►
From YouTube: hyper TSC Meeting - May 18
Description
* Current update on Roadmap
* Demo of new website
* Discussion on launch plan
* Discussion on dynamo db adapter
A
A
Well,
it
is
may
may
18th-
and
we
are
here
for
the
technical
steering
committee
for
now
hyper
and
no
longer
hyper
63,
but
hyper
got
my
little
road
map
here
to
update
everyone.
A
So
in
may
we
wanted
to
announce
the
new
brand
hyper,
io
and
funding
and
team
tyler
is
coming
aboard
in
june,
and
trip
started.
May
10th
we're
launching
the
new
website,
probably
tomorrow,
maybe
at
most
thursday
and
then
we're
gonna
refine.
The
the
the
free
hyper
service
and
it'll
be
dev.hyper.io,
much
easier
to
sign
up
and
we're
going
to
build
a
tutorial,
slash
workshop
to
create
an
api
with
the
new
hyper
service
and
publish
that
do
a
video
etc.
A
So
that's
all
current
and
I
think
we're
we're
on
track
for
that.
I
know:
tyler
is
working
on
the
dynamo
db
adapter
in
his
spare
time
his
spare
spare
spare
time,
but
we'll
probably
be
looking
at
at
that
being
implemented.
A
My
guess
is
around
the
end
of
june
july
time
frame
and
the
other
stuff
is
for
june,
we're
going
to
do
an
announcement
for
private
beta
and
basically
the
thing
that
that
I'm
thinking
about
is
anyone
that
completes
the
workshop
will
get
a
discount
code
to
to
get
some
hyper
swag.
So
any
developer
that
signs
up
completes
the
workshop
will
get
a
free
t-shirt,
essentially
or
or
get
whatever
they
want
from
the
hyper
store
for
25
or
whatever.
A
So
I
think
that'll
be
cool
and
do
a
an
and
you
know
online.
Api
developer
workshop
live
stream
for
anyone
that
wants
to
do
it
as
a
group
and
then
we're
going
to
start
planning
the
the
sas
product,
the
cloud
product
and
and
just
really
starting
to
polish
off
the
documentation
and
then
july.
We're
gonna,
really
roll
up
our
sleeves
and
and
start
building
the
cloud
product
and
continuing
to
to
refine
the
open
source
product
as
well.
A
The
open
source
product
will
be,
of
course,
a
core
of
the
cloud
product
so
expect
to
be
able
to
do
both
continue
to
build
out
the
core
open
source
product,
as
well
as
the
cloud
sas
product
and
last
time
we
talked
about.
Maybe.
A
Putting
together
a
bounty
system
for
anyone
who
wants
to
build
adapters
or
plug-ins,
really
explaining
those
better
and
then
kind
of
something
open
future
future
future
is
maybe
a
marketplace
where
people
might
build
an
adapter
and
and
could
theoretically,
you
know
kind
of
charge
for
that
if
they
wanted
to.
A
C
I'm
hoping
to
have
the
dynamod
the
dynamodb
adapter
done
much
earlier
than
okay
then
end
of
june
time,
but
yes
doing
it
in
my
spare
time,
but
I
think
I
can.
A
Yeah
yeah,
thanks
to
robert
pretty
excited
about
this
blog
post,
coming
out
kind
of.
A
Why
start
hyper,
and
basically
it's
like
soup
to
nuts
going
through
and
and
really
kind
of,
the
the
goal
of
just
completely
eliminating
unintended
technical
debt
right-
and
you
guys
have
heard
heard
me
talk
about
that
over
and
over
again,
but
I
try
to
really
kind
of
lay
it
out
and
show
that
if
we,
you
know,
put
more
of
our
specific
code
in
pure
functions
and
put
more
of
our
general
code
in
implementation
details,
we
get
a
a
cleaner,
more
maintainable
product
that
can
scale
so
that
should
hit
this
week
and
then
the
the
website
so
tripp
and
I
have
been
working
on
the
the
website.
A
We've
built
like
a
little
cms
on
top
of
hyper,
which
was
kind
of
cool
to
drive
the
faqs,
and
you
know
maybe
I
might
be
able
to
just
show
some
of
that
if
we
have
time,
but
basically
the
the
website
is
kind
of
speaking
to
developers
at
this
point,
that's
the
single
voice
of
it
right
now
and
really
kind
of
describing
the
problem
as
technical
debt.
