►
From YouTube: IETF108 HACKATHON 20200720 1400
Description
HACKATHON opening session at IETF108
2020/07/20 1400
A
Okay,
hey
good
morning
good
afternoon
good
evening,
folks,
sorry
for
the
technical
difficulties,
hopefully
we'll
be
able
to
get
things
started
in
about
five
minutes
or.
A
B
B
A
A
A
A
A
A
Okay,
yeah
some
people
are
still
having
problems
getting
on
the
you
know
into
the
meeting
or
into
the
right
version
of
the
meeting,
we'll
just
wait
about
five
minutes
and
then
we'll
we'll
get
started.
If
you
are
having
problems
getting
into
the
right
session
or
you're,
seeing
something
strange,
try
reloading
the
screen
that
seems
to
help.
A
You
should
be
seeing
the
slides,
I'm
basically
sharing
my
powerpoint
just
like
deck
and
I'm
on
the
first
slide,
just
waiting
there
for
people
to
join.
So
that's
what
hopefully
you're
seeing
there's
about
30
of
us
in.
A
A
But
firefox
chrome,
they
both
seem
to
work
fairly.
Well,
if
you
just
completely
close
that
down,
you,
maybe
could
even
try
just
clearing
your
your
cache
and
then
re-entering
in
case
there's
anything
left
over
from
a
previous
instance
that
might
help.
A
A
The
latest
and
greatest
version
of
me
techo,
isn't
the
only
new
thing,
we're
testing
out,
there's
a
few
other
things
I'll
share
during
the
course
of
the
the
slides,
but
just
mentioning
them.
Here
we
have
some
new
networking
capabilities
that
will
hopefully
it
all
goes
well.
It
seems
to
be
working
pretty
well
for
me.
Allow
you
kind
of
a
virtual
seat
at
a
table
where
you
can
all
be
connected
to
your
own
kind
of
network.
A
The
ietf
network
kind
of
similar
to
the
way
we've
had
the
ability
to
request
special
networking
situations
like
if
you
wanted
a
wired
connection
and
you
wanted
certain
things
set
up
there.
Prefix
delegation,
certain
ipv4
v6,
addresses
various
things.
We
can
do
so.
A
There's
some
info
in
the
in
the
wiki
I'll
talk
about
that
more
when
I
get
to
that
slide,
but
just
to
mention
that
to
you
for
me,
that's
been
a
little
bit
of
a
hackathon
project
in
and
of
itself
with
the
guys
on
the
knock
like
clemens
and
joe
doing
all
the
the
real
heavy
lifting
I've
just
been
kind
of
the
test
test.
A
Subject
there
and
hey,
if
I
can
get
it
working,
I'm
sure
the
rest
of
you
will
have
an
easy
time
with
it
and
then,
of
course,
the
gather
town
space
which
we
have
and
I'll
go
through
that
a
little
bit
more
too,
but
that's
a
way
that
we
can
try
to
connect.
Hopefully
a
bit
better
around
tables
and
be
able
to.
You
know
talk
to
each
other.
You
can
use
the
chat
capability
within
there.
A
A
A
In
terms
of
sending
video,
I
suppose
I
could
do
that.
This
is
me
I'm
sending
video
now,
and
I
think
you
know
it's
five
after
I
know
there
may
be
some
people
who's
still
having
problems
getting
connected,
but
we're
gonna
go
ahead
and
get
started.
A
Okay,
well
welcome
to
the
the
itf
hackathon
online,
I'm
I'm
calling
in
from
from
california
and
I'm
sure
the
rest
of
you
all
over
the
place.
Hopefully
this
time
zone,
you
know
we
tried
to
pick
a
slot
that
was
minimally
painful
for
people
but
as
we'll
discuss
during
the
course
of
this
kickoff.
The
idea
is
that
you
have
the
whole
week
to
kind
of
arrange
times
that
work
for
you.
A
So
obviously
this
is
our
first
time
doing
this
online
ietf,
hackathon
and
yeah
there's
going
to
be
some
wrinkles
along
the
way,
but
hopefully
some
things
that
are
actually
really
really
good
too
getting
the
negatives
out
of
the
way.
You
know
we
had
a
hard
time
with
that
connecting
here
initially,
but-
and
we
unfortunately
won't
have
cool
t-shirts
to
give
out
this
time
around.
A
But
but
we
do
have
the
whole
week
and
we
have
different
tools
which
you
know
will
help
us,
and
I
think
that
would
be
kind
of.
A
And
obviously,
having
a
whole
week
gives
us
more
time
to
to
get
things
done,
and
you
know
we
don't
have
to
travel
so
we're
using.
Hopefully
this
is
useful
in
and
of
itself
for
you
for
your
projects,
but
also
this
is
something
where
you
know.
We.
A
So
for
those
of
you
who
this
is
your
first
ietf
event,
I
first
want
to
welcome
you
to
the
ietf.
