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From YouTube: The Graph’s Community Talk #4
Description
The Graph’s Community Talk #4
This video was recorded: Tuesday, October 19 @ 8am PST, 2021.
A
Hello,
everyone
to
community
talk
number
four
at
graph
today
we're
going
to
have
a
packed
agenda.
Talking
about
a
number
of
things.
We
have
a
number
of
conferences
that
are
happening
right
now
and
in
the
coming
weeks.
Martin
is
going
to
talk
about
that.
We
have
derek
data
nexus
with
us
who's
going
to
talk
about
the
curator
catalyst.
A
A
How
are
you
nick
so
tell
us
about
nick
hansen?
You
know
who
is
nick
hansen
in
in
real
world.
B
Well,
hello,
everybody
nick
hansen
so
glad
to
be
here
and
you
might
recognize
the
voice,
which
we
probably
have
something
to
say
about
in
a
minute
here.
Oliver,
but
my
background
professionally
is
in
commercial,
real
estate
and
marketing
and
based
in
the
united
states,
spent
the
last
10
years
of
my
life
as
the
chief
marketing
officer
for
an
investments
firm
got
involved
with
the
graph
back
in
december
of
last
year
and
have
become
really
passionate
about
the
project
about
web3
and
really
looking
forward
to
contributing
in
a
full-time
manner.
At
the
foundation.
A
B
Well,
the
truth
is,
I
think
my
entry
into
the
graph
is
a
lot
like
so
many
others,
which
was
you
know,
you
kind
of,
saw
a
lot
of
discussion
on
twitter.
You
started
seeing
communities
crop
up
and
you
tried
to
figure
out
what
this
thing
was,
because
early
impressions
were
that
this
was
an
infrastructure
based
project
that
would
be
the
foundation
for
what
was
already
becoming
very
exciting
in
the
web.
3
defy
space,
and
so
when
I
first
became
aware
of
the
graph,
it
was
intrigued
about
what
this
thing
was.
B
I
think
the
positioning
as
the
google
blockchain
raised
my
eyebrows
and
piqued
my
interest,
but
then,
as
I
got
more
familiar
with
the
people
and
the
different
individuals
and
stakeholders
in
the
graph
community,
my
passion,
you
know,
became
fire,
and
I
realized
that
there
were
a
like-minded
shared
vision
for
what
people
wanted
to
accomplish
and
the
potential
impact
in
the
world
in
communities
all
across
the
world.
That
really
again
became
the
the
real
thrust
in
getting
involved
and
wanting
to
contribute
in
my
own
way,.
B
I
think
there
can
be
a
lot
of
you
know
cloudiness
as
to
what's
going
on
and
who's
participating
and
where
are
the
people,
but
because
of
the
podcast.
I've
had
the
opportunity
to
meet
and
speak
with
so
many
I've
come
to
realize
that
there
really
are
just
people
fully
committed,
fully
invested
in
building
this,
and
just
because
you
know
they're
in
germany
or
africa
or
somewhere
in
south
america
doesn't
mean
that
this
thing
isn't
tangible
and
driven
by
passion.
A
Yeah,
it's
amazing,
you
know
it's
especially
once
you
get
closer
into
the
project,
you
realize
the
graph
has
no
borders
right,
it's
one
big
family
across
the
entire
globe.
So
speaking
of
your
role
now
at
the
foundation,
so
what
can
we
expect
from
you
in
terms
of
contributions
going
forward?
What's
your
focus
going
to
be.
B
What
it
is
when
it's
going
to
launch-
and
I
myself
am
an
advocate
and
my
story
is
reflective
of-
I
think
what
the
advocate
program
can
do
for
others,
which
is
lower
the
barrier
of
entry
to
participate
and
create
value
in
the
graph
and
in
the
broader
web3
space,
and
so
my
focus
will
be
to
find
others
that
want
to
participate
and
become
an
advocate
in
their
local
community,
and
I
hope,
you'd
reach
out
to
me.
There'll
be
a
lot
of
opportunities.
A
Awesome
exciting
and
I'm
super
excited
that
you've
joined
the
graph,
and
I
look
forward
to
working
alongside
with
you.
I'm
sure
everyone
in
the
community
feels
excited
about
having
you
sort
of
at
the
helm
of
you
know
the
global
outreach
and
given
the
experience
that
you
bring
in
to
the
graph
that
you've
gained
not
only
with
the
gravitas
in
your
professional
career,
so
welcome
to
the
team.
A
All
right,
so
with
that
we
are
shifting
gears
to
conferences
that
we
have
we've
got
quite
a
few
and
we
typically
don't
do
slides,
but
we've
just
prepared
one,
so
we
can
actually
kind
of
get
a
structure
on
all
the
things
that
are
happening.
So
let
me
just
share
that
and
martine
is
walking
us
through
all
the
things
that
are
happening
now
in
the
coming
weeks.
A
C
Thanks
oliver,
so
basically
starting
this
week
or
tomorrow,
there's
a
lot
of
events
happening
in
this
one
and
the
graph
is
all
over
them
and
the
first
one
is
liscon
a
conference
of
around
a
thousand
people
starting
tomorrow
and
where
yaniv
is
opening
the
conference
with
a
main
stage,
talk
at
10
a.m
and
an
adit
is
speaking.
11
20
a.m
also
on
main
stage
and
then
both
of
them
are
participating
in
panels.
C
And
after
that,
there's
this
one,
which
is
a
hackathon
starting
this
friday,
where
also
yanivision
is
going
to
be
speaking
at
the
opening
ceremony
and
then
a
workshop
given
by
simon
on
building
subgroups
and
probably
around
nfts
and
next
week.
