►
Description
On our September 18 call we explored the technology needs of Native peoples with a presentation from Adam Recvlohe of Natives in Tech. https://nativesintech.org/
Learn more about the monthly calls of the IPFS Local Offline Collaboration Special Interest Group: https://github.com/ipfs/local-offline-collab/issues?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=+is%3Aissue+label%3A%22%F0%9F%93%9E+Monthly+Call%22+
A
Hey
folks,
it
is
September,
18th
and
right
here
for
the
ipfs
local
offline
collaboration
call
and
we're
really
excited.
We
have
a
chat
with
Adam
of
natives
in
tech
today
to
learn
more
about
what's
going
on
in
the
Native
communities
in
the
US
and
and
special
needs
there,
but
first
I
wanted
to
just
add
a
new
to
our
call.
A
It's
awesome
to
have
him
here,
so
we
can
just
do
a
quick
round
of
intros
if
everybody
wants
to
just
tell
us
a
little
bit
about
what
you're
doing
in
the
offline
first
space
or
what
you're
excited
about
there.
So
I'm
Terry
I
am
currently
the
leader
of
this
fine
group.
I
also
run
an
event
called
offline
camp
for
folks
interested
in
offline
first,
whether
or
not
that's
related
to
be
web.
A
Here
we
talk
about
the
crossover,
but
there
it's
a
little
more
broad
and
yeah
I
work
for
I
work
at
protocol
labs
and
they
work
primarily
on
something
called
proto
school,
which
offers
decentralized
web
protocol
tutorials.
So
that's
me
Domon.
If
you
want
to
go
next,
yeah.
B
Sure
so
my
name's
Dominic
and
I
mostly
contribute
to
Co
ipfs
I.
Come
to
these
calls
because
I'm
really
interested
to
see
what
people
work
on
and
hearing
the
problems
that
they
might
be
having
with
it
as
well.
It's
it's
always
fun
to
hear
the
stumbling
blocks
and
then,
hopefully
fix
them
later,
but
for
when
things
do
go
well,
I
like
to
broadcast
that
message
as
well
carry
it
forward
and
say:
have
you
heard
about
this
cool
thing?
A
C
D
Hi
everybody,
my
name
is
Michelle
I,
my
handles
often
MHz
megahertz
in
different
things.
I
work
on
the
ipfs
project,
I,
do
product
management,
user
experience,
design,
specifically
and
very
broadly,
around
decentralized
data
stewardship
how
to
help
people
Stewart
and
manage
their
own
information
and
data
and
the
way
that
they
find
most
appropriate
and
culturally
supportive.
Alright,
next.
A
E
Yeah
sorry
I
joined
late
I
work
at
a
company
that
is
work,
we're
doing
land
administration
in
Africa
and
trying
to
find
ways
to
keep
resilient
Hardware
up
resilient
software
app.
So
that's
my
professional
interest
and
personally
just
interested
in
everything,
decentralized,
so
loving,
learning
about
this
stuff.
A
Cool
and
they
saved
today's
special
guests
for
last
so
Adam
we
can
let
you
both
introduce
yourself
and
oh,
no,
actually
I'm,
going
to
give
my
spiel
first
and
then
I'm
gonna.
Let
you
introduce
yourself
and
your
yo.
So
most
of
you
have
heard
this
pitch
before,
but
offline
camp,
which
I
run
it's
taking
place,
we're
only
like
a
week
and
a
half
out
now
joy
will
be
there
all
the
cool
kids
are
coming
and
we
had
to
reschedule
it
because
of
old
fire.
A
As
far
as
we
know,
all
the
fires
are
out
in
the
local
area,
so
we'll
be
in
Oregon,
September
27th
to
30th,
and
we
do
still
have
some
tickets
available,
including
sponsorship
scholarships.
So
if
you
are
interested
in
coming
or
if
you
know
someone
who
is,
you
know
close
enough
to
travel
last
minute
and
might
be
interested
in
joining
us,
it's
it's
a
little
bit
of
a
similar
vibe
to
this,
where
we
spend
a
lot
of
time
like
in
a
group
discussing
interesting
issues
around
offline.