A
Most
things
go
a
little
bit
smoother
than
this,
but
thanks
for
bearing
with
us
on
this
getting
this
kicked
off.
You
know-
and
I
hope
this
is
a
good
experience
for
you
and
a
good
introduction
to
the
ietf.
It's
certainly
not
your
traditional
kind
of
a
regular
ietf
experience,
but
I
I
hope
that
you
find
it
a
very
welcoming
experience
and
and
useful
for
you
and
a
good
way
to
get
started
with
the
iatf.
A
A
You
know
great,
obviously,
it's
a
little
bit
different
for
for
you,
but
it's
kind
of
a
new
experience
for
all
of
us,
so
just
realize
that
none
of
us
have
done
a
virtual
hackathon
before
several
of
us,
though,
have
done
many
hackathons.
So
I
know
me
personally,
I
I'm
wearing.
I
don't
know
if
you
can
see
my
ietf
hackathon
shirt
here.
This
is
from
one
of
the
times
we
were
in
prague.
A
I
have
plenty
of
these
shirts
to
wear
a
different
one
each
day
of
this
week
and
I'm
sure
many
of
the
your
fellow
hackathon
participants
do
as
well.
So
you
know
we
have
a
lot
of
experience
with
the
hackathon
in
the
more
traditional
sense
of
being
in
a
room,
and
you
know
happy
to
to
try
to
help
you.
You
can
reach
out
to
me
personally
or
to
others
reach
out
to
the
various
champions
of
the
projects.
A
You
should
be
able
to
find
their
email
addresses
in
the
wiki
and
I'll
go
over
that
a
bit
more
later,
but
you
know
we're
here
to
help
hope
you
have
a
good
hackathon,
a
good
ietf
experience,
that's
a
big
part
of
it!
So
don't
worry
about
bothering
people
asking
questions
especially
today,
but
until
you
get
kind
of
situated
in
a
team
and
then
once
you
figure
out
a
team
where
you
have
a
good
fit
and
working
on
a
hackathon
project
in
the
end,
the
rest
of
it
should
come.
A
You
know
really
easy,
and
hopefully
you
stick
around
and
you
know
plan
on
attending
the
ietf
meeting
next
week
as
we'll
discuss
a
big
part
of
the
hackathon
is
testing
things
out,
learning
things
which
we
can
then
bring
into
the
ietf
meeting
and
share
during
the
course
of
the
the
working
sessions
that
we
have.
That's
really
one
of
the
primary
drivers.
A
A
I
already
covered
some
of
this
just
just
a
second
ago,
but
really
what
the
reason
why
we're
here,
why
we
have
this
hackathon
is
to
try
to
speed
up
the
work,
that's
going
on
in
the
ietf
and
really
bring
some
of
that
collaborative
spirit
that
we
have
with
open
source
and
that
we've
seen
in
the
open
source
community
and
bring
that
into
the
ietf
to
to
test
out
some
of
the
things
we.
You
know
the
thoughts
we
have
before.
A
We
actually
go
too
far,
along
with
standardizing
something
to
hopefully
produce
some
running
code
that
see
when
the
standard
is
available.
You
not
only
have
the
standard
that
you
can.
A
You
know
the
draft
that
you
can
read
and
then
go
to
implement,
but
you
actually
have
some
running
code
that
either
helps
you
with
implementing
it
testing
it
integrating
support
for,
for
that
new,
say,
protocol
or
or
whatever
it
is
into
your
product
into
your
solution,
and
we
certainly
want
to
attract
new
people
to
the
ietf
by
bringing
another
like
mechanism,
I
would
say
of
contributing
it's
not
just
about
writing
and
reviewing
and
updating
drafts,
but
actually
producing
code
that
hopefully
verifies
that
what
we're
standardizing
is
correct.
A
C
A
Me
know
that
yep
okay,
so
I
guess
presentation
view,
doesn't
work
all
right,
I'll,
just
advance
through
them
this
way,
and
hopefully
actually
what
can
I
do
here?
I
can
make
that
a
little
bit
bigger
right.
A
A
And
let
me
make
this
a
little
bit
bigger
too
so,
okay,
so,
let's
see
so
I
just
covered
that
and
the
note
well
for
those
of
you.
This
is
your
first
ietf
that
this
may
may
seem
a
little
bit
new
to
you.
Most
of
you,
though,
I
would
imagine
I've
already
seen
this.
Certainly
when
you
registered
for
the
ietf
meeting
when
you
registered
for
the
the
hackathon,
you
actually
had
to
click
on
something
to
review
and
say
you
acknowledged
the
note.
Well,
it
just
talks
about
the
rules
under
which
we're
operating
here.
A
If
you
haven't,
had
a
good
look
at
it,
please
do
just
to
familiarize
yourself
with
with
it.
So
you
understand
what
you're
agreeing
to
because
this
idf
hackathon
is
operated
under
the
terms
of
the
node.
