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From YouTube: PSF TSC Meeting - 08-31-2022
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A
Okay
looks
like
we're
good
to
go.
Welcome
everybody
to
the
permissionless
software
foundation.
Technical
steering
committee
today
is
august
31st
I
am
chris
trouttner.
I
helped
found
the
psf
and
I
maintain
full
stack.cash,
which
is
infrastructure
as
a
service
for
people
on
the
bitcoin
cash
ecash
and
avalanche
blockchains.
A
Let's
go
ahead
and
do
a
round
of
introductions
erin.
Why
don't
you
start
us
off.
B
A
Yeah,
lots
of
great
technical
feedback,
we're
missing
sam
and
a
few
of
the
other
errands
today,
but
but
they're
with
us
in
spirit,
and
some
of
them
are
lurking
in
the
shadows
watching
us
as
we
speak.
B
A
A
C
A
Yeah,
it's
a
it's
a
it's
a
culture
shock
when
you
go
over
there.
A
A
Okay,
so
a
couple
things,
I
wanted
to
point
out
right
off
the
get-go,
so
as
always,
our
our
agendas
for
people
who
are
watching,
recording
and
want
to
find
these
later
they're
on
github
under
the
permissionless
software
foundation
group
under
the
tsc
github
repository
called
for
technical
steering
committee
and
we
filed
them
as
issues,
and
so
this
is
the
one
for
today
number
38
and
normally
there's
this
preamble
here
in
the
scope,
which
is
like
the
scope.
A
The
reason
we
have
these
meetings
is
scoped
at
these
meetings
that
lists
like
a
bunch
of
software,
but
that
list
is
getting
so
long
and
I
realized
that
I
actually
have
pretty
good
documentation
sites
now
for
most
of
the
software.
So
these
links
will
take
you
to
these
different
software
documentation.
So
first
is
the
cached
stack,
which
is
the
overall
infrastructure
that
lets
you
build
phone
apps
and
web
apps
that
talk
to
the
blockchain.
A
The
second
is
the
pay
to
write
database,
which
is
documented
here
at
p2wdb.com
and
and
lastly,
is
the
the
dexes.
So
we
have
a
decks
on
bitcoin
cash
and
avalanche
and
we're
rapidly
approaching
having
a
launch
of
a
dex
on
ecash
and
then
eventually,
we'll
have
bridges
to
bridge
these
three
chains
as
well,
so
for
anybody
who
wants
to
there
and
so
the
software's
getting
like
too
numerous
to
list.
A
But
these
are
the
three
major
projects
that
that
we're
focused
on
and,
as
always,
aaron
stowan
interrupt
me
at
any
time
and
I'm
just
going
to
go
through
through
the
agenda.
The
big,
the
big
news
this
week
is
the
avalanche.
Decks
is
done
and
a
report
has
been
created
and
sent
to
all
the
labs
it.
The
report
is
public
if
anybody
wants
to
read
it.
It's
in
a
repository
called
ava
labs,
22
report
and
there's
a
link
here
to
the
demo,
which
is
there's
a
there's,
a
view
only
demo.
A
A
You
know
site
where
you
go
to
trade,
because
that
would
cause
all
sorts
of
legal
issues.
But
if
you
run
the
software
on
your
own
home
and
it's
peer-to-peer
between
you
and
the
seller,
that's
a
completely
different
legal
situation.
A
It's
0.001
avex,
oh
really,
yeah,
and,
and
so
that.
B
Is
constantly
changing,
that's
a
lot
cheaper
than
their,
so
it's
two
cents.
A
A
At
one
point
that
was
like
14
cents,
yeah
and
and
that's
and
you're
gonna
pay
that
every
time
you
send
a
token
and
so-
and
so
I
I
use
one
one
cent
as
like
my
threshold
for
micro
transactions
yeah,
and
so,
if
you
don't
have
microtransactions
your
token
economy,
kind
of
doesn't
work
yeah
and
but
they
also
have
minor
validated
tokens.
So
I
would
be
much
more
comfortable
holding
a
stable
coin
on
avalanche
than
I
would
on
bitcoin
cash
yeah.
A
So
there's
that
to
consider
and
14
cents
or
two
cents
today
is
really
not
that
that
bad
of
a
of
a
trans.
So
you
know,
if
you're
doing
video
games
or
something
I
would
use
an
slp
token.
But
if
you're
going
to
have
a
stable
coin-
and
you
really
want
to
be
sure
that
your
tokens
don't
accidentally
get
burned,
I
would
pay
the
x.
You
know
the
two
cents
transaction
cost
to
work
in
a
stable
coin
on
there.
B
And
you
have
the
prototypes
for
a
bridge
to
to
the
x
chain
from
bch
right.
A
Yeah
they're
code
complete
they
work.
We
just
need
to
set
them
up.
They
require
maintenance,
yeah,
okay,
so
so
that's
pretty
cool.
It's
a
little
clunky
this
avalanche
decks,
because
the
dex
depends
on
the
paid
right
database
and
there
is
no
paid
rate
database
yet
on
the
avalanche
chain.
So
that
means
you
have
to
have
bitcoin
cash
and
psf
tokens
and
that's
what
makes
it
super
clunky
right
now.
So
in
part
of
this
report,
there's
a
section
where
I
I
say
you
know
this
was
a
small
grant.
A
So
if
they
want
to
give
us
like
a
second
grant
to
continue
the
work,
there's
about
four
very
clear
items
that
could
be
improved
and
one
of
them
is
porting
the
pay
to
write
database
over
to
the
the
avalanche
x
chain
so
that
we,
you
know
it's
it's
it
everything's
natively
happening
on
the
x
chain
and
they
don't
need
to
use
bitcoin
cash
because
that's
that's
a
big
ask
for,
for
anybody
on
one
blockchain
is
to
use
coins
on
another
blockchain
yeah,
but
we're
actually
solving
that
problem
on
the
bitcoin
cash
side
and
the
ecash
side.
A
So,
first
of
all,
let
me
talk
about
this
new
ui,
so
we
kind
of
have
have
gone
over
this.
This
wallet
template
in
previous
meetings
and
and
you
know,
stoian
and
I
are
sort
of
going
back
and
forth
right
now,
he's
like
oh
look.
What,
if
you
did
this
and
I'm
like?
Okay
I'll
incorporate
that
and
so
we're
kind
of
hashing
out
the
the
different
ways
to
build
this
web
wallet,
but
it's
been
adapted
for
the
decks.
A
A
It
just
has
this
extra
offers
view
where
you
can
see
tokens
that
are
up
for
sale
on
the
market
place
the
buy
button's
disabled,
because
this
is
a
view
only
but
but
stay
tuned,
because
that's
gonna
change
your
very
in
in
a
little
while
and
then
the
tokens
which
I
don't
have
any
in
this
wallet
have
a
sell
button
and
then
it
lets
you
lets
you
sell.
