►
Description
Presentation slides: https://bit.ly/3fmm9Gx
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đĄ Browse insights, ideas, and proposals: http://cardano.ideascale.com
đŦ Join main Telegram group: https://t.me/ProjectCatalystChat
đ Go deeper with Catalyst Discord: https://discord.gg/2RnUtK8
đ¤ Become Community Advisor/Mentor: https://t.me/CatalystCommunityAdvisors
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đ Help find bugs & test: https://t.me/catalystdryruns
âī¸ Get lost in data: https://bit.ly/ProjectCatalystDashboard
A
B
Hey
everybody
welcome
to
our
weekly
town
hall
and
maria
maria
carmo
is
with
me
one
of
the
members
of
the
of
the
catalyst
coordinator,
one
of
the
funded
proposals
she
and
her
team
will
be
presenting
their
progress.
But
even
before
that
I
wanted
the
maria
I
wanted
to
invite
you
to
welcome
us
to
the
town
hall.
Let
me
share
my
screen,
so
everybody
can
see
the.
C
Sure
hi
everyone,
my
name,
is
maria
carmo,
and
I
would
like
to
welcome
you
to
the
experiment.
Things
may
break
lack
documentation
differ
greatly
between
interactions,
disorientate,
overload
and
inspire,
but
our
goals
here
is
safe
and
lively
in
providing
environments
for
you
to
explore
the
highest
potential
of
the
human
collaboration.
Welcome.
B
Hey
thanks
maria
welcome
everybody,
so
I
think
we're
actually
going
to
start
with
a
recording
of
your
team
presenting
your
your
progress.
So
let
me
share
that.
D
D
We
just
want
to
go
through
what
our
original
proposal
was.
So
the
key
thinking
behind
this
was
that
cardinal
is
currently
placed
to
be
right
at
the
heart
of
this
explosive
area
of
innovation,
where
we've
built
the
most
advanced
smart
contracts
platform
across
the
entire
blockchain
industry.
So
much
thought
has
gone
into
it
over
the
last
five
years,
so
it
made
sense
for
us
to
to
go
ahead
and
kind
of
evangelize.
D
This
whole
platform
to
the
rest
of
the
world
and
get
people
excited
and
get
them
a
good
good
starting
point
on
how
they
can
build
on
top
of
a
of
cardano.
So
the
key
thing
there
was
just
to
attract
all
the
developers
out
there.
So
we
know
the
world
has
just
a
ton
of
really
smart
people
that
want
to
build
on
top
of
the
next
kind
of
big
thing
in
terms
of
the
innovation,
and
then
we
want
people
to
have
that
opportunity
to
build
something
amazing.
D
On
top
of
that,
so
just
to
recap
our
approach,
so
we
haven't
changed
much
from
what
how
how
we
were
going
to
deliver
the
content
to
the
aspiring
developers.
D
So
we
still
have
two
facets:
one,
that's
the
video
tutorial,
so
what
we
publish
on
youtube
to
begin
with,
as
well
as
accompanying
written
documentation
with
the
source
code.
So
this
is
what
we've
been
building
behind
the
scenes
really
trying
to
set
a
good
framework
so
that
publishing
the
content
is
as
easy
as
possible.
D
And
take
a
peek
at
what
we've
published
so
essentially,
we've
expanded
the
scope
somewhat,
so
we're
no
longer
just
focusing
on
smart
contract
development.
We
are
kind
of
getting
people
in
tune
with
what
it
takes
to
start
building
off
on
cardinal
in
the
first
place.
So
you
really
need
to
learn
these
fundamental
topics
before
even
attempting
to
to
create
smart
contracts.
D
So
this
is
why
we
wanted
to
have
a
progressive
approach
to
releasing
this
this
relevant
documentation,
so
that
people
can
actually
learn
these
core
kind
of
primitives
and
build
up
the
knowledge
before
they
even
get
to
the
smart
contract.
So
this
is
why
you
know
we
wanted
to
get
all
this
fundamentals
straight
out
to
begin
with,
make
this
a
bit
easier
to
read
that
area.
D
So
we
wanted
people
to
really
just
understand
a
lot
of
the
basics
first,
get
playing
with
you
know,
setting
up
the
node
locally
and
then
also
you
know.
The
most
important
thing
was
on
top
of
the
videos.
We
also
have
the
ability
to
to
give
the
source
code
so
that
people
can
really
just
you
know,
paste
it
into
their
relevant
ide.
For
example,
you
know
visual
studio
code
and
then
you
can
execute
it
as
as
you
need.
D
D
So
the
other
thing
we
is
we
wanted
to
you
know
from
from
that.
We
want
to
build
a
progressive
way
to
you
know
for
other
people
to
expand
on
on
building
on
top
of
cardona,
so
no
longer
just
running
the
node,
but
also
how
you
can
mint
native
tokens
how
you
can
build
smart
contracts.
D
We
might
even
you
know,
dive
into
how
you
can
build
stakeholders
in
the
future,
but
yeah.
So
that's
that
the
the
other
thing
was.
The
final
thing
was
we
wanted
to
make
this
accessible
to
other
languages
for
people
across
the
world?
So
if
you
are
interested
in
translating
bits
and
pieces
of
information,
so
the
good
thing
is
most
of
it
is
code,
but
we
will
need
help
to
get
some
of
the
meteor
bits
of
documentation
in
other
languages.
D
C
Hi,
everyone
here
is
maria
carmo,
a
third
of
lovelace
academy.
Here's
is
the
page
of
our
channel,
where
we
have
some
content
for
beginners,
that's
cardinal
revolution
and
make
sense
of
blockchain.
If
you
don't
watch,
please
check
it
out.
I
also
have
manual
submits
proposal
to
catalyst,
because
I
think
the
community
was
really
really
need
to
learn
how
catalyst
work
and
we
have
a
video
with
mihaela
uliero.
That
was
the
person
that
was
responsible
to
bring
single
arch
to
cardano.
C
We
also
have
some
views.
Some
comments,
some
likes
here
is
the
521
subscribers.
We
are
growing
as
you
can
see
in
this
graphic.
This
is
the
last
28
days
of
the
channel
plus
118
subscribers.
What's
very
good
for
a
small
channel,
and
here
I
can
show
what
type
of
device
are
all
these
people
using
so
42
computer,
48,
mobile
and
then
2.5
tv
and
1.6
tablets.
So
I
think,
as
we
go
along,
the
data
will
improve
and
I
can
show
more
from
the
back
end
of
our
channel.
E
E
E
B
F
F
D
C
First,
I
would
say
to
the
community
welcome,
welcome,
welcome,
thank
you
for
being
here.
Thank
you
for
being
every
single
town
hall.
Thank
you
for
be
building
it.
If
you
don't
know
me-
and
you
are
getting
here
today,
my
name
is
maria
carmona
cardone,
an
ambassador
also
a
spo
and
a
third
of
lovelace
academy,
and
for
me
it's
an
honor
to
be
here
in
this
space.
Talking
to
you
today,
thank
you
very
much
for
having
me
here
door.
B
Awesome
any
requests,
you
know,
let
me
like,
let
me
run
the
at
least
just
your
the
side
of
your
team,
so
people
will
know
how
to
get
in
touch.
B
Okay,
okay,
so
I
think
you
see
you
can
see.
There's
a
a
twitter
account.
