►
From YouTube: Local Offline Collaboration Monthly 2019-03-20
Description
Intros: 0:00
Research for DWeb in Global South Communities: 9:12
Distributed Open Store: 33:41
Offline Camp: 42:17
WebBluetooth analysis for Libp2p transport: 47:40
Turing Institute: 50:53
A
So
I'm
your
brainstorm
buddy.
If
there's
anything
that
you
know
people
people
see
as
something
that
we
can
really
make
make
progress
on
from
an
engineering
perspective,
I'm,
just
gonna
kind
of
call
on
people
based
on
how
you
happen
to
be
arrayed
on
my
zoom
screen.
So
hopefully
that
sounds
good
Chris!
You
are
the
person.
Next
to
me,
you
want
to
give
me
a
job
sure.
B
I'm
here,
just
out
of
personal
interest
in
the
project,
I've
always
been
working
on
offline
stuff.
If
you
don't
know
me,
I
guess,
one
of
the
things
I
did
back
in
the
day
was
apache
couchdb
and
found
Couchbase,
and
so
for
me
a
lot
of
the
and
built
a
couch
based
mobile
project,
and
so
for
me,
a
lot
of
the
brainstorming
has
always
been
around
user
cases
like
what
happens
when
a
handful
of
people
are
standing
up,
a
new
network
and
they're
fully
disconnected.
So
how
do
you
support
those
news
places
so
mostly
I'm?
A
C
Yeah
so
I've
been
building
like
this
network
of
official
hardware
for
disaster
recovery,
starting
with
Mozilla
grand
project
and
now
I'm
yeah
I'm,
basically
working
with
a
couple
of
different
clients
on
Winfred
stuff,
so
one
of
it
is
using
Laura
or
for
kind
of
a
similar
setup,
and
the
other
is
actually
we're
talking
with
vertical
for
museums
to
be
able
to
share
data
which
mean
some
housing,
artists
and
stuff.
Like
that,
that's
pretty
good
words.
A
D
A
PC
has
been
working
for
30
years
in
klingons,
affordable
access
to
the
global
south
and
has
been
also
part
of
the
of
the
internet
foundation
in
many
levels
of
countries
so
and
I'm
part
of
this
process
of
a
PC
trying
to
get
more
in
to
helping
communities
achieve
this
goal
getting
connected
by
themself
approach
that
anther
Monique
has
been
having
for
many
years.
My
previous
lab
actually
might
like
my
impairment.
In
fact,
these
are
term
only
it's.
An
organization
promotes.
D
Do-It-Yourself,
a
do-it-yourself
approach
to
infrastructure
deployment
in
particularly
in
different
structure,
and
the
purpose
of
this
is
actually
not
about
infrastructure,
but
about
community
organization.
What
we
think
is
by
doing
this
kick
free
approach,
so
networks
people
can
get
together
and
by
getting
together
they
will
accomplish
networks
and
many
many
other
things.
So
it's
kind
of
a
social
hack
using
technology
in
between
I
will
share
little
bit
more
later.
E
Everyone,
my
name,
is
Dominic
I
work
for
protocol
labs
on
one
of
Molly's
teams,
so
I
like
to
sit
in
on
these
things
and
hear
what
people
are
doing
and
specifically
listening
for
like
pain
points
and
things
like
that
and
see.
If
there's
anything,
we
can
do
to
help
alleviate
some
of
that
stuff.
So
yeah
I'm
interested
in
hearing
what
everyone
says.
F
Yeah
I'm
impressed
that
you
pointed
actually
pointed
at
me
on
my
screen.
It's
very
Brady
Bunch
of
us
I'm,
Terry,
Chadbourne
I,
so
I
got
into
decentralized
web
because
I
was
first
involved
with
the
offline
first
movement.
Would
you
focus
on
meeting
stuff
just
work
on
crappy
networks
or
non-existent
networks?
All
of
that
and
I
heard
about
decentralized.
G
I
work
at
protocol
labs
and
working
on
dynamic
data
and
capabilities
group
and
my
thing
is
peer
pad,
so
that
should
be.
The
new
version
should
be
launching
like
really
really
soon,
because
we
have
it
persisting
you
ipfs
IPL
d,
that's
really
exciting
next
step
for
that.
One
I
think
beyond
that.
Probably
the
next
experiment
for
it
on
deck
is
going
to
be
making
it
work
offline,
so
very
interested
in
this
stuff.