I
wish
I
could
have
demoed
that,
but
I'm
gonna
come
back
around
to
that,
because
there's
there's
some
some
good
stuff
there.
A
A
So
this
I'm
looking
at
the
the
dex
report,
yeah
the
dex
report
and
in
this
report
there's
this
this
picture
that
I
want
to
go
over
and
it
walks
through
a
token
trade
between
alice
and
bob,
and
it
breaks
down
the
three
phases
of
the
trade,
the
signal,
the
watch
and
the
pay
and
what
I
realized
so
so
just
to
cover
this
real
quickly
alice
puts
up
a
utxo
for
sale,
which
represents
tokens.
That's
the
signal
bob
browses,
the
market
using
using
the
ui.
I
just
showed
that's
the
watch
part.
A
He
finds
a
token
that
he
wants
to
buy
and
he
broadcasts
a
counter
offer.
And
actually
I
misspoke-
that's
not
the
watchmark.
The
watch
part
is
alice's
software,
it
watches
for
that
counter
offer
and
and
then,
when
it
detects
it,
it
checks.
It
completes
the
partially
signed
transaction
into
a
completely
complete
transaction
broadcast
it
and,
and
the
money
goes
to
alice
and
the
coin
and
the
tokens
go
to
bob.
A
So
that
part
where
bob
browses
the
marketplace
and
clicks
the
buy
button
and
broadcast
the
counter
offer.
I
realized
a
couple
weeks
ago,
like
that
part,
can
actually
be
pulled
out
and,
and
that
could
be
an
android
app
just
just
in
and
of
itself
that
doesn't
require
the
back
end
software.
That
alice
would
need
to
run
in
order
to
sell
and
then
accept
counter
offers.
A
She
needs
to
run
the
special
decks
back-end
software,
but
bob
just
browsing
tokens
and
buying
tokens
that
can
all
happen
just
in
the
browser,
no
with
no
back
end
as
long
as
he
can
post
to
the
pay
to
write
database.
So
that's
what
I'm
that's
sort
of
my
my
focus
in
the
short
term
here
in
this.
This
library
that
I
just
created
is
a
step
down
that
road,
so
the
next
step
is
to
actually
adapt
the
the
user
interface.
A
I
just
showed
into
a
standalone
web
app
and
an
android
app
where
you
can
just
browse
all
the
tokens
on
the
market
and
hit
by
and
you
don't
need
any
psf
tokens.
You
just
need
bch
and
everything
just
magically
happens,
and
so
that's
we're
getting
really
close
to
having
that
and
I'm
really
really
excited
about
that.
It's
going
to
be
like
that's
like
an
ideal
user
experience.
That's.
B
C
Chris,
it's
a
npm
library,
so
when
you're
using
it
from
some
application,
you
will
just
include
it
in
your
package.json.
No
need
to
do
the
use
script
stuff
to
embed
it
inside
your
web,
like
a
dome
right,
yeah.
A
Yeah,
so
what
I,
what
I
do
with
libraries
like
this
and
I
haven't
done
it
yet,
but
is
I
I
compile
them
with
browser
fi,
and
so
you,
you
know
you
include
it
with
like
a
script
tag.
You
know,
so
you
you've
seen
how
I've
done
it
with
the
minimal
slp
wallet
and
the
sweep
wallet.
So
it's
the
same
thing.
It
will
be
same
usage,
okay,.
C
A
A
Well,
there
could
be,
but
the
browsing
of
the
market
sort
of
lends
itself
to
more
of
a
visual
user
interface
like
I'm,
not
sure
how
to
do
that
well
on
a
command
line.
A
A
So
one
of
the
things
I
want
to
add
sooner
rather
than
later,
is
like
a
verified
thing
where
it's
like,
like
you
know,
psf
token
and
usdt
are
the
two
top
ones
I
can
think
of
where
it'll
filter
everything
else.
That's
not
on
a
verified
list,
and
maybe
we
charge
companies
who
want
to
get
on
the
verified
list
just
sort
of
because
there's
going
to
be
people
who
make
you
know
a
usdt
token.
A
A
So
if
you
guys
we'll
we'll
collectively
talk
that
out
when
the
when
the
time's
right
scams.
B
Are
tough
they
they
definitely
are
tough,
especially
when
you're
talking
stable
coins
and
stuff,
like
that,
yeah.
A
I
mean
the
big
advantage
we
have.
Is
that
there's
the
token
id
it's
not
a
human
friendly
thing,
but
that
does
uniquely
identify
a
token
and
it's
not
possible
to
forge
the
token
id.
So
we
can
always
rely
on
that,
but
making
that
sort
of
visually
appealing
and
and
accessible.
That's
why?
I
think,
like
just
a
checkbox
for
like
verified
tokens,
it's
probably
the
easiest
most
naive
way
to
do
it,
but
then
it's
like
who
verifies
the
token.
You
know.
C
Chris,
you
can
check,
maybe
the
all
of
this
unisop
kind
of
dexes
they
they're
using
something
named
tokenlist
and.
A
C
A
standard,
json
format
with
schema,
so
you,
when
you
create
the
new
token,
is
you
can
check
if
it's
right,
so
you
can
have
this
json
file
somewhere.
A
A
Yeah
mechanically,
I
totally
agree,
I
think,
that's
the
way
to
go.
It's
very
similar
to
the
locat
id.
It's
just
that
you
know
that
that
lookup
table
lives
somewhere,
probably
in
a
code
repository
that
some
one
person
owns
and
and
the
question
is,
how
do
you
get
your
token
on
that
list?
It
does
it
and
like
does
it
cost
money,
because
it's
gonna
cost
somebody
time
to
curate
that
list,
and
so
it's
it's
just.
It's
sort
of
I've
seen
I've
seen
now.
This
I've
seen
different
solutions.
B
B
B
A
B
Oh,
no,
this
token
has
been
known
to
be
involved
in
scams.
Not
gonna
allow
this
on.
A
Yeah,
so
you
know
I'm
glad
you
said
this
because
it's
getting
my
gears
turning
now
because
there's
there's
a
one.
I've
been
working
on
this.
This
idea
for
the
simple
store
protocol
and
one
of
the
ideas
on
the
one
of
the
ideas
there
for
for
the
simple
store
protocol.
A
Is
this
idea
of
claims
which
are
just
transactions
on
the
blockchain,
but
but
they
point
at
something
their
claim
about
like
another
store
or
another
claim,
and
so
that
so
we
could
have
a
system
where,
if
someone,
if
like
say
10
claims
are
made,
that
say
this
token
is
a
scam.
Then
it
automatically
gets
added
to
the
blacklist.
