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From YouTube: IPFS Sprint
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B
We've
sort
of
adopted
a
bit
of
a
scrum
pattern,
so
we're
coming
up
talk
more
about
that
missed
call.
I
just
wanted
to
let
you
guys
know
beforehand.
Finally,
there's
a
note
about
the
thumb.
E
B
B
B
B
This
is
Lars
Lars,
great
Bartlett's
Eastman.
He
works
on
infrastructure
and
packet.
Switching
cool
Victor,
hey
me:
first
go
ahead,
sir.
Why
are
you
always
forgetting
me?
Hey
I'm
free
will
I
live
in
Germany,
but
in
the
South
for
ibook
and
I
work
on
IP
us
and
lots
of
JavaScript
things,
especially
Jace
I
BFFs.
B
D
B
C
It's
turning
down
the
other
people's
mics
I'm
Matt,
I'm
I'm
in
philadelphia,
and
I'm
the
program
manager
for
protocol
lab.
So
I
deal
with
a
lot
of
the
overall
organizational
roadmap
stuff
and.
H
I
F
B
B
G
G
B
J
K
It
about
yeah,
so
this
is
so.
The
announcement
is
that
we
are
switching
as
Richard
mentioned
earlier,
we're
kind
of
switching
up
our
structure
for
how
we're
how
we're
planning
our
roadmap
for
the
quarter,
which
then
impacts
a
lot
of
things,
including
how
these?
How
these
Monday
calls
are
going
to
be
structured.
The.
B
G
That
the
work
of
that
sprint
is
the
center
of
their
attention
for
that
whole
two
weeks,
so
that
if
there,
of
course,
there
might
be
little
things
that
they're
going
to
pay
attention
to
during
that
time,
but
they're
going
to
be
primarily
paying
attention
to
the
work
of
that
sprint.
During
those
two
weeks
now.
G
At
a
time
actually,
I've
never
tested
that
Richard.
Could
you
try
putting
week
three
and
week
four
on
one
of
those
issues
and
see
if
it
shows
up
in
both
places
but
I
so
for
right?
Now
those
sprints
there
in
though
the
week
that
starts
the
sprint,
so
right
now
we're
at
the
beginning
of
week
three
of
the
year
so
under
week
three
you
see
that
we're
starting
to
Sprint's
one.
G
That's
focused
on
data
hub
that
I'll
talk
about
in
a
moment
and
then
one
that's
focused
on
the
JSI
PFS
accessing
go
I,
PFS
content
from
the
browser
and
and
to
beat
is
leading
that
one
rich
I
see
you
shaking
your
head,
so
it
didn't
work.
Okay,
oh
well!
So
yeah,
that's
the
that
is
the
the
unveiling
of
of
the
road
map
of
what
we
will
be
focusing
our.
G
What
the
protocol
labs
people
will
be,
focusing
their
attention
on
over
the
coming
quarter,
and
then
people
are
welcome
to
add
their
own
work
on
to
this
roadmap.
We
have
added
this
notion
of
a
sprint.
Ii
know
like
a
little
sprint
that
involves
maybe
one
person
or
two
people
working
for
maybe
a
couple
days
or
a
week,
and
so
that's
not
quite
a
full
fledged
sprint.
It
doesn't
necessarily
have
a
project
manager
coordinating
it,
but
it's
something
that
we
won't
want
to
acknowledge
on
the
roadmap
as
taking
up
someone's
time.
G
So
that
is
the
new
roadmap
and
the
new
sprint
structures,
sprints
and
sprint
e
knows
which
brings
up
this
I've
noticed
with
all
these
new
cards
that
creates
this
confusion
of.
We
have
had
this
notion
of
the
Monday
sprint
calls
and
the
tickets
for
those
are
marked
with
the
labeled
sprint,
and
so
that
is
creating
I.
Think
it's
going
to
create
some
confusion
about
what's
a
sprint
versus.
What's
what
is
just
a
weekly
check-in
call
Richard,
so
I
call
it
spring
to
use,
be
called
sprint.
Abcde,
it's
fine!
G
If
we
rename
it
to
like
week
one
sprint
for
week,
two
and
three
spring
problem:
okay!
Well,
we
can
follow
I
just
wanted
to
call
it
call
it
out
at
this
plant
is
like
that's
going
to
be
a
little
bit
confusing
until
we
figure
out
the
right
language
for
distinguishing
between
these
weekly
calls
versus
these
things
that
we
are
calling
Sprint's,
because
they
are
modeled
on
the
scrum
notion
of
a
sprint.
And
then
the
other
thing
to
call
out
with
this
new
roadmap
is
I.
G
What
can
we
do
to
keep
them
fresh
and
there's
a
there's,
a
pull
request
there
that
has
a
list
of
the
endeavors
and
their
statuses
so
which
ones
are
stale,
which
ones
are
actively
maintained
and
where
there
are
a
bunch
of
issues.
I've
spun
up
for
the
captains
of
each
of
those
endeavors
to
follow
up
and
set
the
plan
of,
what's
going
to
happen
to
that
endeavor
over
this
next
quarter,
that's
partially
as.
B
Far
as
what's
important
for
the
community,
that's
partially
so
that
community
members
can
know
if
there's,
if
there's
an
endeavor,
that
you
care
about,
that.
G
Has
been
marked
as
being
basically,
we
don't
have
the
bandwidth
to
handle
to
handle,
supporting
it
right
now,
then,
that's
a
place
where
community
members
could
step
up
and
take
captainship
of
that
endeavor.
