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Description
Presentation slides: https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1kdxZ4LaGskfu76H-qkh9DpmaYYgjDt39EDKTxS8h7B0/edit?usp=sharing
A
How
is
everybody
doing?
I
hope
you
hope
you're
enjoying
the
the
season
and
the
and
this
this
time
of
rapid
growth
and
expansion
and
as
you
can
see,
I
have
I
have
steve
aldrich
right
next
to
me,
steve
is
I'm
I'm
I'm
thrilled
excited
elated
to
have
steve,
join
us,
join
the
catalyst
team.
A
And
basically,
after
being
being
in
this
project
as
a
contributing
a
lot
and
it's
being
an
amazing
amazing
facilitator,
an
amazing
member
of
the
community
started
the.
I
think,
one
of
the
people
who
started
the
discord
channel
and-
and
I
think
that
everybody
on
on
telegram
knows
him
and
his
his
amazing
presence
and
so
welcome
on
board
steve
thanks.
B
A
B
B
A
B
Sure,
just
real
quickly,
most
of
you
probably
know
me,
but
I've
been
a
long
time.
Lurker
didn't
really
join
in
too
much
until
catalyst
hit.
I
was
one
of
the
ones
that
started
the
discord
channel
and
I
will
say
that
activity
is
key.
B
So
my
my
job
when
dora
and
tim
talk
to
me
about
coming
on,
they
said:
hey
steve,
just
keep
doing
what
you're
doing
and
we'll
throw
a
couple
of
projects
at
you
here
and
there,
and
the
way
that
I
see
my
job
right
now.
The
primary
thing
that
I'm
going
to
be
doing
is
being
in
the
community,
I'm
looking
to
figure
out
how
we
can
grow
our
own
experts,
our
community
stewards
and
working
groups
that
we
need
to
to
move
this
emancipation
of
ours
forward.
B
So
what
dor
and
tim
asked
me
to
do
to
begin
with
was
to
kind
of
be
the
liaison
for
the
funded
cohort,
those
of
fund
two
and
soon
to
be
fund
three,
as
they
become
funded,
we'll
meet
on
a
weekly
basis
and
and
we'll
report
back
to
you
all
every
two
weeks
how
things
are
going
so
look
forward
to
that
and
that's
that's
it.
I'm
jazzed
to
be
here.
A
Welcome,
okay,
let
me
go
back
to
my
and
get
me
off
the
screen.
Oh
yeah,.
C
A
A
We
have
mike
that
from
the
now.
I
call
them
the
community
advisors
guild,
but
their
name
is
gonna,
just
change
all
the
time
I
think,
but
he's
gonna
present.
Some
of
the
work
they've
been
doing.
Josh
from
wada
alliance
is
gonna.
A
Gonna
talk
about
their
their
work
with
the
african
proposers
and
we're
gonna
talk
about
voting
for
fund
three.
That's
coming
soon
fund,
four
refine
reform,
refinement
stage:
that's
starting
today,
short
q,
a
just
to
cover
some
issues.
If
you
have
any
and
and
we'll
finish
in
a
blast
with
carlos,
giving
us
the
workshop
about
about
metadata.
A
So,
first
of
all,
congratulations
to
us.
We
are
the
world's
largest
decentralized
innovation
fund
by
quite
a
bit
okay.
So
our
our
theorists
at
our
our
researchers
in
iohk,
based
on
everything
we
know
before
about
participation
in
decentralized
governance,
estimated
that
the
amount
of
participation
it
will
go
is
going
to
be
60
million
ada.
That's
we
call
it
the
rational
model,
but
what
we're
seeing
for
funds3
registration
is
something
like.
A
A
If
you
take
the
top
100
thousand
ethereum
and
combine
them
together,
how
many
people
unique
wallets
are
participating
in
the
voting.
All
the
top
hundred
together
is
a
thousand
one
hundred.
If
you
look
at
how
many
participate
in
the
ethereum
git
coin
like
their,
they
have
this
their
own.
Like
innovation
fund,
it's
a
bit
less
than
three
thousand
people,
so
you
can
basically
add
up
all
like
dash
and
the
top
hundred
dollars
and
get
coin
and
multiply
it
by
two
by
two
and
it's
still
not
as
big
as
we
isn't
that
amazing.
A
Looking
looking
more,
I
think,
outside
the
blockchain
space
into
like
general
voting
participation
in
in
governance,
because
we're
just
like
flying
by.
A
Thank
you.
It's
because
of
you
I
do
want
to.
I
do
want
to
address
the
fact
that
we
are
not
supporting
yet
for
this
voting
round.
A
Hardware
wallets
and
we
had
a
voting
threshold
that
that
excluded
people
that
have
less
than
3000
ada,
and
I
think
everybody
who's
concerned
about
this
and-
and
I
think
it's
completely
justified
like
I
think
that
the
entire
reason
why
we're
here
to
do
decentralized
governance
is
to
to
include
to
be
inclusive
and
include
everyone,
and
this
is
in
our
hearts
and
souls
of
of
this
project,
and
the
only
reason
why
these
these
groups
have
been
excluded
is
well
each
one
for
its
own
reason,
but
for
hardware
wallets,
it's
because
we're
still
building
the
integration,
and
once
we
know
the
exact
timeline
of
when
it's
going
to
be
delivered,
we
will
we
will
announce
it,
but
it
will
happen.
A
I
believe
in
like
not
in
the
next
voting
round,
but
but
with
a
good
chance,
it
will
happen
the
one
after
that,
and
although
it's
it's
not
just
depends
on
us,
it
also
depends
on
the
hardware
wallet
vendor,
so
we
can't
really
control
it,
but
we
can
give
you
an
update
how
things
are
going
and
and
regarding
voting
threshold.
Our
team
of
engineers
are
working
really
hard
to
reduce
the
threshold.
A
A
And
also,
I
want
to
announce
fund
five,
it's
gonna
happen
in
about
a
month.
If
you
remember
every
six
weeks,
we
launched
a
new
fund,
so
we're
already
now
to
week
three
fund
four,
so
fun.
Five
is
incoming
we're
gonna
control
somewhere
between
a
million
and
a
half
to
ten
to
two
million
dollars
worth
of
ada.
We
will
give
you
a
a
more
precise
figure
in
the
coming
week
or
two,
but
at
least
a
minute
and
a
half.
A
A
Some
will
have
increased
funding
amounts,
we're
going
to
announce
it
and
we're
going
to
add
a
new
challenge
specifically
about
building
applications
using
metadata
in
cardano,
and
that's
why
we're
going
to
have
this
workshop
with
carlos
at
the
end
of
at
the
end
of
the
town
hall
is
going
to
tell
you
all
about
it
and
about
the
commercial
possibilities
of
it
and
about
the
technical
affordances
for
it,
but
and
we're
gonna
have
all
the
community
choice
challenges
like
everything
you
vote
in
in
fund
three
right
now.
A
We
have
all
these
challenges
on
the
ballot,
not
not
just
proposals
but
like
completely
new
challenges
that
you
can
pick
so
so
whatever's
get
voted
in
will
be
will
be
part
of
it.
So
as
soon
as
we
know,
the
voting
results
will
announce
those
those
challenges
as
new
challenges
in
fund
five
chosen
created
and
voted
by
the
by
the
in
by
the
community,
and
so
if
everybody
wants
to
already
start
to
prepare
for
front
five,
I
think
it
gives
us
a
bit
of
information
how
to
go
forward.
A
So
good
luck
and
next
I
want
to
call
up
the
gimbal
team.
Julian
james
is
representing
them
every
every
week
and
we
have
a
funded
proposal
from
a
fan
to
comment.
A
bit
talk
a
bit
about
what
what
they're
doing
so
coming
on
board.
I
see
james,
I'm
not
sure
if
she
julie.
A
B
A
B
B
All
right
so,
can
you
see
that
screen
right
there
yeah
and
I'm
sorry,
I
don't
get
to
say
hi
face
to
face
with
everybody,
but
we
would
like
to
tell
you
a
little
bit
about
gimbal
labs
today,
so
we
are
a
successful
fund.
Two
proposal,
like
you,
saw
last
week
with
the
with
the
mobile
sdks
and
with
liquid.
B
We
got
involved
with
catalyst
during
the
fund,
2
challenge,
and
so
just
to
remind
everybody.
This
was
the
challenge
statement
during
fund
2.
How
can
we
encourage
devs
and
entrepreneurs
to
build
dabs
and
businesses
on
top
of
cardano
in
the
next
six
months?
We
came
up
with
this
problem
statement.
We
we
recognize
that
there's
high
back
high
entry
barriers
for
people
who
really
want
to
be
involved
and
who
are
ready
to
contribute
their
diverse
experiences.