There's
near
con
this
conference
around
the
near
blockchain,
where
adam
and
leo
are
going
to
be
speaking
and
leo,
is
speaking.
The
first
day
of
the
conference,
which
is
tuesday,
26
and
adam,
is
speaking
on
wednesday
and
the
week
after
web
summit.
C
It's
a
great
big
conference
of
four
days
happening
also
here
in
in
lisbon
and
there's
going
to
be
a
a
booth
and
from
the
foundation
there's
going
to
be
rim
attending
and
also
a
couple
of
people
from
agenda
like
simon,
giving
a
workshop
another
and
probably
others
and
and
after
that,
which
ends
on
thursday,
friday
and
saturday
is
cosmos.
Community
conference,
where
teagan
from
a
gernot
and
joseph
from
figment,
will
be
speaking
different
times
on
different
stages
and
the
week
after
that.
A
All
right,
thank
you,
martin,
so
a
lot
of
stuff
coming
up
and
going
on
so
keep
track
of
the
graph
twitter
account,
and
on
this
one
we
will
share
a
lot
of
information,
a
lot
of
the
things
that
are
happening,
sometimes
even
in
real
time
of
of
events
or
amas
that
might
might
occur
so
make
sure
in
the
coming
weeks
to
keep
a
close
eye
on
the
graph
twitter
account
that
will,
you
know,
give
you
all
the
details
as
they
are
happening
as
well.
So
thank
you.
Marty.
A
We
have
derrick
with
us
from
the
duration,
catalyst
nope
he's
not
on
yet
so
we're
gonna,
I'm
gonna
punt.
On
that
a
little
bit.
Let's
talk
about,
then
the
indexer
survey
that
we
have
launched.
So
last
week
we
have
announced
an
indexer
survey
that
will
be
open
until
mid-november.
You
know
11
15
and
what
we
will
be
doing
there
or
what
you
have
the
opportunity
to
do
as
an
indexer
is
to
really
share
deeper.
A
You
know
feedback
on
a
number
of
questions
that
we
have
structured
with
other
indexers
together,
and
you
know
that
goes
into
the
indexing
experience
into
the
operations
into
you
know
how
much
time
you
invest,
and
you
know
how
you
overall,
you
know
rate
the
graph
as
a
protocol
to
engage
in
also
relative
to
other
engagements
that
you
might
have
as
a
validator.
A
So
it's
really
a
deeper
survey
that
also
you
know
we
ask
if
you
want
to
meet
with
somebody
from
the
foundation
and
the
core
deaf.
If
you
want
to
even
have
a
follow-up
discussion
on
your
feedback,
you
have
that
opportunity
as
well,
and
this
is
all
geared
towards
understanding
what
indexers
experience
and
what
they
need.
And
what
and
as
such,
we
will
take
that
and
really
take
a
good
look
at
all
the
answers
that
you
provide
to
understand.
A
You
know
how
that
should
inform
the
roadmap
ahead,
especially
with
regards
to
some
of
the
protocol
enhancements
that
directly
impact
the
indexer
experience.
So
we
have
a
link
that
I
will
share
here
momentarily
and
you
know
you
can
check
that
out.
You
can
also
see
that
in
discord
and
in
the
forum
where
we
have
also
created
a
post
for
it,
where
you
have
links
to
the
survey
as
well-
and
I
will
share
it
here
shortly
in
the
chat
too.
A
D
Yeah,
so
we're
going
to
be
starting
a
a
bi-weekly
call
called
the
curation
catalyst
group,
and
initially
this
was
a
group
just
that's
fairly
familiar
with
a
protocol
related
to
curation
and
how
those
contracts
work
and
all
of
that,
and
so
we're
opening
this
to
a
more
broad
sphere.
I
should
say
so
curators
that
are
interested
in
learning
more
about.
D
You
know
how
the
protocol
works
and
all
that
type
of
stuff,
as
well
as
opening
more
curators
for
a
chance
to
discuss
governance,
suggestions,
different
things
that
can
be
done
to
enhance
the
curator
experience
and
then
also
just
answer
basic
questions
on.
D
You
know
how
to
evaluate
a
sub
graph.
You
know
looking
at
some
of
the
more
technical
aspects
of
that.
Those
are
things
that
we'll
be
able
to
do
in
this
time
frame.
So
it'll
it'll
operate
somewhat
similar
to
the
index
or
office
hours,
though
it's
going
to
focus
more
on
the
curation
side
of
things,
so
we
have
that
on
the
the
graph
calendar.
So,
if
that's
something
that
you
guys
are
interested
in,
I
definitely
welcome
you
to
participate
and
it
should
be
a
good
learning
experience
for
all
of
us.
A
Yeah
awesome
so
reflecting
a
little
bit
on
how
this
has
evolved
and
derek
you've
been
you
know,
leading
charge
in
that
later,
you
know,
community
has
been
extremely
active
from
you
know,
day,
one
of
curation
launch,
which
was
great
to
see
and
a
lot
of
the
proposals
that
that
are
out
there
and
that
have
also
been
implemented
already.
You
know,
are
sort
of
have
been
generated.
A
You
know,
within
the
you
know,
curator
community
and
the
curator
catalyst
was
a
group
that
was
sort
of
like
you
know,
leading
that
discussion
in
many
ways.
Also
on
the
forum,
you
know
been
very
active,
so
it's
been
just
great
to
see
also
great,
to
see
that
you're
going
public
now
and
and
really
you
know,
give
everyone
the
chance
to
get
get
involved
in
it.