C
B
C
B
C
So
if
you
speak
portuguese
and
you
would
like
to
work
in
the
team
to
translate
our
content,
please
welcome
and
show
up
we'll
be
here
and
you
will
be
a
welcome
and
there
are
other
languages
like
spanish,
russian
many
many
other
languages,
if
you
feel
that
is
the
right
job
for
you
and
you
want
to
contribute,
is
what
I'm
doing
day
after
day,
showing
up
and
contributing
showing
up
and
contributes.
So
if
you
think
you
can
contribute
to
lovelace
academy,
please
reach
out
to
us.
B
Awesome:
okay,
thank
you
so
much
maria
for
coming.
Thank
you
for
your
team.
We
have
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
presentations,
I'm
gonna
be
pretty
efficient
and
we
have
a
video
from
ben,
which
is
part
of
the
liquid
theme.
I
think
they
presented
like
I
think
a
few
weeks
ago
and
they
already
have
an
additional
update.
It's
so
it's
good
to
see
the
rapid
progression
and
again
I'm
gonna
challenge
my
computer
literacy
skills
and
try
to
try
to
launch
this
video
one.
B
F
Hi
there
and
thank
you
for
joining
us
for
today's
brief
demonstration
of
the
liquid
lending
platform.
This
is
a
joint
project
between
mlaps
haskell
consultancy
and
liquid
labs,
let's
jump
over
to
our
demo
environment.
So
on
the
left,
if
you
saw
our
previous
demo,
you
might
be
familiar
that
we
have
a
simulated
blockchain
running
in
the
same
environment,
with
the
same
semantics
as
plutus
will
run
when
it
does
go,
live
we've
thrown
a
few
extra
logs
and
some
color
in
just
to
make
it
slightly
more
readable
now
over.
F
On
the
right
hand,
side
we
have
our
draft
of
the
user
interface
and-
and
these
are
all
kind
of
working
in
orchestration,
as
you
would
expect
them
to
so
that
we
can
see
changes
back
and
forth
for
most
of
what
we're
going
to
be
doing
today.
So
what
we
will
be
doing
today
is
we're
going
to
walk
through
simple
user
interactions,
with
the
application
supplying
ada
withdrawing
ada
borrowing
against
it
repaying
that
borrow
and
we're
going
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
technologies
that
enable
everything
you
see
here.
F
So,
let's,
let's
just
jump
into
it.
Let's
go
ahead
and
supply.
Some
ada
into
the
system
we're
going
to
supply
10,
000
ada
and
we're
going
to
get
some
q
ada,
which
represents
our
our
sort
of
bank
deposit.
If
you
will
and
currently
q8a
exchanges
at
five
to
one
so
you'll
see,
we
have
less
ten
in
transaction
fees,
ten
thousand
less
eta
and
we
now
have
two
thousand
ada
representing
ten
thousand
deposited
data.
So
two
thousand
q
ada
kind
of
representing
that
ten
thousand
data
that
we
just
put
in
now.
F
The
next
thing
that
we're
going
to
do
is
we're
going
to
go
ahead
and
hit
borrow
we're
going
to
borrow
5
000
ada,
and
this
is
going
to
collateralize
our
queue
data.
So
it's
going
to
leave
our
wallet,
we're
going
to
get
the
ada
that
we're
borrowing-
and
this
will
work
across
currencies
currently
we're
just
working
with
ada.
F
F
So,
each
time
you'll
see
that
there's
a
blockchain
transaction
that
occurs
and
then
we'll
get
our
balance
update
there.
We
go
so
now
we're
back
down
again.
We
have
a
third
set
of
transaction
fees
and
then
we're
back
down
to
our
original
state
after
depositing
and
then,
if
we
want,
we
can
start
to
withdraw
our
q
eta
back
out
so
I'll
do
a
partial
withdrawal
of
just
5000
ada
worth
of
q
eta
thanks
for
splutter
to
life,
and
we
may
see
some
discrepancies
here,
because
interest
has
been
charged
so
in
our
per
block.
F
We
actually
have
a
quite
high
interest
set
for
this
demonstration
just
so
that
we
can
see
that
there
will
be
some
discrepancies.
That's
not
currently
reflected
on
the
front
end,
but
that's
sort
of
the
next
step
in
our
development.
F
In
the
in
the
live
environment,
if
you
will,
but
I'd
like
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
how
we
built
this
and
how
things
are
going
to
look
as
we
work
towards
getting
this
out
into
production,
so
I
mentioned
on
the
left-
we're
running
a
simulated
blockchain.
This
is
using
the
plutus
application,
backend
simulator
library.
So
this
is
part
of
the
plutus
library.
F
But
that's
sort
of
the
general
idea
is,
as
you're
running
this
simulator
you're
actually
able
to
interact
with
it
via
http,
similar
to
the
way
that
you
will
on
the
day
of
deployment
into
the
wild.
So
we've
we've
built
up
an
sdk
that
does
the
validation
around
those
calls
and
it's
it's
growing
and
sort
of
to
to
add
convenience
functions.
It's
it's
growing
to
add
validation
as
well.
In
addition
to
really
simple
apis
just
to
go
ahead
and
call
the
various
endpoints
that
are
going
to
be
available
on
a
plutus
contract.
F
F
Conveniently
piles
compiles
down
right
into
javascript,
so
we
can
sort
of
maintain
a
lot
of
the
correctness
and
the
semantics
that
we're
getting
from
haskell
but
still
have
a
great
javascript
friendly
sdk
that
sort
of
works
as
a
lot
of
javascript
developers
are
going
to
expect
it
to
so
that's
all
done
with
pure
script,
so
you're
going
to
see
we
have
both
the
peer
script
and
javascript
tool
chain
right
now
in
this,
and
and
it's
going
to
be
available
as
an
npm
package
at
some
point
now,
as
this
moves
to
production,
I
expect
there
will
be
some
small
changes
to
pap
and
so
we're
going
to
be
maintaining
this
and
and
growing
it
and
making
it
more
complete,
as
we
move
closer
and
closer
to
getting
a
test
net
and
then
finally
getting
a
main
net
for
gogen.
F
B
Yeah,
well
I'm
having
a
great
day
more
like
a
great
night.
It's
9
9
pm
here
and
wow.
This
is
cool.
I
think,
they're
moving.
Thank
you,
liquid
team.
Thank
you
ben!
As
usual.
You
know
we
should
like
host
you
in
a
live
chat
at
some
point
because
I'm
sure,
like
everybody,
wants
to
learn
more
and
have
lots
of
questions.
But
but
anyway
you
guys
are
you
guys
are
great
and
all
right.
Moving
on,
we
have
more
with.
B
We
have
even
more
presentations.
B
G
G
Everyone,
it's
kyle,
the
lead
developer
of
cardonasharp,
and
today
I
want
to
give
you
a
quick
overview
on
some
progress
that
is
being
made,
but
before
we
jump
into
that,
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you
to
the
community
for
expressing
you
know
all
your
support
and
interest
in
what
we're
building
over
here
we're
working
really
hard
to
get
this
library
built
for
everybody.
We're
really
anxious
to
use
it
ourselves,
but
yeah.
Thank
you
for
all
the
support
that
you're
showing
anyway,
let's
jump
into
the
updates.
G
All
right,
so,
let's
start
off
with
the
ef
core
update,
so
our
efcor
library
allows
dot
net
developers
to
quickly
start
reading
from
the
cardano
db
sync
database.
Currently
we
are
up
to
date
on
version
nine.
So
if
you
have
a
you
know
a
postgres
database
ready
with
cardone
db
sync,
you
can
add
this
library
to
your
application
and
start
reading
from
the
chain,
or
you
know
the
database.
