►
From YouTube: PSF TC Meeting 10.6.21
Description
Technical Steering Committee Meeting for Oct 6, 2021
A
B
D
Looks
better,
oh,
that
was
that
was
me
checking
on
the
other
stuff.
A
Live
here,
okay,
well,
welcome
everybody
to
the
permissionless
software
foundation,
technical
steering
committee.
It
is
wednesday
october
6th.
I
am
chris
troutner.
I
helped
found
the
psf
and
I
managed
fullstack.cache
and
I'm
joined
by
some
very
intelligent
people.
Here,
let's
go
ahead
around
and
do
a
do.
Some
introductions,
aaron
shoemaker.
D
You
want
to
start
yep,
I'm
aaron
shoemaker.
I've
been
working
with
the
development
program
of
the
psf
and
on
the
nft
side
for
digital
asset
capture
through
photogrammetry,
lidar,
360
stuff,
so
see
a
lot
of
potential
in
the
nft
and
slp
tokens
for
that
sort
of
thing
in
the
future.
So
that's
why
I
came
here.
Long
seems
like
a
long
time
ago
april.
B
Addicted
so
I'm
aaron
sundman
and
I've
worked
for
the
past
20,
something
years
at
a
8
billion
multinational
as
the
innovation
and
digital
strategist,
and
I'm
leaving
the
company
pretty
soon
and
kept
thinking
about
how
do
we
push
forward
on
permissionless
innovation
as
we're
seeing
right
now
with
the
chinese
crackdown
on
cryptocurrency
transactions?
How
do
we
make
this
better?
B
How
do
we
make
sure
that
we
are
supporting
the
right
technology
to
bring
that
kind
of
permissionless
innovation
and
permissionless
ability
to
interact
with
the
with
technologies
around
the
world
so
glad
to
be
a
part
of
this.
A
There
we
go
okay,
so
as
we've
done
in
previous
meetings,
the
way
this
works
is
we're
going
to
go
through
the
agenda
items.
This
is
our
opportunity
to
celebrate
some
of
our
technical
achievements
over
the
last
couple
weeks
and
at
the
end
of
the
the
agenda,
we'll
open
up
to
a
round-robin
discussion
for
just
sort
of
any
kind
of
tech
topic
that
seems
relevant.
A
So
as
always,
you
can
find
the
agenda
on
github
under
the
permissional
software
foundation
group
under
the
tsc
repository,
which
stands
for
technical
steering
committee
and
we
filed
them
as
github
issues,
and
so
we,
this
is
the
one
for
today,
let's
go
ahead
and
roll
through
the
the
agenda
here.
So
the
psf
has
its
core
software
bch
api,
rest,
api,
the
bchjs
javascript
library
and
the
gatsby
ipfs
web
wallet,
which
powers
wallet.fullstack.cache.
A
So
these
are
sort
of
our
core
software
and
then
they're
fairly,
mature,
so
they're,
mostly
in
maintenance
mode
and
we're
also
branching
out
into
other
software
that
we'll
cover
later
so
some
of
the
updates
to
our
core
software.
In
the
last
couple
weeks,
daniel
is
a
community
contributor
and
he
has
made
great
progress
in
integrating
the
ipfs
node
into
gatsby
ipfs
wallet,
so
pretty
soon,
you'll
be
able
to
open
up
wallet.fullstack
and
go
to
the
configuration
tab
and
click
a
button
for
decentralized
mode.
And
what
will
happen
in
the
background?
A
Is
the
web
browser
will
spin
up
an
ipfs
node
in
the
background
connect
to
the
ipfs
network,
reach
out
to
a
blockchain
service
provider,
and
then
the
web
wallet
will
begin
to
work
through
the
ipfs
network
and
talk
to
the
bitcoin
cash
blockchain.
A
That
way,
and
this
will
allow
the
web
wallet
to
work
in
places
where
it
is
currently
censored
like
mainland
china,
that's
the
only
place,
I
know
for
sure
it's
censored
and
so
very
excited
to
subversively,
get
around
the
chinese
firewall
and
hopefully,
therefore
be
able
to
subvert
other
attempts
at
censorship
as
well.
A
And
this
this
will
make
the
entire
stack
from
the
user
interface
that
the
that
the
user
uses
all
the
way
down
to
the
blockchain
decentralized,
with
no
single
point
of
failure
gary
and
also,
as
always,
guys
feel
free
to
interrupt
me
jump
on
and
if
there's
something
you
wanna
wanna,
add
otherwise
I'll
just
go
through
this
and
we'll
get
to
the
the
stuff
we
I
know
we
all
like,
which
is
talking
about
current
events.
A
Gary
has
been
making
some
steady
improvements
in
minimal
ovex
wallet,
which
is
a
minimal
slp
wallet
is
the
sort
of
wallet
engine.
That's
inside
gatsby
ipfs
web
wallet,
and
it's
it's
it's.
What
does
the
you
know
checking
token
balances
sending
sending
tokens
all
the
typical
wallet
features,
so
we've
created
minimal,
avex
wallet
which
works
on
the
avalanche,
blockchain
the
x
chain,
and
it's
pretty
much
at
feature
parity.
It's
really
on
me.
A
I
need
to
find
some
time
to
do
some
qa
and
just
do
a
final
check
to
see
if
there's
anything
we
missed,
but
it's
pretty
much
that
feature
parity.
All
the
function
calls
are
the
same,
so
it's
essentially
a
drop-in
replacement.
You
use
one
library
for
talking
to
point
cache.
You
use
the
other
library
for
talking
to
avalanche
all
the
function.
Calls
from
a
developer
standpoint
are
the
same,
and
this
will
also.
This
is
reflected
in
our
command
line
wallet.
A
So
we
have
slp
cly
wallet
for
the
bitcoin
cash
blockchain
and
ecash
blockchain,
and
we
have,
I
think,
it's
well.
We
have
we
have
a
command
line
wallet
and
I'm
having
a
brain
fired
on
the
name
of
it,
but
it's
the
same
exact
commands
same
exact
experience,
but
on
the
avalanche,
blockchain
I've
been
playing
with
it.
It
works
pretty
good.
A
A
He
fixed
the
price
feed
on
the
abc
version
of
the
web
wallet
or
the
ecash
version
of
the
web
wallet
a
couple
weeks
ago
and
then
more
recently,
he
submitted
a
pr
to
bchjs
so
that
that
javascript
library
can
now
generate
ecash
addresses
and
e-token
addresses,
just
like
you
can
generate
bitcoin
cash
addresses
or
legacy
addresses
or
simple
ledger
addresses.
A
So
that's
a
neat
feature.
If
anybody
wants
to
develop
on
the
ecash
blockchain,
they
can
now
generate
both
the
coin
and
the
token
prefixes
that
work
in
that
ecosystem
with
their
wallets
and
keeps
everything
consistent
and
he's
also
working
on
his
own
fork
of
our
web
wallet.