So
awesome
initiative,
you
find
the
details
on
the
graph
calendar
where
you
can
see
it's
every
other
thursday
right.
D
Yep
every
other
thursday
and
then
and
oliver,
I'm
not
sure,
because
I
came
in
a
little
bit
late,
but
I'm
not
sure
if
you
already
went
over
any
of
the
governance
changes
that
have
happened
recently.
But
there
is
something
curator
related.
That
I
feel
like
is
something
that's
exciting
for
our
leg
of
the
network.
A
Yeah
we're
going
to
talk
about
governance
in
a
minute
we
haven't
gone
to
that
subject
yet.
D
A
By
the
way,
you
also
have
a
discord
channel.
Maybe
you
can
also
share
that
link
in
the
chat
with
the
rest
here,
so
they
can
also
check
out
that.
A
E
Yeah,
so
I
feel,
like
the
concept
of
time
is
definitely
in
passing
all
of
us
these
days
totally
fair
oliver,
but
we're
excited
to
be
collaborating
with
encode
camp.
What
they
do
is
kind
of
like
a,
I
think,
polygons
work
with
them
as
well,
where
they
do
clubs
and
series
where
you
can
get
educated
on
the
graph
now.
What's
really
neat
about
them.
E
So
this
is
probably
going
to
see
about
anywhere
between
a
thousand
to
two
thousand
students
across
the
world
participating
in
an
eight-part
series
covering
things
like
you
know
what
is
the
graph
from
maybe
like
an
open
data
economy
standpoint
how
to
build
subgraphs,
you
know
an
ama
with
tagan
actually
is
also
happening,
but
we
are
going
to
be
releasing
a
full
schedule.
E
I
believe,
sometime
next
week,
if
they
haven't
already
on
their
website,
but
keep
an
eye
out
for
and
encode
clubs,
further
announcements
as
they
are
going
to
be
coordinating
this.
But
there's
definitely
gonna
be
a
lot
of
collaboration
from
us
as
well,
and
who
knows
you
know
later
on
in
the
future?
E
You
might
see
more
of
these
pop
up
as
students
are,
you
know
more
intrigued
with
you
know,
nfts,
and
I
have
family
of
mine
that
are,
you
know
in
high
school
right
now
and
they're
asking
these
questions,
so
it
wouldn't
be
surprising
if
there's
a
lot
of
folks
in
higher
education
that
are
also
looking
to
see
what
they
could
do
in
web
3
and
how
they
can
get
involved.
E
A
A
Okay,
we
switched
gears
to
the
forum
we're
not
going
to
go
deep
into
a
segment
discussion,
but
want
to
touch
on
a
forum.
Post
pedro
will
walk
us
through
this.
The
graph
indexer
kubernetes,
automation
and
operations
toolkit
just
to
highlight
you
know
the
discussions
that
are
currently
going
on
on
that
pedro.
Can
you
tell
us
more
about
it?
A
F
Sure
thing
bye,
everyone
so
yeah.
This
one
was
from
eugene
eugene's
from
chainstack
they've
shared
in
the
form,
this
new
quote-unquote
kubernetes
automation
and
operations
toolkit,
which
was
built
as
part
of
a
graph
foundation.
Grant
this
one
is
one
of
the
different
solutions
we've
been
seeing
to
help
our
indexers
manage
their
stock.
As
you
know,
indexers
do
spend
a
lot
of
time
working
with
servers
or
cloud-based
resources
to
then
essentially
instantiate
or
deploy
the
raw
software
in
there
make
sure
that
everything
is
running
properly
with
minimal
downtime
and
latency.
F
F
You
can
use
things
like
terraform
or
elm
and
kubernetes
no
no
need
to
go
into
the
actual
details,
but
it
essentially
is
allows
you
to
go
from
xero
to
deployed
servers
and
then
the
whole
indexer
software
suite
deployed
on
those
servers
basically,
and
it
works
directly
with
microsoft,
azure,
google
cloud
platform
aws
as
well,
and
it's
pretty
cool
because
we've
been
seeing
a
lot
of
grantees
building
this
type
of
automation,
tooling,
it's
something
that
we
covered
a
lot
during
index
or
office
hours
quite
deeply.
F
Not
we're
not
going
to
do
it
here,
no,
no
need
for
it,
but
this
is
just
to
highlight
that,
as
as
oliver
was
just
mentioning,
we
have.
This
survey
go
go
going
on
and
it's
pretty
important
for
us
to
figure
out
exactly
which
sort
of
tools
or
solutions
the
indexers
are
mostly
using
so
that
yeah
we
can
understand
like
if
we
need
to
update
these
solutions
to
add
more
components
like
the
fire
hose
for,
for,
for,
like
an
example
in
the
future,
we'll
talk
talk
about
it
soon
as
well.
Yeah.
F
We
can
use
those
existing
projects
already
and
it's
becoming
clear
that
we
need
to
find
a
way
to
let
the
community
aware
of
all
of
these
projects
being
built
around
the
graph.
So
for
this
reason,
we'll
also
be
maintaining
some
sort
of
catalog
in
the
future,
so
that
you
guys
can
can
later
on
check
up
check
on,
and
this
will
be
available
in
the
upcoming
website
as
well.
A
F
Sure
yeah
so,
like
I
mentioned
this
last
last
week,
the
fire
hose
this
component,
that's
been
initially
designed
and
developed
by
streaming
fast,
one
of
the
new
core
devs
that
has
joined
the
team,
so
this
has
been
integrated
into
graph
node,
one
of
the
key
components.