B
We
realize
there's
so
much
more
than
just
building
software,
that's
going
to
lead
to
mainstream
adoption
of
cardano,
and
I
want
to
encourage
everybody
here
today.
I
know
that
fund
four
is
moving
into
the
feedback
phase.
B
One
of
the
things
we
did
is
is
we
brought
two
proposals
together,
so
roberto,
who
was
the
co-founder
of
gimbal
labs
along
with
julie
and
me,
had
a
proposal
about
open
source
apis.
My
original
proposal
was
about
project-based
learning
resources.
B
So
gimbal
labs,
our
name,
is
a
little
bit
confusing.
So
I
want
to.
I
want
to
share
a
little
bit
about
that
in
just
a
minute,
our
mission
and
our
vision.
Our
mission
is
really
to
mobilize
everybody.
All
sorts
of
people
across
the
cardano
community
by
creating
tools
and
real
world
use
cases
that
ignite
everyone's
imagination
and
facilitate
the
ongoing
adoption
of
cardano.
B
B
A
gyroscope
consists
of
three
independently
rotating
rings
and
these
rings
are
called
gimbals
and
the
reason
we
chose
this
name
for
our
organization
is
that
we
were
reading
about
drama
cardano
himself,
after
whom
this
whole
platform
is
named
and,
and
one
of
his
claims
to
fame
was
that
he
was
the
first
one
to
really
describe
what
a
gimbal
is.
He
didn't
invent
it.
B
He
was
just
the
the
person
to
really
describe
what
it
is
and
how
it
works,
which
to
us
sounds
a
little
bit
like
the
cardano
blockchain
right,
cardano
didn't
invent
blockchains,
but
I
think
we're
doing
it
better
than
everybody
else
out
there.
So
we
want
to
create
a
network
of
autonomous
contributors
who
can
all
contribute
on
their
own,
maintaining
as
much
autonomy
autonomy
as
you
want
to
have,
while
also
collaborating
with
other
people
to
do
even
more
than
you
can
do
alone.
B
So
we
had
this
original
theory
about
who
our
users
would
be.
We
we
wanted
to
address
eventually
a
mainstream
audience,
people
on
the
street
and
eventually
local
business
owners.
But
how
do
we
get
there
over
the
course
of
the
last
few
weeks?
We've
really
focused
on
what
we
need
to
do
now,
so
that
we
can
eventually
be
sharing
what
cardano
is
with
a
mainstream
audience
with
existing
institutions
and
with
local
business
owners
across
the
globe.
B
So
we're
focused
on
developers
now,
I'm
including
cardano
enthusiasts
and
community
members
in
this
group,
because
all
of
you
know
a
heck
of
a
lot
about
what
cardano
is,
even
if
you've
never
written
a
line
of
code
and
within
gimbal
labs.
What
we're
trying
to
do
is
bring
together
so
many
different
kinds
of
talented
people
so
that
we
can
build
flexible
teams
and
and
just
accomplish
great
things.
B
So
that's
really
our
focus
over
the
next
few
months
and
it
has
been
for
the
last
few
weeks
we've
been
testing
hypotheses,
so
this
slide
up
in
the
top
left.
This
is
just
a
screenshot
of
what
julie
shared
when
she
went
on
the
gauntlet.
A
few
months
back,
we
had
this
theory
about
api's
helping
people
start
to
build
proofs
of
concept.
We
had
this
theory
about
cardano
starter,
kits,
really
launching
people
into
work.
B
Now,
by
exploring
these
hypotheses,
we've
really
identified
three
main
tracks
for
getting
people
involved.
We
want
people
to
to
start
out
participating
either
by
learning
more
by
tinkering
with
tools
or
participating
in
groups
of
builders.
So
this
is
just
a
screenshot
of
our
website
gimballabs.com,
which
we're
still
building
day
by
day.
You
can
go
check
it
out,
just
to
say
a
word
about
each
of
these
pathways.
So,
along
the
learning
pathway,
we
have
a
few
different
sorts
of
resources
already
and
we're
focused
on
really
trying
to
maximize
both
synchronous
and
asynchronous
learning
opportunities.
B
B
But
if
you're
just
trying
to
see
what
different
elements
of
cardano
can
do,
we're
starting
to
build
out
a
playground
where
you
can
go
and
just
interact
a
little
bit
and
everything
we're
doing
is
open
source
all
right.
So
you
can
even
see
the
github
repo
for
our
website
go
in
check
out
the
code,
make
it
your
own
all
right
and
then
we
have
a
whole
bunch
of
different
experiments
in
participation
going
on.
Initiatives
are
for
devs
and
non-devs.
B
B
We
have
a
bunch
of
different
catalyst
proposers
who
are
just
showing
up
to
get
even
just
a
little
bit
of
help
from
the
gimbal
labs
community.
So
if
you
have
a
project
that
that
you
think
you
could
use
some
support
with
just
stop
by
introduce
yourself
talk
about
what
you're
trying
to
do
and
who
you
need-
and
I
bet
you'll
find
somebody
who
can
help
you
out.
We
really
want
a
lot
of
the
high
level
conversations
we've
been
having
to
lead
to
meaningful
action.
So
you
can
see.
B
Our
initial
theory
is
starting
to
lead
to
this.
This
hive
of
of
different
sorts
of
work.
We
launched
a
development
sprint
yesterday,
much
more
on
that
to
come.
We've
got
a
short
content
library
being
built
by
a
new
team
of
leaders.
You
can
see
over
on
the
right
side
of
my
screen
here,
just
some
of
the
channels
that
are
available
in
the
gimbal
apps
discord,
and
so
we
invite
you
to
get
involved
we're
going
to
stick
around
after
town
hall
and
we
will
share
a
link
in
the
chat.
B
It's
it's
just
a
zoom
meeting
where
you
can
come
and
ask
us
questions
and
we're
just
gonna
be
hanging
out
anybody
who
has
questions
from
everything
I
just
said:
there's
also
a
discord
link.
You
can
join
us
or
just
go
poke
around
gimbal
labs.
Just
like
steve
said,
he's
a
lurker.
We
encourage
lurkers
to
lurk
productively
and
then
we
encourage
you
eventually
to
to
just
jump
in
and
start
some
conversations.
A
Julie,
thank
you.
Thank
you.
So
much
and
yeah
and
and
we'll
see,
yeah
and
we're
going
to
meet
some
more
proposers.
Some
more
of
the
of
the
cohorts
not
proposes
already
funded
proposers
next
week.
Stay
tuned.
Next
thing
I
wanted
to
do
is
is
I
wanted
to
share
that?
A
There
was
a
this
mike
mcnulty
has
been
facilitating
the
basically
the
community
and
specifically
the
community
advisors,
to
really
look
at
our
assessments,
process
and
iterate
on
it
and
he's
just
been
doing
a
wonderful
job,
so
he
I
don't
think
he
could
attend.
So
he
sent
us
a
video.
So
I'm
just
gonna
play
that
video
and
you're
gonna
present
the
work
they
did.
C
All
right:
hey,
what's
going
on
team
catalyst
mike
mcnulty
here
calling
in
to
share
a
little
bit
about
the
first
community
retrospective
and
what
the
community
was
able
to
accomplish
over
the
last
couple
weekends.
So
first
thank
you
to
doran
team.
Invite
me
on
to
share
a
little
bit
in
this
week's
town
hall
and
thanks
to
steve
for
helping
to
record,
since
I
won't
be
able
to
attend,
live
and
and
big
biggest
thanks
to
the
community
for
for
making
this
thing
a
success
and
bringing
it
to
life.
C
So,
over
the
last
couple
weekends,
the
community
has
been
getting
together
in
a
tool
called
mural
and
put
together
this
board
you're
about
to
see
coming
up
on
the
screen,
and
our
goal
was
was
to
do
a
retrospective,
quick
level
set.
What
is
a
retrospective,
just
a
team
coming
together,
looking
at
the
most
recent
iteration
of
work
last
cycle
of
work,
what
went
well?
C
One
we
were
laser,
focused
on
pain,
points,
kind
of
what
did
we
see
within
the
process
and
where
do
we
see
opportunities
for
improvement,
so
we
we
spent
that
first
hour
together,
really
going
through
from
from
each
of
these
different
perspectives.
Thinking
from
a
proposer
perspective
from
a
ca,
a
veteran
ca
as
a
voter,
what
are
some
of
the
pain
points
inherent
to
our
process,
so
staying
away
from
solutioning?