There's
a
link
here.
If
anybody
wants
to
check
it
out,
I
don't
think
it's
been
too
customized
but
he's
working
on
bringing
in
the
ecash
branding
and
the
redenomination,
so
they
redenominated
from
you
know
what
bitcoin
cash
represents,
which
is
eight
digits
to.
A
I
think
six
digits
or
a
million.
So
it's
just
it's
just.
They
just
move
the
decimal
point,
but
you
know
that
all
needs
to
be
taken
into
consideration
with
the
software.
So
he's
working
on
that
really
really
appreciate
his
work.
You
know
I
definitely
want
to
see
us
support
all
three
chains.
You
know
as
as
a
diversity
strategy,
I'm
so
pretty
happy
with
that,
so
that
wraps
up
our
core
software
moving
on
to
the
json
rpc
over
ipfs
and
the
pay
to
write
database.
A
This
isn't
in
the
agenda,
but
I
just
want
to
let
you
guys
know
that
you
saw
the
presentation.
I
gave
the
shapeshift
dao
about
the
decks,
we're
building
and
some
of
this
technology
and
I've
been
approached
by
three
other
doubts
since
then,
who
are
very
interested
in
this
json
rpc
over
ipfs,
their
their
tech
people
understand
the
threats
that
are
coming
into
the
industry
from
regulation.
A
They
understand
how
the
json
rpc
over
ipfs
can
circumvent
attempts
at
censorship
and
regulation
so
that
they're
very
interested
in
it,
and
so
that's
that's
great
to
see
it's
great
to
see
that
there's
people
with
money
interested
in
the
tech
wanting
to
push
it
forward,
I'm
very
excited
about
what
fruit
that
might
bring.
B
A
Yeah,
it's
been
great
there's
a
lot
of
attention
on
shapeshift,
so
I
was
so
grateful
that
they
gave
us.
You
know
a
few
minutes
to
present
because
yeah,
like
you,
said,
that's
really
bearing
fruit,
so
daniel
created
a
much
improved
user
experience
for
the
pay
to
write
database
explorer.
Let
me
just
show
that
off
right
here.
So
if
you
go
to
explorer.fullstack.cache.
A
It
now
automatically
loads
the
explorer
menu
item
which
it
didn't
do
that
before
so
now
it
just
takes
you
directly
there
and
then
you'll
see
all
these.
It's
like
a
block
explorer,
but
instead
of
blocks,
we
just
have
new
entries
to
the
database.
So
as
a
new
entry
comes
in
you'll
see
it
this
thing
refreshes
every
20
seconds
you
can
click
on
the
transaction
link
to
take
you
to
the
bitcoin
cash
block,
explorer
that
will
show
you,
the
transaction
for
the
token
burn
that
paid
for
this
entry
into
the
database.
A
You
can
click
on
this
hash
to
open
up
details
about
the
this
entry
in
the
database
and
the
big
feature
I
really
love
is
that
now
we've
got
most
of
the
data
is
in
json
format.
So
now,
if
it
is
in
json
format,
it
will
automatically
detect
that
and
pretty
pretty
prettify
it
make
it
make
it.
You
know
readable.
A
So
this
is
great
because
this
this
really
makes
it
much
more
useful
as
developer
tool
and
then
also,
if
you
click
on
this
hash
link,
it
also
automatically
adds
these
links.
It
will
do
a
rest.
Api
call
and
pull
the
raw
data
down,
so
you
can
see
the
raw
data
for
this.
C
A
This
transaction
and
then
finally,
there's
also
another
link
to
a
transaction
id
so
yeah.
Those
were
the
updates
to
that
really
coming
along,
really
liking.
How
this
paid
right
database
is
shaping
up,
as
especially
from
the
developer,
tooling
side
of
things,
also
chat.fullstack.cache,
which
is
both
an
end-to-end
encrypted
private
messenger,
but
also
more
of
a
developer
tool.
It
has
some
a
command
terminal
where
you
can
go
in
there
and
sort
of
debug.
A
Some
of
the
network
calls
and
interactions
just
to
see
what's
happening
if
you're
having
problems.
One
of
the
two
critical
commands
in
there
is
list
relays
and
lists
appears
so
the
list
relays
lists
all
the
circuit
relays
that
your
browser
node's
connected
to,
which
is
what
lets
you
connect
to
the
wider
sub
network
and
then
the
list
peers
lists
all
the
the
other
nodes
that
your
node
is
aware
of,
and
so
those
commands
broke
and
now
they're
fixed.
A
So
now
they
work
and
then
finally,
you
know
another
just
great
news:
all
the
labs
is
in
the
process
of
processing
a
grant.
A
They
saw
that
presentation
or
I
I've
been
I've
been
in
communication
with
with
them
for
a
while,
I'm
on
pretty
good
terms
with
most
of
the
development
team,
and
I
meant
that
you
know
I
managed
to
get
a
few
of
them
to
look
at
the
presentation
that
I
gave
to
shape
shift
dow
and
they
were
interested
in
giving
us
a
grant
to
fund
the
avalanche
sea
chain
side
of
the
decks
so
that
you
know
it
hasn't
been.
The
grant
hasn't
been
approved
yet,
but
it
is
in
the
process
of
being
approved.
A
There's
there's
no,
no,
nothing.
I
have
no
reason
to
expect
that
it
won't
be
approved
at
this
point.
A
And
that's
great
because
that'll
pay
for
daniel
and
gary
to
work
on
the
decks
over
the
next
year
for
the
avalanche
side
of
things,
I'm
also
petitioning
ecash,
to
see
if
they
would
like
to
you
know,
put
put
up
some
money
for
the
development
of
the
ecash
set,
but
that
hasn't
progressed
very
far
yet
okay,
so
that
wraps
up
this
section
on
the
json
rpc
over
ipfs
and
the
pay
to
write
database
couple
other
miscellaneous
items
for
those
who
haven't
seen
it.
Yet.
I
wanted
to
point
out
this
slpdb
review.
A
This
was
sponsored
by
an
anonymous
donor
who
paid
me
and
indirectly,
the
psf
to
do
some
research
on
the
state
of
the
slp
ecosystem
and
specifically
the
indexers,
which
power
that
ecosystem
and
sort
of
what
is
their
current
state
of
maintenance
and
existence.
A
What
are
the
threats
and
risks
and
what
were
my
recommendations
and
what
are
my
estimated
costs
for
us
to
sort
of
move
forward
and
solve
some
of
those
problems?
So
if
you,
if
anybody,
I
know,
everybody
here-
has
read
it,
but
anybody
watching
this.
If
they
haven't
read
it,
I
recommend
you
watch
it.
