartwarming
to
see
what
people
actually
go
ahead
and
build
so
right
now
one
company
based
out
of
you,
know,
Pakistan.
You
know
many
different
places
in
the
world,
but
that
inspired
me
a
lot.
They
were
working
on
this
platform
and
they
were
creating
distributed
good
stations.
So
these
are
great
stations
at
remote
places.
It's
totally
automated.
It's
a
worker
sitting,
thousands
of
miles
away
just
remotely
monitoring
those
devices
and
it
was
enabling
government
to
you
know,
provide
electricity
to
very
remote
places
where
it's
remotely
impossible
before.
B
A
That's
so,
first
of
all,
that's
so
cool
to
see
people
building
with
your
project
with
your
tool,
like
that's
I'm,
sure,
that's
an
awesome
feeling
where
you're
like.
Actually,
this
is
useful
to
people
and
I
love
the
story
of
like
how
y'all
took
your
your
startup
that
the
initial
startup
that
didn't
do
that
well
and
you
learned
from
it
and
you're
like.
Maybe
this
is
the
problem
we
should
be
solving
for
for
other
Hardware
start
startups.
A
That
need
more
assistance
with
this
and
I'm,
like
thinking
about
other
Industries
too,
like
I'm
I
feel
like
the
software
industry
is
one
of
the
ones
that
it's
like
easy
to
start
a
business,
but
in
other
cases
other
Industries.
It
might
not
be
all
right.
Well,
I
I
feel,
like
I,
got
a
good
idea
of
what
you
do,
but
I
want
to
be
able
to
see
it
live.
So
are
you
ready
to
to
give
us
a
demo.
A
I'm
gonna
wait
for
you
to
right
now,
I
see
like
our
stream
yard
image,
so
I'm
gonna
wait
for
to
just
quickly
swap
sorry.
Can
you
see
my
screen
now
I
see
the
screen,
but
it's
like
a
boss
or
it's
of
Upstream
yard,
yeah
sure.
A
B
You
know,
I
was
talking
about
the
problem
and
that's
a
little
bit
dig
a
little
bit
deeper
on
how
this
platform
functions.
So,
if
you
consider
any
iot
device,
it
is
basically
this
tiny
computer
or
something
similar
to
the
art
which
work
with
you
know,
Hardware
sensors,
and
you
can
build
many
different.
B
For
example,
you
know
applications
like
us
internet
switch,
maybe
an
internet
switch,
is
probably
a
device
which
is
above
maybe
or
a
light,
maybe
which
is
controlled
from
an
application
or
maybe
an
air
conditioner
which
could
be
you
know,
managed
through
an
application.
So
all
those
applications.
You
know
what
one
of
the
major
component
of
these
these
products
or
devices
is
the
data
communication
part.
B
So
like
imagine,
you
have
a
device,
it
needs
all
the
authentication,
storage
and
then
communication,
and
then
you
have
an
end
application
where
you
can
either
monitor
the
data
or
go
to
send
commands.
So
this
is
where
Granger
sort
of
like
gets
plugged.
In
previously,
you
know,
developers
were
building
themselves
on
their
own
from
scratch
on
top
of
existing
Cloud
providers,
but
we
were
like
you
know
what,
if
we
could
just
build
an
integration
layer
and
you
don't
have
to
build
these
individual
components
on
your
own.
So
this
is
how
it
functions.
B
We
just
have
a
simple
dashboard.
You
just
go
ahead
and,
for
example,
give
your
device
a
unique
name
and
right
now,
for
example,
we're
creating
a
smart
heater.
Maybe
it
gives
you
a
device
ID
and
a
authentication
token,
and
then
we
have
all
these.
You
know
sdks
or
libraries
for
major
Hardware
platform.
For
example,
we
have
sdks
for
Arduino,
we
have,
you
know
sdks
for
Python
and
Raspberry
Pi,
and
you
know
all
these
hobbyist
platform,
but
also
some
of
those.
B
You
know
very
production
ready
devices,
for
example
one
that
I'm
holding
in
my
hand
right
now
is
called
esp826x.
It's
a
tiny
computer,
very,
very
limited
processing
power,
but
it
can
do
magical
stuff.
It
can
connect
to
Internet
through
Wi-Fi,
and
then
you
know
it
can
talk
to
an
application.
So
here,
in
this
case,
as
soon
as
you
have
these,
you
know
your
authentication
Keys.
You
can
go
ahead
and
use
our
SDK
in
your
code.
Just
provide
your
credentials
and
just
provide.
B
Maybe
you
know
credentials
for
the
Wi-Fi
endpoint
and
you
know
the
device
comes
online,
pretty
much
instantly
so
right
now,
let's
go
ahead
and
probably
run
this
device
so
run
this
code
on
this
device.
What's
gonna
happen,
I'm
excited
it's
gonna
take
well
a
little
bit.
You
know
just
a
second.
A
B
A
B
Pop
sub
is
where
your
devices
need
to
send
messages
to
applications,
or
vice
versa.
Okay,
so
your
applications.
So
it's
like
a
messaging
it's
in
a
short
term.
So
not
only
you
know
like
WhatsApp
between
your
devices
and
applications.
We
automate
that
you
don't
need
to
edit
that
data
communication
between
your
devices
and
application,
not
only
those
messages,
gets
transferred
instantaneously
but
though
those
messages
also
get
stored,
so
that
you
could
then
go
ahead
and
analyze
all
that
data.