G
Now
what
this
real
this
library
really
entails
is
it
has
scaffolded
models
and
relationships
that
will
allow
you
to
get
information
and
do
your
joins
and
you
know
start
connecting
all
that
data.
So
let's
look
at
some
updates
or
I'm
sorry,
some
some
examples.
Now.
These
are
three
very
basic
examples.
G
The
first
one
ultimately
is
going
to
get
you
all
the
blocks
and
an
epoch
ignore
the
comments
it's
supposed
to
take
it
all
not
get
it
but
yeah.
You
can
see
that
I'm
looking
at
epoch,
266.
what
it's
going
to
do
is
return
all
the
blocks
that
have
that
are
associated
with
that
epoch.
G
The
second
example
will
essentially
look
at
a
given
pool,
so
you
can
see.
I
have
pool
id
one
now.
No,
this
is
a
database
id
not
like
a
pool
hash
or
anything
like
that.
So
we
can
look
at
that
particular
pool
and
we're
gonna
group
it
by
the
epoch
number
and
we're
gonna
get
all
the
stake
by
epoch.
So
this
will
return
back
a
list
of
all
the
all
the
delegation
for
a
particular
pool
by
epoch.
G
The
second
one
is,
in
my
opinion,
where
things
start
to
really
get
fun,
and
this
is
where
I
like
to
really
explore
the
chain:
look
at
the
metadata
and
whatnot
and
that's
what
this
is
doing.
So
we
look
at
a
particular
transaction.
You
can
see
again.
This
is
a
database
id,
not
a
transaction
hash,
but
what
we're
doing
is
we're
taking
the
transaction
and
we're
asking
not
just
for
the
transaction,
but
also
the
metadata
that
is
associated
to
that
transaction.
G
Now,
like
I
said,
these
are
three
very
basic
examples.
We
can
do
much
much
more
if
you
want
to
explore
nfts.
You
can
start
exploring
nfts
with
stuff
like
this
and
looking
at
the
transaction
native
assets
and
look
at
the
metadata,
that's
associated
to
them
and
you
know
checking
out
what
people
are
really
building
on
cardano.
So
this
is
really
fun.
You
know
if
you
want
to
go
to
explorer
or
nft
explorer,
not
just
like
a
block
explorer
but
yeah.
So
you
know
definitely
hit
up
this
library
and
start
poking
around.
G
If
you
are
a
dyna
developer
and
you're,
you
got
a
postgres
database.
Definitely
anxious
to
hear
feedback
from
you
know
what
we
can
do
to
make
it
better.
Maybe
if
there's
some
extra
helper
queries
or
scenarios
that
we
can
put
together
but
yeah.
G
All
right,
so,
let's
talk
wallets
now
in
cardona
sharp.
There
is
a
wallet
library
and
this
wall.
Library
really
has
two
parts
part
one
would
be
wallet
management.
Part
two
is
building
transactions,
so
we
have
part
one
done
and
what
we
can
do
with
that
is.
G
We
can
generate
mnemonics,
we
can
create
restore
wallets,
so
you
know
you
can
take
the
mnemonic
and
create
a
new
wallet
or
you
can
take
an
existing
wallet
and
feed
it
in
and
you
know,
load
your
existing
wallet
and
we
can
also
generate
the
addresses
or
the
for
those
wallets
all
right.
So,
let's
look
at
an
example.
G
Now
I'm
going
to
just
give
a
high
level
overview
what's
going
on
here.
So
in
the
first
part,
essentially,
I'm
just
generating
a
24
or
a
mnemonic.
You
can
see
the
number
24
that
just
denotes
the
number
of
words
that
I
want
in
the
second
part,
I'm
getting
my
root
key,
which
is
the
basis
of
the
wallet,
and
I
can
generate
all
my
private
and
public
keys.
G
Basically,
from
that
root
key
in
the
second
part
or
I'm
sorry,
the
third
part
you
can
see
I'm
generating
my
payment,
private
and
public
key
and
the
fourth
part
is
my
staking
private
public
key
now
with
those
two
pieces,
I
can
then,
in
the
very
last
step,
create
my
address
now.
This
is
known
as
a
delegation
address
right,
so
we
all
know
that
if
I
accept
ada,
if
I'm
staked
to
a
pool
that
ada
will
automatically
get
staked
and
that's
what
this
address
that's
being
generated,
you
know
is
for
so
yeah.
G
G
All
right,
so,
let's
talk
next
steps,
so
we
have
ef
core
reading
from
the
database.
We
have
wallet
management,
so
the
next
pieces
are
very
related
to
the
previous
ones.
So
but
let's
start
off
with
building
and
signing
transactions.
So
remember
in
the
wallet
side
of
the
library
I
said
there
was
two
parts:
wallet,
management
and
well
building
and
signing
transactions,
so
we're
currently
working
on
that.
G
This
is
actually
what
we
are
actively
working
on
right
now.
This
is
definitely
another
beast
to
tackle,
but
we
have
some
really
good
examples
out
there
and
some
good
documentation
that
we
can
follow
and
we're
making
some
pretty
good
progress
and
definitely
seeing
a
light
at
the
end
of
the
tunnel.
For
this,
which
is
very
exciting-
and
the
second
thing
that
we
have
up
to
do
is
the
dapper
or
orm.
G
So
this
would
be
very
similar
to
the
ifcor
orm,
but
this
is
just
another
popular
way
to
talk
to
a
database
and
net.
It's
a
little
more
finer
control,
you're,
going
to
see
a
lot
more
like
sql
s-type
queries,
not
the
more
functional
based
approach,
but
yeah.
So
this
is
what
we're
doing.
Next,.
G
Okay,
so
if
you
have
any
questions
on
how
to
get
started
or
you
want
to
just
track
progress
more
closely
or
you
want
to
be
involved
or
you
just
want
to
get
your
hands
dirty,
add
some
tests
test
out
the
code
you
know
whatever
it
is.
Please
do
not
hesitate
to
reach
out
to
me.
G
I
try
my
best
to
make
time
to
talk
to
everybody.
So
far,
I'm
doing
pretty
good,
but
yeah.
Please
reach
out,
ask
how
you
get
started.
You
know,
even
if
you
just
join
the
discord
or
follow
us
on
twitter,
that's
a
good
way
to
follow
more
closely.
I
will
do
my
best,
especially
on
the
discord
to
post
updates
me
and
daniel.
The
other
developer
are
pretty
active
on
there,
so
even
if
you're
just
on
there-
and
you
want
to
chat
about
what's
going
on-
please
do
so.
G
We
are
always
happy
to
help
talk.
You
know,
even
if
you
have
ideas
or
things
that
we
could
potentially
do
with
the
library
you
know
come
over
share
them.
You
know
get
to
know
us.
We're
definitely
happy
to
answer
any
questions
but
yeah.
Thank
you
for
watching
this
update
and
we're
very
excited
to
see
what
we
can
get
going
in
the
near
future.
So
thank
you.
B
Wow,
that's
so
exciting.
It
was
nice,
it's
nice
to
see
how
it's
working.
Also,
this
feel
is
present.
It's
really
nice
and
I
don't
know
it's
like
like
listening
to
these
three
videos
in
a
row.
You
can
really
see
the
you
know.
You
see
the
chain
right.
You
can
really
see
those
who
people
like
building
the
the
development
infrastructure
right,
bringing
bringing
sharp
developers
into
ecosystem
building
bridges.
B
Then
you
have
you,
have
a
the
liquid
team
right
and
showing
like
adapt
and
smart
contract
system
right
that
could
potentially
utilize
those.