G
A
We
used
it
in
a
meeting
I
think
last
week
and
it
was
fantastic.
It
worked
perfectly.
It
was
better
than
our
previous
note-taking
tools
and
it
was
all
markdown
friendly
and
I
can't
wait
for
for
other
people.
We
definitely
did
use
the
dev
dotnet
so
living
forward
for
that
one
being
economical,
one
tea
drink.
You
are
two
down
for
me:
wanna
go.
H
Hello,
nice
to
meet
you
everybody.
This
is
my
first
meeting
of
this
group
and
my
first
week
at
protocol
labs
very
excited
to
be
here.
I
worked
on
various
offline
related
projects
that
Mozilla
for
a
long
time
before
coming
here
and
ran
a
few
student
projects
around
research
that
we
did
in
places
like
Brazil
and
kind
of
meeting
people
on
the
web
meet
needs
for
things
like
long
commutes
with
limited
connectivity
or
expensive
connectivity.
So
I'm
really
interested
to
see
what
the
group
here.
A
A
You
know
jump
in
first
and
then
talk
about
that
in
a
little
bit
all
right,
Nico
I,
believe
you
are
our
first
agenda
item.
So
do
you
want
to
maybe
give
a
brief
overview
for
people
who
are
not
familiar
with
kind
of
the
research
you've
been
doing,
and
then
maybe
we
can
kind
of
help
you,
with
with
some
questions
about
like
kind
of
insides
and
and
learnings,
and
all
the
work
you've
been
doing
awesome.
D
We
want
to
connect
to
and
all
those
conversations
that
are
usually
difficult
to
discuss.
So
we
met
with
Matt
from
former
ipfs
protocol
Lance
and
he
started
hearing
my
stories
and
what
I
had
to
say
and
I
said:
okay,
let's
we
need
to
do
something
together
and
I
said.
Yet,
of
course
they
take
a
piece
you're
building
another.
You
should
be
aware.
It
should,
from
my
point
of
view
like
okay
holla,
so
half
of
the
planet
is
disconnected
I.
Think
that
some
a
little
a
little
bit
of
background
is
needed.
D
So
half
of
the
planet
has
been
connected.
Thirty
years
have
passed
since
the
internet
started
and
the
market
a
cities
has
been
capable
of
connecting
half
of
the
planet,
and
if
we
usually
say
that
the
plot,
the
part
that
has
been
connected
has
been
the
easy
part
like
most
of
the
people
in
urban
cities.
The
people
that
is,
that
has
enough
income
to
pay
for
connectivity
in
an
open
market
and
the
people
that
every
now
and
then
can
access
any
open
hotspot
that
municipalities
or
governments
can
open.
D
But
it
certainly
doesn't
get
to
everyone
it
and
it
doesn't
get
to
the
rural
places
of
your
nearby
city.
For
sure,
I
mean
if
you
look
around.
If
you
go
50
kilometres
or
a
hundred
kilometres
from
where
you
live
already
into
the
rural
areas,
the
most
the
the
big
there's
a
big
chance
that
the
people
over
there
has
a
very
crappy
connection
or
no
not
connection
at
all
and
what
happens
basically,
because
the
market
is
not
able
to
provide
services
in
places
where
people
that
when
investment
is
too
high.
D
So
the
capital
explained
the
capex
is
too
high
or
where
people
are
not
able
to
pay
for
the
service
were
like
well.
People's
disposable
income
is
too
low
for
the
market
to
be
providing
services.
So
basically
the
companies
do
the
math
and
they
say
well:
I
will
not
I'm,
not
interested
in
coming
to
markets
or
service,
and
the
government's
strategy
is
to
provide
service
in
those
areas
have
been
basically
extending
the
market's
capabilities
as
as
far
as
they
can,
and
it
has
worth
half
of
the
Spanish
population.
D
Three
billion
people
are
connected,
but
the
three
other
billion
people,
and
not
only
the
ones
that
are
unconnected
and
happy
now
connected
thirty
years
ago
and
we'd
probably
be
connected
unconnected
for
the
following
30
years.
The
speed
the
the
the
market
growth
has
dramatically
decreased,
so
the
capacity
of
the
market
to
get
to
those
places
is
really
like
what
I
probably
will
not
get
there,
and
this
and
the
government's
have
no
tool
to
approach
to
this
program.
