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From YouTube: Ecosystem Working Group 2020 Recap
Description
Dietrich Ayala, Ecosystem Lead, was on hand at our December meetup to give an update on the many, many projects shipped by the Ecosystems WG in 2020.
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A
You
may
recognize
me
from
previous
meetups
and
dietrich
ayala.
I
work
on
the
fpfs
team,
the
lead
for
the
ecosystems
working
group.
You
may
know
us
from
a
lot
of
different
things
that
you
see
around
the
project
and
you
see
and
events
like
these
and
I'm
going
to
talk
to
you
for
just
a
couple
minutes
about
who
we
are
the
things
that
we're
doing
all
some
of
the
big
things
that
we
ship
this
year
and
what
we're
gonna
do
next.
A
So
these
are
some
of
the
faces
of
the
people
that
are
behind
events
like
this
blog
posts
that
we
write.
A
Other
events
that
we
put
on
around
the
community
a
lot
of
the
work
that
you
see
when
you
see
us
moving,
github
repos
around
or
landing
support
for
integration
with
other
developer
libraries
or
publishing
research
or
doing
things
like
the
annual
2020
planning
that
molly
talked
about
before
that
shot
from
a
restaurant,
obviously
is
from
earlier
this
year,
when
that
was
a
thing
that
we
could
do
and
a
lot
of
new
people
on
the
team
this
year
that,
sadly,
we
have
yet
to
meet
in
person
but
work
closely
with
together
all
of
the
time,
and
you
see
the
fruits
of
their
work
in
front
of
you
every
day,
as
the
project
runs.
A
Some
of
the
areas
that
we
work
on
the
ecosystem,
working
group,
things
like
community
development
and
engagement,
contribute
experience,
documentation
all
the
events
that
you
see:
ipfs,
participation,
events
and
some
of
the
content
that
we
do
there.
When
we
do
things
like
fix
websites
or
plan
new
versions
of
websites.
A
That's
also
some
of
the
folks
on
ecosystem
and
related
teams,
and
also
track
figuring
out
what
what
are
the
things
that
we're
doing?
Actually,
achieving
the
goals
that
we
have,
are
they
having
the
impact
that
we
want
to
see
metrics
and
our
tracking
of
success
of
some
of
these?
Some
of
these
efforts
are
areas
that
we
work
on,
that
it
was
a
big
year,
even
with
all
the
other
things
going
on.
A
We
did
a
lot
of
things
in
the
first
half
we
had
a
a
bigger
team
and
took
on
a
number
of
big
initiatives
that
I'll
talk
about
in
a
few
minutes
and
second
half
of
the
year
really
focusing
in
on
a
few
different
project,
operational
things,
as
well
as
helping
out
a
number
of
other
projects
and
helping
out
with
other
launches
that
were
happening
and
our
interplanetary
stack
the
first
half
of
the
year
we
actually
had
a
super
group.
A
We
had
three
different
smaller
working
groups
rolled
up
into
one
mega
ecosystem
group,
where
we
did
a
bunch
of
things
that
you
may
recognize
that
jacob
talked
about
some
of
these
before,
like
the
jsi
pfest
model,
repo
work,
making
it
easier
for
developers
to
contribute
fewer
prs
per
change
was
one
of
the
goals
there
that
we
achieved.
A
A
Second
half
the
year,
we
had
a
smaller
group
that
went
in
as
into
other
projects,
really
helping,
accelerate
and
amplify
the
the
work
there
be
able
to
launch
things
like
docs
in
dram
and
file
being
doing
developer
research,
understanding,
one
of
the
challenges
that
developers
have
that
developers
have
in
their
journey
in
developing
ips-based
applications
working
with
different
collabs,
who
are
already
building
on
ipfs
and
helping
them
understand
what
filecoin
can
offer,
as
well
as
new
things
like
integration
with
more
browsers.
A
One
of
the
big
areas
that
we
focus
on
was
developer
experience,
making
it
easier
to
for
us
to
develop
and
maintain
ipfs
make
it
easier
for
you
to
contribute
to
ipfs.
We
do
that
much
in
a
number
of
different
ways:
docs
research
content
and
developer
economics
ergonomics
changes
in
content
strategy
and
websites.
We
we
overhauled
the
newsletter.
A
We
got
a
lot
of
great
feedback
from
the
people
who
I
think
we
missed
one
and
immediately
heard
from
a
bunch
of
folks
how
important
that
is,
for
people
to
be
able
to
keep
up
with
what's
happening
in
the
wide
world
of
ipfs
things
like
an
audit
of
the
entire
ecosystem
of
content.
A
Overall,
community
health
be
able
to
see
with
the
ecosystem,
dashboard,
become
a
tool
that
we
used
regularly
and
still
lean
on
pretty
heavily
today
to
understand
how
things
are
going
in
the
overall
ipfs
community
making
sure
that
we're
responding
to
the
issues
that
you
file.
As
you
can
see
here,
we
measure
our
response
time
to
every
issue
that
you
file.
A
I
we
also
did
a
number
of
things
like
bots
to
be
able
to
know
when
new
posts
happen
on
stack
overflow,
hacker
news
in
the
forum
to
make
sure
that
people
are
getting
response
and
understanding
the
the
full
force
level
view
of
our
ecosystem
for
metrics.
We're
measuring
a
number
of
different
things
in
both
networks,
the
community
developer
engagement
and
a
bunch
of
other
areas
to
make
sure
that
the
work
that
we're
having
is
having
an
impact-
and
we
also
go
all
of
well
not
physically
go.
A
We
now
virtually
go
all
over
the
place.
Still
we
had
a
bunch
of
different
events
this
year,
consensus
academy.
We
we
did
a
course
there.
We
transitioned
from
the
weekly
monday
meet
up
to
these
monthly
virtual
meetups
as
one
of
the
efforts
of
this
group
this
year.
So
thanks
for
joining
us
here
today
and
the
other
events,
external
events
we're
at
paris
blockchain
week.
A
This
week
we
participated
at
distributed
camp
ready
layer,
one
and
a
bunch
of
other
different
events
this
year,
and
we
also
work
on
the
collabs
and
grants
program,
so
managing
the
relationships
that
we
have
with
big
ipfs
users
and
making
sure
that
we
understand
by
interviewing
them
periodically
understand
what
their
needs
are,
making
sure
that
their
their
prs
and
changes
and
protocol
changes
are
happening
and
working
with
grants
to
be
able
to
fund
and
accelerate
some
of
the
big
changes
that
we
want
to
see
in
the
ipfs
ecosystem.