So
hopefully
this
gives
more
clarity
of
ways
that
people
can
get
involved
in
helping
this
code
stay
healthy
and
fresh.
G
G
Maybe
one
comment
about
a
mile
or
dinner:
yes:
okay,
maybe
one
comment
about
waffle,
bots
for
the
father
sprints.
So
right
now
we
opened
up
all
the
issues
regarding
regarding
tasks
of
sprints
in
the
respective
repose
of
the
wealth
of
the
endeavor,
for
example
the
jsf
PFS
rico
and
the
archives
rico
and
the
waffle
balls
of
these
are
by
you
well.
G
But
you
can
look
at
what's
in
progress
and
what's
next
and
whatever
keys
are
yeah
I,
so
I
think
it's
going
to
take
us
a
couple
weeks
to
get
this
really
clear,
but
the
the
main
thing
would
be
that
so
this
waffle
board
is
currently
showing
sprint
issues
that
are
in
the
IPF
SPM
repository,
and
we
I
have
a
hunch
that
what
will
work
is
to
use
those
sprint
issues
as
your
sort
of
very
minimal,
consistent
reference
point
to
know
who's
on
the
team,
who's,
the
PM
or
the
primary
contact
for
that
sprint
and
where
do
I,
where
do
I
find
the
waffle
board
for
that
spring
and
and
that
it
might
be
just
and
what
are
the
dates
that
that
springs
happening
on?
F
F
Sorry,
I
all
captured
them
because
I
was
going
through
all
the
notes.
I'm
opening
two
world
wars
and
trying
to
like
find
my
way
through
all
these
tabs.
Could
you
summarize
it
yeah
the
main
the
main
thing?
We
are
just
a
simple
thing
of
these
issues
that
are
in
ipf
SPM
that
are
marked
with
the
sprint
label.
G
G
But
then
those
individual
Sprint's
won't
have
a
ton
of
information
they
just
let
you
figure
out,
like
Oh,
divides
the
lead
on
this
project.
Lars
and
lars
and
kuba
are
working
on
it
with
him
and
it's
happening
on
these
weeks,
and
I
can
find
the
waffle
board
for
all
the
relevant,
like
the
actual
tasks
related
to
that
sprint
here,
like
in
whichever
repo
right.
So
what
we
did
we
expanded
a
little
bit
and,
in
addition
to
have
this
rentable
point
for
like
who
is
working
on
this
project
only
sprint
for
these
two
weeks.
G
I
G
We
felt
it
was
a
very
good
thing
to
do
is
daily
check-ins
on
the
spring
issue,
so
people
can
tell
on
the
spring
issue
what
they're
going
to
be
working
on
that
day
and
in
the
end
of
the
day,
they
can
also
tell
the
rest
of
the
people
working
with
them.
What
did
they
manage
to
finish
and
if
they
got
blocking
something?
So
that's
this
way.
G
I
So
so
yeah
like
we
basically
to
the
discussion
between
the
people
that
work
operating
the
browser
accesses
going
papers
print
we
are
trying.
We
are
not
sure.
If
this
is
the
best
thing,
it
might
be
too
much
overhead.
It
might
be
too
much
in
communication.
It
might
be
too
little.
We
still
enough
this
is
the
first
place,
so
look
at
how
I
report
back
and
how
everyone
feels
so
far
I've
been
going
good,
but
it
just
first
day
so
random
and
I.
I
I
Why
are
we
doing
like?
Why
is
that
story
written
that
way?
All
of
that
stuff
will
have
that
as
the
sort
of
launch
of
the
sprint
and
then
and
then
will
we
will.
We
haven't
decided
whether
we're
going
to
do
actual
synchronous
daily
stand-ups
or
do
the
same
thing
that
you
guys
are
doing
of
just
adding
the
issues
and
adding
the
comments
on
to
an
issue.
I
will
discuss
that
tomorrow
too,
when
one
thing
I
share
the
link
I
can
share
again
for
with
you
like.
G
Oh
so
yeah,
that's
the
that's!
The
shift
in
structure
which
Oh
something
I
wanted
to
call
out
for
community
members
following
this
is
the
part
of
the
point
here
of
publishing
this
roadmap
is
that
it
allows
is
that
the
people
from
protocol
labs
have
put
our
heads
together
to
figure
out
what
we
are
spending
out.
We
are
what
we
are
committing
our
time
to
working
on
and
making
it
clear
what
we're
working
on,
what
that's
aiming
at
achieving
and
to
some
extent,
why
we're
working
on
that
which
then
gives
room
for
community
members.
I
Also,
it
gives
you
room
to
have
a
sense
of
where
you
can
contribute,
either
by
picking
up
something,
that's
not
getting
attention
or
contributing
to
an
exist
esperan
we're
already
committed
to,
and
so
this
is
where
I'm
hoping
in
the
long
term.
That
will
allow
us
to
build
more
of
a
sense
of
the
community
coordinating
by
communicating
about
what
they're
focusing
on,
and
why
and
that
that
people
can
sort
of
build
up
a
community.
G
G
Thank
You
Man,
someone
else
have
any
more
questions
about
the
last
point:
no
sweet,
ok.
The
next
person
is
mad
with
uptake
optical
disk
or
attic
yeah.
So
starting
late
last
week
there
was
there
was
sort
of
a
and
a
jump
in
the
amount
of
people
participating
on
today.
Matt
is
talking
with
Matt
I,
don't
know
what
that
means,
but
the
so
there
are
more
people
in
the
in
the
discourse
channel
asking
questions.