So
imagine
you
have
a
thermostat
which
is
sending
over
live
temperature.
B
You
know
every
second
and
so
yeah.
So
first
of
all,
a
developer
can
build
an
application
that
can
help
you
as
a
developer
as
a
user.
Send
those
messages
through
your
thermostat,
like
you
know,
set
temperature
to
this
number,
and,
along
with
that,
you
know
you
can
also
save
a
historical
data
and
you
can
probably
see
a
graph
or
something
similar
to
that.
You
know
so
it's
it's
connected.
The
device
is
connected.
It
is
you
know
online
now
and
you
can
go
ahead
and
for
exactly
so.
B
We
have
a
along
with
this.
You
know,
so
your
device
comes
online.
Minus
all
the
coding
that
you
were
previously
required
to
do
you
just
simply
worked
on
your
device,
nothing
else
wow
and
then
go
ahead
and
you
know,
use
our
drag
and
drop
dashboard,
Builder
and
literally
play
with
your
device.
So,
for
example,
I
don't
know
if
you
can
see
there's
this
tiny,
tiny
LED
if
you
can
see
so
when
I
will
click
this,
this
will
sort
of
like
change.
I
hope
you
can
see.
A
B
So
everything
all
this
control
is
happening
in
real
time
over
internet
sort
of
literally
instantaneously.
You
know,
and
it's
just
a
start,
you
can
build
many
different
applications.
For
example,
you
can
attach
some
sensors
to
it.
You
know,
monitor
your
temperature
and
start
a
feed
of
the
current
temperature.
You
know
the
I,
the
the
idea
is
it
just
takes
that
entire
communication
and
data
storage
out
of
you
know
stack,
so
you
can
just
focus
on
building
a
great
Hardware.
B
So,
for
example,
you
know
you
can
update
the
name
of
the
switches
as
well.
So
let's
just
call
it
a
switch
right
now,
for
this
is
more
or
less
like
a
you
know,
a
smart
lamp,
maybe
like
a
simulation,
you
know
you
can
attach
a
lamp
to
it
and
it
can
actually
function.
You
can
turn
on
a
lamp
over
internet
with
us
and
it
took
us
five
minutes
to
build
it.
A
Wow
yeah,
it
was
so
quick,
and
this
is
reminding
me
of
like
the
concept
of
like
message,
Brokers
and
and
software
where
it
like
sends
the
like
it.
Does
the
communication
part
so
you're
taking
away
all
that,
you
don't
have
to
worry
about
that.
We
can
just
press
a
button
on
our
our
website
and
it'll
it'll
do
things
and.
B
It's
also
very
very
fast,
so,
for
example,
if
I
they
can
now
hear
and
open
it
another
window,
maybe
I
hope
you
can
always
see
my
screen.
So,
for
example,
I
have
this
and
it
also
comes
with
all
these
Integrations.
So
you
can
build
your
own
custom
application
or
maybe
use
no
code.
Builders
like
I
have
right
now,
retool,
you
know,
and
it
just
takes
literally.
You
know
many
seconds
for
the
data
to
get
transferred
between.
You
know
get
synced
all
across
different
places.
So
this
is
laborator.
B
If
I
open
another
window
of
canvas,
it
will
be
much
more
instantaneous.
Okay,
so
I
hope
you
can
announce
that
by
messy.
But,
like
you
know,
just
look
at
this,
the
the
speed
we
just
take
it
out
of
the
equation
for
developers.
You
don't
need
to
build
it
yourself.
You're
live
as
soon
as
your
Hardware
is
ready,
so
yeah,
that's.
A
B
So
we
have
all
these
Integrations.
We
have
Integrations
with
grafana,
which
is
a
modern
visualization
tool
yeah,
and
we
have
integration
with
if
Triple,
T
or
zapier-
or
maybe
you
know,
retool
is
a
no
code
app
builder,
so
you
can
just
you
know
one
once
your
device
is
on
date.
Devices
and
data
is
on
the
platform.
Then
you
can
just
go
ahead
and
build
all
those
custom
experiences.
B
So
maybe
you
have
range
in
your
home
and
ring
have
its
own
app
and
you
can,
you
know,
monitor
a
live
stream
of
your
all
the
doorbells
or
all
the
cameras
in
your
home.
You
can
build
a
similar
experience
with
Granger.
You
don't
have
to
have
that
kind
of
infrastructure
or
build
that
kind
of
structure
on
your
own.
You
can
just
get
all
those
amazing
features
out
of
the
box,
and
this
is
the
core
sort
of.
Like
the
you
know,
the
valuation
of
our
platform.
B
It's
secure,
you
can
store
millions
of
you
know
literally
data
points,
think
of
thousands
of
sensors
thousands
of
devices
and
it's
very
fast
and
open-ended.
So
you
can
bring
your
own
Hardware.
A
Wow,
this
is
all
like
I'm
blown
away.
Why
hasn't
someone
thought
of
this
before
I?
Don't
know
this
is
awesome
like
at
first
and
and
to
think
that,
like
you
can
integrate
with
any
app
that
you
want
like
if
you're
like,
oh
I,
want
to
be
able
to
do
this
with
a
GitHub
action,
or
you
gave
an
example
of
another
tool.
You.
B
Can
build
your
own,
for
example,
actions.
We
have
a
JavaScript
SDK
and
node.js
SDK,
where
you
can
start
a
monitoring
or
you
know
whatever
you.