A
You
know,
and
unless
it's
like
manually
you
know,
then
it
could
be
manually
taken
off
the
blacklist
and
then,
if
it's
on
the
whitelist,
then
you
know
it
doesn't
doesn't
matter
if
that
happens,
because
it's
on
the
whitelist-
and
so
it's
like
it's,
you
could
have
this
graded.
This
sort
of
graded
thing
where
like
by
default
the
token's
not
on
either
list,
but
it
can
end
up
on
the
blacklist
through
community
effort
and
if
someone's
just
trolling
it,
you
know,
there's
a
there's.
B
Another
thing
you
can
do
as
well
is
you
don't
even
have
to
have
us
it's
centralized.
So
let's
say
every
the
tokens
have
to
be
muted
minted
from
a
certain
wallet
right
yeah.
You
can't
send
the
minting
baton,
but
we
can
track
where
the
mint
baton's
at
that
sort
of
thing.
If
I
got
scammed
by
something
that
I
don't
know,
you
you're
not
understanding
on
the
internet,
but
your
tokens
scam
me.
I
could
create
a
marker
token
that
I
could
send
to
you.
That
is
my
market
token
saying
that.
B
Did
that
or
it'd
be
better
to
do
it
the
positive
side,
because
it
takes
a
lot
more
for
people
to
leave
a
good
comment
than
a
bad
comment.
So,
if
I
feel
like,
I
had
good
business
with
you-
and
I
know
where
that
token
originates,
I
might
send
a
positive
token
to
that
wallet.
That's
so
that
when
people
look
at
the
originating
wallet
they
go,
oh
yeah
he's
got
like
10
positive
tokens.
People
really
like
working
with
this
person.
A
B
B
A
A
Jerry
asks
a
really
good
question
about
how
do
coins
get
added
to
the
bit
44
coin
type
list,
and
this
is
a
list
it's
on
github
and
it
lists
the
derivation
path
for
all
that,
like,
like
you
know,
so,
it's
like
mnemonic
is
a
12-word
seed,
but
that
can
represent
an
ethereum
address.
A
It
can
represent
a
bitcoin
address,
bitcoin
cash,
whatever,
like
basically
there's
a
list
for
every
derivation
that
belongs
and
each
derivation
belongs
to
a
different
blockchain,
and
so
you
can
use
the
same
12
words
on
all
these
different
blockchains
and
that
list
is
maintained
by
bitcoin
core
and
then
bitcoin
cash
has
its
own
fork
of
the
bits
that
they
maintained
one
day
they
used
to
maintain.
I
don't
think
anybody
maintains
them
now
and
so
trying
to
get
a
new
coin.
A
On
that
list
I
mean
the
original
way
is
to
go
to
bitcoin
core
and
ask
them
to
add
it
because
they're,
the
ones
that
own
the
github
repository
that
controls
that
list
and
then
there's
four
there's
been
forks
at
that
list.
So
so
it's
it's
a
messy
process
and
it's
centralized.
C
Yeah
it's
take
about
a
month.
I
have
one
token
added,
but
it
was
being
paid.
You
need
to
fork
the
repository,
make
like
pull
requests
to
them
and
eventually
someday.
They
will
approve
it
and
add
it
to
them.
Yeah.
A
I
saw
your
pull
request
for
the
locat
id
because
I
just
submitted
a
pull
request
for
a
little
cat
id
and
that's
again,
that's
like
a
it's
a
repository,
that's
not
maintained,
so
those
pull
requests
are
just
going
to
sit
there
forever.
A
Yeah:
okay:
let's
get
back
to
the
agenda;
okay,
so
that's
the
dex
stuff,
pretty
exciting!
Look!
Look
for
that!
Android!
App!
That
lets
you
just
browse
and
buy
tokens.
I'm
pretty
excited
to
put
that
together,
all
the
all
the
pieces
are
there,
I'm
ready
to
do
that
final
thing,
so
tech
updates
trickle.
I
let
me
see
if
I
get
this
bigger
trickle.
A
Ipfs
is
a
docker
container
that
I
created
because
I'm
running
like
like
at
least
six
different
ipfs
nodes
on
my
home
network
and
when
one
of
them
spikes
in
traffic,
they
all
spike
in
traffic,
and-
and
so
I
really
this
is
this-
is
if
you
don't
have
to
dig
too
deep,
to
find
all
of
the
complaints
about
how
hard
it
is
to
bandwidth
limit
ipfs.
A
They
they
don't
make
any
effort,
like
it's
explicit,
they've,
been
very
explicit
that
we
are
not
going
to
make
any
effort
to
bandwidth,
limit
our
software
and
and
and
that's
that's
the
job
of
the
operating
system.
So
what
trickle
ipss
yeah
yeah?
That's
that's
their
stance,
that's
their
official
stance
as
official
as
they
get,
and
so
what
trickle
is
is
it's
a
command
line
app
for
linux
that
that
it's
got
a
pretty
simple
syntax?
A
So
this
docker
container
I
created
wraps
the
ipfs
node
the
go
ipfs
node
in
with
trickle,
and
so
you
can
set
the
bandwidth
limits
with
just
a
couple
environment
variables
in
the
docker
compose
file,
and
so
I've
already
started
updating
a
lot
of
the
software
to
do
this,
like,
particularly
if
anybody
wants
to
run
a
wallet
service
at
home
like
sam
and
and
aaron
sun
men.
I've
already
updated
the
repo.
A
A
A
Okay,
yeah,
so
pay
to
write
database
got
a
pretty
big
update
that
it's
an
optional
service,
so
it's
not
turned
on
by
default.
You
have
to
manually
turn
this
on
and
then
there's
there's
a
couple
other
steps
in
this
pr.
A
Let
me
pull
that
up,
but
what
it
does
is
it
allows
people
to
pay
for
a
right
to
the
pay
to
write
database
in
bitcoin
cash.
They
don't
need
to
have
the
psf
tokens
because,
what's
happening
under
the
hood
is
your
instance
of
the
pay
to
write
database
is
essentially
selling
them
the
the
psf
tokens
they
need
on
the
fly
to
do
that
right.
A
So
there's
you,
you
set
this
environment
variable
and
you
have
to
create
a
wallet
file,
and
then
you
have
to
load
that
wallet
file
with
a
few
cents,
a
bitcoin
cash
and
some
psf
tokens,
but
then,
when
they
use
the
oops,
let's
see
when
they,
when
they
there's
a
there's,
a
new
endpoint
that
they
can
call
to
allow
them
to
pay
in
bitcoin
cash
and
by
default
it
charges
them
an
extra
10
percent.
A
So
whatever
the
market
price
of
the
psf
tokens
is
at
that
point,
it
adds
it
adds
10,
and
so
the
idea
is
that
maybe
in
the
future,
different
paid
right
database
instances
can
compete
on
this
percentage.