C
We're
seeing
where
are
the
opportunities
in
this
process
got
a
lot
of
great
ideas,
not
only
through
the
calls
with
the
community
on
the
phone
talking
and
discussing,
but
also
lots
of
offline
contributions
with
folks
coming
in
here,
offering
their
ideas
cleaning
up
the
board
kind
of
organizing
it's
exciting
to
see
not
only
everyone
coming
together
around
the
calls,
but
also
putting
in
the
work
offline.
C
So
once
we
got
this
view
of
the
opportunities
we
thought
about,
okay,
we
have
all
these
great
ideas,
some
things
we
might
be
able
to
do
to
address
these
pain
points,
but
we've
only
got
so
much
time.
We've
only
got
so
many
bodies
so
where
what?
Where
do
we
want
to
spend
all
of
our
time?
Where
do
we
want
to
focus
some
of
our
efforts?
C
So
to
that
end
we
did
a
little
prioritization
exercise
kind
of
thinking
about
how
might
we
maximize
effort
or
how
might
we
maximize
impact
with
minimal
effort,
and
we
tried
to
rank
those
opportunities.
We
came
up
with
against
both
value
and
complexity,
so
you
know
if
we
can
actually
execute
this,
how
how
much
value
is
it
going
to
bring
to
the
community
and
to
actually
do
it?
How
difficult
would
it
be
and
what
we
were
really
concerned
with?
Was
this
top
right
quadrant,
where
there
was
high
value
and
easy
execution?
C
So
these
were
the
kinds
of
things
like
maybe
having
an
expertise
indicator
introducing
some
mentorship
into
the
community,
maybe
doing
proposal
writing
guides.
So
at
the
end
of
all
this,
it
was
cool
to
see
that
some
folks
were
wanting
to
pick
up.
Some
of
these
ideas
start
running
with
them.
The
goal
was
definitely
to
have
some
proposals
be
informed
by
this
work.
So
hopefully
this
recording
can
come
out
a
little
bit
ahead
of
the
town
hall.
We
can
get
some
new
folks
in
here
to
see
this
work.
C
The
community
has
put
together
and
try
to
make
some
proposals
out
of
it,
so
this
is
definitely
a
living
document,
even
though
we
have
come
through
here
and
had
two
sessions
with
the
team.
I
would
love
to
see
this
continue
to
evolve.
I
know
that,
even
after
the
last
retrospective
session
on
saturday,
there
were
some
more
folks
coming
in
here.
Someone
had
raised
their
hand
to
keep
pushing
ahead
on
some
of
these
ui
ux
ideas.
C
We
weren't
able
to
get
through
all
the
opportunities
and
prioritize
those
on
our
call
so
definitely
encourage
anyone
that
might
be
willing
or
interested
if
you
want
to
come
through
here-
and
you
know,
put
some
prioritization
on
the
board
or
some
new
ideas,
whether
you
want
to
do
that
alone
or
with
a
small
group.
I
definitely
encourage
would
love
to
see
this
not
only
continue
to
evolve,
but
would
love
to
see
more
and
more
proposals
get
be
based
on
on
some
of
this
feedback.
C
So
you've
got
a
really
great
starting
point
to
see
what
does
the
community
find
valuable
and
where
could
you
maybe
step
in
here
and
put
something
together
for
the
community
that
that
is
going
to
be
really
useful?
So
I'll
cut
it
off
here,
I'm
starting
to
ramble
a
little
bit,
but
it
was.
It
was
a
lot
of
fun.
We
had
you
know
almost
20
people
on
that.
Second
call,
so
big
shout
out
to
everyone
that
joined
and
participated
really
encourage.
C
A
Well,
mike,
I
mean
you're
not
here
right
now,
but
you
definitely
are
blowing
our
minds
about
what
is
possible
and
just
I
think
I
think
for
me
that
the
the
level
of
professionalism
and
thinking
in
frameworks-
and
thinking
like
this,
like
kind
of
like
thinking
about
the
the
the
problem
thoroughly
and
exploring
the
spaces,
is
very
impressive
and
I
think
we're
gonna
get
really
really
far
and
if
we
continue
to
use
this
this
approach.
So
thank
you
so
much
and
actually
next
person
is
so.
I
talked
with
in
telegram.
A
I
talked
like
mercy
mentioned
that
the
the
water
alliances
is
working
with
african
proposers
to
onboard
them
to
a
descale
and
help
them
launch
proposals.
E
E
Okay,
so
hello
and
welcome
to
the
wider
presentation.
My
name
is
josh
fielding,
I'm
the
co-founder
and
global
lead
for
wada.
Thanks
for
the
opportunity
to
present
we've
been
hard
at
work
from
fund
one
and
the
beginning.
So
I'm
grateful
for
the
chance
to
give
a
broad
overview
of
what
we've
been
up
to
and
our
plans
after
fund
three
and
sort
of
explain
how
we've
already
started
onboarding
companies
onto
the
catalyst
platform.
E
So,
as
we
know,
cardano
is
very
bullish
in
africa,
whether
that's
from
a
purely
economic
standpoint
or
otherwise.
The
point
is
that
the
continent
is
now
in
the
spotlight.
So
it's
up
to
us
as
a
community
to
figure
out
what
to
do
about
it
and
how
to
build
a
structure
that
can
support.
You
know
thousands
of
developers
and
potentially
billions
of
users.
E
So,
with
our
background,
close
working
ties
with
some
of
us
having
worked
together
over
five
months
already,
we
are
well
equipped
to
take
on
this
ambitious
project
together
and
a
special
mention
goes
to
jacob
tete,
who's,
our
in-house
designer
working
for
months
on
logos
and
graphics
for
us
and
our
partner
projects
for
free.
So
with
that,
with
the
trust
that
his
work
will
be
supported
eventually,
so
all
logos
and
graphics
come
through
here.
You
know
the
nice
iconography
you
can
see.
So
if
you
want
to
show
him
some
support,
some
support,
please
do
so.
E
E
So
about
a
month
ago,
intro
started
bubbling
through
twitter,
youtube
idea
scale
and
the
sheer
willpower
of
our
founder
and
communications
lead
mercy,
tedcimensen
who's
across
any
and
all
platforms,
I'm
sure
you've
heard
of
so
all
these
proposals.
We
have
there's
already
a
network
effect
happening
where
we're
combining
resources,
streamlining
proposals
and
already
finding
synergies
with
a
partnership
and
sponsorship
already
on
the
table
outside
of
catalyst.
E
We've
added
specialties
also
for
good
reasons
that
there
isn't
time
to
go
into.
But
if
you
see
these
different
hubs
in
idea,
scale
know
that
your
vote
goes
towards
something
specific
in
most
cases
why
there
remains
the
administrative
and
educational
center
for
all
the
various
hubs
to
connect
with
where
we
go
in
the
future
is
much
broader
than
this,
of
course.
E
E
It's
very
likely
that
we
will
be
setting
up
a
global
coalition
and
token
aspect
down
the
road,
but
you
know
step
by
step.
Let's
get
water
in
place.
First,
formalize.
The
process
then
begin
to
branch
out,
though,
if
you
are
from
other
regions,
we'd
still
like
to
hear
from
you
and
begin
forming
these
relationships
in
the
background,
so
yeah
ask
yourself
what
would
it
look
like
if
there
was
a
network
of
these
hubs
and
alliances
that
could
all
align
through
a
shared
vision
of
the
future.
E
E
E
So,
if
you're
interested
in
finding
out
more
about
the
team
projects
or
future
partnerships,
these
are
various
ways
to
contact
us.
So
please
do
so
this.
The
discord
link
is
good
good
for
the
first
100
invites
so
make
a
note
of
it
if
you're
interested
so
yeah.
That's
it
thanks
for
your
attention
and
we
will
be
holding
hosting
a
zoom
q,
a
after
the
town
hall
and
we'll
post
a
link,
and
so
don't
forget.
We
add
to
multiply,
see
you
next
time.
E
C
A
A
A
Now
now
is
a
good
time
to
now
is
a
good
time
to
to
actually
talk
a
bit
about
voting
so
and
all
the
upcoming
things,
so
so
some
talking
is,
is
required
for
me
not
just
from
other
people,
though
we
should
just
like
keep
inviting
more
and
more.
It's
so
good.
Okay,
so.
A
As
you're
going
to
vote
so
voting
starts
in
opens
up
in
on
the
fifth
so
that
in
two
days,
two
days
at
at
19
hours,
utc,
this
is
the
big
moment
where
there's
lists
of
of
hundreds
of
proposals,
and-
and
so
I
want
around
100
a
bit
more
than
100
proposals
to
vote
on,
and
it's
for
you
to
to
decide
who
are
who
are
gonna,
get
funding
who
kind
of
like
you
know,
remain
in
our
innovation
evolution
process
until
until
they
are
ready.