D
That
said,
ok,
market,
if
you
don't
want
to
get
as
far
as
where
we
are
it's
fine,
just
stay
where
you
are,
we
will
provide
ourselves
with
connectivity
and
how
well
it
deploy
infrastructure
like
the
way
the
operators
to
the
way
the
companies
do
by
by
their
own
means,
with
their
own
values
in
the
other
own
way
with
their
own
homes,
and
when
this
is
happening
all
over
the
plates.
I
have
some
photos
to
share
with
you.
D
D
This
is
indigenous
University
in
the
rural
mountains,
for
Hakka
Mexico
and
the
university
was
entitled
by
the
local
authorities
to
create
infrastructure
for
themselves,
and
please
stop
me
at
any
point.
If
you
have
any
questions
about
what
you
are
seeing
and
also
I
am
really
bad
at
keeping
track
of
time.
So
if
anyone
can
stop
me,
just
stop
me.
Thank.
D
The
opportunity
for
beautiful
technologies,
from
my
perspective,
is
to
be
able
to
rewrite
the
social
dynamics
of
the
internet
from
then
connected
on,
because
then
can
indeed
are
half
of
the
world's
population.
It's
difficult
to
change
the
behavior
of
those
that
are
already
connected,
but
it's
extremely
easy
to
support
those
that
are
incarnated
in
creating
their
own
means
of
communication
and
by
connecting
those,
then
well,
you
have
50%
of
the
people
that
will
be
connected
using
your
technology,
so
I
think
there's
a
bee
collaboration
there.
D
That
can
happen
and
I'm
happy
to
support
that
if
you're
interested
in
organized.
So,
if
you're
the
plan
your
own
infrastructure,
then
you
have
to
know
how
infrastructure
works.
If
it
happened
to
me,
I
meant,
as
a
systems
engineer
and
some
of
my
pals
in
universe
in
the
university,
didn't
know
how
a
computer
works
or
never
opened
a
computer
in
their
lives.
So,
but
these
people
have
to
do
it
by
themselves,
so
they
started
opening
like
opening
the
box
of
the
computer.
D
In
this
case
the
box
of
the
network,
so
part
of
the
workshops
that
we
facilitate
are
in
relation
to
getting
to
know
the
infrastructure
and
how
it
works
and
what
elements
are
involved
in
that
process.
So
in
this
case
they
were
understanding
how
antennas
world
and
the
diagrams,
in
the
background,
show
how
the
elements
are
interconnected
to
each
other.
D
D
D
We
do
well
whoever
altering
small
workshops
using
LibreOffice
what
to
do
Web
authoring.
But
then
we
talk
about
the
pincer
person,
the
possibilities
of
open
source,
and
then
we
jump
back
and
forth
in
between
I,
like
this
very
bare,
very
hands-on
activities
and
concept
concepts
of
what
things
can
be
done
with
networks.
D
The
tricky
part
is
that,
from
our
perspective,
the
problem,
the
problem
in
the
current
state
of
the
Internet
is
they
are
the
only
cables
they
own
the
equipment
they
own,
the
wireless
links
they
on
the
computers,
but
then,
when
they,
when
you
go
to
the
so
the
software
that
the
uses
of
the
network
you
you
again
have
the
centralization
problem,
they
own
infrastructure,
but
they
don't
own
what
happens
on
top
of
the
infrastructure.
So
it's
basically
the
road
to
the
closest
server
is
provided.
That
is
that
has
nothing
to
do
with
themselves.
D
What
so
we
okay?
So
we
start
from
the
very
bare
bones,
so
they
start
learning
how
a
cable
works
then
switch
switch
works
and
how
they
can
connect
with
each
other.
When
we
talk
about
wireless
networks,
we
use
libre
mesh
and
live
a
router,
so
that's
technology
that
we
have
developed
for
or
them
it's
open
source.
So
it's
the
router,
the
Earl
and
live
Ramesh.
D
The
leaver
router
is
an
open
source.
Hardware
for
mesh
community
networks
and
libera
mesh
is
a
kick
free,
mesh
networks
operating
system.
So
the
idea
is
setting
aside
the
the
technical,
so
CJ
DNS
Batman
advanced
PM,
a
linux
Babel.
All
of
these
are
routed
dynamic,
routing
protocols
and
OSPF.