So
the
only
imagine
General
limit
is
the
imagination.
We
become
that
communication
black
hole
so
think
of
it
like
a
sort
of
like
a
time
travel
like
you,
try
and
travel,
but
like
a
magical
door
between
this
device
and
your
application,
you
can
build
your
own
custom
applications
or
you
can
use
these
no
code
Builders
and
we
become
that
communication.
Gateway
yeah.
A
B
A
Crazy
wow
awesome
I
mean
I'm
gonna
I'm
gonna
highlight
just
some
people
saying
stuff
somebody
said
like
they
were
trying
to
think
of
it
as
well
as
me.
They
were
like
so
basically,
what's
the
difference
with
an
mqtt
broker,
but
then
I
think
they
realized
after
they
said,
oh,
the
producer
and
consumer
are
automatically
linked.
They
said,
that's
cool.
Someone
said
interesting,
I,
don't
know
if
this
is
safe
for
work,
but
someone
said
this
is
lit.
You
know
just
just
putting
that
out.
There
also
Alex
from
the
startups
team
said
very
cool.
A
You
mentioned
a
lamp
as
a
piece
of
Hardware
that
I
could
use
this
for
so
in
essence,
so
I
can
in
essence
create
a
central
place
to
control.
My
whole
house.
B
Actually
so
the
way
I
describe
it.
First
of
all
to
answer
that
question
how
it
is
different
from
mqd
Brokers
I
describe
it
as
a
hosted
mqt
broker,
where
you
don't
have
to
do
it
yourself,
you
don't
have
to
manage
those
machines
yourself
and
there
you
know
it
battery
is
included
so
mqd
by
default.
You
have
to
make
it
secure.
You
have
to
add
all
those
authentications
manage.
B
It
I
remember
working
with
one
developer
from
Bangladesh
and
he
was
initially
working
with
mqtt
Brokers
popular
ones,
and
then
he
switched
to
our
platform
because
it's
managed
it's
scalable.
It
scales
automatically
to
answer
the
other
questions
like
how
you
know
it
works
with
you
know.
So
it's
ideally
meant
for
Hardware
developers,
manufacturers.
Yes,
you
can
build
or
make
your
own
home
smart,
but,
for
example,
it
is
meant
for
people
who
are
building
next
Tesla.
B
So
I've
worked
with
a
company
who
were
building
a
Tesla
for
bikes
and
they
wanted
to
have
a
companion
application
where
anyone
or
any
user
can
go
ahead
and
unlock
that
bike
from
the
application
or
probably
could
you
know,
do
get
notifications
for
maintenance
and
they
had
this
crazy
Vision
that
at
some
point
in
time
they
want
the
bike
to
automatically
go
to
a
repair
shop
and
get
a
repair
itself.
You
know
that
is
the
kind
of
ideas
which
are
possible.
So
probably
you
can
go
ahead
and
build
a
smart
lamp.
B
I
mean
that
is
a
vision
at
some
point.
I
won't
Reserve
anyone
with
the
decent
programming
knowledge
to
go
ahead
and
build
anything,
but
right
now
it
is
ideally,
you
know
meant
for
people
who
want
to
start
this
next
startups
in
Hardware
domain.
Oh.
A
Awesome
Okay,
so
me
and
Alex
were
thinking
in
smaller
sense
because
even
before
I
chatted
with
you
part
of
the
description,
I
was
like.
Do
you
like
building
smart
home
devices,
but
I
wasn't
thinking
of
like
how
powerful
this
could
be
for,
like
you
said,
a
Tesla
like
product?
So
this
is
really
really
awesome.
B
Oh
good,
just
to
add
I
mean
this
is
the
sort
of
like
long-term
perspective
of
it.
We
wanted
to
bring
that
skill
that
accessibility
and
just
make
it
very
easy
for
anyone
to
get
started.
You
know-
and
that
is
how
you
know-
I
draw
this
very
parallel
with
heruku
or
Firebase.
Firebase
is
an
even
better
sort
of
like
an
analogy
for
our
platform.
Yeah.
A
A
B
So
at
this
point,
most
of
the
code
is
closed.
Source
and
majorly.
The
sdks
are
public
because
you
know
we're
working
on
it.
We're
trying
to
get
better
at
this,
but
at
the
core
we
want
to
at
some
point
just
open
source.
The
entire
thing
I
mean
it
includes.
The
idea
is,
you
know,
open
core,
how
you
know
you
see
Super
Bass
and
all
these
amazing
platforms
right
now,
yeah
it
gets
the
you
know,
developers
more
sense
of
you
know,
safety
understanding,
and
it
also
just
empowers
the
platform
at
large.
B
You
know
you
know
more
and
more
developers
collaborate,
they
make
it
better
for
you,
they
may
get
better
for
the
entire
Community
I
might
have
learned
from
GitHub.
I
still
see
so
much
content
that
you
guys
publish-
and
it's
just
I.
Remember
one
content
that
I
read
from
very
early
on
2008
I
guess
it
was
not
an
open
source
repository.
B
It
was
just
a
Blog
and
I
changed
a
lot
of
things
inside
the
theme,
because
it
was
about
how
GitHub
is
managing
infrastructure
and
so
cool
and
so
awesome,
and
it
was
from
very
early
on
in
very
early
days.
That
is
the
kind
of
the
focus.