A
So
as
you
do
it
just
remember,
this
is
not
catalyst
is
not
a
regular
company.
Catalyst
funds
have
some
magical
properties
and
we
can
launch
hundreds
of
experiments
a
year.
We
allow
crowds
to
explore
without
cuffs,
so
we
can.
They
can
explore
really
hard
problems
that
might
seem.
A
You
know
really
wicked
problems
that
almost
seem
unsolvable,
but
but
we
can,
we
can
prototype
one
prototype
at
a
time.
We
can
chip
away
at
these
problems
that
we
can
mobilize
thousands
in
weeks
right.
Every
time
we
set
up
a
challenge.
It's
like
you
know.
We
get
all
these
solutions
and
all
these
teams
ready
to
ready
for
action
and
also
there's
no
need
for
for
consensus.
You
know
the
results
speak
from
themselves,
so
we
launch
those
we
launch
these
prototypes.
A
We
see
what
the
results,
what
the
outcomes
are
and
we
learn
and
iterate
much
better
than
a
regular
company.
So
so,
when
you,
when
you
vote,
think
about
the
proposals
that
kind
of
fits
that
model
well
that
that
use
these
special
special
powers
well
and,
of
course,
as
a
voter,
you're
kind
of
like
the
the
the
steward,
the
holder
of
keeping
us
keeping
the
proposals
to
be
focused
on
solving
the
challenges
that
were
presented,
those
those
big
intentions
that
we
set
so
the
three
ones
that
are
in
front
three
is
the
depth
creation
challenge.
A
A
Okay,
so
as
you
go
so
as
you
go
and
and
look
at
those
all
those
different
proposals,
work
really
ask
yourself:
how
are
we
like
how
much
do
I
think
it's
likely
that
that
this,
this
specific
approach
that
is
being
proposed
is
going
to
it's
going
to
address
this
so
like
which
ones
do
we,
you
can
actually
visualize
see
users
adopting
and
the
second
one
is
the
dev
ecosystem
challenge.
A
So
this
is
so
the
focus
here
instead
of
end
users
using
depth,
it's
about
developers
that
that
that
are
building
depth.
So
it's
it's
all
about
making
it
easier
for
developers
to
to
build
stuff
on
top
of
cardano,
and
so
we're
going
to
ask
ourselves
at
the
end
of
the
challenge.
If
did
we
attract
an
on-board
developers
to
our
ecosystem?
So
then,
again,
when
you,
when
you
think
about
when
you
go
through
the
challenges
and
the
proposals
really
think
about
who
do,
you
think,
is
more
likely
to
to
get
to
get
us
there.
A
The
last
challenge
is
one:
that's
a
it's
a
bit
tricky,
sometimes
to
think
about,
because
it's
a
challenge
about
setting
next
challenges
for
catalyst.
So
it's
by
kind
of
meta
call
it
the
community
choice,
challenge
and
the
question
is:
what
challenges
should
we
launch
in
fund
five,
so
the
next
fund
in
order
to
fulfill
cardona's
mission?
So
what
do
I
mean
like
the
same
way
that
this
is
a?
This
is
a
challenge,
the
ecosystem
challenge
and
that
creation
challenge
is
a
challenge.
A
We
ask
the
community
to
propose
similar
challenges,
but
instead
of
the
catalyst
staff
that
we
we
pick
them,
you
know
it's
actually,
the
community
who
created
them
and
through
this
process
of
getting
feedback
from
the
community
like
evolve
them
to
the
ballot
and
now
it's
time
for
you
to
pick.
What
are
the
targets
that
we're
setting
ourselves?
Which
problems
are
we
prioritizing
to
solve
during
fund
five?
Okay,
so
there's
gonna,
there's,
there's
gonna
be
27
proposals
there.
A
The
total
amount
of
funding
that
this
ch
the
challenges
have
is
four
hundred
thousand
dollars
in
ada.
That
means
that,
let's
say,
there's
a
a
challenge
that
asks
for
two
hundred
thousand
and
another
that
asks
for
two
hundred
thousand
and
both
of
them
are
voted.
Then
then,
you
know
they're
both
in
the
budget,
so
they
both
will
happen.
A
If
you
know,
if,
if
if
there
we
go,
if
you
vote
in
like
10
proposals
each
one
for
40k,
you
know
they're
all
going
to
be
in
you
know
if
you
vote
in
one
for
300
and
and
then
one
for
200
thousand,
then
the
one,
the
the
if
the
the
300
000
was
like
picked
first,
then
there
won't
be
budget
for
the
second
one.
Okay,
we're
going
to
talk
about
the
logical
voting
later,
but
just
just
to
understand
the
so.
The
budget
here
is
not
like
how
much
the
proposer
is
asking.
A
Next
is,
I
think
you
need
to.
I
think
it's
really
important
to
emphasize
that
effective
decision
making
is
a
team
sport.
Okay,
so
we
can
all
sit
in
front
of
our
computers
in
our
living
rooms
and
like
look
at
the
app
and
think
hard
and
make
our
own
minds
and
vote,
and
there
will
be
a
sort
of
collective
intelligence.
A
A
How
effective
can
we
turn
our
decision-making
process
and
how
can
we
evolve
it
over
time,
and
this
is
your
chance
to
experience
it
first,
for
I
think
for
many
many
of
you.
This
is
a
chance
to
experience
it
first
time.
A
For
us,
this
is
just
the
second
time
we're
doing
this
and
we
actually
haven't
built
yet
a
lot
of
tools.
We
have
a
few
things
to
offer
you,
but
I
think
one
of
the
most
valuable
things
we're
going
to
learn
from
this
round
is
we're
going
to
learn
from
all
your
experiences
and
maybe
sometimes
frustrations
how
to
improve
and
and
what
kind
of
additional,
tooling
and
infrastructure
we
need
to
really
make
impactful
decisions
together,
really
smart
decisions,
so
first
of
all,
listening
in
id
scale
is
or
this
scale
is
your
your
place.
A
You
know
you
can
you
can
go
to
the
proposals
in
id
scale.
Actually,
in
the
voting
app
you'll
have
a
direct
link
there.
You
can
read
the
comments
that
people
made,
like
all
sorts
of
questions,
that
people
asked
and
opinions
and
that
people
offered
and
feedback
that
people
people
gave,
and
you
can
look
at
the
proposing
team.
A
If
they've
been
reactive,
if
they
know
to
listen
themselves,
if
they've
changed
and
modified
a
proposal,
if
they
had
thoughtful
comments
to
replies
to
the
comments
made
and
a
second
thing-
that's
really
important-
is
we
had
these
community
advisors
that
were
looking
at
that
that
were
actually
using
a
very
structured
process?
Okay
to
review
this
each
proposal
and-
and
you
will
see
there-
the
score
of
them
in
the
voting
app,
but
there's
also,
they
left
the
rationale.
A
Why
did
I
make
this
score
and
that's
attached
to
the
bottom
of
every
proposal,
so
there's
a
segment
called
annotations
at
the
ba
if
you
scroll
down
to
each
proposal.
In
addition,
you
open
up
open
it
up
and
you
will
see
the
annotations
and
you
need
to
click
that
button
and
suddenly
you'll
get
like
explanations
from
the
advisors
explaining.
Why
do
you
they
think
this
it's
impactful
or
not?
Why
do
you
think
it's
feasible
or
not,
and
whether
they
they
assess
that
the
team
put
enough
information
to
even
to
even
assess
it?
A
Okay
and
and
lastly,
there's
a
lot
of
bottom-up
efforts
from
the
community
to
to
broadcast
and
share
opinions
about
the
different
proposals
from
the
proposing
teams,
but
also
from
the
community
itself,
so
just
tune
into
that,
and
I
hope
that
what
will
emerge
from
this
fund
is
some
some
more
channels
and
broadcasts
and
and
ways
for
for
us
to.
A
You
know
basically
kind
of
swim
inside
this
decision-making
space
and
be
more
informed
and,
in
the
end,
talk
talk
to
the
proposers.
Listen
to
them.
If
something
is,
if
you
have
a
question,
you
can
go
to
the
today
detail
page
of
the
proposal
and
ask
a
question:
have
a
conversation.
A
The
so
for
a
lot
of
you
that
are
new,
you
probably
wonder
what
these
community
advisors,
those
reviewers.
So
basically
in
france,
we
were
65
different
community
advisors,
the
members
of
the
community
that
that
came
and
and
and
submitted
the
valid
assessments.