So
that's
that's
why
it's
set
high
is
to
leave
leave
room
for
competition
and
and
then
there's
there's
also
this
the
pay
to
write
database
npm
library
here
has
been
updated
to
take
advantage
of
this.
A
If
you
scroll
down
to
the
bottom,
so
this
library
is
on
npmjs.com
and
it's
called
p2wdb
and
if
you
scroll
down
the
bottom,
there's
a
code
example
of
how
oh
that's
pinning
if
you
scroll
down
in
the
middle
there's
a
write
example,
and
so
this
this
hasn't
changed
because
all
you're
doing
is
you're,
giving
it
a
private
key
that
has
some
bitcoin
cash
and
everything
just
sort
of
automatically
happens,
but
that's
a
good
segue
into
the
next
item,
which
is
the
pinning
service.
So
the
that
same
library.
A
A
And
then
you
just
give
it
the
one
c
c
id
argument
and
and
then
the
pay
to
write
databases
that
are
running
the
pinning
service,
which
is
an
optional
add-on
for
the
pay-to-write
database.
We'll
pin
it
so.
I've
got
one
running
on
a
cloud
in
virginia
and
I've
got
another
and
then
launchpad
ip
is
running
a
pinning
service
in
california.
A
In
the
cloud.
So
we've
got
two
sort
of
high-end
pinning
services
running
like
the
goal
is
to
have
five
and
so
I'll
start
working
eventually
on
creating
a
bounty
to
to
pay
people
to
to
spin
up
these
pinning
services.
So
it's
just
an
instance
of
the
paid
right
database
and
then
there's
one
extra
docker
container
that
runs
on
top
of
that
stack
which
listens
for
these
pin
commands
and
then
will
pin
that
cid
when
it
hears
it
and
so
right
now
it's
one
penny
per
megabyte.
A
B
Yeah,
it's
pinning
one
megabyte
or
lower
it's
working
in
the
wallet
now,
so
we
can
write
to
it
and
I
I
get
it
because
we've
talked
about
it
before
you.
A
B
You
paid
a
pen
and
it
sends
a
message
out
to
the
pinning
cloud
and
then
the
opinion
cloud
sends
the
message
out
to
the
rest
of
the
cluster.
To
pin
this
content.
Are
you
pinning
it
recursively
across
all
of
them,
or
is
it
something
where
you
can
choose
the
amount
of
pinning.
A
Yeah
each
each
node
operates
independently,
so
each
node's
pinning
pinning
the
oh
and
it
does
yeah
it
does.
It
does
do
recursive,
yeah,
okay,
recursive.
B
Pinning
because,
like
the
the
one
thing
that
we're
gonna
have
to
watch
out
for
is
if
the
nodes
get
larger,
you
know
I
don't
know.
If
that's
the
plan
or
not,
if
there's
more
nodes,
you
can
actually
set
how
many
times
you
wanna
pin
you
know.
So
that's
another
thing
to
keep
in
mind.
A
Yeah
yeah,
like
in
the
pinning
cluster,
you
know
yeah,
that's
interesting,
we'll
have
to
play
like
right
now.
This
is
just
a
prototype
and
we'll
have
to
play
with
this
like
that's
where
the
one
megabyte
limit
comes
in
is
that
was
the
easiest
thing
to
code,
and
so
that's
one
thing
we
need
to
play
with
and
then
like
redundancy
is
another
thing
to
play
with.
Geographic
distribution
is
another
thing
to
play
with
so
it'll.
B
B
Know
like
who
knows
where
that,
but
I
also
think
that,
if
somebody's
wanting
to
participate
in
the
node
network-
and
you
know
get
the
full
benefit
out
of
it
saying
my
node
is
in
cincinnati,
ohio
might
make
sense
for
them
because
they
also
want
it
to,
like,
I
think,
there's
an
incentivization
for
people
to
use
the
network,
not
for
bounties,
but
just
for
storage
like
I'm
running
a
node,
so
I
get
x
amount
of
storage
per
year.
You
know
for
running
one
node
right.
B
A
So
I'm
really
going
to
be
interested
to
see
how
the
incentives
or
how
the
network
unfolds,
because
there's
multiple
incentives
like,
for
instance,
launchpad
ip
they're.
They
are
a
member
of
the
psf
but
they're
not
running
a
node
to
collect
a
bounty
they're
running
a
node
because
they
need
a
pinning
service
physically
close
to
their
servers,
because
their
servers
use
the
content,
that's
pinned
by
the
pinning
service,
and
they
do
want
to
be
decentralized,
and
they
they
don't
want
it.
They
do
want
it
to
be
permissionless.
A
A
Want
to
depend
on
it,
it's
called
free
for
now,
yeah
free
for
now,
yeah,
exactly
and
so,
and
so
they're
running
their
own
note,
because
they
need
their
own
note
and,
and
so
anything
else
that
gets
pinned
by
the
rest
of
the
network
is
like
is
like
just
icing
on
the
cake,
and
so
that's
a
really
interesting
incentive
model,
and
I
hope
to
see
more
of
that
of
like
if
you
know
a
similar
business
that
say
has
a
video
game
with
tokens.
A
B
Well,
you
you,
I
look
at
it
like
this.
Even
if
I'm
a
business
running
a
website
it
most
of
them
are
going
through
squarespace
or
something
like
that,
even
aws.
You
know
it's
costing
me
eight
dollars
ten
dollars
a
month
now
for
hosting
fees
and
like
cdn,
like
by
the
time
you
add
up,
storage,
cdn
and
the
route
53
costs
on
aws
you're
easily,
looking
at
like
15
bucks
a
month.
B
A
B
A
Out
bounties
like
I
want
to
do
both,
but
but
the
problem
with
paying
out
bounties
is
like
we
have
to
keep
people
honest.
We
have
to
you
know,
have
some
system,
that's
making
sure
that
they're
doing
what
they
say
they're
doing,
and
then
we
got
to
worry
about
if
that
system
is
robust
and
actually
reporting
accurately-
and
you
know
it's
just
like
you-
don't
have
to
worry
about
any
of
that
with
this
other
incentive
model,
where
people
are
just
doing
it
because
they
need
it.
It's
a
very
simple,
clear.
Well,
you
know.
B
B
Do
those
hundred
nodes-
probably
don't
all
need
to
store
that
website?
You
know,
but
maybe
we
have
20
nodes
in
st
louis
and
they're,
throwing
a
big
festival
and
they
want
some
web
3
event
or
xr
experience
to
go
off,
so
they
hire
all
23
nodes
in
in
st
louis
to
all
be
seeding
the
content
at
once,
because
that
could
make
sense
for
them.
B
A
A
Yeah-
and
you
know
once
you
start
that's
what
you
realize
once
you
start
digging
on
start
looking
under
the
hood
with
ipfs,
is
like
they
built
this
software
for
them.
You
know
they
didn't.