First,
some
of
the
people
are
approaching
from
the
web.
A
Some
of
them
aren't,
but
it's
all
discussions
based
very
casual
community
focused
my
favorite
event,
so
I
will
pop
a
link
to
that
both
in
the
chat
and
in
the
notes
here
if
anyone's
interested,
but
please
help
spread.
The
word
see
if
there's
anyone
you
know
who
the
interested
in
joining
us
I'm
just
taking
a
quick
look
at
the
agenda.
I,
don't
see
anything
else
here.
Yet
besides
Adams
presentation,
so
let
me
turn
it
over
to
Adam
I'm
super
excited
and
you
can
just
hit
the
share
button.
F
G
Okay
yeah,
my
name
is
Adam
Rock
little
I'm,
a
citizen
of
the
Muscogee
Creek
Nation
I,
so
my
father
is
Muscogee
Creek
and
UT,
and
my
mother
is
English
Canadian,
so
I
have
three
citizenships.
You
know
just
in
case
anything
happens.
Uh-Huh
also
I
am
the
founder
of
natives
in
tech.
It
is
a
coalition
of
native
and
non-native
developers
to
help
basically
promote
developers
that
are
native
they're
already
working
in
the
software
development
space.
G
If
I
can
go
to
the
next
slide
here,
but
yeah,
essentially,
we
want
to
promote,
as
well
as
a
certain
native
identity
on
the
web,
and
we
do
that
by
lifting
up
developers,
whether
that's
kind
of
like,
through
our
blogs
and
through
our
conference,
that
we're
going
to
be
having
November
9th
we're
going
to
have
a
fully
remote
online
conference.
That's
we
have
eight
speakers
in
the
lineup
and
they're
going
to
be
talking
about
they'll
work,
so
we
work
also
with
non-native
developers,
like
I've,
already
said,
a
good
example.
G
G
We
have
this
other
project
that
I'm
working
on,
which
is
a
basic
search,
Muskogee
language
search,
app,
that's
also
listed
as
under
our
github
organization,
and
we're
trying
to
pull
in
more
developers
that
are
working
on
applications
related
to
you
know
anything
that
they're
working
on
related
to
helping
to
sort
of
Native
communities.
So
that's
kind
of
the
the
gist
of
it.
We
are
a
501,
C,
3
non-profit.
We
got
our
status
like
I
think
last
month,
so
we're
currently
you
know
progressing
and
building
as
an
organization.
G
G
G
Yeah,
so
we
will
that
will
I
will
adjust
that
and
let's
see
what
my
next
okay,
so
I
will
get
to
that
I
think
in
the
in
a
subsequent
slide,
but
I
will
talk
about
I,
think
the
goals
of
the
goals
of
the
names
in
tech
and
then
I
can
talk
about
some
of
the
issues
that
the
community
that
my
community
I
can
say.
My
community
is
facing
specifically
and
how
that
might
be
similar
to
what
other
communities
are
facing.
G
So
I
think
some
of
the
goals
like
I
said
we're:
building
trying
to
build
open-source
tools
for
Native
communities
and
I.
Think
the
from
my
perspective
and
I
think
others
might
have
in
in
the
organization
probably
have
other
perspectives
on
this,
but
I
think
you
might
be
wondering
for
you
know,
kind
of
why
we
want
to
build
these.
Obviously,
if
we
want
them
to
connect
to
resources
that
are
online,
that
can
help
improve
their
their
lives
but
I
think
also
from
a
cultural
perspective.
G
We
have
a
lot
of
people
that
have
smartphones
that
have
access
to
applications
that
those
applications
are
probably
in
for
talking
about,
like
Facebook
and
Google
and
some
of
the
larger
applications.
You
know
there
in
most
cases
they
probably
have
localization
built
in
you
know,
and
that's
serving
you
know,
broader
communities,
societies.