Is
you
built
something
you
put
it
out
there
Community
just
take
it
to
the
entirely
other
stage,
and
that
has
happened
with
that
sdks
we
published
one
in
the
case.
B
Someone
got
inspired,
they
helped
us
build
another
SDK,
and
you
know
they
helped
us,
for
example,
build
this
canvas.
This
was
not
part
of
the
platform
on
day
one
so
people,
Inspire
developers,
Inspire
developers,
amazing
group
of
people.
A
I
love
it
yeah
I,
always
like
to
to
hear
from
the
perspective
of
a
founder
and
like
their
their
strategy
that
they're
using
to
whether
they
choose
to
open
source
or
closed
Source
or
eventually
go
open
core
or
whatever.
So
this
was
great
because
I
think
I
think
it's
just
good
to
see
from
like
why
you
made
the
decisions,
because
everybody
has
different
reasons
why
they
need
to
do
things
and
I,
like
that.
A
You
pointed
out
that
part
of
Open,
Source
and
learning
in
public
is
being
able
to
inspire
other
developers
on
like
how
they
can
also
take
things
on
their
own
and
then
I
kind
of
feel
like
it
makes
you
become
a
leader
within
that
industry
because
they're
like
okay,
that's
how
that
company
is
doing
that
I
didn't
even
think
of
that
perspective,
and
then
people
start
following
people
on
that.
That
method.
That's
awesome!
A
So
you
showed
us
a
couple
of
and
I
didn't,
get
to.
Backstage
talk
to
you
about
this
too
much.
But
you
showed
us
a
couple
of
repositories.
Are
there
any
other
tools
within
GitHub
that
you
leverage
within
your
team
like
GitHub
actions
or
code
faces
or
co-pilot
that
have
helped
your
that
have
been
been
beneficial
for
your
company
yeah.
B
I
mean,
first
of
all,
being
on
this
GitHub
status
car
startups
program.
It's
been
I
think
over
five
six
months
now
and
I.
Think
very
honestly.
We
use
a
lot
of
GitHub
I
mean
the
entire
company
is
on
GitHub,
but
something
that
I
love.
The
most
is
the
communication,
so
people
who
have
a
lot
more
experience
in
in
managing
open
source
communities
and
managing
open
source
tool.
They're
always
there
to
help
you,
you
guys
all
the
startup
team.
B
So
whenever
there's
a
query
on
how
to,
for
example,
search
right
now
open
source
strategy,
we
have
all
these
sdks
open
source.
So
you
know
it
attracts
all
all
these
developers
to
collaborate
and
I
think
it
have
has.
You
know
now
turned
into
this
Marketplace
of
sort
where
people
can
see
your
work
and
collaborate
with
yours.
That
was
the
most
exciting
part.
Along
with
that
love.
The
project
management
part
the
pr
Parts.
It
helped
us
a
lot.
B
The
other
major
tool
that
we
use
I
think
now
I'm
also
part
of
the
beta
projects
of
GitHub.
So
other
two
is
coming
now,
probably
will
be
here
soon.
I
love
that
it's
the
new.
No
code
sort
of
like
builder
for
the
home
page
of
GitHub,
it's
coming
soon,
I
guess:
I,
don't
know
if
most
of
the
developers
have
the
access
for
that
I.
Think
I,
love,
GitHub
workspaces
as
well.
We
use
GitHub
editor
all
the
time
whenever
we
need
to
do
PR
reviews.
It's
super
helpful.
B
You
don't
need
to
jump
screens,
but
I
guess
the
part
that
I
love
the
most
is
just
the
pr
the
issues
communication
you
know
and
then
I
think
you
know
the
alerts
that
you
get
as
an
open
source
project
manager.
It
gets
trickier
to
write
all
those
vulnerabilities,
I.
B
Think
I
can
not
imagine
the
startup
works
so
seamless
without
all
the
tools
that
is
there
for
us,
I
mean
it's
literally
I
haven't
imagined
another,
for
example,
version
for
us,
it's
so
seamless
that
it
just
you
know
we
don't
need
to
ever
overthink
about
it.
That
is
actually
the
exciting
part.
A
A
Just
within
my
browser.
My
other
question
to
you
is
just
more
to
your
experience
as
a
startup
founder.
Unless,
on
the
technical
section,
it's
just
like
what
challenges
have
you
encountered,
I
think
when
we
encourage
people
to
be
like
certain
Founders
or
maintainers,
and
we're
like
go.
Do
your
own
thing.
It's
only
like
the
positives,
but
what
what
negatives
have
you
faced
so
that
people
can
be
prepared?
Oh.
B
Yeah,
this
is
a
tough
question,
tough
questions,
because,
because
you
know
obviously
I
think
one
of
the
thing
about
startup
is
it's.
When
you
start
a
startup
for
startup's
sake,
it
becomes
very
trickier,
so
I
think
one
very
core
advice
for
all
the
friends
and
the
founders
out.
There
probably
started
like
a
project,
and
this
is
where
again
I'm
gonna
plug
GitHub
I
mean
create
a
project,
see
if
it's
taking
off.
This
is
our.
Why
I
love
that
open
core
strategy?
B
You
know
put
your
code,
your
stuff
out
there,
let
people
play
with
it
and
then
start
a
for
profit
or
probably
like
a
business
projects.
I
always
encourage
people
start
as
much
as
product
possible.