All
all
these
technologies
are
available
for
doing
networks
that
can
change
over
time,
but
all
of
that
is
a
complexity
that
is
far
far
far
beyond
the
capacities
of
someone
that
has
never
had
indirection
with
a
computer,
so
leave
a
mesh.
What
what
it
does
is.
D
It
turns
networks,
a
gig,
free
technology,
the
same
way
I,
don't
know
if
you
have
ever
set
up
a
TV
dish
on
your
roof
when
broadcast
television
was
the
thing,
but
it's
basically
you
put
your
television.
You
run
a
cable
from
your
house
from
inside
your
house
to
the
roof,
and
you
set
up
an
antenna
on
your
antenna.
You
turn
it
and
trying
to
get
the
best
signal
possible.
The
best
image
possible.
Your
TV.
D
We
tried
for
the
mesh
networks
for
the
mesh
being
wireless
networks
that
are
interconnected,
that
were
the
devices
are
interconnected
to
each
other
by
wireless
links,
and
they
talk
to
each
other
in
order
for
getting
the
message
from
one
place
next,
one
for
for
that
problem
to
be
able
to
be
solved
in
them
same
approach.
Like
you
set
up,
you
play
something
in
your
house.
A
Our
is
this
experience
and
I
assume.
This
is
kind
of
your
normal
practice,
which
is
kind
of
finding
these.
These
communities,
who
tend
to
be
very
off
the
beaten
market,
path
of
kind
of
Internet
infrastructure
and
technology,
rollout
and
kind
of
working
with
them
to
like
get
their
hands
dirty
with
and
setting
up
the
underlying
infrastructure
are,
do
they
tend
to
have
familiarity
with
kind
of
you
know,
either
mobile
phones
or
like
other
forms
of
like
internet
connectivity,
which
just
are
less
available
in
their
their
home
communities?
D
It's
kind
of
all
over
the
place
in
most
of
the
communities.
You
find
something
that
I,
like
phones
like
Android
phones
like
cheap
Android
phones,
have
a
very,
very
deep
penetration,
even
in
in
rural
India,
where
there's
no
electricity,
you
find
that
families
have
at
least
one
phone
per
family
and
it's
kind
of
the
same
entertainment
center
for
the
community
for
the
family,
so
they
do
have
penetration.
D
But,
for
example,
in
this
community
I'm
showing
you,
they
not
only
have
a
wireless
network,
but
also
they
have
their
own
communica
munity
cellular
network
and
in
the
elder,
the
most
elder
members
of
the
communities
don't
have.
They
are
not
literate,
so
they
don't
know
how
to
use
a
smart
phone,
so
they
use
feature
phones
and
this
and
they
can
do
it.
It's
not
a
problem.
They
learn
how
to
use
the
phone
in
that
way
like
like
a
feature
phone.
D
That
is
just
the
numbers
and
anything
nothing
else,
so
they
just
remembered
a
few
numbers
and
they
type
them
in
the
phone
and
they
come
called
each
other
without
any
problem.
I
think
there's
another
photo
of
that
later
or
I.
Think
I
have
already
done
that
for
okay,
let
me
show
you
another
set
of
photos,
so
we
don't
show
you
only
one
community.
D
D
This
was
another
thing
that
happens
sometime
in
rural
communities
in
initiative.
Communities
mainly,
is
that
you
find
communal,
realization
already
there
something
that
is
required
for
community
networks.
Work
is
community
ownership,
so
a
community
network
is
a
network
that
is
owned,
maintained,
expanded
and
sustained
by
the
community.
D
So
in
order
for
that
to
happen,
because
no
one
else
is
there
for
for
them
to
be
provided,
the
community
needs
to
be
involved
in
different
communities,
have
different
approaches
to
ecology,
for
example,
in
this
community
decision
on
dudas
in
this
community,
the
council
is
comprised
of
people
from
both
genders
in
the
previous
community.
The
council
and
the
assembly
is
only
comprised
of
the
people,
the
man
that
over
18
years
old
and
this
community,
all
about
all
of
them
are
part
in
equal
parts.
So
you
can
see
here.
D
Let
me
see
if
I
have
the
folder
so
in
you
will
see
that
in
many
of
the
communities
we
do
it
our
climbing
and
we
try
to
do
it
in
both
with
men
and
women,
because
our
walls
are
like
you
can
connect
with
each
other
quite
easily
without
towers.