A
And
you
know
the
solution
is,
is
hyper
and
here's
our
services
and
then
you
can
zoom
in
to
the
product
page
and
it
kind
of
gives
you
just
a
little
bit
of
a
api
view
of
the
hyper
service
kind
of
showing
each
service
and
and
what
you
can
do
with
it
again,
not
much,
but
just
try
to
be
clean
and
and
clear
as
possible,
and
then
we've
got
the
faq
which
tripp's
working
on
now
and-
and
this
is
all
kind
of
cms
driven
which
is
kind
of
cool
and
he's
working
on
some
of
the
text
right
now,
but
that's
that's
coming
together
and
then
the
company
page
just
really
really
cool
graphics
right.
A
Our
design
team
did
a
phenomenal
job
with
these
graphics
and
I
think
I've
got
the
cop
copy.
A
You
know
at
a
pretty
good
state
right
now
for
this
launch
we'll
need
a
lot
of
refinement,
but
basically
our
focus
is
the
sensibility,
scalability
flexibility
right,
the
the
right,
ilities
and
then
moving
into
documentation
and
working
on
cleaning
that
up,
but
just
adding
more
of
the
the
same
kind
of
style
that
the
design
team
came
up
with
and
working
on.
A
You
know
the
the
dev
service
and
the
workshop.
Those
are
the
two
biggest
pieces
of
the
documentation
to
finish
so
it's
coming
together
and
we'll
be
moving
everything
to
hyper.io,
which
will
be
cool,
so
it'll
be
docs.hyperio,
dev.hyperio,
blog.hyperio,
all
of
that
kind
of
stuff,
so
so
getting
close
to
another
step
in
the
the
process.
A
Any
questions
about
that
any
thoughts
or
comments,
and
one
other
shout
out
to
robert
for
all
of
his
review
work.
That's
that's
on
the
list
to
get
done
tomorrow,
so
we'll
go
through
and
update
all
of
the
accessibility
stuff.
So
I
haven't
forgot
that
I
just
wanted
to
get
all
the
copies
squared
away
before
making
those
adjustments.
A
Yeah
and
again
you
know
as
it'll
evolve,
but
but
hopefully
we've
got
a
good
kind
of
skeleton
structure
to
to
evolve
with
and
that's
kind
of
the
goal
and
to
start
to
get
more
people
more
eyeballs
on
on
the
the
hyper
brand,
and
you
know
what
it
is.
I
think
the
messaging's
coming
together
consistently
and
a
little
bit
more
clear.
A
So
I
did
a
demo
for
someone
this
morning
and-
and
you
know,
did
not
have
very
many
questions
at
the
end,
it
was
like
three
questions,
so
that
was
really
good.
A
Yeah,
it
was
a
tech
person,
a
product
manager
for
for
oracle
and
just
a
friend
of
mine,
giving
some
feedback
so.
A
A
A
A
Brainstorming
things
to
discuss
unless
you
guys
have
any
or
have
any
questions
or
have
any
recommendations
on
where
we're
going
and
and
how
we
can.
You
know,
maybe
refine
that
a
little
bit.
But
you
know
the
game
game
plan
is
to
get
the
site
up,
get
a
place
where
developers
can
start
experimenting
and
give
them
a
a
little
workshop
where
they
can
actually
experiment.
B
Yeah
I
just
had
one
thing
has
to
do
with
the
the
beta
idea:
do
you
have
a
list
of
people
or
are
you
taking
taking
a
list
of
people
that
would
be
on
that?
Because,
with
with
this
kind
of
with
this
kind
of
launch
the
the
thing
that
always
make
I'll
speak
from
my
experience,
but
that
that
gets
me
excited
and
gets
other
people
involved
too
and
gets
them
excited
is
when,
when
there's
this,
like,
you
know
idea
of
like
inclusiveness,
but
it's
also
exclusive,
because
it's.
B
We're
only
going
to
take
this
many,
and
so
you,
and
so
all
of
a
sudden
you're
like
man.
I
don't
want
to
miss
out
like-
and
I
want
to
get
in
on
this
early
because
it
might
be
something
that
gets
big
and
so
all
of
a
sudden,
that's
kind
of
it
becomes
a
only
ten
thousand
yeah.
It's
it's
what
it
builds.
It
builds
a
sense
of
urgency,
that's
what
it's
called
and
and
doing
any
kind
of
like
product
pushes
or
marketing
for
them,
yeah,
so
yeah.
