►
From YouTube: IPFS Weekly Call 2019-07-15
Description
IPFS Newsletter: https://tinyletter.com/ipfsnewsletter
A
B
Brilliant
good
morning,
so
I
guess
a
good
place.
To
start
I
mean
a
lot
of
people
were
not
happy,
infest
camp
and
did
not
know
about
what
we
would
cover
there
and
I
think
a
lot
of
things
have
been
achieved
since
I
was
there
so
I'm
just
talk
about
kind
of
scratch
and
get
people
updated
on
that
feel.
Free
to
also
interrupt
me
with
questions
and
anything
so
best
place
to
start
is
really
just
go
in
term
of
what
that
I
yell,
which
I
just
updated
to
night
at
2:00
a.m.
A
B
And
then
this
guy,
looking
at
their
water.
B
It's
really
a
realization
that
us
or
team
as
product
people,
we
want
to
have
a
way
to
introduce
the
concepts
of
the
perma
web
of
the
decentralized
web
of
ipfs
etc,
to
the
mainstream
and
to
one
learn
the
general
concepts
behind
the
technology
learn
what
apps
are
out
there
and
how
to
get
started
with
this
whole
thing.
So
we've
been
working
on
a
variety
of
apps,
but
we
realized
that
there's
a
lot
of
core
questions
that
people
have
that
we
all
needed
to.
We
all
run
into
and
the
text
our
team
runs
it.
B
So
we
decided
to
start
with
a
mortal
murmur.
What
that
il
surprisingly,
was
free
and
try
to
explain
the
philosophy
we
have
here.
This
whole
thing
stems
from
the
idea
that
we
want
to
take
back
the
internet
from
from
the
you
know,
top
ten
giant,
the
the
ninety
percent
of
websites.
That
control
notes
are
the
ten
websites
that
control
90%
of
the
Internet
and
make
it
possible
using
IPA.
First,
you
start
celebrating
of
things.
B
B
So
we
think
the
two
most
mature
kind
of
things
in
terms
of
consumer
stuff,
on
IP
offense
at
the
moment,
are
from
a
web
writer
and
take
some
photos,
but
we're
looking
for
others
to
adhere,
and
so
essentially
this
is
just
the
community
space
for
us
to
showcase
all
things
ipfs
and
related
to
get
people
in
the
community
faster.
That's
what
we
have
all
the
chance
and
that's
what
we've
been
also
working
on
providing
chat
bridges
for
the
whole
community
so
that
we
are
this
code
server,
the
matrix
server
and
the
IRC
servers
are
breached.
B
A
B
B
So
this
I
I
just
covered
briefly
earlier,
but
really
the
entirety
of
the
internet.
Since
what
you
know,
if,
like
I,
don't
know
how
many
of
you
guys
were
around
for,
like
like
building
startups,
are
2005
but
I
think
that
the
big
like
the
the
the
the
novelty
at
the
time
was
that
like
were
switching
to
a
service
based
Internet
right,
like
API,
is
becoming
a
stander
and
all
that
and
and
that
really
gave
birth
to
a
generalized
services
that
we
specialize
in
certain
kind
of
need
be
like.
B
Oh
I'm,
your
social
network,
a
video
platform,
your
photo
site
whatever,
and
the
problem
I
think
we've
seen
the
past
15
years-
is
that
the
these
platforms
have
become
basically
being
or
that
for
people
so
like.
Prior
to
that,
you
know
the
internet
was
like
get
a
host,
make
your
webpage
like
put
your
stuff
on
the
internet.
That
way
like
it
was
this
very
indie
kind
of
web
and
has
mostly
gone
away.
People
still
do
it,
they
go
on
Squarespace
and
they
do
the
thing
go
that
is
not
the
norm
at
all
and
I.
B
B
Also
think
that
if
you
look
at
the
technology
of
ipfs,
it's
actually
a
really
good
match
for
free
speech
and
this
expression
of
Indy
people,
because
a
lot
of
people
in
the
community
see
as
various
other
things
which
it
is.
You
know
it's
a
great
tool
for
better
infrastructure.
It's
a
great
way
of
thinking
of
different
shape
of
the
internet.