But
when
you
want
to
reach
another
community
or
when
you
want
to
reach
the
wider
Internet
and
and
just
another
clarification
for
us
in
term
it
from
our
description,
Internet
is
an
unconnected
network
goes
to
networks.
D
So
it
can
be
that
some
parts
of
the
internet,
like
from
when
you
see
when,
within
from
the
offline
first
community
like
Terry,
was
saying
like
it
can
happen
that
some
of
the
nodes
are
hard.
Some
of
the
hosts
of
the
internet
are
disconnected
at
a
certain
point
of
time,
because
you're
going
through
how
like
in
a
subway
or
something
somewhere
that
you're
not
connected,
but
also
it
can
happen
that
a
community
that
is
part
of
the
Internet
is
disconnected
from
the
wider
Internet.
D
D
They
were
drawing
the
the
things
that
they
recognized
as
valuable
about
their
community.
What
things
are
the
key
things
that
represent
their
community?
The
girls
did
a
drawing.
The
guys
did
a
list
of
things.
It
was
interesting
how
they
did
different
approaches
to
describe
their
community,
but
then
we
said
what
other
things
are
part
of
this
community
that
you
haven't
have
not
drawn
what
things
are
those
that
you
don't
want
to
see
about
your
community
and
that's
extremely
important,
because
in
general
we
try
we
end.
D
We
describe
things
in
a
positive
way
and
the
things
that
we
don't
want
to
see
are
those
that
are
magnified
more
when
some,
when
in
demand
that
is
a
booster
intimate.
That
is
something
that
speeds
up.
Things
comes
out
community,
so
we
briefly
mentioned
like
pornography
and
violence
and
like
they
cared
about
family.
So
what
will
internet
mean
from
families
and
not
in
this
community,
but
in
another
community
in
to
expand
in
Mexico?
D
One
of
the
elders
said
that,
when
the
like
50
years
of
six
years
ago,
when
he
was
a
kid
he's,
his
grandma
said
like
they
we
are.
We
have
been
told
that
school
and
school
is
going
to
a
right
or
community
and
we
were
told
that
school
is
good
but
but
then
school
came
and
with
school
kids
started
being
apart
from
their
parents
and
by
doing
that
the
local
culture
started
buying.
D
Supplies
from
some
other
places
and
we
started
reading
differently,
and
then
we
started
to
have
diabetes
because
we
started
drinking
coca-cola
and-
and
this
was
the
first
time
in
their
whole
life
that
they
had
coca-cola
coca-cola
and
then
they
had
their
babies
in
their
communities.
So
now
we
are
told
that
Internet
is
coming
and
Internet.
We
were
told
that
it's
good,
but
now
these
people
come
and
say:
ok,
my
internet
might
be
good
for
some
things,
but
not
for
some
others.
So
what
are
we
going
to
do
with
it?
So
this
listener?
D
We
need
to
reflect
a
lot
about
in
relation
to
how
we
approach
technologies
and
how,
because
again,
technologies
are
developed
by
people
that
are
not
there,
then.
So
if
we
want
to
create
a
world
that
that
all
worlds
fit
in,
that
is
diverse
and
not
normalized,
we
want
to
plan
that
we
want
to
serve
the
communities
that
need
technology
in
a
way
that
allow
them
to
be
part
of
the
design
process
of
the
technology
that
they
will
end
up
using.
D
D
D
F
A
I
So
actually
so
my
project
is
quite
different:
I
have
is,
we
are
in
I'm
a
nurse
Cole
and
it's
end
of
week.
All
computer
are
resets
the
for
security
reason,
and
so
computer
can
reuse
it
nice
and
next
students
as
a
next
week
and
from
am,
is
each
Monday.
We
can
aim
to
school
and
will
last
at
least
surfer
s'more
nning
to
just
download
all
the
hacks.
I
We
have
to
do
or
gardening
or
or
virtual
machine
to
to
do
or
exercise,
and
it's
it's
quite
easy,
because
we
are
all
downloading
at
the
same
file
from
fire,
fruits
or
Microsoft
for
visitors
to
you
and
for
people
who
use
visuals
to
you,
and
so
my
IP
was
to
download
all
of
this
at
from
from
Alan
and
outdoor
well,
we
would
you
kill
to
tear
from
each
room
to
another,
or
at
least
and
Runyon's
in
force
that
I
have
this
thing
so
I
currently
I'm.
