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From YouTube: 📦Package Managers SIG Weekly Sync July 23, 2019
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A
Hello
and
welcome
to
the
package
managers
weekly
sync
for
the
23rd
of
july
2019,
we're
still
trying
to
work
out
exactly
what
this
meeting
is.
Gonna
look
like,
but
for
now
what
we'll
do
is
hand
over
to
Michelle
for
an
update
of
what
we've
been
working
on
on
the
package
managers
task
force
over
the
past
week.
Okay,.
B
Right
I
need
to
pull
up,
I'm
gonna
pull
up
a
thing,
so
we
can
see
a
visual
of
a
thing.
It's
gonna
be
great,
but
in
the
meantime,
if
you're
watching
this,
this
video-
and
you
want
to
know
things-
maybe
one
the
most
important
thing
is-
is
that
we
are
trying
to
improve
our
communications
outwards.
So,
let's
see
no
means
it's
coming.
Coming.
B
B
B
So
if
you
want
you
can
dive
in
and
learn
more
and
if
something
interests
you
there,
you
can
reach
out
to
us
and
we
would
love
to
hear
more,
but
so
this
past
week,
what
we've
been
doing
is
one
understanding
the
state
of
go
ipfs,
performance
and
user
experience
and
in
relation
the
package
manager,
stuff,
started.
A
performance
analysis
of
ipfs.
Add
lots
of
interesting
things
there.
Some
quick
fix
work
to
documentation.
B
We
hope
to
do
a
lot
of
these
small
things
over
as
we
find
ways
to
improve
UX
or
improve
people's
understanding
of
how
to
use
IP
FS
for
a
package
management.
Also
one
of
the
big
things.
That's
just
that
we've
been
we're
a
new
team,
so
learning
how
to
work
together
as
a
big
deal.
We
now
have
daily
stand-up
once
the
week
sprint
planning
once
a
week.
B
B
So
we
want
to
summarize
that
for
you
out
there,
if
you're
watching
this
and
make
that
a
bit
easier,
if
also,
if
you
like
packaging
facts,
we're
gonna
send
out
one
every
week
you
know
cardboard,
shipping,
box,
interesting
stuff,
it's
great
mm-hmm,
yeah
I,
think
that's
all
the
things
for
right
now,
Andrew
what
did
I
miss
or
anyone
else
on
this
call.
What
did
I
miss.
A
Potentially
could
be
something
that
we
could
suggest
as
the
best
way
for
an
end
user
to
consume
packages
from
a
ipfs,
backed
mirror
for
Debian
or
Ubuntu
I.
Believe
it
works
in
both,
which
is
very
cool.
That's
the
the
only
thing
I
think
we
didn't
include
in
that
as
a
kind
of
a
community
related
piece
of
work.
That's
going
on
Molly.
Did
you
have
an
update
from
do
you?
Web
cam,
yeah.
C
So
I
met
someone
who
I
know
his
first
name
when
I
don't
know
his
last
name
is
Emma
Sean
and
he's
from
the
secure
scuttlebutt,
community
and
I.
Don't
know
how
familiar
everybody
carries
with
ste
web
camp
that
the
premise
going
into
it
was
iffy
to
non-existent
internet
internet
access
during
this
three-week
gathering
of
d
web
builders
and
hackers,
and
because
of
that
one
of
the
things
that
people
were
interested
and
excited
about
we're.
C
It
would
a
couple
of
threads
about
people
bringing
large
packages
of
like
you,
know,
NPM
and
other
things
like
that.
We
talked
about
bringing
and
came
on,
I
confessed,
but
I'm
shipping
in
performance,
both
them
kind
of
was
like.
Well,
maybe
not
quite
this
time,
but
he
did
some
work
to
port
cargo
to
who
I
PFS-
and
I
don't
know
quite
what
the
the
status
of
that
is,
whether
he
actually
finished
it
or
the
take
away.
It
was
Oh,
there's
actually
gonna,
be
internet
before
he
finished
that
that
port,
but
cooled
it.
C
Someone
from
the
rust
scuttlebutt
community
I
believe
just
kind
of
was
able
to
to
get
started,
and
you
know
from
from
listening
to
him.
He
didn't
have
any
hiccups
or
concerns
with
it.