What
what's
the?
A
Yeah
great
great
comment
and
very
very
very
true.
I
think
the
the
plan
is
to
do
a
limited
kind
of
beta,
private
beta
and
there's
a
few
people
that
have
that
are
on
the
list
that
have
expressed
interest
right
and
they're.
Like
you
know,
I'm
happy
to
check
it
out.
A
Just
let
me
know
when
it's
ready
to
check
out,
but
then,
if
you
know
of
anyone
or
if
any
of
you
guys
know
of
anyone
that
should
be
on
that
list,
let
me
know-
and
we
we
may
you
know,
do
do
like
2025
and
then
open
up
another
2025
and-
and
you
know,
use
charleston
js
as
a
way
to
get
invites
and
then
possibly
open
it
up
to
to
other
kind
of
networks
like
indie
hackers
to
do
some
sign,
ups
and
and
maybe
product
hunt
as
well
over
time.
A
Just
you
know,
try
try
to
get
early
adopters
and
people
that
can
really
see
that
this
could
be
something
they
would
use.
You
know
kind
of
get
their
eyeballs
on
it
and
not
just
just
open
it
up
to
everyone,
but
use
you
know,
use
the
swag
to
to
try
to
you
know.
It's
one
thing
to
get
an
account:
it's
another
thing
to
kind
of
complete
through
the
workshop
and
actually
use
the
product.
So
what
are
your
thoughts?
Is
that
a
good
plan?
You
got
a
better
idea.
B
No,
I
I
think
one
thing
to
if
you're,
not
maybe
this
is
included
in
that
is
like
if
let's
say
you
take
25,
which
I
think
is
totally
manageable,
because
I'm
sorry,
that's
like
the
the
high
end
of
being
manageable,
for
you
know
like
two
to
three
people,
that's
on
the
high
end,
but
that's
still
that's
great,
but
that
I
would
make
sure
that
anybody
else
is
interested,
like
you
know,
having
a
queue
of
of
people
that,
because
I
remember
when
mailbox
I
mean
this
is
totally
different,
but
I
just
remember
the
sensation
of
when
mailbox.app
they
got
bought
by
dropbox,
like
you
know,
eight
seven
years
ago,
but
mailbox
setup
was
so
cool
because
it
was
like
you
know,
you're
in
this,
you
know
you're
waiting
for
this
super
cool
thing.
B
There's
this
many
people
online
like
you're
at
this
position,
I'm
not
saying
do
that,
but
the
sensation
of
like
man,
I
can't
wait
till
I've
got
access
to
this
thing.
It's
like
waiting
for
a
movie
to
come
out,
yeah
and
so
yeah
yeah,
just
as
long
yeah
just
make
sure
anybody
who
wants
in.
If,
if
you
hit
that
number
like
cool,
you
know,
hey
we've
got
this.
Many
people
we're
gonna
open
this
back
up
in
in
many
weeks
and
you're
top
of
the
list.
B
Buddy
yep-
and
I
guess
the
other
side
of
this
too
is
is
to
be
prepared,
be
like
build
it
and
they
will
come
mentality,
be
being
prepared
to
have
a
real,
slow
start
where,
like
oh
either,
no
one
gets
it
or
no
one
cares
or
no
one
has
the
bandwidth
or
no
one
sees
the
value
yet
yep
and
being
just
ready
to
deal
with
that.
A
Yeah,
no,
it's
a
you
know
and
that's
why
we're
really
trying
to
to
start
the
word
now
and
you
know
the
the
these.
These
types
of
products
are
not
like
people
sign
up
and
start
using
them
in
their
production
app
overnight.
It
requires
a
long
kind
of
lead
time
right.
A
Yeah
thanks:
well,
you
know
we'll
we'll
find
out
yeah
again.
I
think
we
are
creating
value
right
now
for
for
two
customers
got
a
really
great
testimonial
from
travis
at
sovereign,
and
you
know
it's
been
kind
of
cool
to
see
them
literally
iterate
on
a
product
that
that's
in
production
now
and
they're,
making
changes
and
hyper's
doing
exactly
what
it
is
supposed
to
do.
A
It's
keeping
all
those
changes
in
that
application
layer,
so
they
can
iterate
and
they're
not
having
to
wait
for
the
back
end
to
implement
stuff
they're
able
to
to
iterate
and
ship-
and
you
know
to
your
point
on
your
comment
last
night
about
the
continuous
delivery
they're
effectively
ever
able
to
do
continuous
delivery.