I
put
the
links
in
most
of
the
active
bitcoin
cash
developer
channels,
there's
also
a
link
here
in
the
in
the
agenda.
A
But
if
I
just
the
tldr
on
this,
is
that
basically
there's
a
short
term
there's
the
problem
is
that
slpdb,
the
the
main
indexer
that
powers
the
ecosystem,
is
continuously
growing
and
getting
harder
and
harder
to
operate,
and
it
won't
be
much
longer
until
it
continues
on
this
trajectory,
where
there's
there's
really
already
only
a
handful
of
people
who
who
can
afford
to
run
the
success
program
and
and
as
it
gets
more
expensive,
there
will
be
even
fewer
people,
and
so
the
short
term
solution
to
this
problem
is
to
switch
to
bchd
or
be
cash
which
both
have
built-in
indexers
that
come
with
their
own
set
of
risks.
A
And
then,
in
my
opinion,
the
long-term
solution
is
to
build
a
replacement
for
slpdb
that
is
decoupled
from
a
no
a
full
node,
that's
its
own
standalone,
indexer
and
and
would
and
would
be
easier
to
maintain
and
and
could
be
redesigned
to
be
much
more
efficient
so
that
that's
the
tldr.
B
Yeah,
I
I
think
this
is
one
of
those
big
things.
What
you
did
over
the
past
week
and
a
half
is
showing
the
importance
of
the
work
that
we're
doing
here,
because
I
feel
like
that.
This
right
here
starts
to
say:
okay,
there
is
a
existential
risk
to
all
of
the
tokens
we're
creating
if
we
don't
have
an
indexer
that
works
well,
like
the.
I
think
the
example
that
you
brought
up
in
in
that
was
was
the
the
bitcoin.com
one,
and
I
didn't
even
realize
that.
B
But
you
pointed
this
out
one
point:
I
was
sending
my
psf
tokens
back
and
forth
to
the
bitcoin.com
wallet
and
it
didn't
show
up
one
time
and
I'm
like
what
is
going
on.
You
know
I've
done
it
many
times
moved
around
now.
I
didn't
realize
that
there
is
an
issue
with
that
and
they're
not
perfectly
aligned.
I
don't
know
what
the
differences
are,
but
you
know
putting
that
stuff
here
to
make
sure
that
we
know
the
importance
of
doing
this.
B
I
mean
this
is
to
make
sure
that
that
all
the
tokens,
all
the
nfts
that
aaron
shoemaker,
is
creating
that
they
exist
years.
From
now
that
it,
you
know
they
don't
get
lost
because
they
indexing
have
different
opinions
on
how
to
deal
with
it.
So
I
think
this
is
a
huge.
This
is
a
very
important
piece
and
whoever
funded
it.
I'm
very
thankful,
because
I
think
this
now
is
brought
up
a
lot
and
it
made
us
realize
sort
of
where
things
are.
A
Yeah
thanks
aaron,
I
echo
that
opinion
completely.
I
appreciate
that
and
final
last
thing
on
the
agenda:
it's
a
new
quarter.
We
did
an
air
drop
and
the
voters
spoke
to
fund
our
next
quarter
of
infrastructure
costs.
So
this
is
our
opportunity
to
ceremoniously
burn
the
leftover
tokens
from
last
quarter.
A
A
A
A
E
A
Just
as
a
reminder,
slp
wallet
is
our
sandbox
wallet,
so
it's
doesn't
it.
It
usually
is
a
little
clunky
just
because
it's
a
rapid,
prototyping
thing,
psf
bch
wallet,
is
our
more
refined,
plywood
or
will
be
once
we
reach
feature
parity
with
it.
C
While
it's
doing
this
work,
can
I
ask
a
question
about
the
e-cash
addressing
yeah?
It's
already
over.
E
A
Yeah,
let's
just
check
this
transaction
out
on
the
block
explorer
and
I'm
also
updating
the
balance
of
the
wallet
here
just
to.
A
C
You
missed
one
four
in
the
beginning
of
the
transaction:
okay,
let's
go
okay,.
G
A
I
can't
fix
their
block
explorer,
but
let's
see
this
is
this
is
the
transaction
and
according
to
blockchair,
it
did
go
through.
A
Yeah
they're
black
explorers,
probably
having
issues,
but
we
can
see
some
bitcoin
cash
and
this
would
have
been
the
dust
representing
the
tokens
into
one
single
output
which
would
not
comply
with
the
slp
specifications.
So
I
can
see
with
pretty
good
confidence.
A
F
A
Right
yeah
I'm
going
to
go
ahead
and
stop
sharing
here
and
we
will
yeah,
let's
go
into
the
round
table.
What
the!
What
burning
topics
do
you
guys
want
to
talk
about
today.
B
Well,
you
know
mentioned
I
wanted
to
mention
one
thing
on
the
nft
space
and
because
this
is
such
a
big,
important
piece
for
what
we're
trying
to
do,
and
so
I
don't
know
if,
if
you
guys
all
use
jungle,
I
mean
I
know
aaron
schmaker
has
because
we
had
a
discussion
on.
I
think
that
the
last
one
and.
A
People
watching
just
just
give
a
quick
summary
of
what
jungle.
B
Is
jungle.net
which
is
j-u-u
so
to
use,
is
a
is
a
slp
nft
exchange,
so
you
can
put
your
own
nfts
out
there
and
you
can
buy
them
with
a
bch
works
pretty
well
and
there's
quite
a
bit
quite
a
few
things
out
there.
If
you
I
don't
know,
I
could
probably
share
my
screen
just
to
show.
Oh,
is
it
possible
to
show
that
I
can
turn
on
sharing
I
like
to
see
you
can.
B
Okay,
so
screen
two
so
here
is
here,
is
my
you
know,
so
I'm
logged
in
right
now-
and
this
is
my
particular
set
set
of
unlisted,
so
I've
been
buying
lots
of
them
because
I
just
think
it's
really
interesting
space.
I
have
some
listed
out
there,
so
a
lot
of
fun
things,
but
they
have
a
really
kind
of
a
rich
experience
out
there.
B
Problem
with
that
right
now
is,
is
that
one
of
the
things
that's
going
on
is
that
to
be
able
to
put
your
own
out
there,
you
have
to
actually
put
a
pull
request,
giving
them
right
now,
so
there's
16
pull
requests
sitting
out
there
mine's
been
sitting
out
there
since
eight
days
ago,
but
there's
stuff
out
there
since
august.
Third,
that's
not
been
added
in.
B
You
know
to
to
make
sure
that
we
have
a
rich
ecosystem
abilities
to
use
the
nfts
as
well
as
to
be
able
to
do
what
most
other
nfts.
Currently
other
systems
are
currently
doing.
We
need
to
I
mean,
there's
some
discussions
that
have
to
go
on.
It's
like
we
don't
what?
What
do
we
do
next?