A
So
it
was
a
pretty
thorough
process
this
time
to
make
sure
that
these
reviews
are
of
good
quality
and
each
each
of
these
advisors
were
asked
to
to
rate
each
proposal
by
impact
feasibility
and
editability
on
a
scale
from
one
to
five.
One
means
I
strongly
disagree.
If
I
mean
I
strongly
agree
about
each
one
of
those
criteria.
A
So
you
know
use
that
as
a
resource
for
decision
making
and
use
their
their
work,
because
reading
100
proposals
can
be
a
hard
ask.
You
know
for
someone,
that's
like
not
full-time
committed,
even
if
you
have
three
weeks
to
do
so,
and
the
third
thing
is
the
the
second
thing
is:
is:
is
coordination?
A
Okay,
so
you
can
join
the
announcement
telegram
channel
where
we
will
tell
you
we
will
share.
You
know
when
voting
ends
and
other
key
dates
in
the
catalyst
process.
A
You
can
keep
informed,
then
you
can
go
one
level
deeper
and
you
can
join
the
catalyst
chat
channel
on
telegram
and-
and
I
hope
you
are
sharing
these
links
to
get
more-
you
know
to
even
be
more
informed
and
and
get
support
and
ask
questions
and
really
engage
in
a
in
a
discussion
and
then
the
and
then,
if
you
really
want
to
get,
if
you
feel
really
really
enthusiastic
and
really
want
to
be
engaged,
then
go
to
the
discard
discord
channel
where
they
have.
A
We
have
more
than
a
thousand
members
and
the
proposing
teams
are
there
and
you
can
have
a
chat
with
them
and
coordinate
your
efforts.
I
think
I
think
that
the
big
I'm
going
to
talk
about
one
more
about
the
coordination
in
the
end,
but
yeah
the
third
thing
is
to
to
analyze
and
that
the
analysis
is
very,
very
tied
to
coordination,
because
the
key
to
making
good
decisions
is
to
be
able
to
zoom
out
from
just
looking
one
proposal
at
the
time
and
see
the
bigger
picture.
A
Okay,
see
that
we
have
with
this
big
challenge
and
there's
like
a
set
of
proposals
that
we
can
define
together.
That
would
be
the
best
fitted
to
to
kind
of
like
attack,
attack
this
problem,
and
for
this
I
want
to
give
you
two
examples
of
people
who
who
give
us
this
ability
to
to
take
a
bigger
look.
Okay,
so
these
these
are
bottom-up
proposals.
One
is
one
is
by
a
a
community
advisor
greg
and
I'm
gonna.
A
I
want
to
share
the
work
he
did
for
fun2
and
I
really
hope
he's
gonna
doing.
I
really
hope
he's
gonna
do
one
for
fan
three
as
well,
but
you
can
see
here
in
his
analysis
that
he
he
looked
at
he.
This
is.
This
is
a
fun
two
example,
so
he
took
took.
A
He
took
a
look
at
all
the
different
proposals
and
he
started
to
create,
like
his
own
score,
an
analysis
according
to
like
the
funds
requested
and
what
percentage
they're
asking
and
and
basically
like
he's
pro,
he
proposed
like
his
own,
his
own
expert
ballot.
So
setting
like
you
know,
according
to
my
analysis
like
this,
should
be
the
ones
that
voted.
Yes,
this
one
should
be
abstained.
This
one
I'm
going
to
vote
no
on,
and
you
know
it
provided
reasoning,
and
you
know
I'm
not
going
to
go
into
the
old
details.
A
The
link
is
here
and
I
hope
you're
going
to
explore
it.
But
you
know
you
really
did
the
really
thorough
analysis.
Quite
amazing,
it's
at
a
very
high
standard
for
everybody
else.
I
have
to
say
and-
and
I
think
that
what
could
be
really
beautiful
is
that,
if,
if
it's
not
just
greg
okay
because
greg
is
gerg
is
amazing,
but
he's
just
one
person
in
one
perspective.
A
Can
we
get
more
people
in
this
community
to
come
and
do
this
kind
of
sort
of
analysis?
It
doesn't
have
to
be
as
rigorous
but
but
really
share
their
perspective
and
publish
it
and
share
it
with
the
community
to
inform
us
too,
and
I
think,
over
time
this
can
be
evolved
into
a
a
real,
a
real
discussion
inside
the
community
and
several
and
several
types
of
this
like
expert
ballot
recommendations?
A
A
It
kind
of
gives
you
a
big
overview
of
project
catalyst
from
from
all
the
like
all
useful
links
and
and
the
timelines
etc
to
to
all
official
documentations
the
recording
of
all
town
halls.
But
then
you
know,
then
we
get
into
the
meet.
You
know
get
into
fund
three
and
the
different
types
of
the
different
type
of
proposals,
how
many
kudos
they
got
in
id
scale.
How
many
comments
were
there
like
how
much
engagement
the
engagement
they
have?
He
would
aggregate
the
ratings
from
the
community
advisors.
A
It's
gonna
is
he
he
started
to
categorize
them
and
look
at
the
percentage
of
the
funds
you
know
for
each
and
every
challenge.
It's
again,
it's
like
a
treasure
treasure
of
france
repurposed.
I
don't
even
know
what
that
is.
Okay,
so
you
know
it
it's
bringing
up
the
the
general
budget
for
the
fund,
but
you
know
if
you,
if
you
want
some
data
and
some
information
to
to
zoom
out
there,
you
have
it.
A
Okay,
really
really
impressive.
Really!
Really
impressive
community
really
impressive
work
with
by
daniel
okay,
so
back
to
back
to
the
slides
so
yeah.
So
so
we
need.
We
need
more
accidental
recommendations.
Okay,
we
need
to
start
to
to
build
that
infrastructure,
that
beautiful
framework
for
decision
making
and
the
soup
of
of
insights
good
way
to
start
is,
you
can
join.
We
have
a
telegram
channel
for
community
advisors.
You
can
join
in
there
and
say
hi,
say
you're
interested
to
create
an
expert
about
recommendations
and
and
seek
help
and
support.
A
A
And,
lastly,
as
you
know,
as
we
go
into
we're
going
to
voting
we're
going
to
campaigning
we're
going
to
discussions
and
arguments
and
trade-offs,
let's
keep
keep
keep
keeping
aware
that
negativity
undermines
our
long-term
goals.
Okay,
so
better
to,
if
you
see
someone
who's
been
really
negative
and
kind
of
like
sucks.
Your
attention-
and
this
turns
into
a
discussion-
it
turns
like
defensive
and
not
so
collectively-
intelligent
better
to
better
to
ignore
and
put
your
energies
on
those
who
think
in
a
constructive
way
and
some
technical
notes
about
voting.
A
There's
gonna
be
issues.
Okay,
with
the
voting
we're
still
it's
still
early,
it's
similarly
in
beta
mode.
The
most
common
thing
that's
gonna
happen
is
once
voting
starts.
You
might
have
come
to
some
error
states
and
you
will
need
to
reinstall
the
app
rescan,
the
qr
code
and
re-input
your
pin
to
to
continue
okay.
So
this
is
basically
the
generic
solution
for
99
percent
of
issues
you're
going
to
encounter
and
if
you're
not
seeing
your
voting
power
after
voting
starts
and
we're
going
to
announce
the
start
of
voting
in
the
catalyst
announcement
telegram
channel.
A
Another
thing
is
that
we
have
a
lot
to
learn
how
to
improve
so
use.
This
link
for
for
ihk
zendesk
to
report
any
bugs
and
any
issues
you
have
so
we
can
fix
them
for
next
time
and,
lastly,
we
kind
of
like
said
it
repeatedly,
but
you
know
if
you
lost
your
qr
codes
or
you
lost
your
pin
code,
you're
not
going
to
be
able
to
to
vote.
A
So
we're
sorry
about
that
and
you
will
get.
You
will
get
your
voter
rewards,
though,
because
because
it
took
all
the
that
trouble
but
there'll
be
this
hard
end,
there's
always
next
round
and
we
will
have
less
bugs
and
maybe
you'll
remember,
to
save
your
qr
code
and
pin
code
this
time.
Okay.
A
So
let's
talk
about
using
your
voting
power,
you
need
to
think
about
voting
power
like
it's
like,
like
your
voting
power,
it's
basically
kind
of
like
one
to
one
today
to
the
ada
balance
you
have
on
your
staking
key.
So
this
is
like
the
amount
of
you
have
stake.
A
That's
your
voting
power
and
you
need
to
think
about
it
like
like
a
cat
okay,
so
you
have
a
cat
and
it
have
eight
thousand
voting
powers
that
it
means
that
every
time
the
cat
is
making
a
decision,
it's
using
its
entire
power,
it's
using
eight
thousand.
So
it
votes.