A
B
B
I
mean,
if
I
were
to
I
mean
I
mean
I'm
from
from
a
like
I'm
using
hyper.
As
my
back
end,
I
could
just
I
could
just
create
a
table
put
stuff
in
it.
B
Like
you
know,
you
know
if
wow
I'm
trying
to
think
about
this.
Like
you
know,
I've
got.
I've
got
a
bunch
of
rows
for
the
different
features
that
we've
got,
enabled
and
disabled
that
we've
maybe
hooked
up
to
like
an
admin
or
interface,
and
then
our
you
know
our
front
end
is
reading
from
that
and
just
takes
this
keys
and
yeah.
A
Yeah
we
so
so
one
of
the
the
things
that
that
we've
done
some
brainstorming
about
is
this
idea
of
starter
kits
so,
like
you
know
the
next
question
you
you
explain
hyper
and
then
the
next
question
is:
what
do
I
use
it
for
right?
You
know
what
what
can
I
use
it
for,
and
you
know
again
it's
easy
to
say.
Well,
you
can
use
it
for
anything.
Well
that
that's
not
helpful.
A
So
we're
thinking
about
the
notion
of
starter
kits
and
starter
kits
is,
is
you
know,
maybe
like
a
60
to
70
done
api
of,
like
all
the
core
things,
so
you
think
of
a
feature
flag
system.
That
would
be
a
nice
little
small
starter
kit,
where
it
shows
kind
of
the
core
building
blocks
of
doing
it,
and
you
could
just
pull
that
down
and
then
apply
your
custom.
A
A
It
doesn't
work
for
your
your
needs,
so
our
hope
is
those
starter
kits
kind
of
you
know
like
a
sas
starter
kit,
here's
all
the
basic
stuff
to
to
put
a
sas
product
together
or
a
feature
flag,
starter
kit
or-
and-
and
you
know
the
one
one
thing
that
the
guy
this
morning
said
is
like
cms
is
already
done,
but
I
think
cms
starter
kit
is
still
worthwhile
for
learning
right
learning
how
to
use
the
system
how
it
works.
A
B
A
Yeah
I
mean
again,
there
could
be
like,
like
you,
may,
have
something
very
specific.
You
know
like
like
a
matching
system
right.
You
take
these
people
that
are
looking
for
services
and
these
people
that
have
services
and
match
them
together
that
that
could
be
something
that's
probably
worth
selling
versus
giving
away
same
thing
for
like
a
conversational
kit
right
where
it's
conversational
connected
to
you
know
all
of
the
chat
bot
kind
of
services
out
there
you
know
could
be
an
adapter.
B
A
E
Not
about
the
stuff
that
you're
talking
about
just
now,
but
whenever,
whenever
you're,
you
guys
are
done
with
the
bullet
points
of
the
meeting,
I
have
some
thoughts
on
the
dynamodb
adapter,
because
I've
been
basically
making
something
similar
to
that
for
the
past
few
days
at
work.
C
Excited
excited
for
the
road
map,
it
started
excited
to
get
get
more
involved
and
just
start
banging
things
out.
So
all
looks
good.
A
Cool
so
yeah
casey
I'll,
give
you
the
floor
and
anything
you
want
to
discuss
about
dynamodb,
I'm
sure
tyler
would
love
to
chat
with
you
about
that.
E
Cool,
so
the
one
thing
I
was
looking
at,
I
didn't
realize
that
you
were
going
to
be
working
on
that,
so
I
was
looking
at
actually
making
an
adapter.
I
haven't
done
any.
Basically
it
I've
made
some
like
a
little
node
library.
That
does
a
few
specific
things,
it's
not
as
general
as
the
adapter,
but
I
was
just
looking
at
some
of
the
schemas
for
it
and
one
of
the
the
only
sort
of
challenge
that
I
see
with
doing
dynamodb
is
the
create
document.
E
Schema
has
one
id
for
basically
like
the
primary
key,
but
dynamodb's
primary
key
is
made
of
partition
key
and
the
sort
key
that's
made
of
two
things.
So
the
only
the
only
thing
I
mean
you
could
do
something
like
base64
encode
it
beforehand
and
then
pass
that
as
the
id,
but
that's
sort
of,
I
guess
making
you'd
be
doing
that
on
the
business
logic
side,
which
is
not
really
where
you'd
want
to
do.