All
those
things
are
true,
but
I
don't
think
enough.
B
So
it
goes
back
to
I
think
the
initial
principles
of
the
internet
when
I
was
DARPA
net
or
is
like
okay,
we
need
to
have
this
kind
of
like
decentralized
system
of
nodes
that
can
talk
to
each
other
in
a
resilient
way
and
I
really
like
that.
That's
something
that
I
PFS
brings
back
to
the
internet.
So
we
think
about
all
that
and
okay.
B
So
this
is
what
I
should
just
camp
I'm
gonna
skip
that
actually,
which
tell
you
what
the
the
app
we're
doing
is
we're
thinking
that
it's
too
difficult
to
just
write
text
and
put
on
that
DFS
and
I
know
peer
Pat
exists.
It's
great
creep
back,
crypt
bone,
crypto
pie,
the
crypt
mad
I,
never
remember
exist
as
well,
and
they're
fine
tools,
I
think
they're,
very
techy
in
some
ways,
and
so
we're
just
looking
at
like
from
product
angle.
How
can
we
do
something?
B
We
we
focus
on
things
that
you
would
find
more
on
like
medium,
so
like
things
like
embeds
and
putting
emojis
and
reactions,
and
things
like
that,
so
that
you
can
write
more
like
a
blog
post
or
a
medium
type
of
post
and
not
so
much
like
a
Google
Docs
kind
of
document,
but
I'd
like
to
show
you
the
stuff
we've
been
working
on
since
ipfs
camp,
because
actually
it
was
really
interesting.
Having
the
discussions
there
realizing.
C
B
Were
like,
oh,
we
want
to
collaborate.
A
different
way
on
ipfs
was
kind
of
like
the
common
point
in
a
lot
of
discussions
we
had
with
people,
and-
and
so
we
went
back
to
the
drawing
board
of
like
what's
the
the
core
of
interactions
we
want
to
solve
for
and
like
writing
is
great,
but
we
realized
that
that
teams
wanted
essentially
really
a
Dropbox
paper
replacement
for
us.
B
That's
what
can
cross
all
the
discussions,
so
we
went
ahead
designed
that
so
here
on
the
screen,
you
see
the
the
current
work
in
progress
version
where,
essentially,
you
have
a
bunch
of
teams,
slash
channels
on
the
left.
They
have
different
sets
of
permissions,
so
you
can
have
it's
essentially
like
repos
on
github.
You
can
have
the
private
you
can
have
it
for
team
and
assigned
to
specific
people.
B
You
can
also
make
them
public
and
in
there
you
can
start
creating
discussions
that
can
be
a
single
post
or
that
can
be
a
series
of
post
so
like
philosophically,
it's
kind
of
a
place
between
let's
say
slack
in
Gmail
I
hate
slack
with
a
passion,
I
think
it's
a
garbage
pool
and
it's
a
negative
value
on
mankind.
I
think
it's
very
distracting
and
it's
always
on
you
all
the
time,
but
but
it's
also
really
easy
to
use
and
I
think
Gmail
makes
it
really
really
convenient
to
like
come
back
to
things
later
on.
B
B
You
can
end
up
with
post
like
this,
which
we
don't
have
the
reactions
right
now,
but
I'm,
hoping
by
the
end
of
the
month
with
you,
but
essentially
it's
sort
of
blog
post
sort
of
to-do
lists
documents.
American
can
have
documents,
you
would
do
on
topics
paper.
Basically,
where
I
think
you
have
the
kind
of
reactions
people
wanted.
We
have
a
bunch
of
bucket
force
with
the
text
option
on
the
kind
of
meetings
they
do
and
how
they
react
to
each
other
and
so
we're
like.
B
Okay,
you
guys
clearly
want
something
kind
of
like
the
Facebook
reactions
to
post.
They
know
laugh
and
cry
and
all
that
stuff,
but
they
need
to
be
about
work,
so
we
can't
lend
it
that
these
reactions
of
approved
history
and
is
thinking
but
that's
also
subject
to
change
depending
how
people
out
here
interact
will
play
around
with
that
here.