Yes
on
proposal
a
so,
it
gets
plus
eight
000
votes,
it
votes
no
on
proposal
b.
So
we
you
know
it's
minus
8,
000
votes
for
that
for
for
the
proposal
and
you
can
go
and
you
can
go
and
change
your
vote.
A
So
you
know
up
until
the
time
the
voting
ends.
So
let's
say
that's:
what's
how
you
voted
and
then
you're
like?
Oh
I'm
going
to
change
that.
You
know
I'm
actually
going
to
vote.
Yes,
so
that
overwrites,
your
old
vote
right.
Your
old
vote
was
minus
8
000..
Now
it's
going
to
be
plus
8
000,
because
I
think
your
new
vote.
A
And
you
know,
let's
say
you
change
your
mind
again
and
now
you
decided
that
proposal
a
you
voted.
Yes,
but
now
you
want
to
vote
no,
so
that
would
overwrite
your
old
votes
and
now
it
will
get
minus
8
000
proposal
a
okay.
So
every
time
you
vote
you
go
to
the
whole
voting
power.
You
can
change
your
votes
as
many
times.
You
want
at
least
this
time
and
only
the
last
like
your
last
vote
is
gonna
count
and
last
thing.
There's
a
neat
feature
in
the
voting
app
where
you
can
actually
submit.
A
You
know
you
can
you
can
vote
on
many
things
and
then
you
can
cast
them
at
once.
So
you
can
vote
on
all
proposals
and
then
just
like
press
once
to
to
submit
them
on
the
blockchain,
we're
using
the
yarming
under
blockchain,
there's
no
transaction
fees
and
but
we're
making
it
easier
for
you.
So
don't
vote
and
cast
vote
and
cast.
You
can
vote
on
everything
and
then
that
kind
of,
like
you're
gonna,
have
some
kind
of
like
a
like
you're
in
a
shopping
app
and
you
have
a
checkout.
You
know
so.
A
A
Where
this
amount
of
funding
available
everybody
voted,
we
sorted
all
the
results
by.
You
know:
amounts
of
plus
votes
minus
the
down,
like
all
the
up
votes,
minus
the
the
down
votes,
and
then
we
created
the
list
ordered
list.
You
know
like
first
one
asked
for
535
dollars
in
ada
bam.
Okay,
that
was
deducted
from
our
total
funding.
A
Next
one
ask
for
41,
000
bam,
deducted
okay
and
goes
and
goes
and
goes
and
goes
down
and
down,
and
suddenly
we
get
to
a
place
where
a
proposal
was
voted.
Yes
on
right,
there
was
like
a
hundred
and
three
thousand
voters
versus
sixty.
Seven
thousand
voters
voted
yes,
so,
like
a
lot
of
ada
was
like
said
that
they
want
this,
but
the
budget
was
seventy
seven
thousand
dollars
and
we
only
had
thirty
two
thousand
dollars
available,
so
it
was
not
found
funded.
A
A
So
that's
that's
about
voting.
One
last
thing
is
just
see
that
that
there's
three
weeks
for
you
to
vote,
you
can
take
your
time.
You
know
this
is
not
like
general
elections.
When
you
have
just
like
a
day
to
everything
happens
in
one
day
we
have
three
weeks
you
can
come,
you
can
try,
you
can
vote,
you
can
talk
to
people,
you
can
change
your
mind.
You
can
have
a
discourse,
isn't
that
nice
enjoy
all
right.
A
So
let's
talk
about
the
fund
for
refinement
stage,
so
we're
we're
moving
away
from
funds
free
voting,
we're
talking
about.
What's
going
on
right
now,
which
was
last
week
like
today,
we're
closing
the
the
submissions
of
drafts,
and
now
we
have
an
entire
week
for
for
two
things:
for
for
a
give
structured
feedback
to
proposers,
to
help
them
improve
their
proposal
and
and
for
the
proposing
team
to
to
build
their
team
to
buff
up
their
team.
A
A
So
if
you
go
to
the
id
scale
interface
and
you
go
into
a
challenge-
you
can
see
that
you
can
sort
it
by
tags
and
when
you
sort
it
by
tags,
you
see
that
there's
like
tags
of
like
a
seeking,
blockchain,
dev,
sick
marketing,
sick
writer,
sick
community.
That
means
this,
this
team
indicated
they
have
some
gap
in
their
team
that
they're
looking
for
someone.
A
A
A
A
Another
thing
we
we
want
everybody
to
do
is
give
feedback
so,
and
I
really
encourage
everybody
who
who
would
like
to
take
part
in
and
be
a
community
advisor
start
by
start
by
giving
some
feedback.
Now
you
know
and
when
people
can
still
fix
and
correct
before
the
assessment
starts,
it's
a
good
exercise
for
you.
It's
a
good
way
for
you
to
test
the
waters.
A
If,
if
you
like
that
kind
of
work-
and
it's
really
helpful
for
for
proposer
than
the
cardano
network-
and
it's
a
great
way
to
nudge
proposals
in
the
right
direction,
I
think
for
a
lot
of
them.
This
is
the
first
time
there.
The
proposal
kind
of
really
gets
feedback,
and-
and
they
want
to
hear
from
you.
A
They
brought
the
challenges,
find
proposals
that
don't
have
a
lot
of
feedback.
You
know
that
that
obviously,
like
you
think,
are
worthwhile
your
efforts.
A
So
if
you
think
someone
is
not
being
like
serious
at
all,
you
know
maybe
don't
spend
time,
but
but
if
you
think
somebody
has
something
interesting
idea
or
like
the
team
is
interesting,
something
is
like
kind
of
lights.
You
up
go
and
give
them
some
feedback
and,
and
at
the
end
go
to
once
you
do
that
do
go
to
our
chat
group
and
tag
feedback
challenge
and
with
the
title
of
the
project
you
commented
on,
you
know
just
to
just
to
show
you
care
so.
A
Lastly,
you
know
as
we
as
we
move
into
voting
and
giving
feedback
and
forming
things
and
all
that
stuff.
You
know
really
think
about
how
you
spend
your
time
being
productive
time,
not
destructive
time,
for
example,
helping
your
proposals
and
helping
propose
you
like
improve
working
with
commenters
joining
teams,
merging
proposals,
removing
proposals,
writing
long-form
blog
posts,
you
know
doing
analysis
of
decision
making.
A
The
all
the
projects,
things
that
are
destructive
is,
like
you
know,
going
into
you
know
just
giving
negative,
just
unconstructive
feedback
being
negative,
being
argumentative
being
defensive,
joking
around
being
not
serious,
arguing
all
that
stuff
just
saps
the
energy
out
of
you.
It
doesn't
really
and-
and
in
the
end
you
like
look
behind
like
oh
wow,
oh
my
I
got
all
worked
up.
A
A
I
did
give
a
lot
of
info.
There
was
like
a
lot
of
information
shared,
and
I
do
want
to
answer
some
questions
for
a
bit.
So
I'm
gonna
look
at
the
questions
posted
here.
According
to
order
of
votes
and
and
I'll
try
to
get
a
few,
I
think
I'm
just
gonna
do
five
minutes.
So
carlos
have
some
time
to
talk
about
metadata.
A
Okay,
so
the
meta
martin
is
asking
demeter
what
if
one
has
a
lot
of
ada
and
distribute
it
into
smaller
proportion,
proportions
and
vote
for
his
her
own
idea
founding
itself
via
catalyst?
Can
aurobor
somehow
detect
it?
It
could
hurt
his
centralized
centralization
this
way
by
rich
people.
Okay,
so
there's
a
few
questions.
There's
a
few
assumptions
here.
So,
first
of
all,
there's
no
need
for
you
to
like
you
know.
If
you
have
a
voting
power
of
8
000
and
then
you
you
split
it
up
into
smaller,
like
wallets.
A
It's
still
gonna
add
up
to
eight
thousand,
so
it
doesn't
doesn't
take
you
anywhere,
okay.
So
there's
no
reason
to
do
that.
You
can.
You
can
just
use
one
wallet
with
your
voting
power
and
you
don't
increase
your
voting
power
by
voting
for
many
wallets
okay,
so
that's
one
and
second
of
all,
yeah
people
can
vote
on
their
own
proposal
and
probably
people
do
but
that's
the
beautif,
that's
the
beauty
of
decentralization
they're.
A
A
So
I
hope
that
I
mean,
I
think,
there's
like
a
more
complex
discussion
here
about
you
know:
rich
people
hurting
decentralization.
A
I
think
we're
right
now
we're
very
fortunate
in
the
cardinal
network
that
the
distribution
is
is
pretty
pretty
good.