G
You
know
political
states
that
exist
within
the
world,
but
those
things
don't
actually
trickle
down
necessarily
to
indigenous
communities,
and
so
in
that
sense
we're
not
able
to
necessarily
like
assert
our
identity
online
and
to
also
find
resources
and
work
with
applications
that
align
with
our
identity,
whether
it's
language
or
cultural
knowledge
or
cultural
constructs
and
concepts.
So,
from
my
perspective,
that's
kind
of
like
the
one
of
the
main
reasons
for
wanting
to
promote
building
applications.
I
serve
Native
communities
so
that
you
know
when
someone
goes
online,
they
can
consume
content.
G
That
is
you
know
in
their
language
or
using
constructs
that
they
understand,
because
otherwise,
if
they're
using
things
like
face,
broken
and
other
kinds
of
resources,
you
know
they're
they're
consuming.
You
know
other
modes
of
thought,
other
modes
of
language
and
communication,
and
so
that
then
becomes
a
way
in
which
they
identify
and
that
changes
you
know
the
way
that
they
they
can
see
themselves.
G
So
that's
kind
of
like
the
perspective
that
I'm
coming
from
so
just
to
kind
of
give
some
context
on
that.
So,
specifically
for
myself,
I
have
looked
into
ipfs
I've
used
it
locally
on
my
computer
I've
looked
into
PW
A's,
which
are
progressive.
Web
applications
I
looked
into
offline
first,
and
there
are
a
lot
of
cases
where
mobile
applications
do
have
offline
first
capabilities
built-in,
which
is
nice
I,
just
heard
about
mesh
networking
literally
like
two
days
ago.
G
Someone
was
mentioning
it
and
I,
don't
know
much
about
it
now,
but
it
seems
like
it
could
be
a
solution
or
helping
other
people
to
have
a
network
connection
to
like
peer-to-peer
sharing.
I've
looked
into
blockchain
in
the
sense
of
like
decentralized,
you
know
web
application,
size
frameworks
that
can
help
with
this
as
well,
where
you
don't
have
all
the
information
on
like
one
server,
but
on
several
you
know
hundreds
of
peers
and
also
just
like
peer-to-peer
networks
which
I
suppose
ipfs
is
a
part
of,
is
what
is
blockchain
and
things
of
that
nature.
G
So
I
think
there
are
things
that
there
are
many
things
that
I
want
to
work
on.
This
is
one
of
those,
and
you
know
things
that
I
know
that
I
can
do
at
least
with,
for
example,
the
natives
and
Ted
website
is
I
can
make
it
a
progressive
web
app
by
caching
that
HTML
content
and
having
it
served
by
a
web
worker,
for
example.
G
The
de-facto
way
in
which
you
make
applications
I
think
that's
where
we
kind
of
want
to
go
at
least
where
I
want
to
take
the
applications
that
I'm
working
on
we're
offline
first
and
you
know
whatever
the
the
methodology
becomes
a
de-facto
way
in
which
I'm
able
to
build
these
apps
in
order
to
serve
communities
that
are
not
well
connected.
So
that's
kind
of
like
the
goals.
C
A
C
A
A
G
C
C
G
C
D
C
C
A
D
G
G
So
NPR
is
a
good
resource
to
find
some
information
on
this,
but
back
in
2018
there
was
an
article
that
was
on
NPR,
and
this
was
related
to
us
since
they're
saying
that
53%
of
native
peoples
are
connected
to
the
Internet,
which
is
they
said,
the
lowest
for
any
racial
group.
I
guess
is
how
they
categorized
it
in
the
United
States
and
that
probably,
to
kind
of
give
that
some
more
context
I
mean
that's,
probably
a
very
broad
spectrum.
G
We
do
have
reservations
that
are
very
rural
and
and
isolated,
but
we
also
have
reservations
that
are
you
know,
literally
in
the
city.
So
it's
it's
hard
to
compare,
and
my
advice
is
when
working
with
the
community,
you
know
just
try
to
figure
out
and
understand
kind
of
you
know
we're.
You
know
understand
like
what
kind
of
issues
they're
facing,
because
you
can't
just
you
know
apply.