You
can
see
that
threads
are
actually
a
series
of
messages,
so
you
can
write
another
post
below
or
replies
and
comments.
It's
a
try
and
thank
people
on
watch
conversation
that
like
so
we
want.
B
B
One
thing
were
very
interested
in
doing:
is
we
so
this
whole
projects
open
source,
its
MIT,
where
we're
not
looking
at
you
know
becoming
richer
on
this
project?
We're
looking
at
creating
a
way
for
people
to
put
more
things
in
that
give
s,
and
because
of
that,
we're
very
interested
in
pushing
things
out
from
the
editor
I
think
when
you
look
at
it
to
like
notion,
for
example,
which
is
all
startups
love
notions
great,
but
it
does
a
lot
of
things.
B
It
tries
to
get
you
to
switch
to
a
lot
of
things
and
I
mean
that
logic,
basically
like
the
design
philosophy,
is
that
you
poor
things
end
at
all.
I
want
to
do
exactly
the
opposite
with
this
tool,
which
is
that
if
you
write
a
thing
here,
you
can
publish
it
on
your
website
so
that
you
can
treat
your
website
or
you
can
produce
more
and
less
CMS
for
your
website
and
just
move
away
as
post.
B
Essentially,
it's
not
writing
a
blog
dynamically
on
top
of
ipfs,
which
is
something
that
people
are
not
really
doing
at
the
moment.
Sadly,
so
so
the
relationship
would
be
to
have
a
basically
static
page
on
that
PFS.
With
a
base
query
there
just
go:
what's
the
latest
content
you
have
on
your
textile
node
and
they
will
just
show
your
blog
post,
so
so
we're
very
interested
in
have
like
enabling
people
to
push
their
content
further
than
just
being.
You
know
very
static
pages
on
the
internet
and
I'm
cam
pushing
the
envelope
on
that
DF.
B
Is
that
like,
and
we
think
that
there's
have
you
ever
served
like
very,
like
versed
pocket.
You
said
of
people
using
for
the
case
being
and
team
collaboration
and
blogs
are
those
kind
of
things
I've,
no
idea
what
captions
I
take,
but
that's
it's
gonna
be
interesting
in
their
coming
months
and
that's
that's.
All
I
have
were
basically
the
first
people
trying
to
do
this
very,
like
consumer.
Take
on
on
this
small
stack.
B
So
you
know
if
you
meet
me
in
person,
either
coming
conferences
or
the
meetups
that
we
have
probably
end
up
in
the
design
discussion.
It
has
to
be
a
different
form
for
a
lot
of
people
in
the
space,
but
we
we
think
the
tech
is
very
awesome
for
helping
Meg
internet
come
to
shape.
We
think
it
should
be,
and
we
really
like
to
bring
more
people
to
that
and
that's
it
love
to
take
your
questions.
A
B
So
so
we,
you
know,
we
met
them
last
year
at
lab.
They
actually
funnily
enough,
and
why
introduced
us-
and
he
was
like
you
know-
I
should
talk
with
these
guys
sounds
like
you've
got
the
same
philosophy
about
what
the
internet
should
be
like.
Okay
and-
and
you
know,
started
talking
with
them
and
we
thought
they'd
be
these
like
that,
can
engineer
dudes
and
it
was
like.
Oh
no,
you
come
from
Apple
and
you've
got
all
these
design
sensitivities.
B
We
have
and
everything-
and
you
know,
provide
all
these
tools
for
people
and
and
we
realize
we're
trying
to
build
the
exact
same
things.
We
were
talking
about
building
like
an
iCloud
on
top
of
ipfs
and
giving
people
like
a
personal
Dropbox,
and
you
know
what
became
essentially
a
Dropbox
paper
here
for
five
GFS,
but
their
skill
set
is
very
much
in
the
tool
side
of
the
stack.
You
know,
they're,
the
the.
Why
explain
to
people
how
we
we
think
of
the
product
stack
on
ipfs
is
that
GFS
is
very
much.
B
The
the
Catholic
protocol
back
in
very,
very
low
level
back
into
textile
for
us,
is
something
like
jQuery
or
you
know
some
sort
of
library
like
that
forward
to
just
make
my
life
easier
to
to
devil
pop
off.