F
Let's
say
that
indexers
run
this
was
integrated
as
a
new
block
stream
and
right
now
the
priority
is
to
work
on
to
work
with
indexers
in
early
staging
or
sorry
in
yeah
early
testing,
because
this
is
a
new
communication
protocol,
it's
based
on
grpc,
and
we
need
to
make
sure
there
is
consistency
with
the
typical
rpc
based
interface
that
we've
been
using
in
the
past
I'll
share
a
link
to
to
the
forum,
because
I
believe
adam
has
now
been
so.
F
F
It
shows
that
core
devs
are
working
nicely
and
this
will
allow
us
to
standardize
the
way
like
having
a
standard
way
of
to
more
easily
or
yeah
to
more
easily
integrate
other
chains
in
the
future,
especially
the
high
throughput
ones,
because
that's
where
the
fire
hose
actually
shines.
For
instance,
we
have
figment
also
doing
great
work
on
this
front.
Yes
and
thick
figment,
as
you
know
already,
it's
also
a
core
dev
and
yeah.
We'll
have
some
more
news
in
the
future
about
this,
so
you
definitely
want
to
stay
stay
tuned.
F
There's
not
much.
I
can
share
right
now
and
oliver.
I
don't.
I
don't
know
if
you
have
time,
but
I
believe
we
have
cohen
on
the
call-
and
I
think
so
we
would
be
prepared.
I
don't
know
cohen.
If
I
don't
know
oliver,
if
you
have
time
to
hear
from
cohen
his
own
experience
with
the
fireballs,
because
I
know
he's
been
testing
it,
as
well
as
an
indexer.
G
Hey
so
I
am,
I've
been
running
or
experimenting
with
a
fire
hose
system,
and
the
more
that
I
learn
about
fire
hose
and
the
more
that
I
run
into
problems
with
the
classical
indexing
in
particularly
on
on
bsc
the
more
excited
I
get
about
about
firehose
it.
It
radically
changes
a
few
of
the
concepts
that
we
that
we
know
about
blockchains
in
a
sense
or
or
about
processing
blockchains.
G
Mostly,
there
is
a
lot
of
sequential
process
and
that's
why
we.
We
need
the
archive
notes
and
we
need
these
huge
amounts
of
storage
and
in
a
way,
the
approach
done
by
streaming
fast
with
firehose
is
that
a
lot
of
these
things
can
be
broken
down
into
smaller
power
processes.
G
That
means
that
there
there
is
a
potential
for
quite
a
big
gain
in
time
and
the
firehose
system
itself.
It
relies
on
a
full
note
rather
than
an
archive
note,
and
to
give
a
comparison.
G
I
think
an
ethereum
archive
note
is
now
just
under
9,
terabyte
or
somewhere
around
that
and
the
bsc
archive
note
is
already
15
terabytes
and
that
needs
to
be
all
nvme
storage
or
you
just
get
bust
and
the
the
component
in
the
fire
hose
system
that
does
that
is.
It
only
needs
to
be
a
full
node,
which
is
roughly
one
terabyte.
G
So
there
is
a
major
difference
in
in
terms
of
the
storage
requirements
and
the
fact
that
it's
only
a
full
node,
rather
than
an
archive
node
those
archive
nodes,
they
can
be
quite
challenging
to
support
ethereum
archive
nodes.
We
have
the
amazing
aragon
system
that
came
up.
I
think
that
that
really
will
change
things
for
ethereum,
but
on
bsc,
for
example,
and
on
polygon
we
don't
have
those,
and
I
see
those
nodes
go
down
into
database
compaction
where
they
don't
keep
up
to
the
chain
anymore.
G
Things
that
I
see
on
on
this-
and
this
is
apparently
a
problem
that
for
hosted
service,
also
sees
that,
on
those
low
block
time
chains
like
bsc
a
polygon
and
a
number
of
others.
Sometimes
the
response
from
the
rpc
from
the
archive
node
is
incomplete
or
is
blank
and
the
indexer
doesn't
know
better
than
this
is
the
correct
information.
G
So
what
happens
on
on
some
of
our
systems
is
that
a
pair
created
event
doesn't
get
caught
by
the
indexer
and
therefore
the
entire
database
doesn't
have
any
information
on
that
pair
and
the
volume
and
the
trading
and
the
and
the
price
evolution,
which
is
a
major
problem
and
on
the
classical
indexing
way.
The
only
solution
that
you
have
is
to
roll
back,
which
means
you
increase.
G
You
introduce
a
lag
in
your
data
if
you
need
to
go
back
in
in
a
month
in
time,
because
you
missed
it
a
month
ago,
there's
a
question:
why
you
missed
it?
Why
you're
only
realizing
it
now
but
still
say
you
missed
the
montago.
You
need
to
go
back
a
month
ago
and
you
potentially
need
to
index
a
very
heavy
subgraph
for
that
missing
month
again
and
with
fire
hose.
G
There
should
be
the
possibility
to
almost
surgically
correct
that
missing
pair
and
only
for
that
missing
pair
find
all
the
the
missing
data
so
to
say
without
affecting
any
other
of
the.
Maybe
there
is
like
a
hundred
pairs
or
something
those
other
hundred
pairs.
They
are
not
affected
by
trying
to
fix
the
the
problem
with
that.
One
pair
that
you
happen
to
have
missed
so
yeah
fire
hose,
you
know
in
many
ways
could
bring
yeah.
G
I
think
it's
definitely
worth
calling
it
indexing
2.0,
because
it
brings
so
much
more
potential
to
the
to
the
ground
into
the
indexing
ecosystem.