G
And
again
you
know
every
every
reservation
is
different.
So
just
you
know
if
you
are
working
with
tribal
communities,
you
know
try
to
you
know,
look
at
those
issues
and
see
you
know
where
the
actual
concerns
are
and
where
things
can
be
worked
on.
But
there
are,
you
know
just
other.
You
know
reasons
that
probably
that
are
maybe
obvious
for
some
people,
but
you
know
there's
in
in
the
world
areas.
Where
was
it?
Where
some
reservations
are,
there
is
like
little
or
no.
G
You
know
broadband
service
and
that's
also
related
to
cell
phone
connectivity
as
well.
So
not
only
do
they,
you
know
not
have
access
to
internet,
but
the
phone
service
might
be
really
low,
so
they're
not
getting
connectivity
that
way
either
and
there's
also
issues
with
how
these
grants
are
being
awarded.
So
NPR
I
think
did
some
research
or
a
nonprofit
organization
did
research
and
found
that
you
know
less
than
1%
of
government
grants
are
being
awarded
to
native
nations
to
actually
implement.
G
You
know
these
actual
things
that
we're
talking
about,
like
you
know,
creating
the
networking
in
the
infrastructure
and
other
things.
So,
even
though
there
are
funds
that
are
available
either
they're
not
being
awarded
in
terms
of
I
think
the
tribes
may
not
necessarily
know
they
might
not
have
the
technical
grant
skillset
to
apply
or
or
to
you
know,
understand
the
technical
details
of
setting
up
that
kind
of
infrastructure.
So
there's
there's
also
maybe
like
a
skills
gap
between
the
work.
G
G
E
I'd
like
to
talk
about
sometimes
doesn't
have
to
be
now
remain
at
the
time
too,
but
I've
recently
been
interested
in
learning
about
how
people
deal
with
schema
changes
in
a
distributed
type
of
environment.
So
here
offline
first
and
you
can
expect
that
some
of
your
peers
in
an
application
are
slowly
being
updated
over
the
course
of
weeks
or
months
or
years.
How
do
you
deal
with
older
application
versions
wanting
to
communicate
with
newer
versions
and
so
forth?.
A
G
G
G
So
I
have
my
charger
plugged
in
so
hopefully
we
can
continue
so
I
think.
Another
element
about
this,
which
I
think
is
important
to
talk
about,
is
you
have
their
connectivity
issue?
You
have
you
know,
issues
of
you
know:
cell
phone,
you
know
low,
you
know
the
amount
of
access
or
data
that
they
can
get
through
cell
phone
service,
but
I
think
there's
also
points
related
to
the
culture.
G
So
Native
communities
are
going
to
be
very
close
or
you
know,
kids
are
going
to
be
raised
by
not
just
their
parents
but
their
grandparents,
aunts
and
uncles,
because
you
might
just
say
well,
you
know
they
don't
have
access
to
this
information.
You
know
they
could
technically.
You
know,
move
somewhere
closer
where
they
do
have
connection,
but
it's
not
such
an
easy.
You
know
thing
to
do.
G
You
know
when,
when
you're
part
of
a
close
connected
network,
so
from
from
my
perspective,
I
realized
that
this
could
be
an
opportunity
where,
if
students,
if
if
people
that
were
living
in
remote
communities,
that
were
you
know,
living
with
their
family,
if
they
could
just
have
internet
access,
if
they
just
had
that
by
itself,
then
they
could.
You
know,
through
resources
on
the
web,
be
able
to
learn.
G
You
know
web
development,
then
through
that
they
could,
you
know,
potentially
start
working
remotely
for
companies
or
start
building
things
themselves
that
they'd
like
to
and
through
that,
then
they
could
be.
You
know,
you
know,
bring
you
know,
wealth
into
their
community
and
to
their
family
being
able
to
help
those
around
them,
and
so
I
really
see
like
Internet
connectivity
as
a
major
barrier
to
achieve,
but
because
of
the
close-knit
you
know,
nature
of
families
and
the
clans
and
the
communities.