Writing
the
white
paper.
I
So
the
main
idea
is
to
use
an
IP
FSU
surefire,
because
in
the
past,
I
will
use
a
reference,
but
ipfs
performance
performance
have
been
increased,
so
no
need
of
that,
and
so
their
lease
to
use
EP
ipfs
to
show
file
and
to
use
our
BTB
are
ptb
to
share
an
application
list.
So
it
works
simply
in
orbit
eBay.
I
I
This
list
have,
as
writer,
he's
a
maintainer
itself.
So
only
the
maintainer
can
write
in
this
list
and
the
first
issue
has
a
list
of
every
developers
and
the
links
to
order
pulsar
DB
edit
our
BTB
database,
which
contain
all
the
information
about
apps
version
of
apps.
So
the
first
thing
when
a
developers
will
actually
implement
a
fact,
an
application
in
a
software
he
has
to
come
to
a
repo
maintainer.
I
Sorry,
if
the
Reformation
or
other
way
to
being
in
history
book,
he
had
a
developer
developer
item
which
contained
the
item
about
the
developers,
a
foot.
You
can't
activate
the
website
and
the
buicks,
and
also
so
that's
the
first
thing
after
you
have
that
you
can
have
them.
You
can
add
application
with
which
I
approve
of
recruitment
as
a
repo
maintainer.
So
the
repo
maintainer,
so
I
use
the
show
app
and
you
make
an
feed
for
you
app
and
then
the
feed
is
link
it
to
your
main.
I
In
the
link
to
your
to
your
at
feed
is
added
in
the
main
repo
feed
and
the
writer
key
is
been
you
set
in
the
in
your
developers
in
your
developers,
your
developers,
approvement
I,
forbid
the
developer
items,
so
only
you
only
the
developers
can
write
in
the
feed
and
feed
contain
an
item
provision
of
perversion
and
for
each
item
you
have
some
information.
The
name
of
the
Russians
changelog
link
to
the
binaries
and
the
links
of
binary
is
is
simply
some.
I
You
have
a
link
of
different
type
of
fineries
Windows,
Mac
Linux
you
when
you
user,
want
to
download
an
app.
So
see
whether
it
was
not
for
your
user
is
simple:
you
choose
an
authority
so
repo.
It's
the
same,
then
your
net
will
subscribe
to
all
the
database.
So
if
you
have
so,
you
have
also
information
of
all
the
application.
I
Then
you
have
a
list
of
application
with
the
Saoirse
I
want
to
install
any
apps,
and
when
you
want
to
instead
of
apps,
the
client
will
go
to
edit
a
base
luge
for
as
a
binary
link
and
gets
the
AP
fs5.
Then
just
download
IP
effects
file.
This
is
an
off
ship,
so
he
just
took
an
presumption
and
execute
install
a
sash
script
and
that's
all.
I
No,
actually,
it's
really
use
IP
FS,
so
for
this
I,
don't
I
don't
have
to
care.
In
fact,
if
I'm
correct
me,
if
I'm
wrong
but
ipfs
using
DNS
for
the
Catholics
disc
arena,
so
you're
using
over,
so
he
ever
buys
that
and
I've
chosen
a
disc
in
discovering,
as
he
will
shut,
that
down
between
both
because
say
we
are
the
fastest
nerd,
and
so
this
application
scientist
of
these
applications
or
zords
no
server.
I
But
in
fact
you
Mabley
will
need
the
server
to
constantly
pimp
the
binary
of
application,
but
since
for
developers,
there's
no
server
disease
and
resilience
if
a
lot
of
person
downloads
the
same
apps,
there
is
no
so
reason
a
diminution
of
speed
because
original
central
server,
it's
like
Germans,
that's
all
I,
have
to
say
I,
don't
know
what
to
say
more.
A
I
A
A
E
So
I
come
from
not
necessarily
an
education
background,
but
I
do
not
love
remembering
the
times
of
us
spending
so
much
time,
ghosting
the
computers
with
Norton
Ghost.
It
would
take
hours
to
do
that
and
I
love
seeing
stuff
like
this,
because
this
is
the
exact
thing
I
I
wish.
We
had
back
then
for
the
exact
reason
you
mentioned,
of
like
it's
just
a
waste
of
student
time
to
student
time
and
resources
on
the
computer,
so
I
love
it.
It's
great.