A
A
Cool
awesome:
okay,
let's
talk
about
governance
more,
you
can
see,
expect
a
post
that
that
I
would
probably
post
in
the
next
week
or
so
that
will
outline
our
existing
governance
protocol
governance
process
in
a
little
bit
more
detail
and
answer
some
of
the
common
questions
that
we
see
being
raised
in
the
community
and
that
is
really
geared
towards
you
know
giving
everyone
just
a
better
understanding.
A
A
Already
so
now,
subgraph
developers
have
the
opportunity
to
be
the
first
curator
on
the
bonding
curve,
which
is
a
big
feature
that
has
been
anticipated
in
the
curator
community
and
also
what
has
gone
live
last
night
is
a
reduction
of
curation
tax
from
two
and
a
half
percent
down
to
one
percent,
so
that
significantly
reduces
the
cost
for
subgraph
updates
for
both
subgraph
developers
as
well
as
curators,
since
they
both
share
the
burden
of
that
upgrade
cost
and
again
another
significant
upgrade.
We've
heard
a
lot.
A
You
know
about
that
being
requested
and
excited
that
that
went
through.
So
those
are
actual
proposals
that
have
been
implemented
at
this
point
and
we
have
a
number
of
different
discussions
out
there
in
the
forum
that
I
encourage
everyone
to
check
out
and
we're
not
going
to
go
deep
into
forum
discussions
here
today.
But
we
have
a
number
of
proposals
around
curations
and
that
is
around
showroom
around
flattening
the
bonding
curve.
A
There
are
deep
discussions
going
on
and
I'm
sure
that
when
we
have
the
creditor
catalyst
launching
here
shortly,
then
we're
gonna
be
able
to
talk
much
more
deeper
about
some
of
the
proposals
that
we
have
posted
in
the
forum
on
that.
A
E
Yeah,
hey
guys.
So
last
week
we
announced
that
we
are
funding
over
1.5
million
dollars
towards
wave
3
grants.
E
We
have
over
35
grant
participants
this
time
around
and
we're
excited
to
bring
a
new
wave
of
grantees
on
board,
as
mentioned,
and
something
that
I
really
like
to
conceptualizes
for
and
illustrate
for
all
of
you.
Folks
is,
you
know
the
graph
is
not
being
built
by
the
team.
That's
facilitating
these
calls
or
bringing
everybody
together.
It's
really
everybody
in
this
call.
Has
you
know
a
small
piece
or
a
big
piece
or
a
role
to
play
in
growing
the
ecosystem?
E
So
I
encourage
you
again
to
think
about
what
you
think
would
be
really
great
for
the
graph
ecosystem,
whether
it's
from
a
protocol
improvement
standpoint,
a
community
initiative
that
you
feel
like
maybe
is
even
lacking
in
your
own
community,
a
dap
or
a
subgraph
that
you
think
could
really
be
a
game
changer
in
the
space
or
even
a
tool
that
could
help
any
of
our
ecosystem
participants,
whether
that
be
indexers,
delegators
or
curators,
or
even
subgraph
developers,
and
make
you
know
their
roles
in
the
ecosystem,
a
bit
more
efficient.
E
We
are
going
to
also
be
announcing
a
new
wave,
a
new
batch
of
rfps
in
the
next
coming
weeks,
so
keep
your
eyes
peeled
for
that.
A
few
grants
that
I'm
excited
about
this
wave
is
one.
E
I
think
I
attended
hcc
over
the
summer
earlier
in
july,
and
vitalik
discussed
the
need
for
more
social
tools
in
the
space
like
we've
really
mastered,
nfts
we've
mastered
d5,
something
that
we
can
really
do
a
bit
more
is
is
look
at
the
the
social
media
ecosystem
and
really
encourage
higher
quality
posting
and
form
the
basis
of
users
online
identities.
E
So
one
that
I'm
really
excited
about
this
time
around
and
my
ears,
my
eyes
and
ears
are
peeled
on,
is
poster
poster
is
aiming
to
be
the
decentralized
censorship,
resistant
and
highly
available
social
media
app,
which
will
be
powered
by
the
graph.
E
So
we're
really
excited
to
see
what
will
come
out
of
their
their
project
there,
but
other
ones
that
I
think,
can
really
be
a
game.
Changer
as
well
are
a
few
of
our
community
grants
such
as
our
encode
cam
club
story
that
one's
gonna
be
really
fun
as
well
as
sorry.
E
I'm
just
remembering
yes,
the
curation
video
guides,
so
I
think
those
that
one
actually
started
out
as
an
rfp
rfps
are
also
grants,
they're,
just
ones
that
are
ideas
that
are
posed
by
the
community,
that
we
post
up.
So
the
grantee
there
really
came
forward
and
actually
provided
us
a
sample
of
a
video
when
he
applied
for
his
for
for
the
rfp,
and
I
think
that's
such
a
great
way
to
showcase
that
you're
already
doing
the
work-
and
you
know
you're
already
owning
the
role.
E
So
maybe
that
could
even
inspire
you
folks
in
terms
of
what
sort
of
applications
you
can
put
through
but
like
I've
mentioned
and
reiterated
time
and
time
again,
there's
no
idea
too
small
or
too
big
feel
free
to
put
them
out
there.
And
if
you
have
any
questions
at
all
or
if
you'd
like
to
you
know,
if
you're
not
really
sure
I've
seen
a
lot
of
successes
come
out
of
the
graph
forum
as
well,
so
feel
free
to
post.
E
Your
ideas
on
the
forum
see
how
the
community
engages
with
it,
and
typically,
I
think
most
of
the
ones
that
have
been
received
positively
well
have
actually
become
grantees.