You
know
those
libraries
and
and
if
there's
developers
and
then
you
have
and
and
and
and
then
you
have
the
team
and
previous
team
who
are
who
are
doing
and
the
lovers
academy
who
are
giving
people
like
the
information,
access,
information
and
and
tutoring,
and
maybe
even
a
bit
of
motivation
to
get
started
learning
how
to
use
all
these
tools.
B
So
it's
like
a
beautiful,
a
beautiful
chain
and
it's
beautiful
to
see
that
all
these
people
are
part
of
the
cohort
and
they
keep
inspiring
each
other
right
and
communicating
and
interacting.
And
it's
really
really
great.
And
I
can't
can't
wait
for
basically
adding
more
and
more
people
to
our
to
our
cohorts
and.
B
So
speaking,
of
which
I
think
this
is
a
good
good,
we
reached
an
important
milestone.
I
think
it
was
yesterday
and
we
hit
25,
that's
right,
a
quarter
of
a
100
000,
25,
000
members
and,
of
course,
we're,
and
we
keep
on
keep
on
growing,
and
this
isn't.
This
is
a
once
again
an
incredible
milestone
and
just
shows
the
the
momentum
of
consistency
in
which
we
progress
and
it
kind
of
opens
our
eyes
right.
We're
kind
of
like.
Can
we
get
to
50
000.?
Maybe
we
can
get
to
a
hundred
thousand.
B
You
know
what
is
this
that
what
does
even
that,
that
scale
of
people
mean
you
know
this
is
we're
literally
in
our
town
right,
we're
not
even
like
we
were
we
used
to
be
a
a
tribe
than
a
village,
then
a
small
town
now
we're
like
a
kind
of
a
pretty
nice
town.
B
We
don't
know
we're
going
to
learn
together,
and
I
just
want
to
take
this
moment
to
to
congratulate
us
for
the
environment
that
we
created
that
attracted
so
many
people
to
be
to
say
they
want
to
be
active,
they
want
to
be
updated
and
they
want
to
contribute.
So
this
is
great
all
right.
So
some
here's
some
less
great
news.
B
Okay,
so
we
were
really
expecting
to
launch
and
fund
for
this
week
and,
unfortunately,
some
forces
outside
of
our
outside
of
a
controlled
intervene,
mainly
the
government
of
argentina,
took
our
entire
mobile
dev
team
on
a
forced
vacation
in
a
really
critical
time,
and
there
was
like
I
mean
I
don't
go
into
the
details.
Okay,
but
there
was
human
shenanigans
because
of
this
dependency,
we
need
to
postpone
by
a
week
we're
right
across
to
launching
everything
is
looking
pretty
good.
We
had
a
dry
run
that
was
pretty
successful
with
the
community.
B
B
We
will
communicate
with
you
about
all
about
what's
needed,
given
that
this
would
be
successful,
and
I
think
it's
highly
likely
to
be
so
and
the
next
day
we'll
do
a
final
final
qa
check,
making
sure
everything
is
is
okay,
and
if
that
and
if
that's
good
to
go,
then
we'll
be
happy
to
announce
that
that,
on
thursday
on
the
third
we
will
finally
launch
fund
four
again,
things
can
fail,
things
can
unexpected
things
can
happen,
but
I
feel
pretty
optimistic.
B
I
really
appreciate
every
everybody's
patience
and
resilience
and
it's
gonna
happen.
It's
gonna
happen,
it's
gonna
be
great.
Fun,
four
will
be
a
very
fun
fun
fun,
not
only
that,
but
we're
gonna
have
some
new
integrations,
so
sometimes
delays
are
have
a
positive
effect.
One
of
the
impact
for
the
delay
is
that
we
can
now
confirm
that
we're
gonna
have
a
support
for
for
those
those
of
you
using
heroin
mobile
and
want
to
register.
So
that
would
be
supported
and
another
issue
we
had
is
that
for
hardware
wallets
we're
supporting
some
hardware
wallets.
B
So
for
those
of
you
who
are
spos,
who
wants
to
use
your
pledge
and
convert
that
into
voting
power
and
using
your
hardware
wallet,
you
can
use
it
with
the
cli
interface,
and
I
want
to
thank
martin
lang
for
exposing
that
library
and
giving
instructions
like
in
the
link
provided
just
the
only
word
of
caution,
because
registration
haven't
actually
started.
So
if
you're
gonna
play
with
the
tool
and
start
and
try
to
register
now,
your
registration
will
not
be
valid.
B
You
will
need
to
wait
for
an
official
announcement
that
a
registration
starts
and
only
then
you
can
register
don't.
Okay,
so
just
like,
don't
you
know,
be
paid.
You've
been
patient
so
long.
It's
been
a
few
more
days.
B
To
participate
in
our
process,
and
that's
great
so
and
finally,
quick
updates.
We
are
almost
done,
if
not
done,
with
the
deadline
for
the
last
stage
of
in
the
of
the
of
innovation
for
fund
five,
which
is
the
review
quality
analysis
phase.
Okay,
in
this
phase,
we
had
veteran
community
advisors,
were
looking
all
all
on
assessments
and
that
were
made
by
the
community
advisors
and
making
sure
there
are
of
sufficient
quality.
B
Okay,
like
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
some
assessments,
were
flagged
by
proposers
or
flagged
by
other
other
community
advisors
being
sub-standard.
So
we're
you
know
making
sure
that
everybody
get
a
fair,
fair
review
as
much
as
we
can
and
we
can
see.
There's
been
considerable
amount
of
efforts,
38
veteran
community
advisors
so
far
and
I
think
there's
actually
the
number
is
a
bit
higher
submitted
their
work.
B
So
that's
like
that's
that's
great,
and
we
really
appreciate
all
your
hard
work
and
now
we
will
compile
and
aggregate
the
final
assessments
and
remove
this
top
standard
to
views
and
and
pretty
much
you
know.
All
the
proposals
are
gonna,
be
ready
for
fund
five
governance,
which
will
come
swiftly
after
fund
for
governance,
and
we
will
we
will
let
you
all
know
about
the
dates
and
as
soon
as
we
know
them
ourselves,
all
right.
B
So
that's
the
updates-
and
I
do
want
to
you
know
I
I
I'm
honored
to
invite
to
invite
and
utah
is
well
she's
she's,
an
expert
in
I
think
in
in
asian
methodologies,
she's
a
writer
she's,
an
expert
in
society,
and
maybe
many
more
things.
I
don't
even
know
and
she's
here
to
to
present
us
the
next
evolutionary
step
of
the
town
hall.
I'm
really
excited
about
that,
and
maybe
one
last
thing
so
she's
she
represents
a
governance
alive,
which
is
a
group
of
of
of
consultants.
B
That's
been
working
with
us
for
for
several
months
now,
it's
not
even
like,
maybe
six
months,
if
you
count
everything
as
we're
planning
this
mission,
okay
of
the
town
hall
from
this,
like
some
person
talking
to
you
and
you
listen
to
you
know
like
an
interactive
affair,
where
we
can
all
share
a
real
connection
and
I'm
so
happy.
We
got
to
this
moment
and
utah
welcome.
B
H
B
Yeah
I
hate
when
that
happens.
It's
like
our
voice.
B
Yeah,
do
you
want
to
take
a
moment
to
try
to
you
know,
maybe
like
reset
your
audio
settings
or
something
like
that,
because
I
know
when
it
happens
to
me.
I
I
completely
freak
out
when
I
hear
my
own
voice.
H
Difficult
it
says
you
should
be
muted,
okay,
no,
not
really
better.