Well,.
A
The
code
that
you're
working
on
is
not
an
ietf
contribution,
at
least
not
necessarily
the
terms
and
conditions
of
the
code.
You're
working
on
are
as
determined
by
the
license
that
hopefully,
is
clearly
indicated
on
the
code
you're
working
on
it,
whether
it's
open
source
or
proprietary,
and
who
the
the
owners
of
the
that
code
are
and
what
rights
they
they
give
to
you
and,
and
that
type
of
thing,
so
you're
welcome
to
work
on
whatever
code
base.
You
want
it's
not
an
ietf
contribution
unless
you
explicitly
made
it
an
ietf
contribution.
A
Okay
projects,
so
all
of
the
projects
are
listed
on
the
wiki
last
I
checked
we
had
17
projects
there,
I'm
imagining
there's
a
couple
more
since
I
put
these
slides
together.
A
So
your
best
source
of
information
to
find
out
details
about
all
the
projects
is
to
go
to
the
wiki,
see
what
information
the
the
project
champions
have
put.
There
they've
all
been
good
about
putting
their
email
address
or
the
way
that
they
want
to
be
contacted,
and
so
I
encourage
you
to
reach
out
to
them
that
way,
make
sure
that
they
know
that
hey.
You
know.
I'd
like
I
find
your
project
very
interesting,
I'd
like
to
work
with
you
on
it.
A
If
you
haven't
done
that
already,
you
know
now
is
a
fine
time
to
do
that
if
you
are
having
a
tough
time
finding
a
project,
another
option
we
have
is
this
lost
and
found
page
there's
a
link
to
it
in
the
wiki
and
that
main
hackathon
wiki
and
you
can
go
there
and
you
can
put
down
hey
these.
Are
you
know
my
interest?
These
are
skills
I
have
to
offer,
as
we
put
it,
and
similarly,
if
you're
leaving
a
project-
and
there
are
certain
things
where
hey
you
know,
you
really
need.
A
You
know
someone
with
a
certain
skill
set
or
a
familiarity
with
certain
ietf
drafts
that
are
being
worked
on,
or
something
like
that
you
can
put
it
here,
so
this
page
is
meant
to
be
kind
of
a
living
page
during
the
course
of
this
week.
A
A
So
the
agenda-
I
guess
I
need
to
update
this
slide
where
we
started
a
little
late,
but
you
know
really
that
the
main
bulk
of
the
work
is
going
to
happen
after
this
and
and
throughout
the
whole
week.
We
realized
that
people's
schedules
are
different
time
zones
all
over
the
world
so
rather
than
try
to
meet
during
set
chunks
of
time
as
a
whole
group
like
we
do
for
the
the
kickoff
and
the
closing
throughout
the
week.
A
The
idea
is
that
each
team
can
kind
of
decide
on
their
own
agenda
when
they
want
to
meet
how
often
they
want
to
meet
how
they
want
to
meet,
and
so
we
created
this
team
schedule
page
to
facilitate
that
or
to
help
with
that,
you
can
see.
Several
teams
have
added
information
there.
Already,
whether
they're
going
to
use
webex
to
me,
you
can
try
using
the
gather.com
gather,
dot,
town
space,
that
I'll
show
you,
but
you
can
just
use
email
whatever
works.
This
is
a
place
where
champions.
A
If
you
haven't
done
it
yet
I
just
either
in
the
wiki
or
on
this
page
I
would
put
how
you
best
want
people
to
to
engage
with
your
team.
Of
course,
your
email
address
is
a
good
start,
but
if
there's
something
else,
you've
decided
on
if
you're
going
to
use,
you
know
a
certain
technology
for
all
of
you
to
communicate
with
each
other
that'd
be
good.
To
put
there.
A
I
mentioned
gather.town
and
we'll
talk
about
that
a
bit
more
in
a
minute,
but
that's
a
new
option
too,
and
then
friday
we'll
have
a
closing
and
the
idea.
There
is
primarily
to
give
each
of
you
the
opportunity
to
present
a
bit
about
your
project
and
what
you
learned
and
things
that
you
want
to
bring
back
into
the
ietf
meeting
and
have
kind
of
more
continued
discussion
or
work
around
and
I'll
talk
about
that
more
later.
A
It
will
be
probably
about
an
hour-
I
guess
maybe
up
to
two
hours,
depending
on
how
many
teams
want
to
present,
and
so
we'll
figure
that
out.
I
have
a
the
space
reserve
for
two
hours.
I
don't
think
we'll
need
the
full
two
hours,
but
just
for
your
own
planning
purposes,
if
you
could
schedule
or
plan
on
being,
you
know
being
up
to
two
hours.
That
would
be
great.
A
Okay
gather
dot
town-
if
you
haven't
checked
it
out,
yet
you
probably
haven't
because
it
just
started
came
online
today,
but
you
may
have
done
a
test
space
or
something
like
that.