They
didn't
they're,
not
building
this
for
us
to
use
on
these
weird
science.
Experiments
like
like
there's
a
lot
of
it
comes
out
in
the
code
and
and
and
how
it's
set
up
is
like
this
is.
B
B
Yeah,
well,
you
know,
since
they
have
gone
technically,
they
say.
Js
ipfs
is
a
split
like
they're
like
yeah
js,
ipfs
split
off
from
us.
I've
heard
them
talking
about
that
in
their
meetings,
because
I
I
like
listen
to
their
monthly
meetings
about
what
they
talked
about,
and
I
was
like.
Oh
so
you
don't
even
consider
them
to
be
part
of
your
team.
A
Yeah
yeah,
I
don't
know
there
is
a
yeah
there's
a
weird
relationship
there
yeah
I
mean
I
it's
unfortunate
because
to
do
things
like
browser
file
sharing
or
browser
chat,
js
ipfs
is
the
only
way
to
do
it,
but
yeah
anytime,
and
I
I
you
know,
I
talked
to
mkhill,
rogers
and
and
other
people
over
there
at
protocol
labs
and
every
single
one's
like
don't
use.
Js
ipfs.
A
That's
the
thing
they
don't
clarify
like
I
haven't.
I've
had
multiple
people
tell
me
not
to
use
it,
but
I
haven't.
Had
anybody
tell
me
why
I
shouldn't
use
it?
I
mean,
for
one
reason,
is:
there's
a
memory
leak
and,
but
you
know
you
can
overcome
that,
but
it
is
just
a
red-headed
stepchild
version
of
of
ipfs.
It's
just
it's
like
you
know,
there's
all
these
great
features
but
they're
not
supported
in
js
ipfs,
and
you
know
like
here's.
A
Here's
a
great
example
of
the
sort
of
undocumented
discrepancy
is
pub
sub
channels
super
important,
especially
for
the
tech
for
the
way
we're
using
it
in
a
browser.
You
can
only
have
six
pub
sub
channels
and
that
that
has
nothing
to
do
with
jsf
ipfs
has
everything
to
do
with
the
web
browser?
That's
all
a
web
browser
lets
a
single
threaded
application.
A
Do
it
just
cannot
subscribe
to
more
than
to
because
it's
making
a
websocket
connection,
so
it's
only
allowed
to
make
six
websocket
connections
and
and
there's
no
way
around
that,
and
so
that's
a
big
issue
for
us,
because
all
of
our
ipfs
nodes
use
pub
sub
to
talk
to
one
another,
and
so
that
means
that
a
js
ipfs
node
in
the
browser
can
only
talk
to
six
other
nodes
at
a
time.
B
Yeah.
Well,
that's
that's
also
why
I
I'm
excited
to
have
you
looking
at
gun
js,
because
what
I've
seen
of
them
could
be
the
workaround
for
that
where
gun
js
is
the
distribution
of
something
like
that
and
then
ipfess
acts
like
the
storage
plot,
the
place
where
things
are
stored.
So
because,
like
I
said
when
gun
gs,
spins
down
like
when
you
close
your
browser
out
because
the
graph
data
stored
in
your
browser,
local
storage,
it
goes
away,
it
goes
back
to
another
node
and
they
so
that
usually,
is
like
an
s3
bucket.
A
B
You
can,
I
think,
there's
a
way
to
have
js
ipfess
spin
up
a
node
pull
from
the
cluster
the
information
and
then
use
that
to
connect
with
gun
js
to
everybody.
That's
already
perpetual
up
in
gun
js.
If
that
network
is
big
enough,
but
you
know
that's
a
cold
start
problem,
so
you
got
you
got
to
get
that
hard
side,
that's
going
to
be
using
it.
Why
are
they
going
to
be
using
it
and
right?
You
know
how
do
you
over?
A
B
It
was
something
that
I
I
realized
like
as
I'm
talking
talking
to
people,
that
the
value
of
these
companies
is
in
their
network.
It
is
not
in
proprietary
knowledge,
it's
not
in
code.
B
Different
than
like
all
these
business
people
think-
and
I'm
sitting
here,
going
it's
not
about
ip,
it's
not
about
any
of
that.
It's
about
the
network,
airbnb,
there's
a
great
example
in
there,
where
airbnb
had
a
competitor
come
up
in
europe
with
a
lot
more
funding
and
a
lot
more
employees,
and
they
were
able
to
beat
them
because
of
the
quality
of
their
network.
C
B
Didn't
win
because
they
had
better
a
different
patents
or
anything
like
that.
So
it's
it's
really
weird
to
see
this
mindset
of
tech
where
they're
like.
Oh,
you
can't
move
fast
enough
for
patents
and
copyright
or
anything
like
that,
and
the
old
mindset.
That's
like
you:
gotta
have
a
patent.
You
gotta
have.
A
Is
what
venture
capitals
the
spy
yeah?
No,
I
know
I,
my
business
partner
is
an
intellectual
property
patent
agent
and
we,
you
know
we
have.
We
agree
to
disagree
and
I'm
glad
that
I
can
leverage
his
knowledge
and
and
wisdom
of
that
space
and
I'm
glad
that
I
don't
have
to
have
that
knowledge
or
take
it
too
seriously
in
in
because
that's
not
how
my
world
works.
No,
it's.
B
It's
all
about
it's
all
about
those
network
effects,
and
you
know
like
like
we're
saying
right
here
with
the
the
cluster
right,
I'm
giving
you
an
example
of
who
could
be
our
hard
side.
Well,
people
that
just
need
a
website
and
they
don't
want
to
they'd.
Rather
just
stick
this
thing
in
their
business
and
have
it
run
and
not
have
to
worry
about
it
like
there's
plenty
of
people
that
don't
even
change
their
website
that
much
but
they're,
still
paying
30
bucks
a
month
for
their
website.
Like
you.
C
A
Yeah,
you
know,
that's
a
reminder.
One
of
the
things
I
wanted
to
now
we're
kind
of
in
the
round
table
discussion
part
one
things
I
want
to
bring
up.
There
is
a
bitcoin
cash
conference
november,
12th
and
13th
in
saint
kitts
in
the
bahamas.
I'm
gonna
go
there.
I've
already
booked
my
flight
in
my
hotel
and
I'll
be
speaking
there.
There
was
an
ecash
conference
in
czech
that
is
just
wrapped
up,
and
so
I'm
hoping
they'll
post
some
videos
there.
A
A
I,
as
far
as
I
understand
like
you,
you
have
to
stake
your
ecash
to
participate
in
the
avalanche
consensus,
but
as
far
as
I'm
aware,
there
is
not
going
to
be
any
incentive
for
that.
Like
there's,
no
rewards,
there's
no
staking
rewards
like
like
the
app
like
avex
gives.