So
that's
a
really
great
way
to
gauge
from
the
community
where
the
needs
are,
and
also
put
your
grant
more
even
forward
in
that
in
that
pipeline,
and
you
know
we'll
definitely
look
into
that
a
bit
more
with
you
and
and
be
excited
about
it
as
well,
so
feel
free
to
ping
many
notes,
as
mentioned
before
as
well.
E
Even
though
we're
announcing
all
of
these
waves,
it
doesn't
mean
that
we're
not
interviewing
and
that
we're
not
you
know
having
these
conversations
and
looking
through
applications.
So
applications
are
always
open.
They're,
never
closed
and
really
excited
to
see
what
sort
of
ideas
you
all
come
up
with.
A
Thank
you.
Applications
are
open
at
any
time.
There
is
no
deadline,
I
think
that's.
You
know
a
key
message
that
I
like
to
reiterate
as
well,
and
you
know
the
rfps
and
grants
initiatives
is
such
a
great
way
to
enter
the
graph.
You
know
community.
If
you
are
thinking
about
engagement,
it
doesn't
matter
if
it's
technical
or
non-technical,
it's
about
ideas
and
there's
so
much.
You
know
good
coming
out
of
the
grand
ideas.
It's
just
amazing,
and
that
is
you
know
also
a
great
way.
You
know
to
deepen
your
engagement.
A
I
mean
we've
just
have
introduced
nick,
you
know
to
the
foundation
team
and
he's
been
a
grantee
as
well,
and
you
know
it
just
leads
to
bigger
and
better
things.
If
that
is
something
that
excites
you
and
and
you
you
pour
your
heart
and
soul
into
that,
and
I
can
tell
you
also
that
with
reem,
you
don't
find
any
other
person
more
passionate
about
wanting
to
help.
You
succeed
in
that
role,
so
really
encourage
you
to
to
take
take
advantage
of
that.
A
Okay
with
that
we're
now
turning
our
attention
to
index
africa
and
nick
is
going
to
lead
us
through
the
segment.
If
anyone
would
like
to
ask
any
question
to
the
index
africa
team,
richard
boyd
they're,
both
here
with
us
right
now,
I'm
sure
you've
listened
to
the
grt
iq
podcast
last
week,
which
was
one
of
the
most
amazing
ones.
I've
listened
to
feel
free
to
ask
any
questions
in
the
chat
and
with
that
I
hand
it
over
to
nick.
B
B
I
need
to
unmute
their
lines
there,
while
they're
getting
settled
in.
I
want
to
just
point
out
the
fact
that
all
indexers
tell
a
unique
story
right
and
it's
a
great
opportunity
for
delegators
and
members
of
the
graph
community
to
learn
more
about
what
makes
indexers
unique
by
joining
calls
like
this,
and
so
today
I
want
to
shine
a
light
on
index
africa,
who
has
a
very
unique
story:
richie
and
boyd.
Welcome.
I
B
Great
to
have
you
you're
joining
us
from
south
africa
and
I
think
there's
the
story
starts
there.
Why
don't
we
go
to
you
first
richie?
What
can
you
tell
us
about
index
africa's
index
or
operation.
I
I
And
so,
as
I
got
involved
with
the
graph
about
a
year
ago,
with
the
curator
program,
I
then
quickly
saw
an
opportunity
to
set
up
an
indexing
node
in
the
continent
to
give
the
graph
some
regional
diversification
from
other
indexing
nodes,
and
that
was
kind
of
the
journey
that
we
we
got
going
on
earlier
this
year.
B
Well,
I
think
anybody
that
listens
to
the
podcast
that
you
did
will
immediately
latch
on
to
this
idea
of
how
you're
disrupting
traditional
philanthropy
again.
I
want
to
encourage
anybody
on
the
call
today,
if
you
have
a
question
type
it
into
the
chat,
I'd
be
happy
to
ask
it
but
boyd.
What
can
you
tell
us
about
this
real
central
idea
or
mission
behind
what
indexer
index
africa
is
doing
with
regards
to
decentralized
philanthropy
or
defy
with
a
ph.
H
Yeah
nick
I
I
have,
I
was
astounded
as
a
layman,
coming
into
the
space
learning,
as
I
went
by
this
philosophical
idea
that
the
network,
rather
than
extracting
value
the
network,
produces
value
for
participants
who
are
involved
in
it
that
that
idea
just
really
really
sparked
me-
and
I
came
from
a
traditional
philanthropy
background
where
every
year
you
know
you
head
out
to
raise
money
for
your
foundation
for
your
organizations,
donors
part
with
their
money
and
then
the
next
year.
H
H
The
node
in
return
produces
rewards.
We
flow
a
portion
of
those
rewards
into
an
education
center
that
is
doing
digital
education,
as
well
as
adult
literacy
and
various
other
literacies,
but
really
the
digital
aspect
of
the
education
that's
happening.
There
is
what
excites
us
and
then
those
young
learners
who
are
becoming
digitally
savvy
can,
in
turn,
participate
in
the
future
coming
economy.
H
What's
amazing
about
it
is
that
delegator
is
supporting
the
upliftment
of
these
people
whilst
earning
apy
whilst
being
able
to
pull
their
their
stakeout
at
any
point
now
that
is
an
incredible.
The
potential
for
that
to
disrupt
traditional
philanthropy
is
absolutely
remarkable.
It's
it's.
H
Everywhere
you
look,
someone
is
is,
is
seeing
value,
the
indexer
is
seeing
value.
The
delegator
is
seeing
value
through
their
apy.