The
link
is
in
the
wiki.
I
also
put
it
on
these
slides
and
these
slides
and
my
presentation,
it's
all
actually
available
I'll,
give
you
the
link
for
that
before
this
is
over
as
well,
but
this
is
what
our
space
looks
like,
there's
basically
kind
of
similar
to.
A
If
you
were
at
the
actual
hackathon,
we
have
a
bunch
of
tables
with
a
lot
of
chairs
around
it
and
you
can
see
they
are
lettered.
So
if
you
want
you're
welcome
for
your
team
to
go
and
grab
like,
say,
hey,
we're
going
to
use
table
f
and,
and
that's
where
your
team
can
sort
of
gather-
and
this
is
me
I
was
kind
of
hanging
out
in
the
space
we
might
spend
a
little
bit
of
time,
demoing
or
playing
around
with
it.
A
But
basically
you
walk
up
to
one
of
these
tables
and
you
kind
of
get
a
seat
at
the
table.
I
forget
you.
A
With
it
by
either
pressing
the
space
bar
or
just
clicking
on
the
seat
and
then
once
you're
at
a
table,
it's
it's
using
webrtc
and
it's
all
peer-to-peer
communication.
So
you
establish
an
audio
and
or
video
session
with
the
other
people
who
are
at
this
table
by
sitting
in
one
of
the
chairs,
and
you
have
your
own
kind
of
little.
You
know
audio
video
conference
going
on
right
there.
This
kind
of
is
its
own
space
or
its
own
pod,
and
you
can
enter
and
leave
that
space.
B
A
Each
time
you
have
a
new
person
come
in
there's
maybe
10
chairs
there,
but
you
will
be
all
in
kind
of
peer-to-peer
communication
with
each
other
with
three
or
four
people.
I've
used
it.
It
works
great.
I
understand
up
to
about
five
or
six.
It
works
pretty
well
after
that,
it's,
I
guess.
One
of
the
problems
is
even
just
resources
on
your
own
computer
and
how
it
handles
all
these
audio
and
video
sessions.
A
So
you
may
find
some
difficulty
if
you
get
10
people
at
your
table
and
so
you'll
just
have
to
manage
that
with
people
kind
of
hanging
out
around
the
table.
Maybe-
and
you
can
use
chat-
and
you
know
other
mechanisms
too,
so
use
it
as
a
way
to
I
mean
figure
out
what
works
best
for
your
team,
but
you
know
it's
there.
I
would
play
around
with
it
and
this
little
thing
here.
This
is
kind
of
a
whiteboard.
A
You
can
go
and
interact
using
that
which
could
be
kind
of
handy
too,
so
so
give
that
a
try
when
you
first
enter
the
space.
This
is
what
it'll
look
like
you'll
come
into
a
kind
of
an
area
that
looks
like
this,
and
you
can
see,
there's
a
map
of
the
overall
space
and
if
I
was
to
zoom
out
this
entrance
area
that
I'm
looking
at
on
the
left
hand
side
I
zoomed
out.
So
it's
this
bottom
part
here
where
we
are
in
the
hackathon
is
over
here
and
it's
labeled,
the
ietf
lounge.
A
A
When
you
first
go
to
gather.com,
it'll
you'll
get
a
script
now,
but
something
like
this
that
asks
you.
If
you
want
to
enter
the
space,
I
guess
you
can
log
in
and
create
an
account
and
all
that
personally,
I
didn't
do
that
and
you
don't
have
to
you-
can
enter
the
space
without
logging
in
and
just
put
your
name
and
so
you're
welcome
to
give
that
a
try,
I'm
sure
there's
some
benefits
to
logging.
In
that
I
haven't
looked
into.
B
A
A
A
Oh
yeah,
there
is
a
handy
guide
that
will
explain
things
much
better
than
I
did,
and
so
you're
welcome
to
there's
a
link
to
this
and
the
wiki,
and
you
know
lots
of
great
information
there.
One
thing
I
want
to
point
out
is
at
the
bottom,
there's
a
thing
about
reporting
issues,
and
I
believe
that
will
give
you
an
email
address
to
which
you
can
report
issues,
but
also
that's
a
great
way
to
suggest
like
hey
this
space.
Is
you
know
fantastic,
but
if
it
only
did
this,
it
would
have
been.
A
You
know
even
better
for
us,
because
from
what
I've
seen
the
folks
from
gather
up
town,
they
are
able
to
add
new
functionality
in
there
they're
able
to
update
our
map
within
reason
right.
It's
like
anything
else,
it's
kind
of
a
platform
and
they
try
to
add
new
capabilities.
A
So
if
there's
something
that
would
help
us
use
their
existing
capabilities
or
maybe
some
some
features,
they
could
turn
enable
for
us.
This
is
a
good
way
to
iterate.