If
this
is
not,
you
know,
if
someone's
not
paying
attention
or
not
moving
this
forward.
B
A
Guys
loosely
I've
also
heard
of
people
moving
their
nfts
to
open
c,
even
though
they're
still
on
the
bitcoin
cash
blockchain.
I
haven't
followed
it
too
closely,
but
apparently
there's
a
workflow
for
that.
B
There's
a
workflow
to
move
so
because
that's
a
that's
a
big
thing
right
now
I
mean
all
of
the
things
that
we're
working
on
in
the
nft
space-
and
I
don't
just
mean
in
our
system,
but
all
around
is.
Is
this
rich
experience
of
being
able
to
put
stuff
out
there
and
use
it
in
what
aaron
shoemaker
was
calling
the
metaverse?
B
In
fact,
if
you
guys
haven't
seen
this
guy,
he
had
a
tweet
storm
over
the
past
three
days.
That
really
absolutely
are
it's
a
real
game-changing
understanding
of
what
the
metaverse
is
going
to
be
and
why
digital
ownership
is
so
important
and-
and
he
also
and
the
the
crazy
thing
about
punk
6529-
is
that
he's
anonymous
or
student
anonymous
right
now,
and
so
he,
even
as
he
created
his
account,
he
said
you
most
of
you
know
me,
but
I
don't
want
to
go
by
that
name.
B
I
want
to
be
this
punk,
this
crypto
punk,
and
I
want
to
have
this
discussion
as
the
pseudo-anonymous
guy,
but
his
if
you've
got
to
get
a
chance
to
read
all
about
his
time
to
build
an
open,
metaverse
tweet
thread.
It's
magnificent.
It
shows
how
important
the
space
is
and
that
what
we're
doing
right
now
building
this
is
where
it
is
to
make
it's
this.
B
Our
stuff
has
to
align
with
all
what
all
that
metaverse
is
going
to
be
or
will
be
left
alone
left
out,
and
so
I
think
that's
why
what
the
paper
you
put
together
chris
is
extremely
important
for
us
to
be
able
to
feel
like
anything.
We're
building
now
is
going
to
exist
when
we
get
to
this
point
where
the
metaverse
is
going
forward.
So
for
anybody
who
has
not
read
that
that
is
a
fantastic
push,
there's
I
don't
know
if
you
guys
seen
sweet
dot
io.
B
A
B
B
B
A
Yeah,
you
might
have
to
stop
sharing.
I
think
snapchat.
B
So
this
is
the
cor.
This
is
nelly.
The
the
cool
part
is,
if
you
have
a
sweet
app.
These
are
not
unique
per
box,
so
every
box
doesn't
have
any
code
you're
allowed
to
every
12
hours,
scan
this
code
and
get
a
unique
nft
from
nelly
and
this
one's
from
little
huddy.
So
there's
another
one
out
there.
I'm
gonna
hold
this
one
up,
even
though
you
can
only
do
one
for
every
12
hours.
Where
is
the
qr
code
scanner?
B
So
what
so?
The
suite
supports
not
only
slp,
they
also
support
matic
on
erc,
erc
721
and
they
support
the
standard,
ethereum
er721.
B
So
so
there's
there's
a
big
ecosystem,
that's
happening
and
the
fact
that
they
have
dave
and
busters
as
well
as
burger
king
now,
they're
all
on
erc
721
they're,
not
on
the
slp
wallet,
but
that's
happening.
This
is
now
becoming
real
and
about.
I
feel
like
what
you've
outlined.
B
Chris
is
really
important
for
us
to
support
this
and
make
sure
that
whatever
happens,
we
are
there
to
help
you
make
this
go,
and
I
don't
know
what
else
to
do,
except
I'm
trying
to
show
in
this
tiny
bit
of
a
rambling
moment
here
is
to
say
it
is
all
moving
forward.
All
of
this
stuff
is
happening
whether
or
not
we
build
it,
and
I
I
want
to
make
sure
that
anything
aaron
builds
anything
we
build
as
a
or
like
I'm
starting,
a
small
company
called
the
digital
art
and
currency
group.
B
I
feel
like
I
want
to
build
on
bitcoin
cash
and
the
reason
is
the
fees
are
so
low.
You
can
do
so
much
with
it.
There's
already
got
all
the
miners,
the
proof
of
work
protection
behind
it,
there's
a
lot
of
things
that
I
don't
understand
yet
about
how
this
is
all
going
to
happen
with
all
these
other
blockchains,
but
bitcoin
cash
and
bitcoin
have
enough
of
a
simple
model
that
they
can
keep
working.
B
B
D
I
I
believe
that
we're
going
to
see
a
distinction
in
intellectual
property
between
physical
property
and
digital
property,
so
you
have
a
house
and
if
you
were
to
scan
your
house
with,
say
a
lidar
scanner
and
create
a
point
cloud
of
that
house
that
would
become
digital
property
right.
D
That
is
what
you
assign
to
the
nft.
So
you
use
something
like
the
pay
to
write
database
or
you.
You
would
use
filecoin
in
order
to
store
this
asset
and
then
you
would
use
the
nft
as
a
key
to
unlock
the
asset,
and
I
think
that's
the
big
distinction.
That's
going
to
happen
where
right
now,
people
see
the
nft
itself
as
the
asset.
D
D
Well,
now
your
house
is
this
compound
asset?
It's
a
physical
asset.
That
is
appreciating
value
in
a
physical
marketplace,
but
is
also
an
asset
that
is
bringing
in
reoccurring
revenue
depending
on
how
you
sell
that
digital
asset.
D
So
that's
where
I
think
the
metaverse
is
heading
and
that's
where
I'm
also
excited
about
the
bridges
that
are
being
built,
which
means
no
nfts
or
digital
assets
will
be
isolated
in
any
one
area.
D
D
D
All
these
things
what's
funny
is,
if
you
look
at
the
history
of
these
things,
they
all
started
separately
and
now
they're
converging
into
one
thing,
and
it
means
that
I
can
go
out
and
I
can
capture
forest
through
several
different
means.
Sometimes
it's
stereoscopic
360
cap
capture,
sometimes
it's
photogrammetry,
sometimes
it's
lidar,
depending
on
the
lighting
conditions
and
the
power
of
the
instrument,
and
I
can
then
create
this
asset
that
I
sell
to
a
game
company
that
puts
it
into
a
video
game
that
can
happen
right
now.
There
are
companies
doing
that
right
now.
D
Well,
you
just
went
out
and
spent
a
million
dollars
on
digital
assets,
and
you
only
use
five
hundred
thousand
right
now
you
have
lost
that
other
500,
000
and
there's
no
way
to
recoup
it
and
what
nfts
and
digital
assets
are
going
to
do
is
give
people
and
companies
the
ability
to
resell
those
assets
and
recoup
some
of
their
loss.