G
So
this
is
our
opportunity
to
test
discourse
where
see
whether
how
it
actually
is
working
in
terms
of
allowing
us
to
let
people
ask
questions
and
let
us
answer
questions,
but
it's
very
very
quickly
brought
up
things
where
people
are
asking
questions
on
discourse
that
are
already
answered
in
the
faq.
So
it
brings
up
that
that
issue
of
how
do
we
handle
that
connection
of.
G
G
Faq
to
this
course,
it
might
make
sense
to
actually
do
that
now
that
people
are
starting
to
use
it
and
it
make
it
easier
and
more
obvious,
or
at
least
start
creating
a
post
which
is
pin
were
linked
in
the
pin
arm
to
the
FAQ
to
make
sure
people
read
it
before
posting
there
a
couple
of
ways
you
can
make
that
in
this
course
happen,
cool.
G
Sir
process
for
moving
that
forward,
besides
just
saying
now,
is
a
good
time
to
interface
to
know
when
we
would
switch
over
whether
I
should
move
the
world
epic,
you
something
I
for
the
short
term.
I
would
say,
at
least
just
add
a
pins
note
saying,
make
sure
to
check
the
faq,
and
then
you
might
because
there's
also
just
a
figuring
out
of
what's
what's
going
to
be
a
smooth
way
to
move
the
faq
over
because,
like
the
faq,
you
don't
like
look
looking
at
the
stuff
in
the
faq.
G
C
C
G
Thank
you,
I,
don't
know
we're
definitely
I
mean
there
were
things
like
a
trial
version
only
works
with
HTTP,
not
https
and
I.
Think
the
trial
version
did
not
does
not
allow
anonymous
posting,
so
there
were
their
work.
There
were
some
like
real
concerns
from
some
people
saying
like
this
doesn't
work,
but
those
concerns
would
be
addressed
if
we
switch.
If
we,
if
we
finish
the
trial
and
switch
to
just
using
it,
we
can
address
those
concerns.
A
A
I
G
G
G
E
Of
people
coming
and
experiencing
I
PFS,
especially
the
JavaScript
version
for
the
first
time
we
actually
now
have
in
an
issue
like
just
a
notes
from
someone
at
spent
two
weeks
digging
to
all
the
repos
like
investigating,
asking
us
questions,
jumping
into
these
meetings
and
basically
getting
information
that,
like
you,
will
probably
need.
As
you
go
through
the
IPS
mountain
in
the
beginning,
it
might
be
e
like
seem
overwhelming,
because
there's
a
lot
of
modules
and
a
lot
of
pieces
that
click
together,
but
most
of
them,
if
I
very
well
all
clearly
fine
interfaces.
C
I
Not
the
case
always
feel
free
to
ask
issues
and
what
is
there's
a
problem,
I
don't
understand
and
we
or
anyone
you
think
we
like
jump
and
like
make
sure
you
have
all
the
information
you
need
to
to
get
the
issue
done
and
yeah
I
keep
coming
to
these
chats.
We
are
also
always
available
in
IRC
and
key
lab
is
always
like
one
really
good
medium
to
talk
with
us
and
yeah
like
keep
us
posted
like
we
are
happy
to
help.
You
w
tell
us
great
thanks.
So
much.
I
Jeweler
I
would
but
likely
not
gonna,
be
here
next
Monday
I,
don't
else.
I
Brutal,
thank
you.
That's
great
see
what
yeah
you
can
now
login
with
get
up
sorry,
but
we
just
didn't
know
that
we
could
do
it.
We're
asking
pro
volunteer,
thurs,
I,
think
but
I
didn't
hear
what
you
were
asking
for.
Oh
I
just
nominate
you
as
a
tearful
moderator.
Oh
thank
you
and
then
Victor
your
note
taker
next
week.
Thank
you,
alright!
Well,
that
was
very
democratic
awesome,
since
there
are
no
more
items
on
this
call.
I
am
going
to
say
that
we're
pretty
much
done
with
the
All
Hands
call
Lars.
I
B
B
F
C
B
Official
schedule
would
be
an
hour
for
this
all
hands
and
then
an
hour
for
the
cross.
Sprint.
Chatter,
but
I,
don't
think
it's
only
it's
barely
it's
not
even
quarter
quarter
of
and
also
I,
don't
think
that
cross
spring
conversation
is
going
to
take
an.
G
Such
creatures
coming
now
well
I
got
one
more
thing
that
we
could
mention
glad.
This
is
como
vez,
so
coming
up.
The
first
week
of
februari
is
the
gap
hackathon
with
the
theory
Imperium
and
I
PFS
in
Seattle,
the
main
so
there's
kind
of
two
things
going
on
there.
It's
one
getting
if
you're
am
deaths
and
I
be
a
festive
together
to
work
on
points
of
integration
between
those
two
systems
and
while
we're
at
it
kind
of
kicking
off
a
public
hackathon
like
do
it
yourself
at
home.
G
So
there's
going
to
be
a
night
of
talks
on
Sunday,
februari,
fifth
and
then
maybe
like
a
drop
in
get
help
day
somewhere
in
the
middle
and
then
sort
of
a
net.
It's
you
know
announce
things
on
on
saturday
or
something
meanwhile,
the
the
etherium
meta
mask.
I
professed
themes.
Whoever
is
able
to
make
it
are.
Are
you
know
working
on
the
core
integration
stuff?
There
is
a
ticket
community
issue
188.
M
Been
yeah
following
the
issue
and
try
to
reply
as
soon
as
I
can
I'll
bet
he'll
be
there?