You
know
material.
You
are
something
and
then
we
just
build
from
the
top
of
it
with
the
the
methods
they
give
us
so
so
it
makes
it
super
easy
for
product
people
to
work
with
and
I
think
that's
been
very,
very
helpful
for
us,
but
yeah.
B
B
It
is
stable
and
easy
to
use
and
ready
to
use
if
you're
a
technical
witch,
Diedrich
I
know
you
are
so
right
now
it
requires
you
to
get
a
release
from
github
/param,
a
web
camera
yjs,
so
you
can
release
there
and
you
run
that
and
you're
able
to
use
it.
You
know
all
you
need
as
a
dependency.
Basically
is
what
I
mean
besides
the
young'uns
dependencies
is
that
you
need
a
textile
wallet
to
run.
So
it
makes
that
note.
B
So
you
you
don't
let
go
textile
you
Rhonda
and
you're
able
to
use
the
app
obviously
we're
working
on,
eliminating
that
that's
actually
the
top
priority
right
now
for
the
textile
team
and
we're
the
first
project
is
going
to
have
that
so
we're
gonna
make
it
that
in
our
builds,
we're
gonna
include
a
textile
node
and
it's
could
detect.
If
you
have
note
running
or
not,
and
if
you
don't
then
they'll
run
it.
B
If
not,
then
you
know
use
a
current
node
and
so
I'm,
hoping
that
in
a
sprinter
2
we
have
that
ready
and
people
can
just
double
click
and
start
using
it.
The
editor
itself
works
really
well,
you
know,
as
of
today,
you
can,
you
can,
you
know,
put
emoji
and
the
bad
things
and
toggle
bold
and
h3
and
whatever
and
all
that
properly
and
it
works
great.
So
you
know
these
things
work
the
wranglings
work,
except
they
give
you
Jason
right
now,
but
you
can
use
them
for
everything.
B
So
that's
kind
of
their
point
right
now.
We
do
not
have
any
collaboration
features
yet
so
that's
going
to
be
ready
once
texta
has
dialogue,
changes
to
their
permissions
and
role
system,
which
I've
actually
helped
design
and
that's
going
to
be
in
the
coming
weeks.
Carson's
work
a
lot
so
we're
count
waiting
to
see
how
that
becomes
available.
B
Good
name
from
opponent
writer
to
perma
web
writer.
We
love
the
name
Epona,
it's
ok,
so
those
of
you
who
are
not
video
gamers
they
don't.
They
won't
get
the
joke
right
away.
Those
of
you
who
are
and
you're
fans
of
Legend
of
Zelda,
we
came
up
to
the
name
Epona,
because
in
Zelda
the
hero
is
called
link
and
we're
like
ipfs,
is
all
about
saving
links
all
the
time
they
pronouns
the
horse.
That's
always
there
to
save
you
and
doesn't
ever
die.
So
that's
what
we
called
everything
names
are
on
Zelda.
B
You
know.
I
do
think,
there's
actually
a
really
good
match
between
emulation
and
an
IP
FS,
which
I'm
surprised
no
one's
with
yet
because
ROM
sets
are
actually
very
static.
Files,
like
everyone's
like
these,
like
known,
good
wrong,
sets
that
it's
just
you
know.
We
know
exactly.
What's
the
CRC
for
everything,
I'm,
pretty
sure
people
would
have
put
those
on
that
PFS
I'm
surprised
no
one's
combined
like
a
JavaScript
version
of
emulators
and
those
external
links,
then
you
get
like
you
know
some
permanent.
A
D
My
question
is
the
same
is
Dirk.
My
Dirk
is
the
same
as
question,
which
is
kind
of
especially
coming
from
like
a
a
building
on
top
of
things,
more
from
a
front-end
perspective
like
what
are
your
pain
points
and
especially
like
what
what
communication
pathways
work
really
well
for
you
and
which
ones
maybe
don't
work
as
well
for
you
and
I'm
given,
given
your
the
way,
you
interface
with
IP,
this
okay.