You
know
it's
not
like
dominated
by
very
few
actors,
but
it's
actually
pretty
well
distributed,
but
this
is
definitely
an
ongoing
process
of
of
of
of
still
like
you
know,
you
don't
want
just
a
few
actors
to
to
set
to
to
determine
it
and
one
good
way
to
do
to
prevent.
It
is
coordination,
so
coordination
between
teams,
coordination
between
types
of
users
and.
A
A
A
A
Iran
is
asking:
is
there
yo
israel?
Is
there
any
plan
to
decentralize
the
pools
even
more
than
the
saturation
mechanism?
Today
I
don't
know
I
work
on
catalyst.
Sorry
er
papanas
is
asking:
is
there
a
way
to
cease?
Let's
check
how
many
wallets
are
registered
for
voting?
A
A
A
You
know
our
snapshotting
tools
so
that
that
is
a
bit
suspicious.
I
would
suspect
the
total
total
ada
amounts
it's
actually
larger
than
what
they
display.
Garrus.
I
really
like
the
cardano
project
and
what
you
are
doing,
I'm
registered
to
vote
and
what's
a
personal
trainer,
yes,
is
there
any
way
to
incorporate
cardano
aida
into
a
rewards
program
to
encourage
people
to
stay,
fit
healthy
and
healthy?
A
Yes,
there
is
a
way
I
mean
I
mean
the
way
potentially
exists.
I
think
we
someone
needs
to
build
it
and
it
could
be
a
great
idea
for
a
proposal
thanks,
girls.
A
A
It's
on
a
roadmap
working
on
a
solution,
and
I
will
I
will
I
will
update
for
the
community
once
this
is
once
once
we
establish
the
delivery
date.
For
that
shouldn't
take
super
long.
It
will
be
in
2021
for
sure.
A
Will
it
be
possible
nick
nick,
I
don't
pronounce
last
name,
I'm
sorry,
but
one
day
I
will
know
how
to
do
it.
So
nick
is
asking:
will
it
be
possible
to
select
and
vote
on
a
project
in
fantu
once
you
selected
the
fund
to
vote
on,
you
may
only
choose
between
yes
or
no
or
no
is
a
negative
sign
which
I
might
not
want
to
select.
A
A
It
is
a
nice
feature.
I
think
it's
in
a
future
suggestion
and
I'll
def
will
definitely
consider
it,
especially
if
a
lot
of
people
ask
for
it,
and
it's
not
just
like
a
very
few,
because
we
in
the
end
we
need
to
prioritize.
A
So
do
let
us
know
in
your
feedback
forms
we're
going
to
send
you
a
feedback
form
once
voting
starts
to
to
tell
us
about
your
voting
experience,
we're
going
to
collect
all
the
feedback
and
we're
going
to
prioritize
it
and
we're
going
to
deal
deal
things
that
are
like
a
lot
of
people
are
bothered
with
we're
going
to
prioritize
and
do
first.
So
you
know
so.
If
a
lot
of
people
agree
with
you,
we
will
we
will.
We
will
take
take
care
of
this
too.
A
Obviously,
there's
like
10
million
things.
We
can
do
better
question.
Where
do
we
start?
Okay,
I'm
going
to
stop
answering
questions,
and
I
want
to
give
the
stage
to
carlos,
because
we've
been
waiting
patiently
for
a
long
time
and
metadata
is
awesome
and
important
and
anna
do
we
have
carlos
around
to
to
beam
up.
A
A
Maybe
there's
like
a
yes.
D
Hall,
thank
you.
Thank
you.
There
pleased
to
meet
you
all.
It's
pretty
exciting,
to
see
the
amount
of
collaboration
and
interaction
that
everyone
is
having
you
all
guys
are
having
a
blast
with
this.
It's
great
it's
great,
to
see
such
a
lively
community
positive
working
towards
a
a
one
objective
that
will
help
us
all
in
the
future,
all
right
all
right
there.
So
let
me
let
me
actually
just
set
this
stage
and
start
talking
a
little
bit
about
what
what
should
we
expect
out
of
today.
D
So,
first
of
all,
before
before
we
start,
let
me
just
introduce
myself
so
I'm
carlos
vargas
montero.
I
work
as
a
director
of
professional
services
within
within
iohd.
So,
but
what
exactly?
Does
that
mean
whenever
a
company
contacts
us
because
they
want
they
have
a
business
problem
and
they
want
to
solve
it,
utilizing
our
technologies,
then
my
team
jumps
in
the
commercial
team
and
we
are
within
the
commercial
department.
D
My
team
jumps
in,
and
we
bridge
the
gap
between
the
business
case
right
and
the
the
problem
and
the
technologies
and
the
products
and
the
platforms
that
we
are
having.
So
you
could
see
why
I
I
wanted
to
start
touching
those
with
with
dora
and
with
you
all
of
you,
because
you
you
do
want
to
do
something
very
similar.
You
want
you
have
problems,
you
want.
You
seen
cardano
an
opportunity
to
solve
them.
D
You
just
need
to
bridge
the
gap,
so
it
will
benefit
of
also,
if,
if
I
just
start
showing
up
a
little
bit
more
frequently,
hopefully
in
the
future
and
start
calling
you
and
sharing
with
you
all
the
ex
experiences
that
we
we
have
helping,
you
hopefully
also
achieve
your
own
goals.
So
with
with
this
interaction,
I
I
just
I
mean
I
have
two
main
objectives
right.
D
The
first
one
is
to
help
you
ignite
new
ideas
to
help
the
entire
community
ignite
new
ideas
to
think
different
about
or
in
a
new
ways
about
how
you
could
utilize.
For
that,
and
the
second
one
is,
as
I
just
mentioned
my
day,
job
is
just
to
bridge
that
gap
between
the
business
problems
and
the
platform.
So
why
not
just
start
sharing
or
start
collaborating
start
just
presenting
here
from
now
and
then
a
little
bit
of
what
we
have
been
able
to
learn.
D
So
now
this
one
is
named
a
metadata
workshop,
but
I
see
it
a
little
bit
more
as
a
series
of
interactions.
Why?
Because
I
would
love
to
see
after
just
having
this
initial
talk
and
maybe
in
the
next
fun
proposal,
or
so
a
couple
of
initiatives
or
a
couple
of
proposals
that
ignited
just
of
these
conversations.
D
So
I
don't.
I
don't
think
it
has
any
start
and
an
end.
In
this
short
conversation,
I
will
try
to
be
brief
right
because
we
have
been
sitting
here
for
more
than
an
hour,
but
I
just
see
this
as
a
starting
point
of
hopefully
a
a
added
value
to
the
community,
just
just
by
being
able
to
share
and
to
collaborate
with
you
and
ensure
the
the
experiences
that
we
have
had.
So
we
are
okay.
So
let's
talk
a
little
bit
now
the
specific
metadata.
So
why
why?
D
It
is
important
that
we
talked
about
that.
It
is
important
because
some
of
you
might
be
blocked
by
the
fact
that
pluto's
is
not
right
now
in
cardano,
without
realizing
that
maybe
a
first
version
of
your
idea
or
a
first
version
of
the
solution
of
your
product
or
project
is,
is
readily
available
right
now,
with
this
just
simple,
very
simple:
correct
capability
of
the
platform-
and
let
me
actually
even
talk
about
what
we
have
been
able
to
do
with
metadata
in
the
past,
so
you
get
an
idea
of
what
I'm
talking
about.
D
So
first
of
all,
many
of
you
may
probably
know
about
the
collaboration
that
we
do
with
new
bonds
and
the
deployment
that
we
did
a
year
back
right
a
couple
of
years
back
so
you
it
burst
the
question
right.
We
were
able
to
build
up
an
application
for
new
ones
that
authenticated
product
for
them,
the
sneakers
more
specifically,
but
if
pluto
is
not
ready
or
not
in
the
platform
right
now,
it
wasn't
even
it
wasn't
there
a
year
ago.
D
We,
with
only
metadata
with
the
help
of
some
hardware
components
you
could
get
there
just
one.
Second,.
D
D
What
was
wha,
what
was
it
okay,
so
the
second
one
was:
is
beef
jean,
so
beef
chain
is
a
traceability
solution
for
people
to
actually
take
meat
from
from
farm
to
to
table
and
we
were
able
to
implement
it
with
on
metadata.
D
So
there
are
other
ideas
that
we
can
nurture
with
only
that
capability,
and
you
could
also
see
it
as
maybe
you
have
a
grandiose
vision
of
a
solution
that
you
want
to
build,
and
for
you
to
reach
that
grandiose
vision,
you
will
need
smart
contracts,
but
does
that
mean
that
you
need
to
wait
until
that
to
actually
make
something
happen?