You
rewards
if
you're
a
sticker,
so
I
don't
know
it'll
be
interesting
to
see
what
happens
with
that,
because
I
don't
know
why
someone
would
bother
to
lock
up
100
million
ecash
if
they
don't,
which
is
like
100
bch
in
the
original.
A
B
Yeah,
if
you
want
to,
if
you
know
anybody
at
that
conference,
you
want
to
reach
out
and
see
if
they
want
to
live
stream
it
in
360
or
to
the
metaverse.
Have
them
hit
me
up
because.
A
B
You
know
that
I
could
come
down
there,
then
we
could
set
up
several
360
cameras
and
we
could
live
stream
out
in
360.
The
entire
conference.
A
B
B
Yeah
I
mean
we
got
a
new
like
website
called
shapesphere,
but
you
know
it
looks
a
lot
better.
My
old
one
did
but
I'll
drop.
That.
A
Yeah,
I
definitely
want
to
check
that
out.
Well,
what
reminded
me
of
this
is
you
were
talking
about
the
hard
side
and
one
of
the
things
that
that
sonny's
been
talking
to
me
about
is
he
just
wants
to
be
able
to
sell
widgets
for
bitcoin
cash
on
a
web
page
like
he
just
that's,
that's
it,
and
so
I
know
that
there
is
a
wordpress
plugin
for
for
buying
and
selling
stuff
with
slp
tokens
and
bitcoin
cash.
So
I'm
going
to
try
and
learn
how
to
how
to
do
that.
B
Yeah
yeah
and
it
got
dedicated.
I
think
I'm
pretty
sure,
though.
A
Yeah
yeah
yeah,
I'm
I'm
in
fairly
regular
communication
with
the
clipter
who's,
the
developer
behind
that
who
yeah
maintains
it
so
yeah
I'm
going
to
try
and
just
it's
been
a
long
time
since
I've
dipped
my
toes
in
the
in
the
wordpress
waters,
but
I'm
just
going
to
try
and
figure
out
how
to
set
up
a
wordpress.
A
B
A
B
A
So
here's
the
thing,
if
any,
if
you
guys
or
anybody
watching
this
knows
a
good
wordpress
developer,
who
can
do
customizations
have
them
reach
out
to
me,
because
I
am
not
going
to
do
that,
I
I
will
learn
how
to
set
up
a
canned
site
and
fall
in.
You
know
like
steps
one
two
three,
but
I'm
not
gonna-
do
that.
I'm
not
gonna
do
any
customization
or
development,
and
I
would
love
to
give
these
people
a
contact
for.
B
Jerry
says
it's
on
the
parameters
we're
doing
wordpress
for
our
block
hack
website,
yeah
jerry
it.
It
definitely
is,
but
the
thing
is
they
switched
over
some
things
and
some
of
the
themes
work
on
the
new
parameters
and
some
work
on
the
old,
and
I
happen
to
be
working
on
this
in
june
right
when
they
did
the
update,
and
so
my
site
switched
from
being
the
old
parameters
in
ways.
A
I
know
that's
just
like
I
thought
I
was
done
with
all
that.
I
haven't
touched
wordpress
in
like
five
years,
but
yeah.
B
Elementary
elementor
is
good,
and
that
was
invented
because
they
didn't
have
a
very
good
gutenberg
press.
Now
they
have
the
gutenberg
press,
but
they
changed
the
global
page
settings
jerry
to
where
they
used
to
be
like
they'd
pop
up
on
the
left-hand
side,
and
then
you
could
choose
stuff
now
it's
like
kind
of
in
in
another
tab,
and
you
like
yeah,
it's
it's
weird
depends.
B
B
Well,
I'm
just
learning
3js
and
babylon.js
been
looking
into
gunjs,
like
I
said
they
have
some
pretty
good
examples
on
the
website
where
you
can
just
play
around
their
communication
protocol
was
great.
I
literally
had
my
phone
in
one
hand
and
my
computer,
the
other
and,
as
I
typed
in
my
computer,
it
was
appearing
on
my
phone.
That's
like
how
quick
it
was
wow
yeah.
B
Yeah
it's
a
different
type
of
database
and
it
is
not
like
it's
a
crdt
very
similar
to
how
okay
the
cluster
works
now
yeah.
That's
how
the
pay-to-write.
B
As
opposed
to
a
raft,
so
it's
like
eventual
consensus.
B
But
I
figure
it's
good
enough
that
if
you
are
building
like,
if
you
have
a
3d
world,
that
you're
sharing
with
your
friend
and
you
guys
are
connected,
it's
good
enough-
that
that
world
will
be
all
right
yeah.
Maybe
if
somebody
comes
in
some
things
will
have
to
catch
up
and
might
be
a
little
wonky,
but
yeah.
A
The
thing
is
is
like
this
is
a
good
example
of
how
things
don't
mean
what
you
think
they
mean
we're
like
so
crdts
are
like
there's
this
whole
mathematical
culture
around
crdts,
and
so
people
summarize
it
as
saying
eventual
eventual
consensus.
But
what
that
really
means
is
it
works
great
unless
your
network
sucks
and
so
it
it
becomes
a
networking
problem.
It's
not
a
it's,
not
a
like
like
like.
A
If
your
network
is
awesome,
then
your
experiences
will
be
awesome
and
if
your
network
sucks,
then
your
experience
will
catch
up
once
your
network
catches
up
and
so
and
so
that
the
yeah
that
whole
the
the
trade-off
with
the
crdt.
Is
that,
like
they
push
the
the
the
thing
onto
the
network,
and
so
that's
I
never.
I
never
have
ever
heard
anybody
explain
it
that
way,
but,
like
that's,
that's
the
reality.
B
A
Should
get
in
touch
with
sam
rock
who's,
a
member
of
the
psf
he
he
built
he,
he
ported
my
web
wallet
over
to
a
very
simple
browser
extension
and
yeah.
Well,
yeah
he's
demoed!
It
here
is.
A
I
think
it
was
but
yeah.
That's
that's
really
interesting,
because
I
mean
for
that
single
sign-on
experience.
That's
what
you
need.
You
need
a
browser
extension
and
you
really
can't
get
it
without
it
and
or
or
a
central
server.
You
know
that's
how
facebook
and
google
does
it.
A
A
B
B
A
Yeah
interesting,
very
cool,
very
cool,
well
yeah,
you
know
jerry
you
and
I
should
touch
base
on
that
because
or
I'll
send
you
a
link
to
the
android
app
that
I
compiled
for
for
my
web
wallet.
It's
not
using
react
native
like
browser
like
badger
mobile.
A
Does
it's
using
just
react
and
then
the
capacitor
framework
to
compile
that
into
an
android
app,
and
it
can
also
compile
it
into
ios
and
in
fact,
dave
dave
allen
who
we
haven't
seen
in
a
while
he's
gonna,
be
sending
me
one
of
his
old
iphones
so
that
I
can
try
and
get
a
get
a
an
iphone
app
developed
as
well.