B
The
whole
concept
of
the
decentralized
web
right
now
is
tarnished
by
a
couple
really
bad
things.
One
is
people
associated
with
dark
web
like
straight
up.
They
just
think
it's
like.
Oh,
so
you
guys
are
doing
some
things
you
share
like
really
bad
photos
or
like
doing
shopping
of
like
that's
the
fault
line
or
whatever
like.
Why
would
you
do
these
things?
There
is
no
communication
around
that.
There
is
no
common
message
around
that
there
is
you
know
it's
it's
the
standard
like.
B
What
do
you
have
something
to
hide
kind
of
problem
and
and
I
think
we
need
to
do
better.
That's
why
I
start
from
what
that
IO?
Actually
the
portal
to
start
educating
people
on
that,
it's
really
tough,
especially
when
so
much
of
our
communication
is
about
tooling.
It's
like
hey
guys.
You
can
decentralize
nodes
and
run
them,
and
it's
like
you
know.
It
sounds
like
Bitcoin
to
people
and
stuff
and
they're
like.
Oh,
maybe
it's
a
scam,
it's
dodging
that
gets
that
makes
it
really
really
difficult.
B
B
You
know
if
there's
a
there's,
a
there's,
a
real,
a
symmetry
between
what's
possible
with
ipfs,
and
what
people
claim
is
possible
without
DFS
right,
like
practically
I,
can
ipfs
ad
dot
and
like
have
my
stuff
and
get
a
hash
and
put
it
out
there,
and
you
know
if
I
can
run
a
node
I
can
serve
that
stuff
to
people
cool,
but
a
lot
of
people
don't
have
a
server
to
run
these
things.
A
lot
of
people
don't
even
know
you
need
that.
B
They
just
think
that
you've
been
the
thing
and
then
or
you
you
generate
your
hash
and
then
you're
done.
They
don't
know
that
they
think
it's
some
sort
of
like
cloud
storage
solution,
kind
of
thing
and
all
that
they
think
that
you
can
send
data
to
space
that
these
19
cents,
dr.
Marrs.
They,
like
all
the
interplanetary
stuff,
they
think
that's
designed
to
die,
replace
HTTP
and
that's
like
what
you
can
be
able
to
do
with
I'm
like
yeah,
maybe
but
but
the
reality
is.
B
You
know
that
I
can
actually
fast,
add
and
I
can
get
a
hatch
and
I
can
maybe
host
a
website
like
promote
that
I.
Go
is
supposed
to
my
PFS
mark
she's,
very
happy
with
the
speed,
but
but
there's
a
lot
of
unmet
kind
of
expectations
from
like,
like
there's
there's
these
early
adopters
in
the
community,
which
don't
seem
to
understand
what
this
day
in
the
reality
of
the
technology
is
right
now.
B
B
B
So
all
these
things
make
it
if
I
want
to
have
a
product,
that's
like
aimed
at
more
than
one
person
or
some
privacy
aspect
to
it
or
anything.
All
these
things
we
had
to
build
by
hand-
and
you
know
community-
is
very
knowledgeable
about
this
stuff
and
all
that,
but
but
it
makes
it
that
there's
there's
this
really
hard
wall
of
skills,
that's
needed
to
do
solve,
and
so,
like
man,
we
can't
do
that
and-
and
so
thankfully
we
found
textile
that
you
know
they.
B
A
Just
watching
the
time-
yes
I
think
we
better
cut
it
out
here,
because
people
have
to
go
to
meetings
and
things,
but
thanks
thanks
for
coming,
and
that
was
a
really
great
perspective.
I
think
you
have
and
we're
excited
I
think
where
everybody
was
excited
to
see
how
Fermilab
writer
is
I
think
he
can
actually
download
it
today
for
I
guess,
like
Windows
Windows.
B
B
Sure,
and
if
you
join
the
community
of
where
we
have
the
link
on
the
web
but
from
a
web,
slash
discord
and
you
can
join,
we,
we
bridge
every
single
channel
from
Oracle
labs
and
the
whole
centralized
web
community.
So
it's
really
easy
to
talk
with
everyone.
There
great
I'll
have
a
look
David.
Thank
you.