So
I
didn't
use
five
hundred
thousand
dollars.
I
just
resold
them
for
three
hundred
thousand
dollars.
D
Now,
I'm
only
out
two
hundred
thousand
dollars
on
the
project
right
and
then,
when
facebook
and
social
media-
and
I
do
want
to
talk
about
facebook
too,
because
of
the
thing
that
happened
made
me
really
think
about
the
psf,
when
social
media
moves
into
the
place
that
your
page
is
no
longer
a
page,
it's
a
house
or
it's
the
grand
canyon
or
like
how
I
like
to
pitch.
D
Maybe
you
want
to
live
in
jay-z's
mansion,
you
know,
maybe
that's
your
digital
world
and
what's
cool
is
not
only
can
you
explore
it
on
a
desktop
or
phone,
but
you
can
put
it
into
a
headset
and
literally
be
there
and
as
haptic
feedback
becomes
better
and
cheaper,
which
is
already
happening
you
can
put
on
gloves
and
feel
things
in
the
real
world
and
in
fact,
we're
going
to
be
using
those
gloves
to
capture
physical
objects,
the
feeling
of
physical
objects
and
transmit
them
to
the
end
user,
like
they're,
going
to
be
capture
devices
right
now,
everything
is
programmed
in
a
computer
to
and
and
if
you
want
to
use
it
as
a
capture
device.
D
There's
a
few
companies
out
there
really
really
expensive,
really
expensive
haptic
capture
software.
They
have
like
a
big
box
and
they
have
two
gloves
and
they
put
their
hands
in
the
gloves
and
they
capture
haptic
feedback
that
way
so
that
they
can
put
it
into
video
games,
but
that's
coming
to
where
it's
becoming
cheaper
and
cheaper
and
cheaper.
So
not
only
can
you
live
in
this
world,
but
if
you're
making
an
nft,
you
could
include
haptic
feedback
to
it.
D
So
I
could
go
into
my
room
and
I
can
pick
up
this
entity
and
turn
it
around
and
feel
it.
You
know
that's
where
the
potential
of
the
metaverse
lies
and
it's
gonna
start
with
this
video
games,
3d
printers
and
stuff
like
that
and
then
once
it
moves
into
social
media.
That's
where
it's
going
to
explode
and
this
these
digital
assets
are
really
going
to
see
their
full
potential.
D
A
A
I
think
that
that
was
a
centralized
solution,
because
it
was
easier
and
faster
to
build
a
proof
of
concept
using
that,
but
now
that
the
time
has
come
to
move
beyond
that-
and
you
know
I
know-
I
know
we're-
not
the
only
ones
thinking
these
things
are
working
on
it,
but
we
definitely
have
a
road
map,
and
you
know
one
of
them
being
the
the
mutable
token
spec,
which
opens
a
lot
of
business
doors,
but
also
opens
the
door
to
get
away
from
this
permissioned
workflow
that
exists
today,
right
and
then
something
you
said
about
you
know
like.
A
I
think
you
guys
both
touched
on
tokenizing
assets,
you
know,
and
one
of
the
one
of
the
trends
we're
seeing
is,
is
dows
coming
together
to
pool
money
to
purchase
nfts.
But,
as
we
know,
those
nfts
can
be
many
different
things
they
could
buy.
C
A
So
you
could
have
a
dow,
like
a
real
estate
investor
dao,
who
pools
their
money
to
purchase
real
estate
and
rent
it
out
and
then
bring
in
the
cash
flows
and
then
divvy
up
the
cash
flows
to
the
token
holders.
That's
completely
feasible
today
and
and
then
what
you
guys
said
about
the
safety
of
ensuring
that
the
nft
will
stand
the
test
of
time
in
the
face
of
all
this
new
tech.
A
I
I
re,
you
know,
I
don't
really
see
anybody
talking
about
this
much,
but
I
think
the
the
trend
that
will
emerge
is
multi-block
chain
recording
of
data,
so
you
don't
just
create
an
nft
on
ethereum
or
aux
or
bch.
You
create
a
an
nft
that
exists
on
all
blockchain
simultaneously,
and
so,
if
something
happens
to
any
one
blockchain
or
the
transaction
fees
get
you
know
high
on
one
you're
not
tied
to
any
one
specific
blockchain
you
can
use.
Whichever
is
the
most
appropriate
at
that
moment,
for
your
business
use
case.
D
D
Right,
I
actually
have
a
friend
who's
planning
on
launching
launching
an
nft
series
and
his
plan
is
actually
to
launch
nfts
on
ethereum
and
bitcoin
cash
and
avalanche,
and
but
his
plan
is
not
to
duplicate
them
across
the
the
blockchains,
but
to
have
specific
ones
for
the
specific
blockchains
and
which
I
think
is
great
idea.
But
I
do
also
like
the
idea
of
being
able
to
duplicate
it
and
have
it
across
several
blockchains.
Like
you're.
Talking
about.
C
Yeah
there
was
some
confusions
about
the
namespace
for
the
for
for
the
where
to
put
these
functions
because,
with
the
bch
gs
there
was
like
sop
namespace
like
nft
or
something
but
the
the
e
cache.
They
have
e
token
right.
They
call
their
stuff
e
token.
So
what
will
happen
with
the
the
library?
You
will
the?
And
I
think
you
are
some
discussions
with
matthew
or
his
name,
where
to
put
exactly
the
the
function
generating
addresses
in
which
yeah
part.
A
Is
my
screen
visible?
Oh
there
we
go
no
okay!
There
we
go
thanks,
aaron,
no
problem.
So
this
is
the
pull
request
that
matthew
submitted
and
it
ended
up
being
actually
pretty
easy,
because
the
ecash
development
team
had
already
done.
I
think
it
was
specifically
joey.
King
or
yeah
had
already
forked
this
cash
adder
js
library
into
ecash,
adder
js,
so
it
it
has
all
the
same
features
which
is
bitcoin
cash
and
simple
ledger
and
they
just
added
the
e-cash
stuff.
So
it
was
largely
just
replacing.
A
The
libraries
was
the
main
bulk
of
the
and
this.
This
pr
is
is
linked
in
the
right
here
in
the
in
the
agenda
yeah.
So
it
was
really
just
putting
in
the
swapping
out
an
old
library
with
a
new
library
and
then
and
then
adding
the
specific
function,
calls
to
convert
an
address
to
ecash.
C
What
will
happens
with
the
example
repository
dch
js
example?
You
will
be
there,
including
also
the
ecash
examples
or.
A
I'd
like
to
see
it
yeah
I
mean
I.
I
was
hoping
to
actually
update
that
the
examples
yesterday,
but
I
didn't
get
time
for
it.
So
I
mean
anybody
can
do
that.
