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From YouTube: IPFS Camp 2019 Sendoff - Juan Benet
Description
To close, Juan set us back out through the airlock back toward Earth with his IPFS Camp Sendoff, including a huge THANK YOU to everyone who made this camp possible - especially the tireless Protocol Labs Events Team who worked so hard to make this event a huge success! 🙏👏
Learn more about IPFS Camp: https://camp.ipfs.io/
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A
These
have
been
amazing
three
days,
I
think
it
feels
like
a
month.
At
this
point,
it's
been
amazing
to
get
to
know
everybody.
Some.
The
conversations
have
been
phenomenal.
I've
seen
people
learning
about
a
ton
of
stuff
coming
up
with
a
bunch
of
new
ideas,
making
poor
requests
finding
issues
do
writing
documentation,
learning
about
a
whole
bunch
of
concepts
that
they
didn't
know
anything
about
and
suddenly
leveling
up.
A
That's
been
really
amazing
but,
as
a
Vida
said,
I
think
the
most
important
thing
that's
gonna
come
out
of
this
is
all
of
the
relationships
that
you've
built
with
each
other
here
and
so
I'm
really
really
glad
that
that's
been
a
big
focus
of
the
of
these
three
days
and
that
we
have
formed
a
really
amazing
group.
So
thank
you
for
for
spending
your
precious
time
with
us
here.
A
So,
as
you
get
ready
to
leave
the
interplanetary
station
and
go
back
to
back
to
earth
where
we
need
to
build
a
lot
of
this
stuff,
I
want
to
remind
you
why
we're
here
so
this
is.
You
saw
this
slide
from
the
beads
talk.
When
we
opened
the
project
mission,
we
want
to
ensure
that
all
people
have
the
ability
to
efficiently
access
and
grow
humanity's
knowledge.
We
want
to
mindfully,
develop
new
technologies
that
preserve
and
promote
the
rights
of
individuals.
A
When
you
think
about
a
lot
of
the
things
that
we're
doing,
there
usually
are
very
tightly
connected
to
some
important
right
that
we
hold
dear,
that
we
want
to
make
sure,
is
preserved
for
everybody
around
the
world,
and
we
want
to
support
a
persistent
and
upgradable
open
Internet.
This
amazing
machine
that
we've
built
can
only
improve
and
get
better
as
we
if
we
can
operate
it
safely,
and
we
want
to
make
sure
that
all
information
on
the
Internet
can
be
uniquely
and
permanently
content
at
rest
on
a
distributed.
A
Peer-To-Peer
web
remember
that
computing
revolutions
have
transformed
our
species
dramatically.
Remember
that
there
are
big
changes
coming
ahead
in
the
coming
decades,
that
this
is
going
to
be
an
amazingly
interesting
century.
Some
of
the
dinner
conversations
yesterday,
especially
the
table
that
I
was
having
just
dived
into
a
whole
range
of
incredible
things
and
discussions
about
what
is
gonna
happen
over
the
next
two
four
six
decades.
A
So
it'll
be
an
amazing
roller
coaster
and
remember
that
the
Internet
today
is
a
a
huge
part
of
everybody's
lives
or
not
everybody,
but
a
huge
part
of
a
big
fraction
of
the
world's
lives
and
increasingly
so,
and
the
properties
of
the
tools
that
we
use
really
affect
and
impact
people's
access
to
knowledge,
people's
access
to
all
kinds
of
resources
and
their
future
lives.
So
an
extremely
high
leverage
thing
to
do
is
to
just
enable
more
people
to
use
the
internet
well
to
have.
A
You
know,
lower
latency
connections
to
have
higher
bandwidth
to
be
able
to
do
all
the
amazing,
powerful
things
that
you
can
do
and
to
do
so
safely.
We
have
a
lot
of
problems
to
solve,
but
remember
that
computer
revolutions
take
a
long
time
and
I
want
to
just
discuss
how
we
can
continue
the
camp
throughout
throughout
the
year,
and
you
know
before
next
year.
I
don't
know
when
we
might
do
another
one.
A
So
the
first
one
is
built
together
and
github
I
think
everybody
kind
of
knows
this
one.
But
a
lot
of
the
ideas
and
thoughts
that
have
been
percolating
here
need
to
find
their
way
back
to
github.
We've
done
a
lot
of
really
good
documentation
this
these
last
few
days,
but
if
we
don't
take
the
time
to
go
and
write
our
ideas
on
there,
then
our
broader
community
who's,
not
here,
can't
learn
from
what
you've
come
up
with,
can't
help
you
build
it
and
so
on.
A
A
The
other
thing
you
can
do
is
you
can
join
or
start
a
protic
school
chapter.
So
if
you
like
hanging
out
with
people
in
in
meatspace,
you
can
make
sure
that
that
can
happen
more
frequently
by
joining
a
for
a
school
chapter
or
starting
one,
and
you
can
run
a
workshop
I
think
now.
You've
either
run
one
or
you've
seen
one
run,
and
you
can
probably
take
it.
Take
a
stab
at
it
too,
and
a
bunch
of
these
are
recorded.
So
you
will
be
able
to
also
watch
how
presenters
go
in
and
run
their
workshops.
A
So,
if
you're
interested
in
running
a
workshop
now
you
can,
you
could
also
host
a
meet-up
and
just
gather
people
together.
So
you
don't
have
to
go
and
create
a
whole
workshop,
but
you
can
just
bring
the
community
together
near
you.