Oh
damn.
B
A
A
Yeah
yeah,
I
know
I
don't
like
I
haven't
heard.
I've
talked
to
a
few
iphone
developers
and
the
experience
sounds
horrible,
and
so
I'm
not
looking
forward
to
it.
But.
C
C
This
was
just
to
make
some
profit:
oh
they're,
nice
they're,
giving
some
free
tokens
so
but
yeah,
I'm
I'm
messing
around
with
aurora,
which
is
like
ethereum
compatible
blockchain
on
top
of
near
so
it's
near
prices,
but
everything
is
like
ethereum
virtual
machine
compatible
and
the
nice
stuff
is
that
you
can
breach
directly
your
eat.
C
So
all
the
taxes
you
pay
again
in
it,
but
I
mean
on
near
prices,
so
your
transaction
will
cost
you
like
0.000,
no
many
zeros
and
but
there's
no
like
fuzz
around
converting
koi
to
something
else
which
can
change
in
time
like
it's
it
there.
So
you
can
move
it
back.
You
will
not
lose
any
value
in
your
heat
because
you
converted
it
to
matic
or
something
so.
C
You
still
need
to
pay
it
for
your
fees
or
not
it,
but,
for
example,
native
like
currency
for
this,
not
currency
but
coin
for
this
blockchain
like
if
you're
on
on
polygon,
it's
wrap
to
eat,
but
you
still
pay
matic
for
your
transactions,
but
on
on
these
guys,
your
native
coin
will
be
it.
So
when
you
bridge
it
one
time
you
will
pay
your
transaction,
you
need
everything,
so
you
can
start
with
empty
wallet.
In
fact,
you
can
just
transfer
everything
there.
C
You
need
don't
need
some
like
initial
funds
to
get
your
funds
from
the
bridge
or
something
so
it's
very
convenient
to
start
on
aurora,
and
it's
fast,
you
have
all
of
the
eats
stuff
that
they
promised
like
shouting
or
whatever
you
want
it's
already
there
and
they
yeah
stable
diffusion.
I'm
doing
this
too.
Oh.
A
C
Or
yeah
it's
how
I'm
creating
my
recent
pieces,
it's
geez,
okay,
so
short
course,
maybe
five
minutes
on
ai
art,
yeah.
A
C
So
all
of
this
art
you
create
it
with
some
generator
like
what
is
g,
a
n
like
what
is
this.
A
C
No,
I
mean
it's
something
network.
This
gan
was
like
very
cool.
A
Yeah
gan,
what
do
they
call
it
again?
It's
artificial
neural
network,
it's
the
am
whatever
the
g
is
neuron
network
yeah.
C
So
it
started
before
you,
you
first
train
it
with
some
images
like
you
just
consist
give
to
him
like
a
hundred
hours
of
animation,
and
it
can
create
some
images
similar
to
to
the
one
that
you
feed
it
with.
But
there's
no
way
to
check
if
this
image
is
close
to
the
thing
that
you
want
so
somewhere
in
the
middle.
There
is
a
group
which
is
named
open
ai.
C
They
have
like
github
repository,
so
they
created
something
named
clip,
clap
which
can
check
if
the
current
pictures
is
close
to
some
text.
C
So
you
you
just
give
them
some
prop
his
name
from
like,
for
example,
okay,
flying
lamborghini,
and
it
will
how
to
see
just
listen
to
not
listen,
but
viewing
all
of
this
out
that
the
crazy
generator
is
creating
and
it
will
just
show.
How
close
is
it
to
this
prompt
like
okay,.
A
C
Yeah
and
and
this
first
generator
is
named
like
vqgan-
it's
like
a
visual
call,
something
generator,
but
it's
how
to
see
it's
create
a
very
it's,
not
creating
very
nice
input
for
the
clip,
so
there's
another
ways
to
create
like
a
pictures
like
layer,
layer
by
layer,
so
you
can
become
like
you
can
make
just
part
of
your
picture
to
become
this
a
art.
C
If
you
see
these
nft
collections
like
what
was
like
ai
moonboard,
they
just
mutated,
just
the
the
face
of
the
distinct,
and
for
this
you
need
a
little
like
more
advanced
generators.
C
So
there
was
first
something
named
disco
diffusion
and
now
the
current,
like
big
guy
in
the
in
the
town,
is
this
stable
diffusion
because
it
can
diffuse
like
ai,
do
just
small
part
of
your
image.
It
will
keep
everything
around
oh,
okay
and
that's
why
you
can
give
it
some
initial
image
like
ape
yeah.
You.
A
B
Because
I
know
there's
an
intel
team,
I
forget
their
name:
they've
been
working
on
stable
view,
synthesis
which
is,
and
they
also
develop
nerve
plus
plus
and
which
nerfs
are
a
huge
like
range
right
now
in
the
tech
valley,
but
stable
view.
Synthesis
is
like
in
my
mind
what
I've
seen
them
do
is
like
a
step
above
that,
where
it's
recreating
3d
scenes
from
photos
using
ai,
but.
C
Until
now,
the
problem
was
that,
in
order
to
do
this
art
you
you
need
to
to
make
too
much
programming
like
I'm.
I
was
using
like
a
google
collab
because
they
give
you
like.
B
C
For
higher,
for
you
can
rent
gpu,
can
you
run
there
some
like
this?
What
was
jupiter
notebooks
like
python
style
code,
but
for
the
regular
people?
It
was
too
much,
but
now
they
start
to
make
like
a
product
from
all
of
this,
when
the
you,
the
interface,
is
more
like
for
the
human
beings
like
if
you
want
to
play
around
for
free,
the
nice
product
is
named
night
studio,
yeah,
okay,.
C
Yeah
yeah,
so
they
give
you
some
credits
for
free
every
day,
because
one
of
these
it
cost
you
like
one
credit,
but
they
give
you
five
every
day.
So
you
can
create
five
like
pieces
every
day
for
free
and
it's
like
pretty.
You
can
use
use
all
of
this
that
I
mentioned
you
can
use
disco
diffusion,
stable,
diffusion,
whatever
you
want
so.
A
Story,
I
got
a
question
for
you.
I
was
kind
of
you
know.
I
didn't
even
really
know
what
I
was
looking
at,
but
I
knew
it
was
ai
generated,
and
so
I
was
talking
to
an
artist
about
it
and
she
was
telling
she
was
asking
me
she's
like
oh
well.
Could
I
take
just
my
art:
have
the
ai
just
study,
just
my
art
and
then
have
it,
create
a
new
piece
of
artwork
based
on
my
previous
work,
a
body
of
art?
Have
you
have
you
seen
that
like
is.