G
G
But
you
know
we
get
into
the
cyclical
pattern
where
you
know
they:
okay,
so
they
don't
have
internet
connectivity,
and
so
they
don't
have
the
resources
and
so
without
the
resources.
Whether
that's
you
you
know
financially,
do
then
be
able
to
build
that
infrastructure.
You
know
again,
they
cannot
get
that
connectivity.
You
know
to
be
able
to
get
that
information
so.
G
So
I
think
in
general,
though
achieving
this,
what
I
think
you
know
be
really
incredible,
just
because
you
know
it
would
give
them
the
opportunity
to
continue
to
you
know,
be
close
to
their
family,
but
have
the
opportunity
to
learn
and
grow
and
to
be
able
to
have
a
good
way
of
living
or
a
good
salary
in
order
to
whether
for
themselves
or
to
help
their
community
help
their
family
things
of
that
nature.
So
those
are
just
some
of
the
points
about
the
culture
that
I
wanted
to
bring
up
as
well,
something.
E
I
don't
know
Adam
if
this
is
something
that
comes
up
in
your
community,
but
a
certain
amount
of
separation
or
segregation
also
can
be
an
advantage
in
evolving
different
approaches
to
things
so
well-well
connectivity
is
a
problem
in
some
ways.
It
could
also
mean
that
unique
solutions
are
only
possible
in
that
environment.
E
G
Yeah
and
I
think
I
think
yeah
I
think
that's
a
really
good
point
and
I
think
introducing
these
ideas
to
the
community
can
I
think
start
to
have
those
conversations.
I
think
me
taking
the
time
to
spend
time
in
those
communities
can
kind
of
also
promote
these
conversations,
but
yeah
I
think
providing
at
least
you
know
some
resources
to
them
and
to
then
allow
them
to
innovate
like
what
you're
saying
I
think
is
yeah
another
way
in
which
to
to
spur
these
actions.
I
want.
H
To
jump
in
along
those
lines,
besides
the
maybe
innovation
that
could
come
about
we're,
seeing
how,
outside
in
the
US,
there's
a
lot
of
regulatory
uncertainty
that
come
with
our
new
technologies
that
make
it
hard
for
beginners
to
innovate.
Whereas
in
these
areas
like
we're
seeing
in
Africa,
those
could
be
more
ripe
for
actually
creating
new
business
ideas
that
have
a
little
bit
more
leeway
and
freedom
to
you
know
a
place
in
our
case:
crypto
currencies,
but
all
kinds
of
other
business
ideas
that
might
not
be
practical
outside
the
area.
Mm-Hmm.
G
And
I've
even
thought
about:
okay,
there's
I'm,
not
not
sure.
If
you've
worked
in
this
space
or
not
doing
but
the
I
know,
there
was
like
some
service
where
there
was
like
SMS
text
messaging.
That
was
letting
community
members
know
like
where
there
were
I
think
it
was
related
to
hardware
as
well,
but
just
letting
members
know
like
where
water
was
available
and
they
could,
like
you
know,
use
their
cell
phone
and
take
an
SMS
messaging
in
order
to
get
that
information.
G
A
It's
so
interesting
how
we're
completely
like
oblivious
to
things
that
don't
fit
with
our
own
experience
of
our,
in
my
case
very
first
world
and
privileged
day-to-day,
but
I
love.
We
hear
a
lot
from
you
know,
folks,
like
doing
who
are
involved
in
projects
in
Africa
or
occasionally
someone
who
is
actually
from
from
another
community.
That
has
those
constraints.
A
That's
really
cool
I
just
wanted
to
mention
that
there
are
a
number
of
articles
on
the
offline
camp,
medium
publication,
but
touch
on
some
of
those
kinds
of
use
cases
like
Sue's
aster
recovery
with
mesh
networks
or
those
kinds
of
things.
So,
if
you're
looking
for
some
suggestions
for
like
or
constrained
environments,
you
might
find
a
few
starting
points.
There
Oh
pop
the
link
in
the
notes,
so
I'll,
let
you
get
back
to
another.