On
that
too,
it
seems
like
this
could
be
a
handy
tool,
we're
thinking
this
could
be
a
handy
tool
to
facilitate
remote
communication,
not
just
for
the
hackathon,
but
obviously
for
the
the
ietf
in
general.
A
If
and
at
the
hackathon,
for
those
of
you
who
haven't
been
there
before
you
come
in
and
there's
tables
and
you're
able
to
connect
to
the
ietf
wireless
network
and
away
you
go
now.
Some
teams
have
equipment
that
they
want
to
be
able
to
plug
in
physically,
and
so
they
request
a
drop
to
their
cable.
So
they
can
just
plug
in
you
know,
wired
connection
to
the
ietf
network
and
then
some
people
request.
You
know
special
networking
capabilities,
so
within
their
team
they
want
to
be
testing
out
something
new.
A
So
this
is
something
that
we
thought
we
wouldn't
be
able
to
do
with
a
virtual
hackathon,
but
thanks
to
the
the
the
knock
team,
they've
actually
put
together
an
ability
to
to
handle
this
and,
for
example,
I
have
a
raspberry
pi
here
and
it's
it's
connected
into
ietf-virtual
network.
A
So
it's
actually
as
if
I'm
you
know,
sitting
physically
there
and
I
get
the
networking
aspects
of
that
and
there's
I
have
a
little
wireless
card
on
here,
so
I
can
connect
to
it.
I
have
a
dongle
I
got
where
I
can
it
converts
from
usb
to
to
ethernet,
so
I'm
gonna
play
around
with
that
a
little
bit
plugging
other
things
into
it
to
a
wired
connection
but
anyways
it.
It
seems
like
it
could
be
for
depending.
A
A
But
basically
you
send
an
email
to
to
this
address
and
then
the
folks
in
the
knock
they'll
share
with
you
how
you
can
build
out
your
your
raspberry,
pi
and
there's
certain
raspberry,
pi
2
and
later
they
support
right
now,
and
I
know
there's
some
other
devices
they're
working
on
as
well,
so
this
list
list
of
supported
devices
will
hopefully
grow
and
again
this
is
kind
of
a
hackathon
project
in
and
of
itself
so,
but
so
far
seems
to
be
working
really
well.
A
A
Oh,
the
other
thing
I
should
point
out:
don't
connect
to
it
just
instead
of
using
your
regular
network,
it's
not
meant
for,
like
everyone
in
the
ietf
to
be
using
it.
It's
really
meant
for
hackathon
teams
that
need
specific
network
capabilities
that
their
isp
or
whatever
it
doesn't
provide
them.
So
you
can
vpn
into
you
know
this
kind
of
shared
network
space
for
you
and
your
team.
That's
really
what
we're
trying
to
create
there.
A
Okay
project
presentations,
so
on
friday,
this
is
what
we'll
do.
This
is
optional,
of
course,
but
I
highly
recommend
that
you
spend
some
time
to
put
together
a
short
presentation.
A
A
That
five
minutes
will
give
you
a
little
bit
more
more
time
and
be
a
good
amount
of
time
for
you
really
to
describe
what
you
did,
and
this
is
helpful
not
just
for
those
participating
in
the
hackathon,
but
I
suspect
a
large
number
of
people
will
join
that
who
actually
didn't
get
to
participate
in
the
hackathon,
because
I
want
to
see
you
know
what
people
did
do
and
it's
also
a
very
handy
way
for
you
to
get
your
thoughts
together
for
what
you
do
want
to
bring
back
into
your
working
group
and-
and
they
have
a
record
of
it
so
later
on.
A
A
The
the
thing
we
do
to
share
these
presentations
is
basically
in
github.
There's
an
ietf
hackathon,
github
org
and
we've
created
an
ietf108
project,
presentations
repo
there
and
that's
where
all
of
the
the
presentations
will
go.
A
So
I'm
sure
all
of
you
are
probably
familiar
with
github
by
now,
and
if
you
check
out
that
project
that
repo
that
the
readme
there
has
some
instructions
about
how
to
go
about
using
that.
So
the
first
thing
is
in
order
to
be
able
to
have
access
to
this.
Basically,
in
order
to
be
a
committer
to
that
project
and
to
upload
your
presentation
or
to
you
know,
change
it
throughout
the
course
of
the
week
or
you
will
need
to
be
a
member
of
the
ietf
hackathon
org.
A
You
don't
need
this
in
order
to
read
what's
there,
but
in
order
to
write
anything,
that's
just
the
way.
We're
handling
the
right
capabilities
so
to
to
become
a
member
is
very
easy.
You
can.
A
An
email,
but
I
do
ask
you
for
your
github
profile,
please
be
sure
to
put
your
name
there.
It
just
helps
because
github
email,
ids
are
pretty
cryptic,
and
this
at
least
gives
us
a
little
more
confidence
in
who
we're
actually
talking
to
that.
Yet
you
know
we
have
the
right
person.