A
F
F
So
I
mentioned
in
my
introduction
that
I
run
an
event
called
offline
camp,
which
is
a
essentially
like
a
tech
retreat
in
the
woods
and
lunch
somewhere
for
335
people
about
the
offline
first
movement,
which
I
want
to
just
be
super
clear
that
the
event
is
not
specifically
about
the
decentralized
well,
it's
about
all
of
the
problems
that
you
encounter
when
you're
up
against
crappy
bandwidth,
but
a
lot
of
the
people
who
come
are
interested
in
decentralized
web
as
a
solution
to
that.
F
So
I
wanted
to
raise
it
here,
because
it's
a
great
place,
if
you
would,
instead
of
having
an
hour
a
month
of
conversations
about
this
topic,
would
like
to
spend
three
or
four
days
solid,
surrounded
by
people
who
care
about
this
stuff.
This
is
the
place
for
you,
so
this
is
the
website.
This
is
last
year's
event.
Still
here,
the
event
will
be
happening
this
summer
we
have
not
launched
yet
so
I'm
not
going
to
reveal
the
exact
dates
and
location,
but
if
you
won't
want
to
make
sure
you're
notified,
you
would
click.
F
This
join
a
future
camp
button
which
would
take
you
to
this
forum.
You
can
watch
a
video
about
the
camp
experience
and
when
you
fill
out
this
form
it'll
give
you
an
opportunity
both
to
give
us
your
email.
So
we
can
reach
out
and
let
you
know
when
they
can't
spend
an
ounce
but
also
an
opportunity
to
vote
on
where
we
go
next.
F
Our
goal
is
that
the
event
will
circulate
and
go
more
tear
up
if
they're
Europeans
interested
in
coming,
so
that
people
don't
have
to
spend
as
much
on
travel,
and
we
do
also
have
scholarships
available
and
if
that's
helpful,
to
anyone
and
then,
if
you
want
to
get
a
sense
of
the
kinds
of
topics
we
discuss
at
applying
camp,
the
thing
covers
up.
The
zoom
thing
is
covering
up
where
I
need
to
click.
F
We
have
a
medium
publication,
medium.com
slash
offline
camp,
and
you
can
see
here
like,
for
example,
there's
a
whole
section
on
decentralized
web,
like
the
crossover
between
the
decentralized.
What
I
find.
First
that
you
check
out.
Usually
what
happens
is
we
were
having
this
sort
of
communal
living
experience?
F
We
break
up
into
little
groups
to
do
these
unconference
discussions
about
whatever
folks
are
interested
in
talking
about
around
the
theme
of
offline
first
and
then
afterwards,
we'll
ask
somebody
who
was
at
that
discussion
to
write
it
up,
so
the
broader
community
can
take
advantage
of
that.
You
know
we
also
have
the
opportunity
for
people
to
do
passion,
talks
and
stuff
like
that.
F
But
this
event
is
all
about
just
getting
into
really
deep
conversation
with
people
who
are
excited
about
offline
person
who
might
be
coming
at
it
in
different
ways
than
you
are
exploring
different
problem
sets,
so
it's
really
cool.
We
love
to
get
a
diverse
audience,
so
the
best
thing
you
can
do
right
now,
if
you
have
any
interest,
is
to
just
get
yourself
on
this
forum.
F
So
we
can
let
you
know
when
we
announce
the
next
event
and
I'm
saying
this
now,
because
I
suspect
we
will
launch
between
now
in
the
next
iteration
of
this
call,
and
this
is
we
actually
do
an
application
process
for
the
event
to
make
sure
that
we
have
a
chance
to
really
explain
to
people
the
nature
of
this
you're
in
a
lodge
with
other
people.
It's
an
interesting
experience
and
make
sure
that
we're
really
comfortable
that
everyone
will
adhere
to
our
code
of
conduct
to
make
sure
that
we
have
a
diverse
group.
F
A
D
I
was
thinking
if
it's
understand
it
softly
first
and
something
that
we
have
been
talking
with
banana
cloud,
also
from
the
listen
device
web
summit
that
the
third
archive
is
are
amazing,
is
trying
to
include
more
spaces
where
non
coders
can
participate
and
bring
their
point
of
view
and
their
needs
and
opening
those
spaces.
So
do
you
think
Terry
that
there's
a
space
for
that,
and
so
how
would
you
like
to
be
discussing
about
them
so.