Are
you
like
I
know
that
keeping
one
and
Jeremy
why
you're
sleeping
to
give
a
talk?
Are
we
looking
for
like
talk
like
20-30
minutes?
Also,
you
won't
like
workshops
on
the
first
day
and
every
got
a
confirmation
from
Germany
the
he
is
going
to
be
there.
No,
not
yet
the
yeah.
M
We
were
pretty
well
represented
on
the
etherium
side
for
talks
for
sunday,
februari
fifth,
but
yeah
I
mean
I
can
make
up
an
IPF
s
talk
but
I'm.
Definitely
not
the
best
person
for
it.
Yeah
I'll
just
check
in
we've
long
and
weigh
or
something
I
have
to
see
what
their
schedule
look
like:
cool,
it's
cool,
also
I'm,
just
calling
out
come
opposite
heavy.
M
Were
you
watching
on
the
stream
or
did
you
just
join
I
just
joined
yet
yeah
I
recommend
watching
the
recording
from
the
earlier
part
of
this,
because
we've
restructured
our
whole
quarterly
and
it's
information
that
will
be
useful
for
you,
cool
and
and
on
that
road
map.
This
athyrium
hackathon
is
already
there
on
the
road
map.
Wait
on.
I
F
M
I
L
G
And
Johnny
crunch
and
Frank
did
you?
Do
you
have
anything
that
you
wanted
to
discuss
the
unity
context?
No
I,
think
Richard,
Richard
and
I
right
discuss
something
on
the
IPL
d
called,
but
I
think
I'll
leave
it
for
that
call
this
friday.
I
think
I
just
got
a
cocoon
across
the
the
get
book
actually
for
just
getting
up
to
speed
with
ipf
s.
One
thing
that
I
rented
to
was
ice
mitad
an
issue
about
garbage
collection.
C
B
J
J
J
G
N
On
this
call,
nikoloz,
the
main
I
feel
deeper
person
might
be
a
good
idea
to
flag
the
issue
here.
Just
like
mentioned
that
you
wants
me
to
happen,
or
even
about
some
things.
Then
you
can
either
talk
about
any
issue
or
have
a
separate
appeal
d
call
scheduled
that
make
sense
yes,
yeah,
mostly
as
I
mentioned,
is
about
context
and
in
the
Jason
LD
world.
There's
this
concept
of
actually
identifying
your
attributes
for
semantic
interoperability
and
I,
think
and
but
I
think
it's
jason
with
json.
So
I
think
it's
it's
optional.
N
I
think
if
that
is
actually
something
that,
in
the
IPL
d
world
actually
sort
of
wanted
to
have
the
the
context
the
attributes
described
and
there's
some
nuances
about
how
to
actually
implement
that
I
think
but
I'm
on
the
verifiable
claims
task
force
for
w3c,
and
so
I
think
we're
talking
about
this
quite
a
bit
about
in
the
leveraging
I
PFS
I
pld
that
first
in
those
use
cases,
could
you
could
you
make
an
issue
for
that
I
know.
Edd
Silverton
has
run
into
that
same
thing
of
so.
B
That
is
not
easy
to
reconcile
with
IPL
d
and
I
know
he's
been
sort
of
frustrated
with
that,
also,
and
so
just
by
the,
but
there's
not
there's
no
issue
that
specifically
calls
that
out.
So
it's
been
hard
for
me
to
get
it
on
Nikolas
radar
of
like
this
is
a
thing
that
needs
to
be
handled
in
order
for
IPL
do
to.
J
Thank
you.
Everyone
for
joining
the
IPF
s
all
hands,
call
you're
all
wonderful
people.
Congratulations
I
believe
we
will
now
segue
immediately
into
the
sprint
skull
yeah
yeah
I
divi
can
I
can
I
go
first
since
I
held
off
from
the
community
portion
of
the
relevant
part
of
my
sprint.
Since
we're
talking
about
it
relative.
G
To
the
sprint
Matt
before
you
begin,
I
just
want
to
be
very
clear
with
everyone.
The
all
hands
call
is
over.
If
you
want
to
go,
you
can
go.
Thank
you.
The
old
hands
call
is
over,
but
stick
around
for
just
a
moment,
because
I
have
this
community
relevant
info
that
happens
to
fit
underneath
my
sprint
call
and
I
didn't
want
to
repeat
myself:
okay,
Matt,
take
it
away.
G
B
B
G
So
I
attended
a
hackathon
at
University
of
Pennsylvania
this
weekend
that
was
organized
by
the
data
refuge
and
climate
mirror
projects.
Those.
B
Are
both
they're
both
communities
Riven
efforts
that
were
they
arose
from
people.
G
Who
rely
on
climate
data
sets
being
worried
that
the
data
sets
hosted
by
the
US
federal
government
will
get
turned
off
or
the
servers
will
get
turned
off
and
then
their
data
won't
be
available
anymore,
and
so,
even
if
we
did
not
care
about
this
data
personally
or
politically,
oh
there
is.
The
interesting
thing
of
this
is
a
very
clear
example
of
centralization
hurting
right,
where
you
have
an
entire
field
of
researchers,
spread.
G
That
their
data
is
going
to
disappear
because
one
server
might
get
turned
off
or
a
couple
of
servers
controlled
by
one
organization
like
it
turned
off
and
suddenly
their
entire
field
of
researches
is
in
peril,
and
so
this
is
where
we
have
stood
up
and
said.