Also.
I
ask
you
to
enable
two-factor
authentication,
there's
just
been
a
lot
of
github
accounts
being
credentials
being
used
to
access
people's
accounts
and
then
cause
problems.
So
we
don't
want
that
for
you,
we
don't
want
that
for
our
github
org.
A
So
add
your
name,
enable
two-factor,
authentication
and
then
send
me
an
email
and
I'll
gladly.
Add
you
to
the
project.
A
One
other
thing
I
think
oh
yeah,
I
like
to
mention
this
and
do
this
sooner
rather
than
later.
Don't
wait
till
like
thursday,
night
or
friday
morning,
your
time
because
it
might
be,
I
might
be
asleep,
so
I
might
not
get
you
at
it
in
time.
So,
even
though
you
don't
have
anything
to
upload,
yet
you
know
just
during
the
course.
The
next
few
days,
whenever
it's
convenient,
send
me
an
email
and
I'll
go
ahead
and
get
you
at.
A
It
what
was
I
trying?
Oh
yes,
so
another
thing
you'll
find
in
that
repo.
In
addition
to
the
readme,
is
we
have
this
template
and
it's
optional
to
use,
but
many
people
find
this
very
handy.
It's
it
is
in
powerpoint.
A
So
if
that's
useful
for
you
go
ahead,
download
that-
and
you
can
use
that
as
a
template
to
build
your
your
presentation-
it's
just
it
just
reminds
you
of
the
types
of
things
we're
looking
for,
like
what
you
tried
to
achieve
and
what
you
actually
did
learn
and
who
was
on
the
team
open
source
code
that
you
used
or
communities
that
you
interacted
with.
There's
it
just
kind
of
is
a
little
bit
helpful
and
many
people
find
that
a
good
way
to
put
their
presentation
together.
A
I
think
it
just
gives
you
a
good
idea
of
the
type
of
information
we're
looking
for
so
feel
free
to
use
that
if
that
is
helpful,
I
should
also
mention
something:
we're
going
to
do
a
little
bit
different
this
time
around.
Normally,
everyone
sends
our
presentations
to
to
us
and
then
barry
and
I
kind
of
run
through
the
presentations
and
drive
it
all
from
one
laptop.
A
A
I
think
it'll
probably
work
fine,
hopefully
for
each
of
you
to
share
your
presentation,
learn
from
me
and
so
don't
try
to
use
presentation
mode
or
figure
out
how
to
do
it
correctly.
A
If
you
want
to
like,
if
you
wanted
to
do
a
demo
or
something
like
that,
so
I
think
that's
what
we're
going
to
do
and
give
that
a
try.
I
think
that'd
be
better
than
than
us
driving
all
the
presentations,
but
still
really
ask
you
to
please
upload
your
presentation
into
this,
this
repo,
so
that
everyone
can
access
it.
A
Okay
and
that's
that's
pretty
much
it,
but
I
did
want
to
thank
our
sponsors
for
this.
Icann
has
sponsored
the
last
several
itf,
hackathons
and
they're
sponsoring
us
again.
Our
cost
basis
is
different,
but
we
are
using
some
new
tools
and
have
some
new.
A
So
we
still
do
have
costs
with
putting
these
these
events
on
not
to
mention
just
everyone's
time
and
and
making
things
happen.
The
secretariat
has
has
done
a
ton
of
work,
so
really
appreciate
all
their
efforts
too,
and-
and
then
you
know,
my
group
at
cisco
has
has
been
helpful
as
well.
A
And
so
with
that,
let
me
try
to
answer
any
questions.
I.
A
A
Yeah
karen
write
the
the
slide,
so
the
slides.
Actually,
let
me
share.
Let
me
do
this.
I'm
gonna
share
my
whole
screen.
I
think
well,
the
slides
are
in
in
this
github
repo
there's.
Actually
a
third
thing
there.
Now,
in
addition
to
the
the
presentation,
template
you'll
find
the
latest
version,
it's
a
pdf
version
of
the
slides
I'm
presenting,
and
it
has
all
the
links
in
it
as
well.
A
B
A
But
as
I
mentioned
before,
you
start
here
at
the
bottom
and
then
you
kind
of
just
come
up
and
go
to
the
right
and.
A
B
A
So
you
can
create
these
ad
hoc
conferences
anywhere
you
want,
but
the
idea
with
the
table
is,
if
you
sit
at
a
table,
that's
kind
of
a
more
set
group
where
your
audio
will
be
confined
only
to
those
at
the
table,
and
you
can
actually
you
know.
A
A
A
Okay,
one
other
thing-
and
I
don't
know
the
latest
on
this,
but
with
gather
gather
up
town.
I
believe
there
was
a
50-person
limit
in
it
and
I'm
not
sure
exactly
what
happens
when
the
51st
person
tries
to
enter
if,
but
we
were
going
to
see
about
getting
that
limit
removed
or
at
least
increased,
that's
something
that
we
may
hit
during
the
hackathon.