Well,
I
I
just
try
and
I
try
to
ignore,
so
I
really
want
to
invite
you
to
improve
the
town
hall
experience
and.
H
Because
we
think
the
tunnel
experience
is
just
one
way
of
how
things
are
happening
or
can
happen
in
the
town
hall,
but
there
are
also
other
ways
what
could
be
possible
and
we
heard
so
many
great
experiences
from
the
community
like
loveless,
liquid
kadamshav
and
all
of
those,
and
we
we
always
are.
I
think,
all
of
us
really
interested
to
hear
what's
going
on
there
and
also
wonder
what
kind
of
help
then
they
need,
or
also
what.
H
How
good
is
my
idea.
Am
I
ready
for
presenting
it
here
in
the
town
hall
or
maybe
I
need
some
more
help,
so
we
really
would
like
to
offer
an
idea
how
you
can
get
that
experience
out
of
the
town
hall
before
I
get
into
that.
What
I
first
wouldn't
would
like
to
do
is
to
look
at
what
is
the
actual
experience
in
the
town
hall
at
least
kind
of
the
way
I
see
it,
and
this
is
more
or
less
what
what
I
think
is
happening.
So
it's
a
one-way,
one-way
kind
of
presentation.
H
So
there
are
people
on
the
screen
and
sharing
what
great
stuff
they
have
developed
and
all
of
us
we
are
sitting
in
the
auditorium,
and
maybe
we
are
whispering
to
each
other
by
using
the
chat
or
something,
but
we
are
not
really
contributing.
We
are
not
really
part
of
it.
Well,
we
become
part
of
it
once
we
are
invited
on
stage
like
lucky
me,
I
am
today,
but
what
about?
If
maybe
we
can
also
learn
what
other
conferences
have
learned?
H
What
can
be
done,
and
I
want
to
share
that
story
from
a
guy
called
harrison
owen,
so
harrison
owen
has
put
together
conferences
like
these,
like
what
you
see
on
that
picture.
Quite
a
lot
of
them
so
has
put
a
great
program
together.
Invited
inspiring
speakers
had
put
a
lot
of
effort
into
it,
definitely
with
a
team
and
then
regularly
when
he
asked
after
the
conference.
H
Can
you
think
of
what
the
highlight
was,
if
you
think,
maybe
of
your
own
conference
experience,
actually
what
people
regularly
were
saying
it's
the
coffee
break
so
now
harrison
owen
has
put
so
much
work
into
putting
that
program
together,
but
then
people
said
well,
what's
actually
best
is
the
coffee
break
and
well
maybe
the
coffee
was
extra
good,
always
or
saw
the
snacks
or
whatever,
but
actually
that's
not
the
point.
That's
not
what
people
really
liked
about
it.
H
It's
actually
something
else,
and
I
want
to
dive
into
what
is
that
something
else
that
makes
a
coffee
break
different
from
a
presentation
by
still
being
something
like
like
a
conference
and
maybe
before
I
forget
that
I
want
to
say
it
right
now.
So
whatever
I'm
sharing
with
you
now
what's
happening
in
a
coffee
break
is
what
harrison
owen
has
put
together
as
a
conference
format
after
he
has
kind
of
learned
that,
and
there
are
a
lot
of
other
people
doing
that
as
well.
H
Now,
let's
examine
what
hap,
what
happens
really
in
these
coffee
breaks,
so,
starting
with
like
in
a
coffee
break
what
we
do
is
we
just
talk
about
stuff?
That's
on
our
mind,
so
we
are
just
getting
together,
like
maybe
those
people
you
see
here
they
are
discussing
and
probably
they
they
discuss
what
they
just
heard,
but
maybe
not
maybe
somebody
sharing
something
from
work
or
something
completely
different.
H
Then
we
also
choose
any
kind
of
small
group,
so
you
don't
see
a
huge
audience
here.
You
see
well,
this
one
here
is
actually
the
probably
the
biggest
audience
that's
available,
but
not
like
you
have
seen
in
that
other
huge
room.
So
it's
always
kind
of
a
small
group
thing,
a
more
intimate
thing
that's
going
on.
Then
people
choose
if
they
want
to
talk
or
if
they
want
to
listen.
Sometimes
it's
also
kind
of
listening
and
and
thinking.
Oh,
is
this
really
relevant
for
me?
Am
I
interested
in
that,
like
that?
H
Guy
here
looks
a
bit
to
me
like
that
so
kind
of
observing
what
what
they
are
discussing
and
still
wondering.
Am
I
interested
in
that
or
maybe
I'm
going
elsewhere-
and
this
is
another
thing
about
kind
of
the
well
yeah
going
elsewhere-
has
actually
various
very
variants
to
it.
So
one
is
in
any
kind
of
such
such
group.
In
a
coffee
break,
we
start
and
stop
talking
on
a
subject
on
our
own
convenience.
So
what
does
it
mean?
H
H
Well,
no,
it's
just
emerging
it's
happening,
so
we
are
talking
whatever
is
on
our
mind
and
actually,
if
I
am,
for
example,
that
guy
here
and
I'm
not
interested
anymore
in
what's
going
on
here
or
where
the
topic
has
shifted,
or
that
we
still
talk
about
that
stuff,
I'm
walking
over
somewhere
else,
whatever
interests
me
more
so
this
is
also
a
typical
thing.
That's
happening
in
coffee
breaks,
if
there's
a
little
bit
more
to
that,
so
we
decide
on
changing
conversations,
but
also
what
we
do
in
a
coffee
break.
H
Well,
me
might
even
choose
not
to
talk
to
anyone.
So
speaking
of
myself
well
at
the
moment,
I'm
on
stage
and
I'm
often
on
stage
I'm
a
speaker
as
well.
So
as
a
store
said.
However,
I'm
not
always
happy
speaking
and
I'm
also
going
to
conferences
where
very
often
you
will
see
me
like
here
sitting
all
by
myself
or
even
outside
there,
because
I
just
maybe
I
want
to
contemplate
on
what's
going
on
or
I
just
want
to
be
by
myself
and
think.
H
H
All
of
that
at
once,
and
just
by
invitation
only
and
now
lucky
me.
I
remember
that
I
wanted
to
say
that
so
all
of
these
principles,
if
you
will
have
been
taken
by
that
guy-
I
mentioned
before
harrison
owen
and
he
created
a
conference
format
out
of
that.
So
there
are
actually
conferences
happening
nowadays
that
use
those
principles
only
so
there
is
no
predefined
program.
H
The
program
or
the
agenda
is
emerging
by
the
people
who
are
there
and
who
are
interested
in
something
really
specific
in
a
special
topic,
and
so
what
I
want
to
do
here
and
which
is
well
I'm
representing
right
now.
I
and
all
my
colleagues
and
friends
from
governance
alive
is,
I
want
to
share
what's
our
hypothesis
and
also
what's
our
invitation,
and
our
hypothesis
is
if
we
change
parts
of
the
town
hall,
we
all
know
there's
stuff
in
the
town
hall.
We
all
love
and
we
want
to
keep
that
definitely.
H
But
if
we
change
parts
of
the
town
hall
to
a
more
extended
coffee
break
format
which
is
actually
known
as
open
space
technology,
if
you
have
wondered
about
that,
so
these
conferences
being
run
in
the
coffee
break
style,
they're
called
open
space
technology,
then
we
can
have
a
more
meaningful
participation
by
seeking
the
information
we
need
most
of
at
the
time,
and
so
therefore
we
really
would
like
to
invite
you,
after
the
next
town
hall.