It
was
just
like
you
know
how
much
time
is
he
gonna
invest
in
doing
it,
given
that
hey,
suddenly,
there's
gonna
be
Wi-Fi
and
you
don't
have
to
worry
about
it
as
much
anymore,
but
I
thought
that
was
pretty
cool,
that
people
were
able
to
pick
it
up
and
I
encouraged
him
to
come
to
this
weekly
call.
A
The
there
was
a
addition
to
rust,
I
want
to
say
kind
of
March
that
basically
added
an
airplane
mode
to
cargo,
like
command
line
interface
directly,
which
basically
says
like.
Can
you
when,
installing
things
locally,
can
you
be
a
little
bit
more
aggressive
with
the
caching
of
the
things
that
you
download
and
I
believe
from
the
like?
A
I
can't
remember
exactly
where
the
link
is,
but
the
I've
seen
that
the
kind
of
ongoing
work
on
github
and
it
relies
on
that
and
basically
taking
the
stuff
that
you
would
download
using
cargos
airplane
mode
and
dropping
that
in
ipfs.
So
it's
easy
to
share
with
everyone
else,
and
it
has
both
the
metadata
and
the
Tarble
source
code
to
be
able
to
allow
anyone
to
replicate
that
which
is
really
neat,
because
it's
kind
of
a
combination
of
the
client
being
friendly
to
not
having
to
chat
with
its
registry.
B
Perhaps
a
very
high-level
update
that
we
can
just
get
on
the
recording,
just
in
case
is
that
we
talked
about
and
sprint
planning
that
we
have
what
three
major
areas
of
focus
most
likely
for
this
quarter
and
we're
getting
Lowe's
to
find
I,
probably
can't
name
them
off
the
top
of
my
head
as
well
as
Andrew.
You
can.
But
if
you
feel
comfortable,
if
you
know
what
I'm
talking
about,
perhaps
just
let
Molly
and
Jim
and
anyone
else
listening
on
the
call
the
recording
later
know
where
we're
at
I.
A
Can
I
can
try,
so
one
is
ipfs
ads
performance
so
looking
into
ways
that
it
can.
We
can
import
very
large
directories
of
files,
we're
looking
at
up
to
a
million
files
and
about
a
terabyte
of
data
in
the
different
ways
that
we
can
improve
the
performance
of
that
one
from
scratch
for
people
setting
up
a
mirror
after
downloading
a
whole
copy
from
somewhere
else,
and
to
when
I
go
to
update
that,
usually
via
I'll,
synch
I'm
pulling
down
the
anything.
That's
changed
since
the
last
time,
I
downloaded
a
copy
from
a
mirror.
A
Then
we
have
a
slightly
different
approach
to
thinking
about
how
to
change
the
performance
characteristics
of,
especially
when
it
comes
to
adding
things
that
have
been
updated,
which
is
mounting
ipfs
as
a
writable
filesystem.
This
is
the
work
the
Dominic's
been
looking
at
and
that
basically
means
that
we
can
interrupt
really
nicely
with
existing
tooling
that
people
who
are
maintaining
mirror
for
far
system-based
package
managers
use
all
the
time.
A
Every
time
that
we're
writing
to
a
two-disc
disk
being
ipfs
and
then
the
the
kind
of
there's
also
the
user
experience
side
of
the
whole
process
of
doing
this
setup
and
maintenance.
And
that's
things
like
in
general.
The
performance
of
the
different
functions
that
you're
going
to
be
doing
should
be
not
painful.
So
things
like
IP
and
s
being
faster
is
like
something
that
people
will
get
stuck
on
and
a
Dean
has
been
working
on,
making
that
much
more
enjoyable
to
use,
and
hopefully
that
will
then
start
to
push
through
a
number
of
user
experience.
A
A
So
one
thing
to
think
about
for
next
week
is
if
there
is
any
particular
topic
that
someone
would
be
interested
in
going
diving
deeply
into
it
could
be
related
to
ipfs
hair
and
how
that
a
particular
tool
inside
of
the
ipfs
toolbox
helps
with
package
management
or
it
could
be
something
more
in
general,
with
package
management
or
potentially
it
could
be
an
interview
with
someone
either
within
ipfs
or
externally.
That
has
some
interesting
experience
trying
to
do
my
IP
FS
and
package
manager
related
stuff,
so
don't
have
to
come
up
with
it
now.