The
learner
is
seeing
value
and
that's
just
an
incredibly
exciting
idea.
B
It's
value
additive
and
the
barriers
to
entry
are
very
low,
which
kind
of
leads
us
into
another
question,
which
is
you
know
both
richie
and
boyd
in
their
photographs
here
and
then,
if
you
do,
a
little
research
you'll
see
that
they're
in
the
safari
business
and
kind
of
migrated
into
the
web3
business.
So
going
back
to
you
richie.
What
can
you
tell
us
about
yours
and
boyd's
background
in
the
safari
and
then
kind
of
entering
into
that
web
3
space.
I
So
you
know
I
got
involved
in
the
safari
industry,
because
I
came
from
a
digital
media
background
and
I
saw
an
opportunity.
This
was
around
2009
2008
to
start
putting
digital
media
on
the
internet
to
bring
people
to
africa,
and
this
was
right
at
the
time.
As
you
know,
big
centralized
social
networks
are
starting
to
get
going
like
facebook
and
youtube,
and
so
I
went
and
became
a
wildlife
filmmaker
in
the
safari
industry,
bridging
technology
and
and
the
wilderness,
and
that
got
me
exposed
to
tech
in
the
industry.
I
I
So
then,
fast
forwarding,
just
an
interest
in
the
text
in
in
the
tech
world
really
got
me
interested
in
the
web
3
space,
particularly
in
in
in
the
idea
of
smart
contracts
as
ethereum
started
to
evolve,
and
then,
when
a
friend
of
ours
told
us
about
the
graph,
we
really
started
to
look
more
closely
at
it
and
that
that
was
a
journey
that
began
about
18
months
ago
and
yeah.
That's
that's
where
we
find
ourselves
today.
B
Boyd
another
sub
element
or
thread
of
the
podcast
that
we
recorded
was
this
idea
that
you
came
back
to
many
times,
which
was
innovation,
happens
when
unexpected
things
come
together,
as
richie
just
laid
out,
I
mean
you
both
have
backgrounds
in
safari.
You've
got
some
philo
philanthropic,
you
know
ventures
that
you've
been
involved
with
you're
in
south
africa,
and
yet
here
we
are
at
the
cusp
of
innovation
and
technology
in
the
web
3
space
and
these
things
bumped
in
together.
B
H
Well,
nick,
you
know
you
I
we
were
looking
at
what
is
clearly
you
know
if
you
think
of
web
3
as
the
future
economy,
and
certainly
even
as
a
layman,
you
just
need
to
start
to
understand
it
a
little
bit
to
really
become
a
believer,
so
we
were
seeing
this
emerging.
H
At
the
same
time,
we
were
operating
on
the
ground
every
day
in
learning
centers,
with
some
of
with
young
and
some
of
the
most
rural
people.
People
who
traditionally
haven't
had
access
to
education,
and
we
were,
we
were
creating
that
access,
and
then
it
just
became
abundantly
clear
to
us
that
somehow
we
need
to
put
these
words
together.
H
One
is
we
have
a
system
that
generates
value
in
the
graph
protocol
and
two
we
have
a
young
dynamic
learner
who
is
hungry
to
participate
in
a
future
economy
if
we
can
just
skill
them
upskill
them,
and
in
fact
I
wish,
I
think
I
said
this
on
the
podcast
like
I
wish.
I
could
take
you
into
these
learning
centers
and
you
could
see
the
tremendous
excitement
around
learning
that
there
is.
H
H
You
know
as
connected
to
web3
ex-safari,
guys
who
had
a
hand
in
philanthropy
who
were
interested
in
generating
economies
for
the
most
rural
people,
and
it
just
started
to
come
together
that
we
could
in
fact
set
up
a
world-class
indexing
node
and
start
to
funnel
rewards
into
these
learning
centers
and
create
this
strange
abundant
synergy
at
the
same
time,
that
opportunity
would
uplift
uplift
these
young
learners
who
in
turn
will
then
be
able
to
participate.
H
H
H
I
get
to
experience
the
deepest
parts
of
myself
through
my
relationships
with
other
people
and
as
you
travel
around
africa,
you
find
that
everywhere
this
the
sense
of
relationality
we
need
each
other.
We
need
to
work
together
to
get
by
and
really
you
know.
That
means
that
african
people
are
innately
and
innately
and
deeply
prepared
to
be
a
part
of
what
web
3
is
going
to
be
and
could
be.
I
Yeah
I
mean
boyd.
It
really
just
triggers
a
thought
in
me.
You
know
what
what
index
africa
is
at
its
core.
Trying
to
do
in
this
philosophical
construct
is
like
blockchain,
like
bitcoin
credit,
the
incident
of
money
per
se,
we're
seeking
to
try
and
create
the
internet
of
african
wisdom
and
see
how
that
can
have
its
impact
on
the
world
and
I'll.
Give
an
example
with
you
know
what
we're
doing
with
the
these
learners
in
the
in
the
good
work
foundation,
the
digital
academy.
I
You
know
right
now
we
using
a
lot
of
the
funding
to
teach
young
learners
how
to
get
their
digital
skills
going,
but
we're
setting
up
a
blockchain
academy,
we're
getting
kids
going
on
playing
games
like
axiomfinity,
so
that
they
can
start
to
earn
rewards
for
themselves
so
that
they
don't
need
to
go
out
and
find
a
traditional
job
and
we're
looking
at
creating
a
new
generation
of
artists
that
can
start
to
produce
nfts
and
digital
goods
so
that
they
can
take
their
unique
contribution
in
terms
of
their
souls
in
terms
of
their
essence
in
terms
of
their
worldview
and
put
that
into
a
global
marketplace.