This
is
next
week
june
2nd
to
participate
in
such
an
open
space.
H
Such
a
coffee
break
format
to
find
out
if
it
really
supports
us
in
having
such
a
dialogue,
collaboration
and
and
also
does
it,
help
us
strengthening
our
trust
in
networks.
So
the
the
thing
is
this
could
be
something
for
you
if
you
want
to
test
your
idea,
if
you
have
a
burning
question
so
often
what's
also
happening.
If
you
remember
what's
what's
going
on
at
coffee
breaks,
the
same
is
true
for
open
space.
You
can
go
there
with
the
question.
You
don't
have
an
answer
to
and
you
can
use
the
community
to
learn
from
them.
H
I
believe
they
are
looking
for
testers
and
maybe
also
for
people
programming.
All
of
that
you
can
find
your
connections,
the
thing
that
you
need,
the
most
the
thing
that
you
want
to
offer
in
this
format:
format
of
open
space
or
extended
coffee
break
format.
If
you
will
and
yeah,
we
really
hope
you
will
be
there
next
week
june,
2nd
after
the
town
hall,
we
will
provide
the
access
to
that
open
space
during
the
town
hall,
so
you
should
be
there
in
order
to
get
in
and
everything
else.
H
H
B
I
I
yeah
I
I
I
think
you
you
did
a
wonderful
job,
presenting
this
the
concept,
I
think
we're
all
really
energized
and,
and
I'm
sure,
we're
gonna
have
a
lot
of
people
that
want
to
take
part
in
this
experience
next
week
and
and
really
really
thank
you
for
coming
and
and
sharing
a
beautiful
invitation.
B
The
you
know
all
the
people
upstairs
like
our
our
our
town,
town
hall,
admins,
I
think
kai
is
around.
I
would
love
to
invite
him
to
share
with
his
experience
from
open
space
if
it's,
if
it's
possible,
and
while
we
try
to
do
that-
and
you
know
I
just
wanna-
you
know
just
like-
maybe
a
bit
of
a
summary
from
my
like
my
own
perspective.
You
know
why
why
it's
so
important,
you
know
why
are
we
taking
so
much
time
and
energy
to
to
make
this
happen?
B
B
This
is
a
global
community
with
many
different
people
that
have
many
different
perspectives
and
different
interests
and
different
incentives,
and
the
way
it's
going
to
work
is
by
learning
how
to
communicate
and
interact
with
each
other
and
listening
to
each
other
and
also
learning
how
to
speak
and
voice
voice
ourselves
and
here's
kyle
kind
of
jumped
for
a
second
okay.
When,
when
carol
shows
up.
B
B
This
is
another
grand
experiment,
we're
launching
you
know
and
we
don't
know
how
it's
going
to
end.
It's
all
up
to
you
and
because
you're
going
to
be
the
you're
going
to
create
it.
So
so
I
don't
know
where
kyle
is.
But
this
is
my
summary.
Maybe
I'll
show
up
at
some
point
well
you're
here
in
the
chat,
but
are
you?
Can
you
be
here
in
a
little
box
in
the
video
and
like
talking?
B
Well,
we
will
never
mind
so
next
week,
just
just
be
come
to
the
town
hall
reserve.
Some
time
a
bit
after
this-
oh
god,
it's
here,
kyle.
A
Hey,
oh
excellent,
okay,
I
clicked
the
button
a
few
times,
sorry
guys
so
yeah
just
you
know.
I
wanted
to
give
you
my
experience
with
the
open
spaces.
I've
been
kind
of
working
with
the
catalyst
cohort,
and
you
know
one
of
the
things
that
I've
experienced
being
the
communities
we're
growing
so
fast
and
I'm
a
huge
proponent
of
solving
problems.
And
so
you
know
we
walk
into
this
environment.
We
we
defined
a
pretty.
A
You
know,
definitive
problem
for
the
most
part
and
we
walk
into
a
group
not
really
any
idea
we're
going
to
solve
it
and
came
out
with
actual
solution
from
my
period.
My
greatest
colleagues
in
this
space
are
individuals
who
I've
had
the
opportunity
to
to
work
in
the
collab
environment,
with
like
whether
it
be
a
stateful
operator
group
or
a
small,
closed
group
where
you've
got
some
problems
to
solve
for
the
ecosystem
and
engaging
those
individuals.
A
They've
become
some
of
actually
probably
my
best
friends
on
the
planet
today,
and
so
if
we
can
foster
that
type
of
environment
within
catalyst
where
we
have
a
space
where
we
can
come
and
collaborate,
you
guys
can
start
to
make
new
friends
and
then
we
can
understand
each
other's
strengths
and
weaknesses
and
when
you
pair
together
with
individuals,
it's
what's
called
the
synergy
right
now
we're
moving
forward.
So
I
was
really
excited
with
what
we
saw
and
dora's
right.
It's
one
big
experiment,
but
I
think
we
can
learn
a
lot
from
it.
A
So
I'm
very
grateful
to
see
this
happen.
B
B
So
all
right,
so
one
more
so
one
more
big
topic
to
cover.
Oh
yeah,
we
have
yeah,
so
catalyst
team
is
growing
and
not
only
catalyst
team,
but
but
ihk
itself
is
growing.
We
are
recruiting
lots
of
people,
so
we
so
sobeki
head
of
talent,
acquisition
g
and
made
us
a
bit
a
short
video
talking
about
it
and
I'm
gonna
show
it.
B
A
Hello:
everyone,
my
name,
is
becky
jones
and
I
head
up
the
talent
acquisition
team
here
at
iohk.
It's
great
to
see
you
all
here
and
thank
you
very
much
for
your
time.
A
A
We
are
hiring
quite
significantly
this
year
and
we
have
many
many
available
positions
across
all
of
our
different
business
areas
so
from
products
to
commercial
to
professional
services
through
to
engineering
and
community
and
everything
in
between,
if
you're
interested
in
looking
and
applying
for
any
of
our
roles
or
just
having
a
browse
and
seeing
what
we're
looking
for
and
you
can
go
to
our
queries
page
on
our
website,
so
iohk
dot,
io
forward,
slash
careers.
A
Everything
that
is
live
is
currently
advertised
there.
I
just
specifically
for
the
purpose
of
this
school,
wanted
to
introduce
you
to
a
role
that
we
are
actively
hiring
for.
That
might
be
an
interest
to
some
of
you
in
this
in
this
group,
so
we
are
actually
looking
right
now
for
a
community
manager,
and
this
community
manager,
at
least
initially,
will
spend
a
lot
of
time
working
with
the
catalyst
community.
A
The
job
description
and
all
of
the
details
are
online.
If
you
want
to
know
more,
feel
free
to
obviously
apply
or
reach
out
directly
to
me-
and
I
can
give
you
some
further
information,
but
obviously
being
a
catalyst
call,
we
thought
would
be
a
good
way
to
introduce
this
role
to
everybody.
A
We
do
have,
as
I
said,
many
other
positions
with
within
engineering,
specifically
for
haskell,
rust
and
scala
engineers.
Software
test
engineers,
service,
reliability.
So
there's
anything
that
takes
your
fancy.
Please
do
go
to
the
website
and
take
a
look
also.
We
are
very
interested
if
anybody
wants
to
just
connect
with
us
to
learn
more
about
the
company
and
how
we
work,
you
can
find
me
on
linkedin.
A
My
name
is
becky
jones.
You
can
also
find
me
on
the
team
page
on
the
ihk
website.
So
if
you're
keen
to
connect,
do,
let
me
know
and
I'd
be
happy
to
talk
to
you
in
more
detail.