That.
E
E
You
can
you
can
make
like
indexes
out
of
the
sort
key
okay,
but
it's
not
so.
The
the
unique
key
is
the
combination
of
the
partition
key
and
the
sort
key.
So
you
can
have
multiple.
E
C
I
haven't
reconciled
that
yet
and
just
my
thoughts
are
on
how
to
build
the
the
dynamo
db
adapter,
I
mean
to
me,
like
the
the
distinction
between
the
partition
key
and
a
sort.
Key
seems
like
a
detail
that
perhaps
we
don't
want
to
expose
to
the
user,
because
it's
the
whole
point
of
using
or
one
of
the
reasons
to
use
hyper
is
to
not
have
to
think
about
that
and
having
a
consistent
api
and
the
adapter
would
handle
underneath
the
hood,
how
to
reconcile
like
a
partition,
key
and
a
sort
key.
C
The
sort
key
is
optional,
but
perhaps
like
the
first
iteration
just
uses
the
partition
key.
C
If
we
have
a
use
case
for
the
sword
key,
perhaps
the
adapter
handles
that
underneath
the
hood,
but
I
think
we
would
definitely
don't
want
to
expose
that
on
the
on
the
port
spec
specification,
because
then
that's
just
exposing
on
the
port
one
particular
implementation
of
the
data
adapter
right
per
particular
tool.
Does
that
make
sense.
C
Yeah,
you
would
have
to
have
as
part
of
the
adapter
a
check
on
that
on
that
partition
key
to
make
sure
something
doesn't
already
exist
with
that,
but
that
id
or
perhaps
it's
you
provide
an
id
through
like
the
when
you
provide
an
id
through
the
port.
C
A
Can
the
sort
key
be
the
same
thing
so
like?
If,
if
you
have,
you
know,
partition
key
one
and
sort
key
one
and
then
partition
key
two
and
then
sort
key
one
right,
then,
if
you're
always
adding
the
same
sort
key
for
every
one,
then
wouldn't
it
force
the
partition
key
to
be
unique.
A
A
I
guess
it's
digging
down
and
and
understanding
what
the
the
benefit
is
of
having
two
unique
identifiers
to
be
one
key
and
and
there's
other
implementations
that
have
created
adapters
from
dynamodb
like
like
level
db
and
architect,
and
some
others
that
we
could
look
at
as
well.
For
inspiration.
C
I
mean
with
with
all
that
said
in
case,
if
you're
already
working
on
something
and
you
wanted
to
take
a
stab
at
the
dynamodb
adapter.
C
I
have
no
issues
with
you
bring
in
like
pushing
that
forward
and
then
just
like
like
work
that
I've
done
just
pushing
that
up
and
then
you
can
use
it
as
a
reference
or
just
or
not,
whichever
whichever
you'd
prefer,
but
if
you're
already.
E
C
E
C
C
Yeah,
but
that's
a
that's
a
it's
a
good
question,
my
admit.
My
initial
thoughts
on
is
suggest
kind
of
to
what
tom
said
have
the
sort
key
be
consistent,
which
forces
the
partition
key
to
be
unique
and
that
would
sort
of
be
the
first
iteration
of
the
adapter
if
we
needed
to,
if
we
needed
to
change
that,
then
we'd
either
have
to
have
a
more
complex,
adapter
or
consider
changing
the
port,
which
I
think
we
want
to
scrutinize
more
heavily
before
we
do
before
we
do
that.
A
Thoughts
there
I
agree,
you
know,
I
think
I
think
the
the
bigger
challenge
with
with
dynamodb
is
going
to
be
their
extremely
verbose,
query,
language
and
cross
referencing
that
to
to
like
the
the
mongodb
kind
of
selector
pattern,
I
think
that's
the
the
big
challenge
with
that
and
and
avoiding
scans
right,
so
we
don't
want
to
do
scans
unless
we
have
to.
A
C
I
think,
and
when
I
was
doing
the
elastic
search
adapter
I
mean
elasticsearch
has
a
huge
api
surface,
there's
so
many
different
things
you
can
do
sort
of
this,
but
the
search
port
is
like
pretty
straightforward,
and
so,
when
I
was
building
up
that
adapter,
I
was
just
operating
under
the
like.