Thank.
I
I,
don't
know
if
you
guys
talked
about
an
emergency
cases,
for
example
something
like
if
any
natural
disaster
or
something
like
that
could
all
the
connections
across
some
area
may
be.
This
kind
of
technology
can
help
to
communicate
between
persons
in
an
affected
area.
For
any
reason,
it's
all
it's
mine.
My
comment.
G
Yeah
yeah
definitely
yeah
I
mean
I.
Think
there
are
cases
where,
like
at
least
here
in
Oklahoma,
we
have
tornadoes
so
like
and
they're
pretty.
They
can
be
pretty
prevalent
south
of
for
I'm
living,
but
also
in
kind
of
this
general
area,
and
they
might
not
necessarily
have
access
to
yeah.
That
information
in
regards
to
you
know
natural
disasters,
but
even
if
they
did,
you
know
what,
if
the
natural
disaster
knocks
out
a
power
line
or
knocks
out
a
service,
you
know,
then
you
know.
G
D
G
So
I'll
go
to
the
next
slide.
These
are
just
like
a
few
of
the
I
think
things
that
kind
of
come
to
mind
as
well.
When
we
talk
about
having
like
an
online
I,
guess,
persona
or
identity,
and
you
know,
as
it
pertains
to
indigenous
peoples,
you
know
they
can
be
very
private
about
information
like
especially
if
it's
cultural
or
ceremonial
in
nature,
but
at
the
same
time,
if
they
don't
put
in
like
certain
safeguards
in
in
relation
to
their
online
identity,
then
you
know
that
information
could
potentially
leak
out.
D
G
G
So
you
know
it
should
be
important
too.
If
they
are
able
to
connect
to
a
web
interface
and
they
are
engaging
with
web
applications,
then
we
also
need
to
inform
these
community
members
about.
You
know
using
two-factor
authentication,
probably
you
know
using
something
that
helps
make
their,
maybe
a
password
manager.
That
makes
it
easy
to
create
passwords
to
know
the
differences
between
using
firefox
and
chrome
or
between
using
DuckDuckGo
and
google
search
in
terms
of
searching
for
information.
You
know
social,
media
and
email.
You
know
if
they
use
Gmail,
for
example.
G
Maybe
that
information
is,
you
know,
being
collected
up
so
again.
You
know
these
are
things
that
they
probably
you
know
they
don't
really
like.
You
know
explicit
when
you
sign
up
for
service,
or
maybe
they
are
in
the
sense
that,
if
you're
really
into
the
fine
details-
and
you
want
to
read
like
the
end
user,
you
know
agreement
on
things
but
I
think
for
most
users
are
not
really
going
to
be
educated
in
this
area
and
they
may
be
sharing
information
that
you
know
shouldn't
be
known
by
anyone
outside
of
the
community.
G
You
know
whether
it's
you
know
on
a
hard
drive
or
not,
and
it's
not
really
being
looked
into
it
all,
but
you
know,
maybe
they
just
don't
want
it
to
be
out
there
and
then
also
from
my
perspective,
I
think
there
is
a
lot
of
opportunity,
I
think
for
for
e-commerce,
because
when
working
with
indigenous
communities,
you
know
there
is
a
tradition
of
regalia
or
beyond
that.
Just
aren't,
you
know,
there's
a
lot
of
artisans
within
the
community
and
because
their
role,
you
know
they
couldn't,
they
could
take
advantage
of.
G
You
know
ecommerce
and
in
ways
that
can
you
know,
help
their
way
of
life
and
so
but
at
the
same
time
they
have
to
also
get
up
to
speed.
You
know
on
what
ecommerce
is
and
and
using
a
platform
and
getting
familiar
with
the
platform
and
how
they
specifically
do
e-commerce.
So
currently
I
see
a
lot
of
community
members
that
post
on
Twitter,
you
know
they'll,
say
hey,
you
know,
I
made
some
earrings
or
you
know,
hey
I
made
this.
You
know
you
know.