Maybe
not?
Maybe
you
could
start
with
this
series
of
capabilities.
D
You
provide
something
you
actually
test
your
idea
on
the
market.
You
gain
users,
you
start
asking
those
users
or
start
gathering
information
and
feedback
from
those
users
to
evolve
and
even
validate.
If
your
original
idea
of
that
brand
use
vision
was
even
on
the
on
the
right
track,
so
the
other,
the
other
thing
that
may
may
blow
your
mind
as
well,
like
you
might
know,
a
teleprism,
a
power
person
is
an
identity
solution
that
we
have
built
right.
D
There
is
a
very
cool
demo
out
there
and
a
thought
person
only
utilizes
metadata
right,
so
I
mean
I
just
I
just
want.
If
I,
if
I
achieve
my
goal
today,
guys
and
girls,
I
would
be
igniting
in
all
of
you,
I
will
be
opening
a
door
for
you
to
consider
that
maybe
there
is
a
a
a
first
step
with
the
capabilities
that
are
right
here,
that
you
could
do
that.
D
You
could
propose,
and
I
will
be
igniting
new
ideas
for
these
and
the
in
the
next
funds
that
surround
the
capabilities
of
metadata.
Now,
let's
save
that
a
little
bit
more
on
to
then
how
shall
we
think
about
metadata?
Now
that
I
have
made
a
point
I
have
made
a
point
of.
There
are
many
applications
that
can
be
built
with
it.
D
So
the
way
we
you
should
think
about
metadata
is
is
like
a
like
a
database
right
like
a
shared
database,
where
you
can
have
different
people
coordinating
and
the
trust
comes
from
the
from
the
blockchain.
So
you
have
different
people
that
want
to
share
information.
It
doesn't
mean
that
the
information
needs
to
be
public.
There
are
ways
of
sharing
information
in
a
private
manner
and
just
maintaining
the
proofs
on
on
the
blockchain.
D
So
you
have
several
actors
that
want
to
either
agree
or
need
to
share
data
or
need
to
run
a
workflow
on
a
data
need
to
evolve
or
need
to
agree
on
something,
and
you
can
have
all
those
personalities
you
know.
Instead
of
one
of
them,
implement
the
centralized
database
and
providing
access
to
everyone
else,
you
can
have
blockchain
as
a
database,
and
you
can
you
can
utilize
certain
mechanisms
by
so
that
you
only
store
the
necessary
information
in
there.
D
So
you
you
don't
want
to
store
like
the
entirety
of
information
in
the
blockchain
anyway,
you
you
just
want
to
store
the
necessary
information
for
you
to
achieve
your
business
goal
like
in
the
case
of
bitching,
for
instance,
or
traceability
in
general.
You
don't
store
all
the
documents
in
that,
so
you
restore
the
documents
remotely
and
then
you
attest
the
documents
against
the
blockchain
with
hashes,
for
instance.
D
So
whenever
an
idea
for
you,
for
instance,
if
you
wanted
to
create
a
use
case
where
you
need
a
workflow,
an
auditable,
decentralized
workflow,
let's
say
even
something
as
simple
as
a
hello
sign
or
docusign.
D
If
you
have
utilized
these
two
services
where
it
coordinates
signatures
and
then
creates
the
final
version
of
the
document
provides
a
time
stamp
of
digital
signatures
and
that's
all
good
and
nice.
You
can
build
that
only
with
metadata,
because
what
you
need
to
build
that
use
case
is
just
to
have
that
repository
in
which
you
can
have
the
document.
You
can
have
the
signatures
and
you
can
attest
that
the
document
exists
at
a
very
specific
point
in
time
and
that
it
has
not
been
tampered
with.
D
So
if
you
have
to
think
it
as
a
as
a
database
with
specific
properties,
it
is
immutable.
The
time
step
is
implicit,
so
you
you
can
know
when
the
document
existed
right.
You
have
to
burn
in
mind
that
the
writing-
the
writing
of
it-
can
take
some
time
if
you
want
to
be
100
certain
that
the
or
that
the
change
will
not
have
a
reorganization
right,
like
the
exactly
in
the
same
way
that
you
wait
for
confirmations
when
you're
doing
transactions
sometimes.
D
But
there
is
a
point
where
you
can
have
different
parties
agree
on
on
an
event,
agree
on
a
document
and
so
on
so
forth.
So
again
I
wanted
this
to
be
short.
I
just
wanted
to
ignite
that
in
you
and
I
wanted
you
to
meet
me
and
hopefully
in
the
future,
we'll
have
other
other
events
or
other
interactions
where
we
can
refine
our
understanding
of.
How
exactly
can
we
utilize
all
this
set
of
technologies.
A
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
carlos
I
want
to.
I
mean,
maybe
just
just
a
few
tidbits
extra,
so
first
of
all,
we're
gonna
launch
in
a
few
weeks
a
new
challenge
just
about
metadata.
Okay,
so
we're
not
sure
about
the
final
amount.
I
think
it
will
be
somewhere
between
50
to
100
000
in
ada,
for
for
this
particular
challenge,
just
for
people
to
build
daps
and
applications
using
using
metadata
first
of
all,
so
this
is
very
timely.
Second
of
all
ioh
case
building
built
quite
a
lot
of
tools.
A
Right
like
that
can
can
can
basically
make
it
very
easy
for
for
people
to
you
know
from
jump
from
zero
to
one
right.
So
so
I
know,
can
you
can
you
tell
us
a
bit
about
that
about
like?
Can
you
give
us
an
example
of
a
tool
that
that
you
have
available
that
maybe
people
are
not
aware
that
can
really
make
it
easier
to
to
jump
on
on
this.
D
Yeah
sure
thank
you
for
that.
So
there
is,
there
is
the
the
usual
apis
that
you
see
on
on
cardano
right
and
we,
my
team.
D
One
of
the
things
that
have
has
done
on
top
of
it
is
that
we
have
created
a
series
of
services
for
enterprises
for
companies
to
make
it
easier
for
them
to
actually
utilize
metadata
like,
for
instance,
we
have
a
an
interface
that
allows
java
developers
and
style
developers
to
utilize
the
same
apis
that
get
exposed
by
the
cardano
so-
and
there
is,
I
believe
alan
mcsherry
is-
is
on
the
chat.
He
is
part
of
the
psg
team
right,
so
alan.
D
If
you
are
dirk
and
you
post
the
links,
we
will
be
sharing,
I'm
on
the
telegram.
I
will
be
sharing
the
links
as
well.
There
are
youtube
presentations
of
the
different
services
that
you
could
utilize
to
make
your
life
easier,
integrated
with
metadata
there
are.
There
will
be
beyond
this
one
of
the
things
that
I'll
I'll
do
as
well
is:
there's
the
developers
community
call,
I
will
start
joining
it.
D
So
if
you
want
to
deep
dive
into
it,
maybe
we
can
do
another
another
session
in
the
next
town
hall
or
maybe
would
we
keep
it
to
the
deaf
community
right?
I
I
didn't
want
to
to
deep
dive
in
the
technical
piece
here,
because
I
didn't
know
the
audience
right.
It
could
be
that
the
audience
is
still
technically
not.
But
if
I
go
to
the
developer
community
call,
I
know
I
know
what
the
audience
is
so
so
again.
D
For
me,
this
is
the
just
the
initiation
of
a
series
of
interactions
that
hopefully
will
help
you
build
and
make
it
easy
to
build
on
togo
cardano
and
also
just
consider
ideas
that
maybe
you
just
were
blocked
by
the
idea
that
smart
contracts
were
not
here
yet
right
so
and
there
we
will
be
working
with
you
also
on
helping
out
once
the
fund
gets
settled,
helping
out
those
that
that
were
selected
even
after
after
the
fund
after
the
voting
ends,
those
that
have
solution
proposals,
meaning
that
they
are
trying
to
utilize
utility
so
we'll
be
also
there
to
help
them
as
well.
A
So
thank
you
and
yeah
and
I'm
sure
we're
gonna,
see
you
or
alan
in
the
next.
In
the
coming
weeks,
again,
yeah
take
care,
yeah
and
and
for
everybody
else
and
just
gonna,
say
bye
and
enjoy
voting,
enjoy
feeling
like
an
empowered
member
of
this
community
and
that
have
a
say
how
things
get
which
things
get
done
and
how
we're
solving
some
really
big
important
problems
together
and
for
all
of
you,
proposals
that
are
just
like
in
front
four.
Just
getting
you
know
getting
like
ramped
up
towards
preparing
your
proposal.
A
I
wish
you
the
best.
Listen,
listen
carefully
to
what
people
are
saying
to
you
and.