Well,
let's,
let's,
let's
look
at
the
fact
that
this
is
a
symptom
of
the
broader,
deeper
problem
of
centralization
and
I
published
an
article
about
that
on
medium
a
couple
weeks
ago,
and
so
at
the
hackathon.
G
I
got
to
talk
to
some
people
about
what
that
looks
like
in
on
the
ground
of
what
it
looks
like
to
decentralize
a
gigantic.
An
entire
field
of
research
and
data
sets,
and
let
me
tell
you
it's
complicated
and
it
involves
a
whole
lot
of
metadata
and-
and
so
that's
that's
one
thing
that
I
wanted
is
sort
of
relevant
as
just
general
community
discussion
I.
G
We
also
are
spinning
up
a
sprint
where
we're
collaborating
with
Stanford
University's
libraries
and
probably
a
number
of
other
big
big
libraries
with
lots
of
storage
and
archivists
and
preservation
plans
to
look
at
what
it
looks
like
what
it
would
look
like
to
download
all
of
data
Cove,
which
is
about
300
or
350
terabytes
of
data
and
preserve
it
on
their
regular
preservation
systems,
but
also
publish
it
on
IPO
us
so
that
it's
one
available
for
people
to
use,
but
also
so
that
networks
of
people
can
coordinate
to
help
hold
and
preserve
these
data
in
a
distributed
fashion,
and
so
that's
I,
exciting
in
and
of
itself
due
to
the
nature
of
the
content.
G
It's
also
a
great
load
test
for
our
systems
that
we
currently
have
not
been
running
any
tests
where
we
load
300
terabytes
of
data
on
the
IP
FS
and
move
it
across
the
network,
and
so
now
we
get
to
test
that
and
we
get
to
see
how
we
can
improve
the
user
experience
there.
What
performance
issues
can
be
tuned.
G
So,
for
example,
if
I
have
300
terabytes
of
data
and
currently
use
I,
PFS,
add
to
add
a
type
EFS
suddenly
I
have
600
terabytes
of
data
to
store
a
file
store,
would
allow
you
to
point
I
PFS
at
those
300
terabytes,
and
it
would
index
it
in
place
and
serve
the
serve
the
blocks
directly
from
the
files
that
are
there
on
your
file
system.
So
that's
obviously
the
bigger
the
data
you
have
the
more
important
it
is
to
have
this
feature,
and
so
300
terabytes
definitely
is
over
that
threshold.
G
Where
makes
a
big
difference
and
so
I.
So
this
is
where
we
will
be
looking
at.
Can
we
move
files
stored
forward
or
at
least
get
a
very
basic
implementation
of
file
store
merged
so
that
they
could
use
it
this
week,
but
also
will
be
looking
at
this
sort
of
triggered
this
topic
of
I
PFS
pack,
which
is
basically
a
strategy
for
building,
manifests
of
your
data,
our
manifest
of
the
data
that
you've
registered
and
then
there's
all
this
performance,
stuff
and
user
experience
stuff
around
it.
G
So
that's
what
this
sprint
is
focused
on
its
come
together
very,
very
quickly,
so
I'm
still
I'm
still
honing
in
on
the
clear
explanation
of
what
we
are
doing
in
these
two
weeks
and
what
we're
trying
to
get
done
by
the
end
of
these
two
weeks,
but
that's
the
general
sense
and
as
far
as
sprint
coordination,
we
can
look
at
the.
How
I
was
more
interested
in
just
telling
people
what's
up,
because
it's
exciting
interesting
stuff
and
two
people
want
to
ask
questions
about
that.
G
G
This
is
so
this
is
where
you're
asking
is
it
included
or
you're,
calling
out
that
it
is
included
by
asking
if
it
is
I,
we
would
have
to
ask
so
this
is
so.
The
way
this
came
together
is
I
have
for
many
years,
worked
closely
with
the
libraries
at
Stanford,
and
so
they
on
their
own
said
we're
just
going
to
try
this
we're
gonna,
try
downloading
all
of
data
Cove
and
and
then
we're
going
to
try
putting
it
on
I
PFS
and
see
what
happens
so
they
emailed
us
and
said
hey.
G
They
were
basically
like
heads
up
we're
going
to
be
trying
this
and
we
said:
hey
we're
gonna,
but
we're
going
to
put
some
real
effort
into
helping
you
try
this
and
so
I
think
from
their
side.
This
has
happened
so
quickly
that
they
haven't
necessarily
fully
figured
out.
What
is
there
in
data
like
they've,
managed
to
figure
out
it's
about
350
terabytes
that
they
would
be
pulling
down,
but
I,
don't
think
they've
gotten
into
the
details
of
what?
G
That
is
relevant
to
your
field
and
I
PFS
would
give
us
really
great
ways
for
keeping
track
of
how
many
redundant
copies
are
there
of
this
particular
data
set
across
the
network,
and
things
like
that,
so
that
sort
of
drifts
into
use
cases
for
cluster
for
I,
PFS
cluster
and
coordinating
all
that
it
brought
up
a
bunch
of
people
in
this
area
have
asked
over
the
last
few
weeks
they
specifically
requested
or
asked.
Is
there
a
way
to
easily
identify
what
are
the
most
endangered
blocks
on
the
network?
G
So
within
this
data
set
with
this
rude
hash?
What
are
the
blocks
that
have
the
least
redundant
copies
on
the
network
so
that
I
could
pick
those
up
and
hold
them
right
like?
Where
is
where
is
my
storage
assistance
most
needed
within
this
data
set
is
a
use
case
that
people
have.