Okay,
I'll
put
it
out
there
write
about
it,
so
start
with
being
a
maintainer,
and
then
let's
see,
if
it
you
know,
if
it's
you
know,
if
there's
a
poll
and
then
start
a
business,
I
think
for
data
reference
communities,
they
give
you
this
strong
platform,
Hacker
News.
We
have
GitHub
Community.
B
So
in
Hardware
we
have
a
platform
which
is
called
instructables
and
hackster
and
I
always
encourage
all
of
my
fat
people
and
founders
of
using
our
platform
that
put
it
out
there.
Let
people
know
what
you're
building
Reddit
is,
for
example,
another
example:
I
ask
all
the
founders
to
be
there
and
also
take
the
feedback,
it's
difficult
to
take
feedback
when
you,
for
example,
like
coder,
you
love
your
code,
you
love
your
creation
and
all
that's
also
a
fulfilling
part
people.
B
A
Yeah
no,
this
is
good
advice.
I
never
really
heard
a
Founder
say
this,
but
that's
true
start
off
being
a
maintainer,
because
oftentimes
maintainers
are
kind
of
like
the
CEO
of
the
open
source
project.
So
you
get
that
experience
and
then
that's
a
good
point
of
don't
get
too
connected
to
your
code.
Oh
yeah,
because
I
do
get
connected
to
I
code.
People
give
me
feedback
they're
like
they
said
they
hate
it,
but
that's
not
the
case.
A
It's
just
here's
how
to
improve
or
here's
what
your
users
want
to
see
out
of
the
product,
because
it's
like
you're,
not
building
this
for
yourself
anymore,
they're,
building
it
for
your
users.
We
have
this
question
here:
I'm,
not
sure.
If
this
is
a
hard
question,
I
don't
know,
but
it's
from
the
audience
there
and
it
might
not
be
necessarily
related
to
to
you
but
they're,
just
curious
of
how
developers
choose
what
locations
to
deploy
devices
to
I,
guess
they're,
talking.
B
B
They
can
be
two
perspective
for
those
questions.
One
is,
if
you
want
to
like
build
devices,
you
can
build
it
wherever
you
won't
deploy
it
wherever
you
want
it's
a
sort
of
like
a
globally
accessible
solution.
You
don't
need
to
be
like
in
a
specific
Geographic.
Geography.
I
hope.
This
answers
part
of
the
question
another
way
to
answer.
This
is
obviously
right
now.
B
Most
of
these
servers
that
we
have
is
ideally
based
in
America,
so
we
provide
best
service
in
America
or
us,
or
we're
hopefully
trying
to
build
this
Global
CDN
for
Hardware
devices.
So
wherever
your
device
are,
whenever
you
as
a
team,
are,
are
probably
wherever
your
users
are,
it
needs
to
be
accessible
there
and
it's
not
self-hosted.
It's
managed
right
now,
so
you
don't
need
to
like
think
of
any
hosting
or
anything
or
deploy
I
mean
they
just
just
sign
in
and
it's
ready.
A
B
Going
towards
yeah
it's
a
serious
challenge,
making
it
very
seamlessly
everywhere.
It's
a
it's.
A
GitHub
challenge,
I
mean
literally
the
kind
of
scale.
Yes.
A
I'm
curious,
like
how
do
you
end
up
prioritizing
like
different
features
for
your
product,
because
it's
about
the
hardware
like
and
software
type
of
products?
So
how
do
you
like
prioritize
that.
B
Again,
that
was
the
very
tricky
part
to
learn
what
to
build,
and
so
I'd
say
it's
50
I
mean
60,
40
I.
Guess
it's
going
to
sound
a
little
bit
so
60
user
feedback
and
40
your
intuition.
Why
I
say
that
I
mean
for
most
startup
Founders?
They
give
this
idea
that
just
follow
the
users,
and
it
makes
sense
to
me,
but
my
perspective
is
take
feedback
from
users
and
then
apply
your
perspective
to
it
and
build
it.
B
That
is
how
it
prioritize
so,
for
example,
for
a
long
period
of
time.
People
wanted
this.
You
know:
data
storage,
large-scale
data,
storage
in
the
platform.
One
option
was
to
probably
just
you
know,
build
it
probably
add
an
integration
out
of
the
box.
I
mean
you
know:
integration
for
mongodb
or
how
you
know,
there's
a
data
source
product
in
Firebase
or
data
store
product
in
super
based.
That
was
my
idea.
Remember
like
how
a
hardware
engineer
would
use
use
it.
B
B
You
take
the
feedback
and
then
translate
into
something
that
first
of
all
aligns
to
your
long-term
plan
and
also
what
you
uniquely
know
about
the
space
and
one
question
that
we
always
ask
ask
ourselves
how
a
hardware
developer
would
be
using
it,
and
Hardware
developers
are
a
little
bit
different.
They
program
differently.
They
know
the
programming
word
from
a
less
except
no,
not
I
mean
unless
the
software
way
yeah,
you
know
so,
for
example,
it's
100
lines
of
code.
It's
very
simple.
That
is
how
most
of
the
hardware
programmers
program.
A
Interesting,
okay,
so
normally
there's
not
files
on
files
on
files
for
for
all
Hardware
engineering,
interesting
I,
didn't
I
had
no
clue
and
I.
I've
never
heard
that
advice
before,
but
that's
good
advice
on
like
take
your
user
feedback,
but
like
Cur
like
what
an
asterisk
of
like
curving
it
into
your
own
perspective,
because
you
don't
want
your
users
to
take
your
product
into
a
direction
that
wasn't
even
what
you
initially
envisioned
right
like
you
want
them
to
help
grow
it.