If
you
run
into
it,
you
can
just
report
that
issue
by
sending
an
email
to
the
the
link.
A
D
D
A
A
A
And
you'll
see
information
about
all
the
teams
here,
so
last
I
checked
there
was
17
teams.
You
can
read
a
bit
about
each
project
here,
what
it
is
they're
looking
to
do
and
the
the
team
champions
how
to
contact
them,
email
address
or
whatever
they've
put
there.
So
so
I
would
encourage
you
to
give
give
these
a
look
and
just
try
to
narrow
it
down
to
the
ones
that
you
think
are
of
interest
to
you
and
then
contact
the
champion.
A
That's
the
best
way
to
get
started,
but
then
one
of
the
things
we've
put
in
place
for
the
throughout
the
course
of
the
week.
The
way
for
these
teams
to
help
meet
with
each
other
is
for
your
team.
You
can
put
what
times
what
days
and
how
you
plan
on
working
with
each
other.
A
You
can
see
you
know
people
putting
the
way
they
plan
to
communicate
here,
whether
it's
using
slack
webex
using
gather,
dot,
talent,
right,
there's
various
options.
You're
welcome
to
use
whatever
works
best
for
you
and
and
for
your
team,
so
complete
flexibility
there
you
can
decide
what
what
works,
how
often
and
when
and
where
you
want
to
meet.
A
The
other
thing
was
the
lost
and
found
and
to
get
to
the
lost
and
found
is
here,
and
so,
if
you're
looking
to
join
a
team
or
if
your
team
needs
someone,
you
want
to
advertise
that
you
explicitly
need
cert,
there's
certain
things
that
you
need.
You
can
go
to
this
page,
you
can
see,
we
don't
have
many
people
there
yet,
but
the
idea
is,
you
can
add
yourself
here
at
any
time
and
so
project
champions.
A
I
encourage
you
to
add
something
here
and
or
come
and
take
a
look
and
see
who's
in
here
and
and
what
it
is
they're
looking
to
do
and
and
how
they
could
help
you.
So
that's
that's.
You
know
something
you
can
do
as
well
and
then
I
guess
the
other
thing
would
be.
You
can
go
through
the
the
gather,
dot
town
space
too
and
and
look
around
in
there,
although
I
think
the
gather
dot,
town
space
isn't
really
necessarily
the
best
way
to
find
a
team.
A
I
I
wouldn't
say
I
think,
by
reaching
out
to
the
team
champion
and
and
that
type
of
thing
is
a
better
way
to
get
started
with
the
team.
But
of
course
you
can
go
to
the
gather
up
town
space
and
you
can
go
around
the
hackathon
and
once
you
know
which
team
you
want
to
participate
on
or
if
you're
participating
in
a
certain
team
and
you're
like
hey
the
folks
in
the
the
bgp
group,
we
really
want
to
work
with
them.
A
A
I
guess
we
used
it
a
lot
in
preparing
for
the
hackathon,
so
I
think
you
might
find
this
a
handy
way
to
to
work
together
and,
like
I
said,
my
experience
seems
to
be
three
to
five.
People
is
kind
of
a
good
how
many
people
you
can
have
at
a
table,
but
you
know
experiment
with
that.
Some
too,
if
you
have
a
better
system
and
don't
have
too
many
things
other
things
going
on,
it
might
work
a
bit
better.
A
A
So
but
I
can
see
people
who
have
come
close
to
me
and
I
would
have
had
the
opportunity
to
to
chat
with.
A
A
A
D
Hello,
this
is
alexander
petresco
and
I'm
situated
in
france.
My
my
question
is
about
this:
the
floor
plan
that
you
show
on
gather
town
and
it's
a
wonderful
idea.
I
could
walk
around
and
see
the
spaces
even
see
the
photo
of
cafe
or
coffee
and
maybe
something
to
to
eat
there.
It's
it's
a
wonderful
idea.
It
works
on
ipv6,
but
I
cannot
connect
to
the
people
who
are
there.
D
A
It
certainly
worked
for
me
what
I
suggest
if
you're
having
problems
connecting
is,
if
you
you
go
to
the
in
the
the
hackathon
wiki,
there's
the
gather
guidelines,
and
so
you
can.
You
can
access
those,
and
it
gives
you
some
some
tips
for
how
to
interact
with
gather.townspace.
A
A
Because,
certainly
in
my
little
bit
of
testing,
I
didn't
have
any
problems
interacting.
E
Yeah,
okay,
so
when
we
are
present
the
hackathon
achievement
this
friday,
so
we
just
you
can
make
some
schedule
right
for
our
teams
right.
So
so,
okay,
maybe
it'll,
be
a
good.
You
make
some
schedule
for
presentation,
so
it'll
be
easier.
Okay,.