G
G
I
think
I
don't
know
if
there's
some
that
have
no
overhead
and
maybe
some
that
have
you
know
a
subscription
model,
but
either
way
you
know,
I
think
that
there
are
errors
in
which
artisans
within
these
communities
can
also
plug
into
and
take
advantage
of.
You
know
that
the
commerce
that's
happening.
You
know
on
the
web
today.
G
G
G
So
this
is
just
some
of
the
social
media
platforms
that
we're
on
in
order
to
get
a
you
know,
get
the
word
out
about
our
work
and
at
the
end
here
we
have
like
some
information
related
to
resources,
so
these
are
kind
of
some
of
the
articles
that
I
read
and
to
get
like
see
what
other
communities
are
going
through
outside
of
the
Muscogee
Creek
Nation.
Here
in
Oklahoma
and
Arizona
State
University
put
together
some
nice
information
related
to
the
digital
divide.
G
E
E
E
Incorporated
with
the
government,
exam
BIA
and
so
there's
some
ambiguities,
there's
also
some
other
processes
that
works
being
worked
on
to
try
to
allow
local
ownership
or
illustration
of
the
plan.
So
basically
communal,
lenin's
and
I.
Imagine
some
of
those
things
are
very
similar,
but
are
you
I
guess
I'm
just
curious
if
you're,
if
there's
any
overlap
and
some
of
the
things
we're
doing
there
with
what
some
of
the
problems
that
exist
in
in
the
Americas
or
if
it's
kind
of
well-established
I
guess
it's
been,
we've
been
colonists.
E
D
G
G
You
know
providing
medical
assistance
to
people
out
in
rural
areas
and
so
yeah
I
think
I
think
in
our
situations
we
might
be
in
a
similar
situation
in
the
sense
that
you
know
the
the
the
local
I
guess
tried
to
are
the
ones
taking
the
initiative
on
some
of
those
things.
So
yeah
I
mean
I
think
that
in
that
sense
it
kind
of
there
is
opportunity
to
then
work
specifically
with
you
know
those
tribal
with
the
with
the
tribal
nations
here
in
terms
of
you
know,
establishing
what
you
might
be
internet
connectivity.
G
H
Think
we're
gonna
have
more
talk
about
this
with
you
specifically
later,
because
we've
talked
about
designs
of
the
administration
system.
It's
basically
recording
ownership
is,
and
your
idea
of
ownership
is
different
in
areas
and
there's
different
ownership,
and
so
you
know
I
think
it'll
be
interesting
to
hear
later
and
there's
conversation
how
we
could
either
deploy
something
that
would
be
useful
in
that
context
or
something
that
there's
an
overlap
between,
though,
at
that
ownership
and
overall
state
ownership
which
surrounds
it
and
just
determining
what
gets
to
be
feared.
E
I
had
one
other
yeah,
so
I
was
curious
about
something.
It
seems
like
you've
been
quite
successful
personally
in
in
bridging
that
a
lot
of
these
gaps
that
you're
talking
about
I'm
curious,
have
there
been
some
things
that
you've
seen
that
are
replicable
in
your
story
that
could
be
applied
to
some
of
the
some
of
the
native
areas
or
communities
that
you're
seeing
you.
G
Know
so,
there's
definitely
more
work
to
be
done.
I've
kind
of
just
I
just
moved
out
here,
like
a
month
ago,
a
couple
months
ago,
and
so
I'm
kind
of
now
just
having
conversations
with
the
Muscogee
Creek
Nation,
as
well
as
there's
a
coding
bootcamp.
That's
close
to
here
call
it
coding,
dojo,
so
I'm
just
now
like
trying
to
start
conversations
and
to
like
let
them
know
that
this
is
an
opportunity
for
them
to
that.
G
I
think
aligns
with
a
lot
of
people's
way
of
life
in
terms
of
you
know,
within
their
community
and
wanting
to
because
look
for
anyone,
that's
gotten
into
development.
It's
not
easy.
It
can
be
very
hate.
You
know
difficult.