F
We
welcome
people
who
are
not
just
coders.
There
are
some
people
who
come,
who
are
more
like
business
owners
or
product
managers
or
stuff
like
that
who
are
like
interested
in
the
use
cases
and
the
solutions
you
will
like
when
I
started.
Attending
I
was
not
a
comer
yet,
and
there
certainly
was
you
know
there
were
conversations
that
went
over
my
head,
but
and
as
people
are
nominating
their
own
topics
for
discussion,
some
of
them
will
be
less
super
technical
and
some
of
them
you'll
know
are
like
clearly
somebody's
going
to
get
into.
F
How
do
we
actually
implement
this
thing
in
code?
But
we
would
really
appreciate
that
variety
of
perspectives
to
include
people
who
aren't
coders,
we
get
web
developers,
we
got
UX
people,
we
get
a
few
like
businesspeople,
product
people,
etc.
I
would
say
that
at
least
half
of
the
people
are
programmers,
but
it
doesn't.
You
certainly
don't
need
to
be
to
come.
A
Awesome,
thank
you
all
right,
I
think
I'm.
The
last
person
on
my
agenda
I
just
had
kind
of
two
quick,
two
quick
things
to
push
forward
to
this
group.
One
is
that
there
is
a
great
write-up
from
Basco
yeah
Vasko
Santos
who's
on
the
lib
p2p
team.
Talking
about
Bluetooth
as
a
potential
mobile
transport.
He
was
specifically
looking
at
web
Bluetooth,
which
is,
and
it's
still
a
work
in
progress
from
a
usability
stability
perspective,
but
a
huge
priority
for
kind
of
enabling
a
whole
chunk
of
use,
cases
that
are
pretty
impactful
for
communities.
A
Where
say
they
have
Android
devices
or
you
know
mobile
devices,
but
they
may
not
have
as
good
access
to.
Let's
say:
mobile
networks
or
data
is
very
expensive,
or
things
like
that
is
using
some
of
the
more
like
mobile
device,
p2p
options
to
say,
synchronize
stuff
between
your
computer
and
your
phone
or
synchronize,
two
phones
with
each
other
and
share
a
file
back
and
forth.
A
A
Finding
finding
other
options
is
great.
So
more
common
suggestions,
thoughts
on
how
to
do
this,
I
think
there's
kind
of
a
couple
of
paths
forward
here
either
we
have
other
suggestions
for
different
transports
that
we
should
look
into
other
than
Bluetooth,
or
we
kind
of
push
forward
on
having
a
Bluetooth
spec
and
try
and
either
get
the
lip
p2p
to
do
it
team
to
do
it
or
kind
of
raise
it
as
a
proposal
for
someone
and
it
goes,
we
go,
you
have
a
hand,
yes,.
D
A
The
other
thing
was
just
a
quick
note:
someone
from
the
turing
institute
reached
out
to
me
about
kind
of
an
offline
first
focused
conference
they're
having
about
kind
of
connecting
regions
of
the
world
that
are
maybe
less
connected
right
now
and
it's
mostly
UK
focused
right
now,
like
the
the
community.
But
if
anyone
is
interested
in
going,
I
have
the
contact
information
of
one
of
the
people,
who's
organizing
and
is
looking
for
more
non
uk-based
contributors.
A
So
if
anyone
feel
free
to
ping
me
on
github
or
through
email,
if
anyone
wants
an
intro-
and
I
can
pass
you
along
to
one
of
the
conference-
organizers
cool-
well,
we
are
out
of
time
for
today.
Thank
you
all
for
the
awesome
demos
and
research
reports
and
conversation.
Let's
keep
it
going
and
I
hate
probably
will
we'll
be
doing
some
lightweight.
Okay,
our
mojo
asynchronously
in
the
repo.
A
So
if
anyone
has
suggestions
for
what
we
should
be
focused
on,
there
will
be
an
issue
there
soon
for
people
to
to
add
ideas
or,
if
there's
any
work,
that's
happening
throughout
those
and
an
ecosystem
that
we
should
be
just
keeping
touch
with
and
continuing
to
tie
communication
threads
with
and
make
sure
that
the
work
that
gets
done
is
motivated
by
these
kind
of
offline
connectivity
use
cases.
That's
like
another
good
area
to
continue
that
or
awesome.
Well,
wonderful!
Thank
you
all.