I
Where
value
can
be
ascribed
to
it,
and
that,
for
me,
is,
is
really
this
philosophical
idea
of
this
collective
consciousness
and
and
bringing
it
into
the
web
3
space.
H
And-
and
we
should
say
to
nick
that
you
know
this
is
we're
we're
at
the
beginning
of
this
journey
and
it's
incredibly
exciting
for
us
and
we're
we're
being
asked
to
innovate
and
learn
and
discover
as
we
go
and
that's
and
ultimately,
what
we
want
to
build
is
a
model
that
becomes
the
the
model
that
everyone
looks
to
when
they
set
out
to
to
create
value
and
and
really
like
ground.
This
idea
of
d5
phi
as
a
viable
future
model
for
philanthropy
around
the
world.
B
Well,
I
want
to
encourage
anyone
on
the
call
if
you
have
a
question,
go
ahead
and
type
it
in
again,
we'd
be
happy
to
ask
it
on
your
behalf
or
richie
and
boyd
have
made
themselves
available.
If
you
have
a
question
talking
about
platforms,
you
know.
Obviously
the
graph
has
been
a
platform
for
index
africa
to
do
and
pursue
a
lot
of
great
things
in
africa.
Another
thing
you're
doing
is
working
with
others
to
build
graphica.
We
should
probably
highlight
your
efforts
there
richie.
I
So
graphica:
well
let
me
contextualize
it
this
way.
Much
like
the
index,
africa
and
the
good
work
foundation
relationship
is
to
uplift
a
future
generation
of
rural
learners.
The
idea
behind
graphica
is
to
take
africa's
most
sophisticated
web
3
talent
pair.
I
It
together,
use
the
graph
protocol
and
see
what
can
emerge
from
that
in
terms
of
ideas
and
innovations,
and
so
what
we
did
was
we
set
up
a
discord
channel
and
we
really
started
to
to
call
out
and
build
regional
communities
of
people
in
west
africa
we're
working
on
finding
people
in
north
africa.
We've
got
some
relationships
in
east
africa
and
obviously,
we've
got
south
africa,
and
I
see
my
colleague,
jerry
accola
is
on
the
call
shout
out
to
him.
I
He
is
running
the
the
west
african
group
there
and
what
we
do
is
we
run
weekly
training
for
web3
developers
to
understand
how
to
use
subgraphs
how
to
develop
subgraphs,
how
the
protocol
works,
and
then
we
have
thursday
meetings
which
are
more
philosophical,
ideation
discussions.
We
call
them
lean
coffees
where
people
can
participate
by.
I
You
know
and
already
there's
amazing
ideas
around
where
the
big
opportunities
are
in
in
in
terms
of
things
like
media,
in
terms
of
things
like
remittances,
the
d5
space,
and,
ideally,
what
I
would
see
is
out
of
all
of
this
is
taking
really
great
talent,
pairing
it
with
capital
and
then
allowing
ideas
to
to
catalyze
themselves
all
using
the
power
of
the
graph
to
do
that,
so
that
that
is
it
in
a
nutshell.
A
I
have
a
follow-up
question
on
that.
This
is
oliver
hey
richie,
the
lean
coffee.
You
know,
meetings
that
you
have.
I
know
that
simon
was
from
edge
of
node
was
part
of
one
last
week.
I
believe
is
that
something
that
is
open
to
everyone
or
essentially,
is
that
a
targeted
audience
that
you
have.
I
Well,
you
know
it
is
open
to
everyone,
but
the
context
is
around
web3
in
africa
that
that's
kind
of
the
focal
point.
So
by
all
means
we
would
love
to
have
you
on
there.
We'd
love
to
get
a
diverse,
we'd
love
to
get
more
diverse
opinions
and
perspectives
on
there,
but
the
focus
that
we're
seeking
to
look
for
african
ideas
in
an
african
context
that
use
the
power
of
web
3.
B
Well,
I
want
to
thank
boyd
and
richie
for
joining
us
with
index
africa.
Again,
if
you
haven't
had
a
chance
to
listen
to
the
grt
iq
podcast
episode,
33
that
spotlights
the
work
they're
doing
and
their
index
operation,
then
you
really
ought
to
check
it
out.
They
go
in
a
lot
more
depth
and
provide
really
cool
details
about
the
work
they're
doing
in
africa,
maybe
real,
quick,
rich
and
boyd.
If
someone
wants
to
learn
more
about
index
africa
graphica,
what
are
some
of
the
ways
they
can
reach
out.
I
So
the
easiest
way
to
learn
about
index
africa
is
just
visit.
The
website
index
africa,
dot
io,
and
we
also
have
a
telegram
channel,
which
I
know
nick.
You
posted
a
link
to
on
your
your
your
podcast
and
then
the
graphica
discord
channel.
I'd
say
the
easiest
way
is
to
just
reach
out
to
me
on
telegram
or
on
the
index
africa
channel
if
you're,
a
web3
developer
or
if
you
want
to
participate
and
I'll
happily
share
a
link
and
invite
you.
Likewise.
A
Thanks
that
you
joined,
thank
you
very
much
and
thanks
for
everyone
that
joined
as
well
and
shared
their,
you
know,
views
insights,
feedback
and
comments.
This
concludes
our
community
talk
today.
Thank
you
all
for
participating.
We
have
no
other
question
in
the
chat
right
now,
so
we
are
all
good
to
go.
I
hope
you
all
have
a
great
rest
of
the
week.
Thank
you
so
much.