I
I
would
like
to
see
an
ecash,
like
example,
branch
or
folder,
for
for
that
stuff
it
would
be
yeah,
be
really
nice,
and
I'd
also
like
to
see
the
same
thing
for
avex.
D
Very
cool,
very
cool,
so
the
whole
facebook
thing
made
me
think
about
the
pay
to
write
database
and
decentralize
data.
This
week
like
when
that
hit,
I
was
like
man,
they
should
be
running.
You
know
on
a
pay
to
write
database
over
ipfs.
A
A
B
F
D
Delay
yeah
so
as
that's
happening,
I'm
listening
to
some
people
talk
about
it
and
I'm
like
man.
If
this
was
if
they
were
like
decentralized
over
ipfs
and
and
utilizing
pay
to
write
database
and
things
of
that
nature.
They
wouldn't
have
this
problem,
but
because
they've
centralized
themselves
so
much.
They
had
a
central
point
of
failure
which
took
them
offline.
A
You
know
I'm
hoping
that
this
experience
inspires
some
small
percentage
of
people
to
look
for
alternatives.
I
it's
inspired
me
to
look
a
little
deeper
at
mastodon.
That's
been
getting
some
traction.
I
finally
just
created
a
profile
so
shout
out
to
anybody
who
wants
to
connect
to
me
there.
I
just
did
a
tweet
with
my
mastodon
profile
info
and
you
know
they.
They
use
a
federated
model,
it's
a
micro
blogging
platform
and
they
use
a
federated
model.
C
No,
it's
a
great
it's
an
underlying
how
to
see
data
exchange
protocol
and
on
top
of
it
there
are
several
good
projects
like
mastodon
is
for
blogging.
C
They
also
is
an
image
gallery
and
I
forgot
what
else,
but
this
using
the
same
underlying
protocol,
so
you
can
like
exchange
like
profile
information
or
like
pictures
stuff
like
this,
but
yeah
mastodon
is
like
classic.
I
have
accounts
of
maybe
10
of
them
different
groups
because
of
the
cool
names
like
bitcoiners
dot,
something.
D
You
know
another
top
good.
I
have
a
question
about
the
the
chat
function
on
the
chat:
full
stack,
dot
cash.
Is
it
possible
to
do
groups
that
way,
because
I
know
that's
single
peer-to-peer,
but
is
it
possible.
A
Yeah
it
is,
it
is,
it
needs
to
be
built.
The
thing
is
that
when
you're
doing
peer-to-peer
communication,
encryption
is
really
straightforward
and
when
you
do
a
group
communication,
encryption
just
really
doesn't
work
based
on
the
fact
that
it's
all
groups,
even
if
you
can
get
it
to
work,
it's
just
not
really
very
effective.
A
D
A
D
Yeah
yeah,
I
like
telegram
for
its
ability
to
share
files,
photos
stuff
like
that
anybody
that
does
video
with
me.
I'm
I'm
like
get
on
telegram,
because
I
can
send
you
dailies
through
telegram.
You
know
I
don't
have
to
email
them
to
you
or
send
a
low-res
through
text
message.
I
can
literally
just
drop
it
into
telegram
and
you're
going
to
see
a
pretty
good
resolution
daily.
You
know
I
wish
they'd
had
360
functionality,
any
telegram
programmers
out
there
listening.
B
I
I
want
to
mention
that
the
suite.io
does
have
360
nfts.
Now
I
just
I
collected
all
of
the
nelly
ones,
and
I
got
a
bonus
360
of
of
the
king,
the
burger
king
guy.
So
I
got
a
so
it's
kind
of
wild
to
see
they
gave
you
little
surprises.
So
if
you
collect
all
the
particular
one,
you
get
these
additional
360
nfts
they're,
erc
721,
but
really
interesting.
D
That's
the
like
a
360
product
or
artifact
right.
D
D
B
D
Yeah,
it's
not
like
an
stl
or
a
obj
or
anything.
It's
just
yeah,
see
it'd
be
what's
gonna,
be
sweet,
is
when
they're
obj's
as
well,
and
that's
some
projects,
I'm
working
on
when
I
get
time
where
it's
like
all
right,
I've
got
obj
files,
I'm
gonna
put
it
up
into
ipfs
and
there's
a
javascript
file
that
you
can
look
at
it
on
your
browser.
But
I
also
want
to
have
the
functionality
of
now.
You
can
download
the
obj
and
then
go
print
it
or
stick
it
in
a
video.
H
D
Right
now
so
it's
like
you
can
preview
it.
You
can
look
at
it.
You
can
show
people
that
on
your
phone
here,
look
at
this.
I
could
turn
it
around
and
then
you
can
go
home
to
your
computer,
download
the
obj
file
and
then
print
it
out
with
your
3d
printer.
A
B
B
B
D
Great
idea,
the
biggest
problem
is
the
3d
rendering
and
building
platforms
and
they're
getting
better
they're
integrating
a
lot
better.
D
A
Yeah
hook
up
a
hook
up
like
one
of
those
animal
feeder,
the
bitcoin
cash
activated
animal
feeders,
except
it's
also
ways
to
print
and.
D
Yeah
aaron
who's
in
the
telegram
chest
he's
been
working
on
that
bch,
the
payment
module
right,
and
so
I
I
think
if
somebody.
D
He's
in
the
pro
prototyping
stage-
and
you
know
I'll
I'll
talk
to
him
and
but
right
now
I
know
he's
got
it
hooked
up
to
his
lamp,
and
so
you
can
turn
his
lamp
on
for
a
minute.
You
send
him
some
bc.
A
A
C
A
B
A
A
That
I
just
wanted
to
cover,
while
you're
here
you
know
anybody
who's
used.
Ethereum
is
aware
of
the
crazy
transaction
fees.
I
it's
not
it's
not
just
that
they're
high!
It's
that
they're
volatile.
Like
I
at
one
point
yesterday
I
tried
to
do
a
transaction.
It
was
an
eighty
dollar
transaction
fee
just
to
send
each
not
even
to
interact
with
a
with
an
erc20
token
and
and
then
I
tried
I
I
was
like
that's
way
too
high,
so
I
waited
till
the
evening
and
then
the
transaction
fee
was
ten
dollars.
A
That
was
much
better,
so
I
waited
a
few
hours,
but
I've
been
playing
with
the
avalanche
c
chain
and
their
bridge,
because
I've
been
hearing
about
all
these
things,
and
I
know
that
the
c
chain
transaction
volume
is
exploding
right
now,
and
so
I
decided
okay,
it's
time
to
sit
down
and
think
about
this,
because
I'm
also
really
thinking
I've
been
doing
some
research
into
stable
coins
that
I'd
like
to
share
with
you
guys
but
anyways.
A
I
really
encourage
you
guys
if
you
have
like
a
little
bit
of
east
to
play
with
google,
the
avalanche
ethereum
bridge,
really
smooth
ux.