You
can
want
to
pull
your
hair
out
of
time,
so
you
can
just
want
to
quit
sometimes
and
I
think
what
we're
trying
to
do,
at
least
at
least
right
now
is
to
say.
Okay,
there
are
opportunities.
Let
us
be
a
support
network
for
you.
G
So
at
this
moment
in
time
you
know
building
of
that
support
network
and
then
hopefully,
in
the
near
future,
we
can
actually,
you
know,
work
with
people
in
the
community
that
want
to
get
into
the
field
and
then,
from
there,
people
that
are
closer
to
you
know
remote
in
rural
areas
that
have
a
support
network
that
have
been
successful.
Then
they
can
start
to
replicate
that
for
other
people
as
well
as
community,
so
I
think
that
that
can
also
work
for
other
tribal
nations
here.
G
So
there
are
other
communities,
for
example
the
Kiowa
that
are
doing
camps
for
students
in
with
a
small
high
school,
so
I
have
connected
with
them.
I
haven't
necessarily
gone
out
and
and
worked
with
them
yet,
but
there
are
other
publications
that
are
interested
is
including
the
Osage
as
well,
which
are
just
looking
here.
So
there
I
think
right
now
they're
trying
to
build
it
with
one
community
and
then
hopefully
you
know
that
can
be
replicated
out.
G
D
F
F
A
G
I'll,
just
let's
plug
the
thing
kid
hub
group
again
like
if
you
want
to
contribute-
and
you
know
help
us
on
github-
you
know
send
some
commits
our
way.
That'd
be
great.
If,
if
you
have
like
also
just
I,
guess
send
me
information
I
think
you
have
my
email
of
Terry,
so
anyone
has
like
more
resources
that
you
just
brought
up.
Protocol
labs,
I.
Think
there's
tutorial
for
information
which
I
didn't
know
about
before
so
yeah
like
we
take
a
look
at
that,
but
yeah.
G
If,
if
anyone
wants
to
like
you
know,
collaborate
on
something
yeah
feel
free
to,
you
know
speak
with
me
and
we
figure
out
what
we
can
do.
I
wanted
to
go
to
the
offline
conference,
it's
kind
of
not
the
best
time
with
work
home,
but
yeah
I
would
like
to
set
out
date.
You
know
further
in
the
future
and
so
that
I
can
attend
yeah.
A
We
certainly
do
our
best
after
the
event
to
kind
of
summarize
discussions
that
happen
and
share
them
in
writing,
so
that
medium
publication
is
a
great
place
to
catch
up
on
some
of
the
interesting
stuff.
That's
come
out
of
past
discussions,
oh
I
was
just
gonna
say
we
usually
host
these
on
the
third
Wednesday
of
the
month,
which
would
be
October
16th
for
the
next
one,
and
we
don't
have
a
specific
topic
or
presenter.
Yet
for
that
one.
So
people
can
be
thinking
about
whether
there's
something
they'd
like
to
share.
A
We
will
have
had
offline
camp
in
between,
so
it
might
be
that
we'd
have
some
folks
from
off.
I
can't
sharing
some
of
the
interesting
discussions
from
there
or
we
could
look
at
a
specific
presenter,
but
I
suspect
we
might
have
a
bigger
crowd
than
usual
a
trapline
camp,
so
we'll
see
how
it
goes,
but
if
anyone
is
not
doing
this
already,
the
wreaths,
oh,
oh
I,
know
what
else
I
was
in
suggest.
Adam
opened
an
issue
in
the
in
our
repo
about
this.
A
But
if
you
follow
the
repo
I'll
find
the
link
in
here
here
somewhere,
because
this
is
where
I
announced
the
call
dates
and
if
you're
I
can
like
tag
you
in
the
issue,
so
that
you
actually
get
an
email
to
remind
you
that
the
calls
exist
but
great
to
see
everybody
today
and
I'll
send
out
a
link
to
the
video
of
this
in
our
recap,
so
feel
free
to
share
with
anyone
or
Adam.
If
you
want
to
share
the
video
more
broadly
as
a
place
to
share
your
presentation,
please
feel
free
to
do
that.