Okay,
thank
you
very
much.
Everyone
and
any
questions.
Please
direct
them
to
me.
Take
care,
hey.
B
Thanks,
thank
you
becky,
so
yeah,
so
so
community
manager
for
sure.
There's
a
few
more
I
mean
I
mean
we're
gonna,
I'm
gonna
bombard
you
in
the
next
few
weeks,
with
with
more
and
more
open,
open
positions
for
catalyst
because
we
are,
we
are.
We
are
growing.
Okay,
the
like
the
achievement.
B
So
far,
you
know
our
mean
and
the
traction
we're
getting
also
means
we're
getting
more
resources
and
we
can
level
up
like
across
the
board,
and
so
we
talked
about
the
community
manager
role
and
we're
also
hiring
a
rust
engineer
and
for
for
catalyst
and
a
qa
engineer
and
we're
buffing
up
that
and
something
that's
close
to
my
heart,
a
technical
product
manager
that
actually
you
know,
will
be
working
directly
and
closely
with
me
as
we
go
ahead
and
decentralize
our
system
yay,
and
so
that
would
be,
you
know,
really
working
on
the
working
with
shelley
and
the
shelly
node,
very
tech,
technical,
someone,
that's
like
engineering
engineer
background,
maybe
like
good
with
math
good
with
formal
definitions,
can
understand,
like
this
kind
of
this
kind
of
like
formal
documentation
and
and
yeah.
B
So
if
you
feel
you
feel
you
got
it
just
go
to
our
workable
page
and
and
submit
I'm
I'm
really
looking
forward.
It
would
be
amazing
if
some
really
motivated
people
from
the
community
could
take
some
of
these
roles.
That
would
be
like
great
and
so
yeah.
So
that's
about
it
for
today,
in
terms
of
like
presentations
and
as
usual,
there's
like
999
ways
to
join
catalyst
from
many
different
perspectives
and
angles,
and.
B
You
could
be
stuck
there
longer
than
you
imagined
and
it
might
inspire
you
so
good
luck
and
yeah
and
as
usual,
oh
maybe
we
should
take.
First
of
all,
we
have
we
have
these
poles
and
looking
at
the
town
halls
that
we
didn't
cover,
and
I
wanted
to
just
to
share
the
findings.
So
I
see
we
asked,
like
is
the
town
hall
a
great
way
to
build
relationships?
B
Only
point
five
percent
strongly
agree
right
and
like
about
the
third
and
neutral
around
the
third
degree
and
like
around
twelve
percent
like
disagree
or
strongly
disagree.
So
definitely,
and
we
can
level
this
up
and
I
can
see
another
poll
was
the
town
hall
is
a
great
way
to
build
allies
and
we
have
20
strongly
agree,
31,
agree
and
then.
B
B
Almost
54
strongly
agree,
which
is
great
26
percent,
agree
and
20
neutral.
Okay,
so
I
think
across
all
these
four
important
questions,
we
want
more
okay.
We
really
want
this.
This
experience
to
be
to
be
better,
I
mean
we
it's
nice.
You
know
we
started
this.
We
had
kind
of
kept
the
same
format
like
since
fun
too
until
now
and
and
like
time
to
level
up
like
time.
Time
tend
to
go
to
the
next
level,
all
right,
so
some
questions.
B
Vladimir
p
is
asking
hi
door
from
your
own
unique
vantage
point:
what
kind
of
threats
the
project
catalyst
are
attracting
your
attention
nowadays
anything
unexpected,
also
any
unexpected
positive,
positive
developments
that
you
didn't
envisage
in
visage
at
the
at
the
outset.
B
Thanks
for
your
openness,
okay,
so
two
questions,
threats
of
project
catalyst
are
attracting
nowadays
and.
B
B
At
the
same
time,
I
think
it's
always
a
threat,
and
you
know
and
we're
looking
to
we're,
looking
to
break
through
okay
right
right,
we're
looking
to
not
just
not
just,
although
it's
incredible
not
just
to
be
in
charge
of
the
cardinal
treasury,
but
we
want
to
add
more
more
governance,
more
system
for
consent
and
around
like
stuff,
like
fees
stuff,
like
important
decisions
like
integrating
the
cip
process
and
gradual
decentralization
to
the
entire
community,
but
also
lots
of
technological
developments,
and
I
think
the
biggest
threat.
B
Is
that
we'll
try
to
be
everything
for
everyone?
And
you
know
we
don't
manage
to
excel
in
anything
in
particular,
so
I
think
that's
like
as
a
product
manager.
This
is
something
I
I
kind
of
keep
concerned
on
and,
and
you
know
so,
I
really
try
to
really
tries
to
focus
on
this,
the
roi
okay,
what
what
the
outcomes
that
we're
getting?
And
that
is
a
key
to
our
legitimacy
as
a
first
focus,
and
we
I
want
to
kind
of
maintain
it
as
long
as
we
can
and
let's
see
what
other,
what
other
threats.
B
H
A
B
Of
threats,
I
think
that
I
think
that
you
know,
I
think
the
only
thing
I'm
feel
threatened
by
is
that,
like
I
really
want
us
to
move,
move
in
launch
fund
four
already
find
four
in
front
five
and
start
one
six
and
get
to
that.
You
know
continue
the
continued,
the
doubling
of
sense,
I
think
we're
on
track,
and
I
think
all
these
threats
are.
B
You
know
the
known
threats
where
we
have
the
safety
measures
to
deal
with
them:
the
unknown
threats.
We
don't
know
what
they
are,
so
we're
just
going
to
find
out
together
so
we'll
see,
then
unexpected
positive
developments.
Yeah
I
mean
any,
I
mean
yeah.
I
think
I
think
the
rise
of
community
advisors.
B
I
did
not
expect
that
happening,
and
it's
amazing.
I
mean
that's
what
it's
like,
like:
the
community
advisors,
the
veteran
community
advisors,
the
the
autonomous
development
of
processes
that
are
actually
sensible
from
this
community,
the
ability
of
this
community
to
self-regulate-
and
that's
that's
like
for
me-
that's
like
an
unexpected
positive
development
and
I
think
the.
B
I
think
we're
starting
to
start
to
see
the
emergence
of
the
cohorts
and
the
force,
so
I'm
looking
for,
like
I
think
I
see
the
potential
there
right.
So,
let's
see
if
it's
like
it
goes
on
and
yeah.
I
think
there's
like
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
those.
It's
just
for
me.
It's
like
10
p.m.
Right
now,
I'm
retired,
okay,
but
I
I'll
I'll
leave
it
to
that
jeffrey
is
asking
any
updates
on
voting
for
fund
four
fund
five.
B
While
I
share
the
slide,
if
everything
goes
right
next
week,
registration
for
fun,
four
will
start.
We
will
have
a
short
registration
period
short
voting
period,
then
immediately
we're
gonna,
launch,
fund
five
registration
and
voting.
B
Then
we're
gonna
launch
fund
six
and
then-
and
you
know,
we'll-
have
like
all
these
new
challenges-
the
community
votes
again
what
what
what
new
challenges
the
community
going
to
to
vote
in
nobody
knows
I
want
to
know
okay
and
then
tevo
is
asking
how
long
we
are
going
to
remain
as
a
testing
governance.
B
So
it's
going
to
be
as
long
as
it's
going
to
take
like
as
long
as
required
like.
I
think
that
I
think
nobody
can
it's
it's
possible
time
exactly.