I
think
five
different
people
have
approached
me
about
it
over
the
past
two
weeks.
G
G
Yet
because
I'm
worried
is
going
to
hit
my
my
production
servers
cool.
There
are
also
related
to
that
on
a
road
map
for
week,
9
well
week,
9
in
week.
10
is
a
sprint
on
the
the
interplanetary
test
lab
and
that's
where
we
want
to
build
out
better
testing
infrastructure
for
doing
this
kind
of
load,
testing
and
all
sorts
of
varieties
of
testing
that
you
may
want
to
do
so,
it'd
be
great
to
have
you
involved
in
planning
for
that
of
how
we
can
make
that
Tesla
have
most
useful.
G
J
J
G
I
will
come
back
to
version
is
to
like
safe
space
but
like
when
you
have
a
compact
version:
you're
just
saving
space
space
on
the
wire
you're,
not
saving,
space
and
serg,
because
you
still
need
to
keep
the
metadata
one
of
the
things
why
you
want
a
non
compacted
on.
An
expanded
version
is
because
you
can
expend
the
same
data
in
several
ways
using
different
schemas
or
stimulate
evolved
over
time
and
the
way
that
we
propose.
That
is
instead
of
like
forcing
the
data
to
this
filter,
and
it
has
to
come
out.
J
Under
these
specific
schema,
you
just
like
a
meta
data
that
points
to
the
data
itself,
so
that,
like
you,
you
can
describe
some
data
with
several
pieces
of
metadata
that
you
have
all
the
network
and
those
cannot
change
over
time.
And
you
can.
You
believe
in
also
use
mutable
pointers
for
those.
If
you
want
it
is
not
using
one
single
processor,
so
I
can
be
in
a
low
level,
is
just
like
thing
that
you
create
the
raft
structure
and.
N
I
I
I
I
F
J
You
start
what
filtering
out
all
the
better,
for
example
in
a
json-ld
parser
as
soon
as
you
drop
Jason
that
doesn't
conform
with
the
schema.
The
partial
just
dropped
it
and
that's
like
by
spec
right.
So
we
cannot
do
that
at
the
home
at
all.
We
need
to
preserve
their
and
then
we
describe
kind
of
like
this
parsing
through
this
data
or
like
using
different
context
more
like
a
transformation.
So
you
have
a
bunch
of
data.
I
Things
described
as
transformations
the
other
thing
on
the
fs
column,
flash
crash.
The
reason
behind
that
is
so
that,
like
I,
give
a
spats
or
dislike
content
addressable
pads
are
mountable
are
like
unique
spread
way
and
we
have
the
swatch
etfs
watch
ash
right
now,
but
we
are
moving
towards
having
such
a
pld
/h
to
resolve
on
the
Gateway,
but
weak,
see
IDs.
You
are
actually
describing
in
the
relative
fire
of
the
content,
not
only
the
content
ash,
but
also
the
multi
codex
of
the
format.
I
You
are
lifting
the
extension
up
to
the
link
itself
and
you
also
like
describing
the
version
of
these
identifiers
and
the
way
that
it
is
encoded
so
like
this
identifier
makes
it
really
good
to
create
paths
that
unique
swag
that
can
be
represented
in
a
friendly
way.
For
example,
domains
cannot
have
some
characters,
so
you
have
like
twinkle
it
instead
of
like
basic
idea
to
include
it
in
place.
32
so
see,
IDs
make
it
really
nice
for
like.
I
But
you
can
even
have
like
five
blocks
in
your
system
that
you
use
just
like,
instead
of
like
the
full
I
PFS
machine,
you
just
use
the
the
reader
for
from
your
system
and
you
can
still
understand
what
better
you
have
in
your
machine
without
having
the
full
note
injected,
and
it's
like
why
the
fs
column
success,
because
it
makes
it
agnostic.
It
isn't
paper
just
like
resolving
my
papers
and
T
IDs
I
like
this
key
achievement,
where
you
lift
the
information
about
the
continent,
your
resolving
to
the
link
itself.
I
Todavia
no
longer
needs
such
a
grievous,
massage
idea,
but
yeah
actually
more
like
way.
Oh
I
love.
It
is
this
the
right
way
to
do
it.
I
think
one
comment
I
had
was
the
my
reservation
was
about
limiting
the
sea
IDs,
because
I
think
it's
the
first
bite
or
two
enter
your
limiting
and
I
st.
address
on
an
account
on
a
theory
and
platform,
and
so
I
think
you
can
all
you're
limited
by
the
number
of
bytes
to
the
number
of
different
endpoints
or
saria
domains
or
networks,
and
so
I
think.
I
Well,
we
end
up
limited
because
we
use
multi,
codec
and
multi.
Codec
is
a
variant,
so
we
have
now.
If
you
go
to
multi
format,
/
boutique
codec,
you
find
a
table
and
it's
like
already
really
little
long
and
I
people
keep
posting
more
codecs
for
their
gala
formats.
We
have
already
bunch
of
bacterial
formats,
it's
the
cash
and
so
on,
and
we
just
need
to
assign
a
member
to
to
its
comment,
and
it
is
like
right
now.
Adoption
has
been
pretty
smooth
like.
I
We
also
want
to
avoid
adding
contacts
that
are
white,
my
tongue,
just
because
I
keep
on
to
have
a
lot
of
bandwidth
and
but
the
key
we
will
be
able
to
reference
as
many
a
girly
format
as
we
want.