B
Can
look
at
also
from
the
vision
perspective,
but
one
another
dimension
to
it
is
sometimes
users
I
mean
they
tell
you
about
what
they
want,
but
in
what
form?
This
is
a
gray
area.
I
mean
you
can
add
your
own
creativity
to
it.
Sometimes
you
can
I
give
an
example
Tome,
for
example,
it's
a
presentation
tool
that
we're
using
now
I
I'm,
increasingly
using
it
and
I
loved
it.
I
mean
I
shared
a
feedback
with
them.
B
I
want
more
flexible
layouts,
for
example,
it's
a
storytelling
tool
at
the
core
and
they
took
my
feedback
and
then
they
added
you
know
they
added
layouts
and
it's
it's
very
amazing.
I
cannot
describe
it,
but
the
thing
feedback
apply
the
creativity
to
it,
and
then
it
just
blows
your
mind.
Oh
my
God.
This
could
be
done
this
way.
For
example,
I
had
the
I,
you
know,
I
I
told
you
about
the
data
part
so
most
of
the
people.
They
just
wanted
data
storage.
B
But
then,
when
we
shared
that
earlier
version
with
people
that
you
know,
you
can
store
and
then
streams
more
organized
way
to
store
data
they
liked
it.
They
like
the
idea
like
Firebase,
for
example,
you
know
they
started
with
this
game
messenging
platform,
and
then
they
added
a
database
to
it
before
data,
and
it
just
was,
you
know,
went
skyrocketing.
So
that
is
how
I
look
at
it.
You
need
to
have
a
unique
perspective,
a
unique
angle,
to
the
feedback.
A
B
Very
me
sound
very
little,
but
change
a
lot.
It
changed
me
a
lot
as
a
person.
The
first
couple
of
juice,
I,
guess
I,
don't
know
why
people
don't
talk
about
it.
It
it
changes
your
morning
and
you're
like
it
matters.
B
Oh,
the
first
issue
at
least
I
mean
first
people
outside
of
the
organization,
creating
an
issue
on
the
platform
gut
punching
feedback
on
Discord.
A
B
I
mean
I
love
it
that
people
have
a
it's
probably
I,
I've
Loved
people
to
be
more
soft
with
the
feedback,
but
you
know
critical
feedback
sometimes
give
this
idea
that
people
care
and
I
mean
you
know
they
are
sort
of
hurt.
I
mean
they've,
warned
that
problem
to
be
fixed.
They
really
care
about
that
so
painfully.
B
So
that
was
the
other
first
I
think.
The
third
first
is
when
people
reach
you
out
to,
for
example,
join
your
team
is
a
very,
very
big,
Milestone
and
I
think
it
happened
just
this
week,
so
I
mean
initially
you
start
with
friends
or
early
friends
of
friends.
But
then
you
know
when
people
reach
you
out
that
we
want
to
be
part
of
this
organization
and
they're
amazing.
B
You
wanted
to
hire
someone
like
that
person
and
then
when
and
when
they
tell
you
about
it
very
passionately
like
why
they
love
you
yeah.
That
I
think
this
is
your
morning
and
those
are
some
of
the
best
apps
people
that
don't
you
know,
people
and
and
when,
for
example,
inside
an
organization
when
people
developers
are
you
know
they
they,
for
example,
don't
go
to
an
event
or
just
probably
spend
an
extra
day
or
probably
just
make
it
more
cool
because
they
just
love
that
idea.
B
They
just
wanted
to
probably
spend
their
weekend
on
I,
don't
encourage
that
I
mean
I,
don't
want
put
who
you
know.
There
needs
to
be
balance,
but
when
it
happens
very
organically
I
love.
It.
A
B
I
think
that
was
the
best
one.
It
happened
just
this
week
and
then
I
danced
that
morning
and
I
think
it
was
an
amazing
feeling.
A
That's
awesome.
Okay,
if
y'all
have
any
more
questions
for
him
feel
free
to
put
it
in
the
chat,
but
we're
nearing
the
end
now
so
my
my
coat
well
call
to
action,
or
just
like
it's
just
like:
how
can
we
support
you?
How
can
viewers
support
you?
A
Do
you
have
any
like
things
that
are
coming
up,
that
we
should
follow
you
on
that
shoot?
Like
any
events,
any
social
media
platforms.
B
I
think,
first
of
all,
there
are
two
things
that
I
wanted
to
mention
just
wanted
to
give
everyone
a
perspective
of
where
this
can
go
and
buy
the
right
time
to
get
excited
about
the
hardware
word.
You
know
we
see
all
the
software
Innovations,
we
see
charge
GPD
and
all
these
amazing
amazing
Innovations
happening
right
now,
but
this
is
very
right
time
to
get
started
and
start
your
own
project
in
Hardware
space,
and
why
so
I'll
share
my
screen
very
quickly.
B
And
then
also
I
would
love
everyone
to
join
our
discard,
be
a
part
of
the
community,
whether
you're,
a
hardware
developer
or
not
get
involved,
learn.
So
one
of
the
amazing
things
that
we're
doing
now-
and
it's
probably
gonna-
give
everyone
a
perspective
on
where
this
entire
thing
is
going.
So
we're
now
working
on
our
launching
soon
a
AI
integration
with
our
platform.