I
think
that
what
we're
seeing
right,
if
I
don't
know
if
you
notice
the
trend
of
like
the
funds
doubling
in
size
every
time
like
you
know,
every
every
couple
of
months,
every
several
months,
you
know
the
power,
the
the
influence
power
of
the
communities
is
doubled,
right
and
so
far
so
good.
B
So
I
think
it's
just
gonna
it's
gonna
double
and
double
and
double
and
double
until
we
get
to
capacity
and
then
you
know
we
will
look
back
and-
and
I
think
everybody
will
know-
okay,
I
will
legit
you
know
and
and-
and
I
think
I
hope
we
kind
of
continue
the
the
testing
mindsets
forever.
B
I
think
you
know
the
the
the
also
the
the
scope
of
what
the
community
is
going
to
govern
is
going
to
increase
and
definitely
in
in
this
year
in
2021,
we're
going
to
launch
we're
now
working
on
some
like
really
exciting
pilot
for
the
community
to
govern
more
more
things,
and
I
think
if
we
feel
if
we
feel
that
you
know
we
generate
a
field
of
good
experience,
we're
making
effective
decisions.
B
We're
making
smart
decisions
and
we're
and
the
power
is
decentralized,
and
it's
not
ending
up
controlled
by
a
few
individuals,
but
there's
actually
lots
of
different
actors
and
groups
that
are
involved
in
the
governance.
B
Then
you
know
just
going
to
continue
on
our
journey,
so
hope
that
helps
and
is
project
qatar
is
going
to
be
used
for
voting
for
network
parameters.
Yeah
yeah.
We
will,
I
mean
in
some
way.
Yes,
it's
there
will
be.
You
know
we,
you
know,
watch
the
child's
videos,
you
know,
there's
gonna
be.
We
are
wanting
to
pilot
a
bicameral
model
model
and
where
there
will
be
like
a
vote
in
catalyst.
B
Gonna
also
be
like
an
on
chain
on
shelley
votes
and
kind
of
like
two
houses
and
the
cattle
is
part
of
it.
We're
gonna
pilot
it,
and
so
I
we're
still
hashing
out
the
details,
but
once
we
get
it
cleared
up,
I
will
be
there
like.
You
know
we
will
all
you
will
all
know
about
it.
B
I
mean
yeah.
Imagine
if
imagine,
if
all
the
attraction
we
got
so
far
was
like
not
even
we
haven't
even
talked
in
english
and
we're
just
scraping
the
bottom
of
the
barrel
and
yeah.
Maybe
you
know,
maybe
we
should
need
to
have
a
town
hall
in
chinese
definitely
in
japanese
and
it
would
be
really
really
great.
B
Dore
is
this
iog
community
manager,
your
current
job,
and
if
it
is
where
the
heck
are
you
going?
So
no,
my
role
is
a
product
manager,
governance
and
we
have
danny
who's,
doing
the
role
of
community
manager
and
now
we're
recruiting
another
person
to
work
together
with
danny,
and
you
know,
even
even
upgrade
our
our
community
management
capacity.
G
B
Our
two
proposals
for
fund
foreign
fund
five-
we
collaborated
with
york
university
students
to
build
prototype
as
a
capstone
project,
they've
done
it
and
we
have
prototyped
and
a
demo
of
it.
Can
we
present
at
the
next
community
hall
community
community
town
hall?
D
B
Of
all,
there
will
always
be
time
in
this
town
hall
for
people
to
present
work.
That
is
done,
so
I
just
wanna
bring
it
out
there.
Okay.
So
if
you
did
work,
it's
done,
you
know
you
have
like
a
tangible
thing
to
show
and
I'm
gonna
do
everything
I
can
to
give
you
a
stage
just
reach
out
and
and
we
will
do
it-
okay,
it's
not
you
know
it's
not
just
like
not
not
just
if
you
got
funded.
B
So
I
tell
you
what
we're
gonna
do
so
we're
going
to
accommodate
very
specific
edge
cases
like
if,
if
you
want
to
update
the
link
for
example,
then
we
will
allow
it
and
you
know
so,
if
you
want
to
add
like
something
like
a
link.
Oh,
this
is
done.
Link
then
we'll
allow
it
and
you
can
contact
marek
on
telegram
on
dm
or
through
id
scale,
find
marek,
and
maybe
someone
can
share
the
contact
details
of
the
chat
and
we'll
do
the
best
to
accommodate.
B
Nick
serge,
I
don't
even
try
nick
nick
is
asking
last
town
hall.
There
was
a
question
to
do
every
13
weeks,
a
round
of
proposals
instead
of
12
weeks,
any
decision
yet
and
if
so,
is
there
a
scheme
available
already
for
this
year
in
case
of
holidays
planning,
no
decision,
yet
it's
probably
gonna
be
the
decision
and
definitely
I'll
present
the
scheme
and
and
the
schedule
and
everything
and
but
right
now
the
focus
is
getting
fun
for
out
of
the
door.
B
B
Quasar
is
asking:
are
there
any
channel
partner
positions
open,
I
don't
know
you
can
look
at
workable
and
see,
and
quasar
is
asking
if
cardano
is
looking
to
create
a
new
financial
and
social
operating
system,
why
isn't
iohk
hiring
people
in
the
social
science
and
science
space?
So
how?
Why
do
you
assume
that
we're
not
hiring
people
in
the
social
design
space?
I
mean.
I
think
that
I
would
say:
governance
alive,
for
example,
that
we
we
hired
are
in
the
social,
social
science
space.
B
We
could
do
more
and
also
the
new
community
can
hire
people
in
the
social
science
space.
If
you
want
okay,
this
is,
it
is
yours,
it's
funds
are
yours
to
manage
and
decide
on.
B
Antoine
is
asking
hydor.
Do
you
know
when
fan
six
proposals
will
begin
and
can't
tell
you
a
date
we'll
just
do
a
we'll
just
define
fourth
and
five
and
then
immediately
from
six
and
I'm
going
to
in
the
next
week
or
two
I'm
actually
going
to
share
information
about
fund
six,
so
people
can
start
start
getting
the
juices
flowing
and
start
to
think
about
that.
B
Information-
okay,
all
right,
there's
only
two
more
questions
of
the
cyclone
through
them
and
hydor.
Can
you
put
us
in
contact
with
someone
from
the
state
pool
charities?
B
B
Okay,
I
I
I'm
actually
not
not
a
good
connection
point
for
stakeable
charities,
so
we're
just
gonna.
Try
again
anybody
in
the
community
and
maybe
in
the
chats,
can
can
be
a
connector
to
greg
w,
and
you
know
we'll
do
our
best
and.
B
Okay,
john,
is
asking:
is
there
any
update
on
the
cardano
token
registry
when
will
registering
be
obligatory
for
the
tokens
minted
on
candano,
and
I
do
not.
I
don't
know
and
good
question
to
ask
for
tomorrow's
crazy
360
event,
probably
someone
there
could
help
with
an
answer
and
also
it's
going
to
be
a
really
exciting
one.
I
hope
you
will
follow
it
and
I'm
going
to
talk
all
about
some.
B
F
B
Okay,
I
think
that's
it.
For
me
it
was
cool.
I
really
enjoyed
everybody's
questions
and
I
it
was
a
great
time
haul
and
you
know
next
week
we're
just
gonna
like
hang
out
in
a
room
together
and
just
talk.
It
wouldn't
be
that
fun.
There
will
be
some
some
some
presentations
of
course,
but
but
a
lot
of
me
getting
to
see
you
your
faces
for
the
first
time
and
it's
that's
and
that's
really
really
meaningful
for
me.