You
can
convert
your
ethan
to
wrapped
east
and
move
them
over
to
avalanche
and
then
there's
pangolin
and
trader
joe.
Those
were
the
two
decentralized
exchanges
on
the
avalanche
chain.
You
know
pangolin
was
the
only
one,
so
it
kind
of
got
that
first
mover
advantage,
but
everybody's
raving
about
trader
joe
and
after
trying
it
it's
still
a
little
clunky,
but
man
it
works
when
it
works.
A
It
works
really
good
and
and
and
so
and
then
they
have
all
these
stable
coins.
And
this,
and
so
the
transaction
fees
on
the
avalanche
chain
is
like
between,
like
eight
cents
to
like,
I
don't
think
I've
ever
seen
it
over
20
cents.
I
think
it's
always
been
under
20
cents,
for
a
transaction
fee
and
and
so
there's
a
couple
stable
coins
that
caught
my
eye.
One
is
the
frax
stable
coin.
That's
really
interesting.
A
It
looks
like
they
have
really
good
fundamentals:
they're
both
on
ethereum
and
avalanche
c
chain,
they're
they're,
a
semi-collateralized
or
semi-algorithmic
stable
coin,
so
they're
they're,
both
collateralized
and
algorithmic,
they're
they're,
they're
a
hybrid,
and
it's
really
interesting
there
and
and
they
have
their
dow.
They
have
their
own
government's
governance
token
and
then
there's
also
on
avalanche
there's
teddy
cash,
which
is
a
fork
of
I
think
it's
called
liquidity
on
ethereum
and
what
it
is.
Is
it's
a
very
simple,
smart
contract
that
lets
you
loan
take
loans
to
yourself.
A
Now
I
wouldn't
do
this
right
now,
because
the
market's
high
I'm
gonna
wait
till
the
market's
low
so
that
I
don't
have
a
so
much
risk
of
getting
liquidated.
If
you
know
we
lose
30
percent
one
day
and
prices,
but
but
there's
no
intermediary
you're,
essentially
giving
a
loan
to
yourself.
So
you
you
stake
like
some
albex
or
on
a
theory,
mistake
ethereum
and
you
get
a
us
dollar
pegged
token.
This
means
that
there's
no
counterparty
risk.
There's
no.
C
A
Mean
other
other
than
the
the
the
smart
contract
you
gotta
trust
the
smart
contract
was
written,
but
but
some
of
the
the
teddy
cash
has
not
been
audited,
but
I
think
the
liquidity
project
that
it
was
forked
from
was
audited
and
frax
is
very
highly
audited
and
there's
governance
mechanism
there.
So
those
are
a
couple
stable
coins
that
have
caught
my
eye
that
I'm
playing
with
and
yeah
just
loving
the
low
transaction
fees,
loving
the
decentralized
exchange
of
assets
really
coming.
There's
there's
a
lot
to
lot
to
appreciate
there.
E
C
If
you
remember
the
there
we
go
so
I
ported
my
clone
of
this
scaffold
it
it's
already
working
with
the
avalanche
sea
chain,
both
fuji
and
the
main
net.
So
I
can
create
all
of
this
crazy
application
on
the
avalanche
too.
C
I
will
post
maybe
the
what
else
in
the
chat
when
I'm
talking,
maybe
or
sure,
yeah
or.
A
Toss
them
in
the
the
psf
telegram
channel.
B
C
C
C
Project,
but
it's
another
gym
again,
so
what
you
can
do
here.
First,
there
is
this
relays
which
you
can
create
wallet
here
on
many
chains.
C
Oh,
so
this
one
itself
is
not
so
exciting,
but
you
can
create
the
wallet
and
fund
it.
Just
remember
this
one
after
this
you
can
create.
You
can
import
contracts
here
and
imagine
you
have
a
pcf,
for
example,
a
token
contract
rc20
token
you
import
it
here
and
after
this
you
can
do
extremely
fancy
stuff
like,
for
example,
you
can
have
a
proposals
which
are
execute
some
methods.
For
example,
we
want
to
mint
new
tokens
or
we
can
burn
new
tokens.
C
A
Yeah,
that's
cool
that
you
know
so.
I've
been
looking
at
this
as
well.
You
know
because
I've
been
inspired
by
you,
stoyan
and
and
I'm
starting.
You
know,
I'm
really
starting
to
lean
towards
this:
the
avalanche
model
where
they
have
the
x
chain
and
the
c
chain,
and
they
have
a
way
to
move
tokens
between
the
two
chains,
and
so
you
can
really
leverage.
A
A
We
have
two
very
different
ways
of
solving
our
problems
as
a
dow
and
and
so
I'm
very
attracted
to
having
options.
C
And
this
one,
this
one
is
how
to
see
it's
at
the
beginning
of
the
greatness.
Another
one.
If
you
move
down
this
auto
task,
you
can
create
a
small
scripts
here
in
javascript,
for
example,
this
one
I
just
create.
I
don't
know
even
what
I
created
here,
but
you
can
have
this
a
small
piece
of
code
here,
not
this
one
so,
and
you
can
how
to
see
this
sentinel
guys
it
can
listen
to
the
events
on
the
blockchain
means.
C
For
example,
their
presentation
was,
when
somebody
buy
pcf
token,
you
can
mint
nft
for
him
automatically,
so
this
guy
it's
listening
for,
for
example,
if
you
exchange
a
unislope,
for
example,
make
event
on
every
exchange.
So
when
somebody
exchange
pca
for
something
this
sentinel
will
catch
this,
and
it
will
run
this
auto
task
and
if
you
automatically
generate
a
mint,
it
will
mean
nft
for
this
guy
and
reward
him.
That's
cool.
A
So
one
use
case
I
could
see
for
this
is
like
when
someone
pays
for
a
full
stack
dot
cash.
C
A
C
And
it's
it's:
it
will
get
the
funds
from
this
relays
that
you
funded.
So
everything
is
automated
here.
It's
like
a
small
infrastructure
here,
like
I
think
it's
healthy
and
it's
very
new.
Still
it's
working
in
the
moment
only
only
with
test
nets,
but
a
lot
of
them
like
avalanche.
C
And
one
more
I
will
post
repository
here
because
we're
talking
with
chris
about
can
we
breach
some
tokens
between
like
sop,
maybe
or
smart,
bch
and
other
chains?
It
seems
there's
already
some
ready
project
here.
A
C
C
You
can
have
two
blockchains
av
evm
compatible
with
contracts
of
both
of
them
and
there's
also
this
off
chain
federator,
which
is
a
piece
of
javascript
which
will
check,
and
there
can
be
maybe
several
of
them
and
when
they
agree
everything
is
okay.
Only
in
this
case
you
can
do
the
the
bridging.
C
A
Yeah,
that's
I'm
gonna
have
to
check
into
that
risk
thing.