So,
what's
going
to
happen,
is
think
of
it
we're
building
a
brain
in
the
cloud.
So
all
of
your
devices
data
are
there.
B
You
know
now
with
AI
integration,
you
can
build
analytics
on
your
data.
You
can
set
up
alerts
or
you
know
literally
query
your
data
so
think
of
it
as
an
AI.
You
know
assistant
in
the
cloud
for
iot
developers,
and
you
know
it
just
bringing
it.
B
You
know
full
circle
when
we
imagined
iot,
we
think
of
devices
which
can
make
decisions,
or
at
least
peripheral
decisions
for
us
make
our
life
more
cooler,
and
this
is
the
kind
of
experiences
developers
can
now
build
for
other
other
humans
and
other
people
and
their
users,
like
maybe
a
autonomous
drone
delivery
company
can
burn
out
of
it
or
you
know
a
pet
tracker,
an
autonomous,
Pet
Tracker
can
happen,
and
that
is
where
we're
going,
and
that
is
where
this
entire
ecosystem
is
going.
B
So
this
is
very
exciting
time
to
be
alive
and
exciting
time
to
be
Hardware,
developer
and
I
just
want
everyone
to
get
started
in
this
domain
get
involved,
you
know,
join
our
Discord,
we
do
bi-weekly
meetups,
we
do
workshops
where
we
try
to
teach
developers
on.
You
know
getting
started
with
our
platform
and
not
just
our
platform,
but
also
other
exciting
things
which
is
happening
in
this
domain,
so
treat
me
to
get
started.
We
also
have
a
community
on
hackster.
B
This
is
where
you
can
find
a
lot
of
examples
in
maybe
tutorials
I'll
share
this
link
right.
Yes,
I.
B
Yeah,
so
you
can
see
tons
of
examples.
We
also
have
a
GitHub
examples,
sort
of
like
repository,
so
a
lot
of
ways
where
you
can.
You
know
we're
trying
to
help
here
and
who
love
all
of
the
community
get
involved,
show
us
the
future
and
help
us.
You
know
build
a
future
together.
I
mean
that
is
the
idea.
This.
A
B
Awesome,
it's
also
on
the
the
public
like
the
LinkedIn
and
but
you
know
majorly
on
our
discard.
We
do
the
sometimes
there
are
you
know:
Fireside
Chats,
where
we
invite
successful
Hardware,
Founders
and
startup
Founders
to
tell
about
their
stories.
We
also
have
a
Blog
now,
which
is
about
you
know,
highlighting
what
other
startups
are
doing
to
inspire
people
to
make
be
it.
You
know
possible
for
people
to
see
the
future.
You
know
there's
not
enough
conversation
about
what
this
space
can
become.
B
Yeah,
so
imagine
how
coinbase
was
used
to
talk
about.
You
know
crypto
in
2011..
That
is
what
this
this
is
about.
Now,.
A
This
is
great,
especially
just
when
you
you
gave
that
vision
of
what
you
can.
You
can
eventually
do
with
it,
like
maybe
the
autonomous
drone,
delivery
and
stuff
like
that.
This
is
really
awesome.
You're
right,
it's
an
exciting
time
to
be
in
Tech
I'm,
so
glad
that
I'm
I'm
within
the
engineering
space
and
I
get
to
see
all
the
the
Creations
that
our
people
are
making,
because
we
can
just
imagine
in
a
few
years
of
all,
the
change
will
be
yeah.
B
A
Journey
yeah
this
is
great
and
so
I
just
want
to
remind
people
go
ahead
and
go
to
I,
hope,
I'm
saying
it
right.
You
said
it
was
Grandeur.
Oh.
A
And
then
hackster.io,
the
also
the
the
GitHub
repository
will
be
a
great
reference
for
y'all
for
examples
and
also,
if
you
want
to
contribute
to
their
St
SDK
I'm
gonna
mix
an
open
source
contribution
or
leverage
the
SDK.
B
A
B
On
God
and
tell
us,
I
mean
we
do
also
sort
of
like
open
launch
weeks
where
we
do
sort
of
like
this
close
circles
where
people
can
tell
us
about
their
experience
on
this
platform
and
probably
help
us
build
the
next
feature.
I
mean
it's.
So
all
of
the
organization
is
also
on
the
discard.
So
in
fact,
all
the
team
members
they
post
regular
updates.
They
interact
with
everyone
we
played
regularly,
or
at
least
try
to
games
on
the
platform.
Among
Us
is
our
favorite.
B
A
Is
great,
this
is
great.
Someone
was
saying
awesome
all
right,
so
yeah
go
ahead
and
join
that
Discord
I
think
you
said
they
would
find
that
if
they
go
to
the
website,
I
want
to
join
it
right
after
this
we'll
quickly
transition
into
some
of
like
the
fun
questions,
I
normally
ask
wrap
up
yay
awesome.
So
first
question
is:
what's
your
most
used,
emoji.
B
Right
now,
it's
LOL,
or
sometimes
that
I
don't
remember
what
it's
called,
but
with
the
wide
mouth
open
or
the
teeth
worked.
Yeah.
B
Twitter
yeah
I
think
that
is
the
most
used,
I
guess,
favorite
I
guess
notion
and
sometimes
tone
why
I
loved
art,
I
love
the
applications,
a
new
there's,
a
new
application.
It's
called
Art
browser
I
like
that
as
well.