C
A
C
B
C
Look
like
a
picture
or
it
can
be
pastel
whatever
you
want,
but
in
order
for
her
to
have
her
own
style
first
to
create
a
model,
I
mean
she
needs
to
to
teach
this
ai
with
her
pictures
like
sending
a
lot
of
her
pictures
until
this
guy
understand
that
her
name
means
this
style,
so
the
the
teaching
this
most
of
these
projects
they
give
the
ready
models,
that's
how
they
already
train
everything
with
van
gogh
pictures.
But
if
you
want
your
own
prompt,
you
need
to
to
teach
this
guy
to
recognize.
A
Yeah,
well,
I
I
think
that
there
are
because
she
she's
a
she's
a
and
I've
taught
she's,
not
the
only
artist.
I've
talked
to
about
this.
That's
sort
of
transitioning
to
the
ipad.
Is
she
she
does
a
lot
with.
You
know
watercolors,
and
you
know
like
physical,
medium,
but
she's
transitioning
into
working
on
an
ipad.
A
She's
got
a
high-end
ipad,
and-
and
so
I
was
like
man-
wouldn't
that
be
cool
if,
like
the
ai,
could
just
come
up
with
like
a
rough
draft
and
then
with
the
ipad
you
can,
then
you
know
do
whatever
you
need
to
do
with
it,
and
and
that
would
really
cut
her
time
in
making
art,
but
would
would
maintain
the
quality
and
the
style.
C
Yeah,
it's
possible.
I
think
this
is
that
most
of
the
people
still
don't
understand
that
dcaa
will
not
replace
the
real
artist
we
was
talking
and
somebody
okay,
this
yeah,
I
will
replace
all
of
the
artists.
It's
never
happened
because,
even
with
the
process
that
I
mentioned,
you
need
to
look
on
this
picture
and
tell
him
okay.
Stop
it's
now
good,
because
it's
becoming
bizarre,
more
bizarre
and
bizarre
like
when
you
start
doing
stuff
yeah.
C
Yeah
yeah,
it's
like
something
so
and
for
for
the
case
that
she's
designing
kids,
I
think
great,
because
it
can
save
most
of
the
dirty
work
like,
for
example,
you
need
to
have
something
not
empty
canvas,
but
something
to
start
with,
and
it
can
help
with
this,
but
it
never
will
be
so
good
to
replace
the
real
artist.
I
think
yeah
yeah.
I
could
definitely,
but
this
case
is
great
just
to
give
you
something
to
start
with,
so
you
can
like
make
it
good.
A
A
Yeah
yeah
yeah
give
us
a
quick.
We
should
wrap
this
up,
but
yeah
give
us
a
quick
view.
I
turned
on
screen
sharing.
C
Okay,
so
I
I
was
just
wanted
to
try
these,
because
everybody
was
mentioning
that
it's
very
cheap
and
nice
to
use.
So
I
created
some
pieces
there
and
just
because
I'm
zooming
now
it
will
be
a
little
slow
to
up
but
yeah
it's
here.
So
this
this
is
the
space
related.
So
if
you're
a
sci-fi
fan,
you
will
maybe
enjoy
and
yeah.
This
is
the
one
wow
it's
good.
C
It's
like
2000
pictures
on
2000
and.
C
No,
this
is
the.
This
is
the
marketplace:
okay,
that's
just
the
nfts,
so
yeah!
This
is
the
nftc
I
creating
them
on
this
night
study
or
in
collab,
and
I
just
uploading
because
they
have
like
nice
interface.
You
can
upload
it
to
the
ipfs
and
cdn
in
the
same
time,
so
yeah
very,
very
easy
to
use
web
interface
and
we
can
sell
your
art,
but
the
the
stuff
that
I'm
using
is
this
night
night
yeah
this
night
studio
night
cafe
dot
studio.
C
Because
yeah
you
can,
if
you
go
to
in
the
start,
it
will
ask
you
what
kind
of
algorithm
you
want
to
use
like
stable,
diffusion
or
something
something
so
see.
You
can
choose
your
styling
cyber.
A
A
A
C
You
choose
this
stable
diffusion,
you
just
give
them
some
prompt.
Let
me
show
you,
for
example,.
A
C
Some
of
the
crazy,
like
a
friend
of
mine,
told
me
that
she,
if
she
find
the
spider
in
her
kitchen,
she
will
burn
the
house.
So
I
decided.
Okay,
I
put
the
prompt
like
a
cute
woman
with
long
hair
like
holding
cat
staying
in
front
of
burning
house,
and
it's
creating
this
for
me
from
this
prompt
and.
C
C
C
Ferret
on
a
board
wearing
no
yeah.
C
Fire
works
works
like
this
one
yeah
yeah
and
you
can
give
it
where
the
add
modifiers.
So
you
can
see
there's
a
preset
or
artist.
Let's
do
this
like
know
van
gogh
or
let's.
C
Yeah,
where
is
this
this
guy?
Okay
and
it
should
be
like
8k
resolution,
maybe
sure
concept,
art,
and
we
can
do
this
like
what
is
acrylic
mosaic?
No
photography,
maybe,
but
I
don't
but
yeah.
Let's,
let's
just
do
this
yeah
and
yeah.
You
can,
let's
create
four
images,
so
we'll
have
more
choices
and
you
can
choose
some
like
sampling,
like
training
models,
but
and
then
we
can
tell
him
how
close
this
to
be
to
our
words
and
yeah
and
just
boom,
and
it's
taking
about
a
minute
so
or
30
seconds.
So
please
be
quiet.
C
I
I
already
got
40
for
free
because
they
introduced
stable
diffusion
this
week.
Oh
see,
there's
no
board.
I
maybe
make
some
mistake.
C
B
B
C
A
C
Like
I
use
this
same
technique
to
use
script-
and
I
put
the
sweeper
library
in
the
dom
model-
and
after
this
now
you
can,
but
it
looks
like
ugly,
like
maybe
the
same
like
in
the
wallet
that
you
are
creating.
It's
just
one
prompt
in
one
button
yeah
so,
but
I
have
also
the
qr
code
reader.
So
maybe
it's
a
little
more
advanced
than
yours.
C
A
A
That's
that's.
I'm
gonna
send
all
my
artist
friends
like
a
link
to
this
video
with
like
the
time
stamp
when
we
started
talking
about
this,
because
that's
going
to
blow
their
mind
seeing
the
board
with
fireworks.
C
A
C
A
Yeah
good
that
definitely
seems
like
a
service
worth
charging
for
so
I'm
glad
we
get
to
use
it
for
free
a
little
bit
good,
okay,
guys!
Well,
I'm
gonna
sign
off
here.
Thank
you
for
making
the
time
for
this
and
yeah
yeah
next,
hopefully,
in
the
next
meeting
I'll,
have
that
sweet,
android
app
for
buying
tokens
on
the
marketplace.
Ready
to
show
sounds
great.