There
will
not
be
any
limited
by
design,
then
what
you
might
decide
if
your
nail
doesn't
know
what
resolve
the
given
formats,
because
you
don't
care
about
you
do
in
format
so
like.
J
Anything
else-
and
this
is
like
it's
interesting
because
I
keep
you
are
working
the
browser.
You
might
not
want
the
full
thing
for
everyone.
If
you
are
doing
like
IOT
devices
that
are
well
memory,
you
also
want
to
incorporate
every
single
ash
function
in
the
world
in
every
single
for
Martinez
gotcha
Oh
memory
and
make
sets
go
yeah
all
right.
My
boat
awesome.
I
I
So
I'm,
actually
a
simple
I
am
so
there's
a
big
effort
in
that
I
logged
off
and,
like
we
know
about
all
these
people
that
are
using
this
ginormous
Allison
I'm
very
interested
to
learn
how
they
are
using
it.
What
is
this
software?
Where
are
the
implications?
And
if
those
applications
are
open
source
and
we
free
by
inviting
the
iotas
community
to
actual
this
issue
or
like
moving
water
channel
sense
on
a
PFS?
I
We
can
also
invite
the
community
to
participate
on
that
research,
because
I'll
be
very
interested
to
know
what
they
are
doing
with
that
amount
of
data.
What
are
their
like
research?
What
is
that?
A
research
all
right
I
can
provide
some
context
of
what
data.gov
is,
which
I
think
partially
answers.
Your
question,
because
sort
of
the
answer
to
your
question
is
in
the
in
along
big
pictures
that
there
are
tons
and
tons
of
different
people
building
tons
of
of.
I
I
I
Executive
order
from
the
Obama
administration
from
from
very
early
in
oklahoma's
first
term,
where
they
produced
an
executive
order
that
made
it
so
that
federal
agencies
are
US.
Federal
agencies
are
obligated
to
make
all
of
their
data
publicly
available
as
public
open
access
content
and
they're
they're
obligated
to
do
it
in
ways
that
are
where
the
data
are
actually
useful
right.
So
up
until
that
point,
it
was
very
hard
to
acquire
data
at
all
from
a
lot
of
federal
agencies.
If
you
did
get
it,
it
was
often
in
a
PDF.
So
it's
like,
as.
G
G
What
formats
is
it
available
in
etc,
etc,
and
so
over
the
past
six
years
or
so
I,
don't
remember
when
they
first
launched
data
gov,
but
in
the
time
since
then,
agencies
have
bit
by
bit
release
data
to
the
point
where
the
data
that
is
currently
being
published
by
federal
agencies
and
AG
and
Pat
and
is
visible
through
this
portal,
is
about
350
terabytes.
But
it's
like
it
like.
It's
genomics
data,
its
climate
data,
its
labor
statistics,
its
housing
data.
G
It's
everything
that
any
federal
agency
chose
to
make
available
through
the
portal,
and
so
this
is
where
the
this
bit
of
it.
The
library's
at
Stanford,
said.
Well,
all
these
people
are
scrambling
to
back
up
all
this
climate
data,
but
what?
Let's,
just
let's
just
change
the
way
that
we
distribute
public,
open
access
data
sets
in
general
and
so
they're
just
going
at
the
whole
thing.
G
As
which
is
like
a
giant
undertaking-
and
this
is
just
like
the
first
pass
of
like
what's
involved
in
just
downloading
all
that
stuff
and
redistributing
it
I
on
the
like
on
the
block
level
like
on
the
bit
level
like
how
do
we
download
all
those
bits
and
then
redistribute
them
and
then
over
time,
then
there's
the
questions
of
how
do
you
build
tooling
for
interfaces
on
to
the
data?
How
do
you
build
metadata
about
it?
How
do
you
keep
track
of
those
data
as
they
change
over
time
like?
G
If
you
just
back
up
the
data,
sets
that
that
interface
is
querying,
but
you
don't
back
up
the
code,
that's
querying
it
are
people
actually
going
to
be
able
to
use
the
data,
so
that's
just
one
example
of
the
problems
that
you're
pointing
at
oh
that
people
are
going
to
have
to
tackle
over
over
time,
see.
Okay,
that
definitely
answered
my
question
and
I
yeah
still
very
interested
in
understanding
one
of
those
apps
and
what
people
are
looking
forward
to
do.
We
follow
that
data.
G
G
All
right
should
I
go
into
describing
what
is
this
print
that
I'm
happening
for
this
week's
yeah?
Awesome?
Ok,
so
the
spring
I'm
cutting
produce
weeks
and
I'm
joined
by
victor
similarly
and
ours,
and
then
anyway,
immediately
wants
to
join,
of
course
and
he's
browser
accesses,
go
IP
test
content
and
by,
as
we
mean
like
really
being
able
to
make
the
experience
of
the
developer
that
arrives
at
the
Jaypee
best
project
spawning
in
lb
in
the
browser
and
carrying
a
file
that
they
added,
we
do
I
PFS.
I
I
You
have
to
tell
why
PFS
to
listen
on
web
sockets,
and
then
you
have
to
tell
the
browser
to
that
I
watch
it
does.
It
is
a
manual
process
and
then
doing
a
process.
You
also
have
to
understand
that
there
is
lip
YouTube,
you
think
that
supports
all
of
the
transports
and
then
there's
not
the
other
thing
like
it's
confusing
people
are
expecting
to
spawn
a
note
and
seek
peers
as
they
see
when
they
spawned
a
demon
in
their
CLI
with
you,
I
PFS,
and
that's
what
we
are
flowing.