This
is
inspiring
I
mean
the
ux,
it's
amazing
as
a
Creator,
and
it
gives
you
that
Goosebumps
filling
okay.
A
Addicted
to
Twitter
a
little
bit
but
yeah
all
right,
what'd,
you
say
sorry
where.
A
Yeah
I
love
connecting
with
other
developers
and
just
hearing
how
they
think
what
was
your
least
enjoyable
job
ever.
B
I
think
right
now
it's
difficult
to
answer,
least
enjoyable
I
think
I.
Don't
entirely
love
going
from
one
place
to
another:
I,
don't
like
traveling
a
lot
in
the
instance
of
regular
traveling
and
I.
Think
one
of
the
things
that
we
did
initially
did
a
lot
of
sort
of
in-person
trips
to
users.
It
was
not
I
mean
in
in
sense
of
debugging,
helping
them
debug
and
I
initially
worked
with
some.
You
know
Founders
to
actually
debug
their
code,
so
that
was
also
sort
of.
B
But
you
know,
oh,
you
cannot
type
an
array
I
mean
you
know.
That
is
the
kind
of
experience
you
have
initially
days
so
I
worked
on,
for
example,
feed
trips
with
my
startup
Founders
to
see
what
end
users
are
doing,
yeah,
not
least
enjoy
now
I
Aspire.
It
I
want
to
do
it
again,
but
at
that
time
it
sort
of
sucked
yeah.
A
A
B
I
love
more
and
more
now
Coldplay
to
do
not
as
much
of
like
an
app
for
a
fan.
It's
going
to
be
very
lame,
but
I
love,
yellow.
A
A
Is
probably
the
other
yeah.
B
A
very
diverse
music
sort
of
inclination.
B
Definitely
go
ahead
and
probably
listen
to
Nusrat
Fateh
Ali
Khan
It's,
a
classical
singer
from
Pakistan
and
India
Pakistan
origin,
and
you
will
love
it
if
you
like.
You
know
different
kind
of
music
yeah.
A
A
Any
last
words
from
you,
I
do
want
to
tell
the
audience.
I
want
to
give
the
audience
a
little
call
to
action.
So
Moyes
is
currently
part
of
the
GitHub
for
startups
program
and
I
wanted
to
tell
you
all
about
the
Gale
for
startups
program.
If
you
were
interested
in
joining
two,
basically,
what
we
do
is
we
help
your
startup
go
from
idea
to
IPO
on
the
world's
largest
and
most
advanced
developer
platform.
A
If
you're
eligible
you
end
up
receiving
20
seats
of
GitHub
Enterprise
for
free
for
12
months
and
then
also
I,
think
I
think
Moyes
was
even
mentioning
it
as
well,
but
you
get
a
personalized
onboarding
experience.
You
get
office
hours,
you
get
technical
best
practices,
so
we're
here
to
give
you
advice
and
and
and
be
of
support
to
you.
A
Also,
if
you
are
a
technology
leader,
go
ahead
and
apply
now,
but
if
you're
not-
and
you
think
that
your
company
should
get
into
this-
talk
to
your
to
talk
to
your
leaders,
talk
to
your
VC
team
and
go
ahead
and
have
them
apply
for
this
also
I
did
see
people
saying
oh
there's
only
a
little
bit
of
people
watching
it's
because
I
think
I
think
it's
because
one
this
is
a
newer
show
and
then
two
I
did
take
a
break
last
week,
because
I
was
traveling
at
a
conference,
but
I
will
love.
A
If
you
all
saw
this
and
you're
like
yo,
Roselle
and
Moyes
are
cool
I
would
love
for
y'all
to
keep
tuning
in
every
Wednesday
at
2
p.m?
Eastern,
because
you're
gonna
get
more
awesome.
People
like
Moyes
and
more
awesome
startups
to
learn
about
and
learn
how
to
support
them
and
stuff
like
that.
So
please,
please
tune
back
in
next
week.
Wednesday
and
every
Wednesday
at
2PM
I
wanted
to
ask
you
if
you
had
any
last
last
thoughts
that
you
wanted
to
add
in
before
we
go.
Thank.
B
You
so
much
Ozil
for
just
inviting
in
everyone
in
the
team.
This
was
an
exciting
time
with
the
GitHub
team
and
I
recommend
everyone
listening
to
the
stream
right
now
definitely
go
ahead,
be
part
of
the
GitHub
startups
program.
I
had
phenomenal
experience
and
I
think
the
exposure.
The
help
that
you
get
is
just
amazing
and
it's
exciting
time
be
super
pumped
I,
I
love,
it
I
mean
go
out.
There
create
something,
put
your
creation
alive
and
don't
forget
to
join
this.
B
A
Yes,
also,
thank
you
so
much
and
then
I
just
wanted
to
Echo.
This
comment
that
I
see
I
just
met
you
but
I'm
super
proud
of
you
too,
like
this,
this
startup
is
awesome
and
I'm
excited
to
see
it
grow,
I
think
I'm,
gonna,
try
it
out
and
I'm
gonna
join
the
Discord
too,
because
I
want
to
know
more.
Thank
you
so
much
to
the
audience
as
well
for
tuning
in
for
asking
questions
and
being
engaged,
and
thanks
again
Moyes
for
for
giving
us
your
time
and
your
expertise.
A
That
is
going
to
be
it
for
the
rest
of
this
stream
y'all
bye.
Thank
you.