A
Yeah,
that's
actually
a
good
idea,
I
think,
if
for
for
those
teams
that
know
they
want
to
present
go
ahead,
and
let
me
know
you
can
send
me
an
email,
I'll
kind
of
break
it
up
into
five
minute
slots,
which
will
be
our
our
rough
plan.
A
A
Together,
yep
and
if,
when
you're
done
speaking,
I
think
you
can
remove
yourself
from
the
queue.
A
A
The
the
the
best
way
to
reach
me
is
probably
via
email.
I
will
be
in
the
gather,
dot
town
space
at
times,
but
not
all
day
every
day.
So,
if
you
see
me
in
there,
you're
you're
welcome
to
come
up
and
and
chat
with
me
there.
A
You
can
send
up
my
send
me
an
email,
my
email
address,
addresses
and
the
wiki,
and
you
could
always
send
something
to
the
hackathon
list
too.
If
you.
A
If
you
need
help,
but
probably
unless
you
have
something
that
you
really
want
to
share
that
you
think
is
helpful
to
everyone,
probably
better
to
just
send
to
me
deidre,
I
don't
see
you
requesting
audio.
I
don't
know.
If,
if
you
want
to
speak,
you
should
I
request
audio
okay.
A
Well,
I
think
you
should
be
able
to
just
click
on
one
of
the
icons
to
to
leave
the
queue.
Also.
A
A
A
I
I
can
see
the
queue
I
don't
know,
but
that's
because
you
know
barry
and
I
are
the
chairs,
so
we
have
different
capabilities
than
than
you
might
have.
So
I
don't
know
if
you
see
the
view,
I'm
sharing
my
screen.
I
believe
so.
If
you're
seeing
my
screen.
F
D
Oh,
it's
not
good.
Okay
hold
on
yeah
because
my
video
is
taken
with
yeah,
okay
good.
Thank
you
very
much.
I
will
stop
my
video
in
my
audio.
A
Okay,
okay
and
there
are
sessions
which
I
think
I'm
gonna
go
take
again
about
using
me
techo
and
a
lot
of
the
new
capabilities
that
are
in
there.
For
those
of
you
like
myself,
who
you
know
typically
join
the
the
meeting
in
person.
There's
a
lot
you
can
do
and
meet
echo
and
a
lot
of
new
capabilities
have
been
added
for
this
meeting,
which
are
great,
but
it
kind
of
helps
if
you
play
around
with
them
and
experiment
with
them
a
little
bit.
A
So
I
know
guides
have
been
put
out
that
help.
You
know
explicitly
to
help
with
that
purpose.
So
I
know
I'm
going
to
brush
up
on
that.
We
won't
be
using
the
techo
necessarily
throughout
the
the
week,
but
we
will
use
it
on
friday
for
the
presentation,
so
for
those
of
you
who
are
presenting
especially
good
to
make
sure
you're
you're
more
familiar
with
it
and
and
I'll
make
sure
to
do
that
too
before
friday.
So
so,
hopefully,
our
our
use
of
meat
taco
will
be
a
little
bit
smoother.
A
But
between
then,
and
let
me
go
back
to
the.
A
The
agenda
here
you
know
you
can
see
we
have
you
know
until
friday,
it's
just
basically
for
from
now
until
then
it's
for
teams
to
to
work
on
their
projects,
and
so
I
think
I'm
gonna
go
ahead
and
end
this
session
in
just
a
minute
and
encourage
all
of
you
to
to
go
off
and
work
on
your
projects
but
again
feel
free
to
reach
out
to
the
project
champions
you
can
find
their
email
addresses
in
the
wiki.
A
The
wiki
is
your
main
guide.
All
the
links
are
in
the
wiki,
including
the
links
to
the
github
org
and
from
there
you
can
download
the
presentation
that
I
shared,
but
so
so
I
would,
you
know,
go
to
the
wiki.
If
you
don't
find
what
you
need
there,
you
can
go
to
the
the
team
schedule
which
is
links
to
it
are
in
the
agenda
here
and
the
gather,
dot,
town,
space
and,
of
course,
email.
A
So
I
hope
this.
This
has
been
helpful
for
you.
I
hope
this
whole
week
goes
really
well.
It's
it's
great
to
be
able
to
use
this
time
to
to
work
on
our
our
projects
and
to
learn
how
to
do
this.
Better
too
was
an
important
thing,
but,
like
I
said
I,
I
hope
that
this
isn't
just
a
learning
experience
for
how
to
do
the
hackathon
better,
but
that
you
actually
can
really
get
a
lot
of
great
work
done
on
your
hackathon
projects,
it's
different
than
when
we're
all
there
together
in
person.
A
So
thank
you
everyone.
I
appreciate
your
time.
My
apologies.
It
took
a
while
to
get
started,
but
thanks
for
hanging
in
with
us,
I
hope
you
have
a
great
week
and
I'll
I'll
talk
to
you
again
friday.
If
not.