You
can
also
just
hang
out
and
discuss
things
on.
You
know
discuss
that
I,
professor
IO
or
I,
our
CEO
there's
a
whole
bunch
of
other
channels
where
we
all
get
together.
What
I'd
love
to
find
is
some
way
to
have
a
3d
world
where
we
can
all
hang
out.
A
So
you
know
whether
it's
a
game
or
something
like
that.
I,
don't
think
we've
like
minecraft
I,
don't
know
we
should
pick
like
one
game
and
we
should
all
play
it
and
I
think
it'll
be
pretty
awesome.
Minecraft
is
probably
like
a
good
one
because
it
has
cubes,
so
we
can
build
stuff,
so
yeah
I,
don't
know.
If
somebody
wants
to
set
up
minecraft
ffs
community,
minecraft
server,
I'd
be
down
hang
out.
A
The
next
thing
you
can
do
is
actually
have
fun
together.
I
think
this
is
a
really
important
part
of
all
open
source.
It's
a
lot
of
people
just
can
do
amazing
things
together
by
just
having
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
fun
together.
So
keep
doing
amazing,
awesome,
fun,
fun
things
and
build
more
awesome
stuff.
So,
as
we
go
into
you
know
the
next
year
take
all
of
the
amazing
knowledge
that
you've
put
together
and
then
you
know
continue
to
make
it
make
really
really
awesome
stuff.
A
I've
been
amazed
that
the
sets
of
things
that
I've
seen
here
in
the
last
few
days
there's
an
amazing
products
being
built,
some
really
cool
stuff
that
I
didn't
know
like
was
working
so
well
already,
so
try
each
other's
stuff
out
play
with
it,
give
each
other
feedback
and
build
on.
So
one
of
the
coolest
things
that
I've
observed
is
people
building
on
each
other
stuff.
So
you
know
people
building
on
textile
or
pinata
people
building
on
a
whole
bunch
of
the
libraries
that
people
have
been
building.
A
A
So
now
so
there's
a
bunch
of
problems
right,
but
now
with
deep
lives.
You
now
have
the
knowledge
in
your
brains
on
how
to
fix
all
the
things.
So
now
you
can
fly
the
helicopter
and
you
can
go
and
like
scale
a
THC
or
you
know,
do
whatever
and
and
help
solve
it
and
so
of
the
deep
types
generally
trend,
or
things
like
that
generally
translate
to
pull
requests
which
generally
translate
to
problem
solved.
A
And
it'll
be
awesome
to
see
more
a
bunch,
more
HEC
stickers,
so
I
found
a
few,
but
next
time
like
make
a
hexa-core,
that's
you
know
compliant
with
the
with
a
hex
protocol.
It's
it's
out
there
on
the
web.
You
can
find
it
and
just
bring
your
logo
thing
in
hex,
so
we
can
all
like
put
a
bunch
of
hexes.
A
You
know
so
I
think
it'd
be
really
awesome
and
thank
you
to
the
node
community
for
like
starting
that
it's
like
a
great
idea
and
so
yeah
all
of
these
things
you
can
do
to
you
know,
as
you
return
to
return
to
Earth
and
I,
wanted
to
give
a
last.
Thank
you.
So
the
amazing
thing
is
already
but
again,
if
you
drew
let's,
let's
thank
all
the
content,
producers
and
the
events
team.
It's
an
enormous
amount
of
work
to
make
such
a
special
three
days
happen.
So
really
a
huge
thank
you
to
that
entire
group.
A
And
and
I
also
want
to
thank
a
person
who
really
made
all
of
this
happen
in
by
instigating
it
by
making
sure
that
we
put
time
into
it
by
like
coordinating
a
lot
of
things
going
on
by
insisting
that
like
no
way
in
hell,
could
we
delay
this
and
we
had
to
happen
now
and
then
making
sure
that
all
of
the
content
occurred
and
planning
a
lot
of
that
stuff
and
so
on.
And
so
really.
A
This
has
been
an
enormous
labor
of
love
and
a
huge
huge
focus
and
all-consuming
focus
for
one
person,
at
least
for
many
people
actually,
but
but
but
especially
when
I
highlight
Devi,
who
has
spent
an
enormous
fraction
and
of
his
life
making
this
for
us
yeah.
Let's
all
just
give
him
a
standing
ovation.
A
And
I
want
to
thank
you,
because
this
event
would
not
have
been
at
all
what
it
would
be
if
you
weren't
here,
imagine
like
just
empty
space,
no,
but
really
the
the
conversations
and
things
you
brought
to
to
show
and
the
problems
you
want
to
solve
and
the
ideas
that
you
shared
and
the
things
you
came
up
with.
All
of
that
is
like
really
really
really
amazing
stuff.
So
thank
you
for
for
again
putting
away
everything
else.
A
A
And
I
want
to.
You
know,
also
thank
the
broader
community
that
couldn't
be
here
today.
So
this
is,
these
kinds
of
events
are
limited.
We
can't,
you
know,
put
four
thousand
people
in
one
room.
Nor
can
we
coordinate
that
kind
of
a
schedule
today.
So
a
huge
huge
should
thank
you
to
all
of
the
people
that
helped
make
all
of
this
possible.
Who
aren't
here
now
so
there's
an
inner
like
again
a
lot
of
people
who
couldn't
be
with
us
today
that
would
like
to
be
or
like
we'd
like
to
be
with
us.