I
We
are
creating
bootstrapper
notes
for
jessica's
notes
so
that
when
be
postponed
and
right
because
know
they
will
FPS
automatically,
we
are
finishing
up
and
implementing
real
light
in
JavaScript,
so
that
week
relay
connections
from
all
groups
and
promotes
to
occur
melt
in
your
machines,
and
we
are
also
fixing
one
issue
in
here
with
ours.
Three
multiplexer
implementation.
I
We
are
fixing
the
issue
by
implementing
a
new
stream
multiplexer,
and
the
issue
is
actually
found
on
the
girl
at
PFS,
speedy
stream
multiplexer,
and
we
are
running
a
call
news,
3
multiplexer,
to
solid
with
you.
The
the
rabbit
hole
is
deep
in
this
one,
but
yeah
like
this
will
enable
going
to
pass
and
Jessica
Vess
to
exchange
large
files.
Right
now
there
is
a
cap
of
64
K
64k
for
a
file
between
just
be
personal
activist.
I
What
we
expect
we're
by
the
end
of
the
spring
is
a
very
powerful
demos
that
people
cannot
just
run
through
them
as
tutorials
and
that
they
can
spawn
their
IP
fest
loads,
get
Pierce
connected
cap,
the
files
from
the
catapult
they
added
with
God
DFS
and
do
not
feel
any
pain
during
the
process,
so
that
more
people
feel
identifies
and
encouraged
to
try
out
jazzy
bffs.
There
is
a
big
list
of
tasks
it
is
available
on
the
IPS
wash
p.m.
and
I
will
visit
Warren
IVs
Hannah
unisys
on
the
wharf.
I
Oh
yeah,
we're
not
just
implementing
relay
and
JavaScript,
but
also
and
go
like.
There
has
been
some
very
old
code
for
relay
and
go,
but
it's
never
actually
been
used
or
tested
before.
Okay,
so
I
guess
that
a
spiral
guap
task
is
like
understand.
What's
going
on,
we
go
and
like
know
if
we
need
to
read
for
my
dinner,
so
say
yeah
what
yeah
that
you're
hanging,
ok
Richard
had
his
hand
up
or
we're
just
stretching.
I
Oh
okay,
I'm
stretch
it
and
we'll
be
checking
it's
like
I
talked
about
this
on
the
call
before
we'll
be
checking
daily
on
the
screen
tissue.
That's
of
the
180
pass
p.m.
for
this
sprint
we
yeah
like,
then
all
that's.
How
is
it
there?
A
bunch
of
stuff
is
happening
if
you
want
to
how
about
join
the.
Never
let
me
know
will
be
very
focused
and
down
solving
the
problems
for
this
issue,
which
means
that
like
if
there
is
another
bug
or
other
thing
that
we
should
like
that
comes
up
during
this
time.
F
I
I
The
like
the
right
balance
of
how
how
formal
how
to
formalize
the
user
stories
in
a
way
that
they're
trapped,
especially
in
the
sense
that
like
we,
might
not
get
to
all
of
them,
so
that,
like
we,
want
the
user
stories
to
be
something
that
someone
else
could
like
pick
up
later
or
that
we
could
pick
up
on
a
future
sprint.
I,
don't
I,
think
I
heard
for
this
sprint.
I
My
inclination
would
just
be
sort
of
keep
an
eye
on
how
you're
doing
it
and
keep
an
eye
on
how
I'm
doing
it,
and
then
we
can
check
in
after
this
two
weeks
and
see
my
own
sort
of
trade
notes
and
route
I,
because
we're
we
have
so
much
to
get
done
in
the
next
two
weeks.
I
don't
want
to
derail
with
like
heat
process
stuff.
Does
that
make
sense?
You
sounds
good.
We
yeah
we
will
broke.
G
G
All
right,
if
people
do
want
to
follow
in
with
the
data.gov
thing,
there
is
we'll
be
doing
the
sort
of
spring
planning
session
tomorrow,
probably
at
the
time
that
the
Monday
All
Hands
usually
starts
so
1705
p.m.
UTC
will
I,
but
that
partially
depends
on
when
Jeremy's
free
he's
on
a
plane
right
now
on,
so
that
time
might
change
a
bit
but
it'll
be
roughly
then
tomorrow,
we'll
do
a
deeper
sprint
planning.
Look
through
the
plan
for
the
day
dog
of
effort
and.
I
G
Yeah,
that's
a
good
point
cool.
I
will
take
these
notes
and
put
them
into
an
issue
or
markdown
file
in
meeting
notes
and
Matt.
Let
us
know
when
you
know
about
the
time
tomorrow
and
sprint
issue:
I
will
I
will
keep
this
brain
tissue
up
to
date
so
that
it
has
a
time
listed
right
now
and
unless
I
change.
That
and
add
a
note
in
the
comments,
then
that's
the
timeline
like
I
was
going
to
happen.
Cool
David!
Thank
you
for
all
the
IPF
fpm
random
issues.
G
You
like
clothes,
/,
vomited,
/
designs,
to
be
that's
what
I'll
be
doing
this
week,
it's
like
going
through
that,
but
well
so
let
you
bring
brought
it
up,
because
one
thing
that
it
keeps
crossing
my
mind
is
like
I.
Do
this
kind
of
like
every
other
week
or
once
a
month,
I
just
go
through
all
the
issues
like
there
till
I
get
tired
and
I've
try
to
make
sure
like
all
of
them
get
a
little
bit
of
attention
and
like
I
understand,
why
is
the
state
and
what
I
feel
is
it
like?