That's
intriguing
to
me,
because
I
I
had
a
just
on
this
topic
of
sort
of
bridging
blockchains
securely.
I
had
this
idea
of,
like
you
could
write
a
node.js
javascript
app.
That
is
stateless,
that
that
that
you
know
you
just
feed
it
inputs
like,
like
you
give
it
you
it
you
sign
a
transaction
and
then
it
re.
A
It
reacts
to
the
transaction
you
sign,
but
the
the
app
itself
is
stateless,
and
so
you
could
you
could
upload
that
to
final
coin
and
get
a
hash
and
so
everybody
just
like
a
smart
contract.
Everyone
knows
they're
they're
they're
running
the
same
code
because
they
have
this
ipfs
hash
and
so
that
this
would
be
a
a
method
of
interacting
with
any
blockchain
at
like
a
higher
level
pro
at
the
application
level.
A
That's
both
you
know
easily
easy
to
share
immutable
and
because
it's
stateless,
like
it
just
depends
on
whatever
inputs,
you
give
it
at
the
time.
So
I
had
I.
I
threw
some
notes
in
one
in
the
specification
repository
for
psf,
applying
this
to
to
minting
multi-signature
tokens,
because
there's
it's
theoretically
possible,
no
one's
actually
done
the
work
to
to
develop
it
on
on
bch
for
slp
tokens,
and
so
and
we
were,
we
were
having
a
problem
with
it
on
the
avex
side
as
well.
We
solved
that
part.
A
We
figured
out
how
to
do
multi-segmenting
of
x-chain
avalanche
tokens,
but
but
this
method
of
doing
it
at
the
application
level
would
work
for
any
blockchain.
It
doesn't
doesn't
really
care
what
blockchain
you're
you're
talking
to
and
it
uses
shamir's
secret
sharing
protocol,
which
is
pretty
cool.
If
anybody
wants
to
check
that
out,
that's
that's
really
like
I
I
felt
like
once
I
once
I
found
the
javascript
library
for
that.
I
was
like
new
superpower.
G
E
E
C
This
one
is
how
to
see:
if
you
look
on
it,
it
does
not
look,
does
not
look
fancy
at
all,
but
this
one
is
like
a
whole
new
world.
They
have
how
to
see
so
many
new
technologies
packed
inside.
C
It's
like
gem
on
itself,
like
they're,
using
not
usual
contracts,
they're
using
something
named
diamond
pattern
very
new
to
to
the
even
for
the
internet.
It's
still
like
not
approved,
but
it's
pretty
much
like
in
the
usual
web
to
work
will
be
like
apache
or
nginx
in
front
of
many
other
services.
So
this
diamond
guy.
I
think
I
have
some
picture.
C
You
can
have
one
diamond
which
will
talk
to
many
facets
behind
him,
so
you
send
some
function
to
this
diamond
like,
for
example,
mint,
and
it
will
found
a
facet
where
to
say,
resent
this
function
and
can
be
like
nft
contract.
C
A
E
It's
it.
C
Yeah,
it's
a
smart
contract,
so
you
you
communicate
only
with
one
knife.
When
one
internet
address
you
send
all
your
transactions
to
this
one.
It
found
the
facets,
resend
them,
so
this
avegochi
guys
they
how
to
see
they
have
many
facets
inside
this
avagochi
main
diamond
and,
for
example,
all
of
their
graphics.
C
C
On
on
chain
wow,
and
also
they
have
this
governance
stuff,
which
is
you
can
you
you
can
communicate
with
social
networks,
for
example,
when
somebody
posts
something
you
can
add,
experience
to
you
averigochi.
So
it's
like
connections
between
once
and
not
like
how
to
see
real
world
social
networks
and
this
tavagochi.
C
You
can
change
the
stuff
like
points
or
something
with
post
to
the
twitter,
for
example.
C
B
Stop
story
and
what
you're
proving
right
here
I
mean
you've
done
this
every
time
I've
joined
is
that
there's
so
much
amazing
stuff
happening
all
over
the
place.
That
makes
me
feel
like
wow.
This
is
going
to
be
successful.
All
of
this
we
are
going
to
make
it.
I
mean
this
is
I
mean
not
just
us
here,
but
the
whole
crypto
space.
I
mean
this
is
amazing.
You
can
spend
all
of
your
time
reading,
thinking
about
crypto
and
there's
still
thousands
of
other
things
that
we
are
not
understanding
and
not
seeing.
C
A
E
A
C
Are
seem
very
powerful
yeah.
This
was
what
I
was
attracted.
It's
I'm
not
so
interested
in
gaming
assets
but,
like
the
whole,
this
infrastructure,
it's
starting
from
usual
tokens.
You
buy
this
tamagotchi
with
avegochi
with
tokens
and
you
start
expanding
it
with
the
functions
and
create
dao
around
it.
Like
everything.
A
C
A
A
D
Girls
would
love
that,
to
be
honest
with
you,
like
this
avagachi,
very
much
like
tamagotchi
and
at
big
good
intro
into
doing
crypto.
I
tried
to
use
utilize
slp
tokens
for
like
chores
and
stuff
like
that,
and
you
know
the
it
worked
out
some,
but
not
all
the
way.
F
B
You
see
sam,
I
am
records
in
the
in
the
youtube
chat.
He
already
knew
we're
going
to
talk
about
diamonds,
so
he
posted
a
bunch
of
diamonds
out
there.
So
thanks
for
that
and
also
crazy
money
wanting
to
get
into
the
3d
printing
part
of
this,
so
I
think
it's
great
to
see
comments
out
there
and
I
I
love
the
engagement
that
we're
getting
not
a
huge
group
right
there,
but
I
feel
like
making
sure
we
talk
about
that,
because
those
guys
are
fantastic.
A
D
Yes,
thanks
to
anybody
commenting
out
there,
we
appreciate
it
and
I
decided
to
put
a
title
up
for
that
type
of
segment.
It's
now
stoyan
blows
our
mind
segment
after
the
okay.
A
Nice
all
right
guys.
Well,
let's
wrap
this
up.
I've
made
amazing
meeting
like
always
thank
you
for
blowing
our
minds
against
joanne.
Absolutely
that
was
great.
D
Yeah
and
anybody
that's
interested,
feel
free
to
contact
us
and
telegram
if
you're
interested
in
and
the
pay
to
write,
database
and
stuff
like
that
contact.
Chris
he's
always
working
he's
he's
willing
to
talk.
I
love
to
talk
nfts
or
anything
to
deal
with
360
vr
development
for
anybody.
That's
in
that
area
and
definitely
burning
down
the
in
the
lane
with
the
smart
bch
and
a
lot
of
these
nft
stuff
too.
So
we're
all
on
telegram
easy
to
get
a
hold
of,
and
we
look
forward
to
hearing
from
you.