C
You
aren't
going
to
need
it
sort
of
mindset
and
that,
instead
of
trying
to
figure
out
how
to
how
to
expose
everything
and
have
the
adapter
do
all
these
things
that
leverage
the
elastic
search
api
that
just
for
the
first
iteration
just
making
it
sort
of
dead,
simple
and
then,
when
a
use
case
pops
up,
then
we
can
just
add
to
the
adapter.
And
then,
if
it's
not
possible,
to
modify
the
adapter
to
handle
more
complex
cases,
then
we
would
have
to
revisit
looking
at
the
port,
but
more
often
than
not.
A
Yeah-
and
I
think
you
know
kind
of
driving
that
by
use
case
and-
and
I
think
these
api
starter
kits-
will
give
us
a
a
good
set
of
use
cases
to
push
these
adapters
and
refine
the
complexity
but
but
kind
of
start,
simple
and
and
it
span
when,
when
needed.
E
And
you're
talking
about
the
scans
for
dynamodb,
so
basically
like.
If
you
make
a
an
index
out
of
some
type
of
attribute,
you
can
do
a
query
without
a
scan
and
it's
generally
like
not
best
practice
to
use
the
scans
anyway,
because
they're
like
slow
and
they
cost
more
money.
So
I
doubt
anybody
would
be
too
hungry
for
being
able
to
scan
anything
yeah.
A
I
think
that
the
the
rub
is
is
to
educate
on
creating
the
index
right,
so
we've
got
an
endpoint
to
create
an
index,
and
you
know
with
with
and
and
couch
they
kind
of
you
know
if
you're
working
with
a
small
enough
set
of
data,
they
basically
don't
they
don't
yell
at
you
for
not
having
an
index
and
it'll
work,
but
I
think
with
dynamo
in
order
not
to
do
the
scans,
you
have
to
create
those
secondary
indexes.
C
C
D
But
yeah,
if
they're
not
like,
if
you're
just
querying
by
the
primary,
you
don't
need
them.
Obviously,
yeah
and.
A
It's
it's
not
hard,
it's
just
getting
the
the
documentation
there!
So
people,
you
know,
don't
try
to
query
on
all
these
document
properties
and
not
get
anything
and
wonder
why
they're
not
getting
anything.
Oh,
I
need
to
create
an
index
kind
of
thing.
E
That's
sort
of
an
interesting
side
of
it
that
I
don't
know
how
much
I've
ever
like
thought
in
depth
of
which
is
that
the
code
would
be
the
same
for
using
these,
but
you'd
still
have
to
probably
not
for
all
of
them,
but
for
some
of
them
still
say:
okay!
Well,
you
can
use
this
code,
but
it's
not
going
to
work
for
this.
For
this
reason,
what's
the
is
the
best
way
to
handle
that
just
you
know
having
like
a
recommendation
for
each
individual
adapter
for
like
how
you
use
it
pretty
much.
A
Yeah,
it's
a
great
question
and
some
thought
that
I've
given
into
it
and
again
kind
of
borrowing
from
some
of
the
amazon
data.
Architects
of
you
know
when
you're
kind
of
doing
data
modeling
in
relational
database,
space,
you're
thinking
and
tables
and
foreign
keys,
and
all
of
that
I
think
one
of
the
things
with
designing
towards
an
api
is,
you
can
add,
add
certain
patterns
to
that
like
when
you're
building
your
your
api.
A
A
So
I
could
say,
let
me
find
all
the
f8qs
that
are
about
data
or
all
the
faqs
that
are
about
queuing
and
and
so
then
you're
starting
to
think
about
how
your
data
is
going
to
come
out
of
the
system
and
that's
just
a
different
approach
than
people
are
accustomed
to,
but
it's
it's
very
effective,
especially
with
systems
like
dynamodb,
mongodb
and
couchdb,
because
you're
you're,
you
know
you're
you're
thinking,
you're
thinking
about
index
first
instead
of
a
side
effect
like
oh,
I
could
just
query
anything
and
it'll
come
to
me
and
then
I'll
make
it
fast
later.
A
A
Cool
anyone
else
have
any
comments
or
thoughts.
A
Awesome
well
stay
tuned
in
the
next
week.
I
should
have
the
new
hyper
store
up
with
taking
some
of
these
great
graphics
and
putting
them
on
shirts
and
swag
and
I'll
be
sending
you
guys.
Some
updates
on
that
and
thanks
to
everyone
for
all
of
your
help,
really
appreciate
it.
And
if
there's
anything
I
can
do
for
you
guys.
Just
let
me
know
have
a
great
day.