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From YouTube: PSF TSC Meeting - 05-26-21
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A
Okay,
the
youtube
link
is
posted
to
telegram.
Okay,
let's
go
ahead
and
get
this
started.
Let's
do
a
brief
round
of
introductions.
I
am
chris
tropner.
I
founded
the
permissionless
software
foundation
with
a
few
other
people,
and
I've
been
working
to
grow,
both
the
community
and
the
technical
side
of
things
and
we're
here
today
to
discuss
the
technical
side
of
things
david.
B
Wants
to
go
ahead
and
introduce
yourself
not
here
for
the
technical
side,
I'm
primarily
focused
on
business
development
and
been
part
of
this
with
chris
for
a
while.
C
A
Right
on,
and
that
is
greatly
appreciated,
okay,
well
with
that,
let's
dive
on
into
the
agenda.
A
And
I
think
in
our
last
meeting
things
were,
I
don't
know,
I'm
still
working
on
my
display.
So
if,
if
you
guys
think
that
like
I'm,
if
I'm
talking
to
something
and
the
thing
on
the
screen,
doesn't
seem
to
match
with
what
I'm
talking
about,
let
me
know
but
anyways.
So
it's
been
about
a
month
since
our
last
technical
steering
committee
meeting
and
I
was
not
able
to
host
the
one
a
couple
weeks
ago.
So
this
this
agenda
is
a
little
long,
but
we're
gonna
try
and
power
through
it.
A
So,
basically,
at
the
point
where
we're
at
in
our
organization
and
communities
growth,
these
technical
steering
committees
are
a
little
ad
hoc.
It's
it's
less
about
oversight,
which
is
what
you
would
think
a
committee
is
about,
and
it's
more
an
opportunity
for
us
to
just
celebrate
our
technical
achievements
from
one
meeting
to
the
next.
So
we've
got
quite
a
bit
to
celebrate
today.
A
So
first
of
all,
the
this
psf
core
software.
A
Just
to
just
to
talk
about
what
I
mean
by
psf
core
is:
this
is
on
the
the
blog
ps
foundation,
dot
cash
blog
on
the
article
towards
a
roadmap,
and
so
when
I
talk
about
core
I'm
talking
about
this
column
here,
which
includes
the
bch
api,
rest,
api,
bchjs,
javascript
library
and
the
gatsby
ipfs
web
wallet,
which
is
like
the
the
engine
for
our
front
end
web
wallet,
stoyan
added
two
new
bch
api
endpoints,
as
well
as
two
new
bchjs
endpoints
for
querying
the
relationships
between
nfts.
So
in
bitcoin
cash.
A
There
is,
when
you
create
an
nft,
you
generate
it
from
what's
known
as
a
group
token,
and
so
these
endpoints.
If
you
have
a
group
token,
you
can
query
all
the
nfts
that
were
generated
from
that
group
token.
And
if
you
have
an
nft,
you
can
query
and
find
out
the
group
token
that
it
was
generated
from
so
those
are
the
two
new
endpoints.
So
those
are
in
place
in
bch
api
as
well
as
bchjs,
and
this
will
enable
us
to
build
better
nft
support
into
applications
such
as
wallet.fullstack.cache
or
or
really.
A
A
Another
big
milestone
is
that
fullstack.cash
is
averaging
over
500
000
api
requests
a
day,
so
half
a
million.
That's
that's
quite
a
big
jump.
We
we
have
been
growing
very
quickly
like
we
hung
out
around
250
000
for
quite
a
while,
and
then
we
jumped
up
from
there
to
500
000,
a
50
increase
over
the
course
of
a
couple
weeks,
and
so
right
now
the
infrastructure's
running
great,
and
but
we
are
in
the
process
of
upgrading
the
infrastructure
to
handle
this
increased
load
and
this
increased
growth.
A
So
this
is
great
because
we
don't
yet
have
enough
data
to
know
what
the
percentage
is
exactly,
but
there
should
be
a
relationship
between
the
number
of
api
requests
and
the
number
of
paid
subscriptions
on
fullstack.cache,
which
then
go
to
burn,
psf
tokens
and
increase
the
value
of
the
psf
token
daniel,
fixed
a
bug
in
wallet.fullstack.cash,
where
web
browsers
were
caching,
the
12-word
mnemonic.
A
I
discovered
this
by
accident.
I
went
to
go
restore
my
my
wallet
and
I
noticed
that
my
browser
already
had
my
12
words
there
waiting
for
me-
and
I
was
like
looked
into
that
so
we
were
able
to
just
that
was
actually
a
pretty
simple
fix.
So
just
that's
kind
of
more
of
a
heads
up,
that's
fixed
now,
so
the
browsers
do
not
retain
your
12
words
as
it
should
be.
A
C
Is
that
fixed
on
the
message.fullstack.cache
stuff
too,
or
just
on
the
wallet.cache.
A
A
Good
question,
so
that's
those
are
the
recent
changes
in
our
core
software,
the
jason
rpc
over
ipfs
and
the
pay
to
web
database.
You
guys
are
all
familiar
with
how
excited
I
am
over
these
two
technologies.
We're
working
on
we've
had
some
progress
on
that
front,
daniel
added
rate
limiting
to
this
ipfs
service
provider.
A
So
the
idea
is
that
this
ipfs
service
providers,
a
replacement
for
a
rest
api,
would
allow
someone
to
provide
services
over
the
internet
like
a
rest,
api
does,
except
it
would
do
so
over
ipfs
and
full
stack
as
fullstack.cache
you
know
proves
is
rate
limits
are
incredibly
important.
If
you
let
people
abuse
your
system,
they
will
and
rate
limits
are
how
you
prevent
abuse
so
so
being
able
to
add
default
rate,
limit
values
and
then
have
them.
Configurable
by
the
service
providers
is,
is
pretty
critical.
A
He
daniel
also
added
signature
verification
to
the
pay-to-write
database,
so
just
to
refresh
memories.
The
pay-to-write
database
is
a
it's
a
peer-to-peer
database
that
that
runs
over
ipfs,
so
it
has
very
similar
properties
to
a
blockchain
except
there's,
no
mining
and
in
in
order
to
this.
A
This
particular
version
of
this
database
that
we
call
pay
to
write,
allows
anyone
to
write
to
the
database
so
long
as
they
submit
proof
that
they've
burned
a
psf
token
and
and
in
order
and
there's
a
sort
of
corner
case
where
someone
could
burn
the
psf
token.
A
But
then
someone
else
could
be
monitoring
the
network
and
essentially
front
run
them
and
and
use
their
proof
to
to
write
their
own
data
to
the
to
use
somebody
else's
proof
to
write
their
own
data
to
the
database.
So
this
signature
verification
solves
that
potential
problem
by
verifying
like
it's
one
extra
step
where,
when
someone
submits
proof,
the
database
verifies
that
they
also
submit
a
signature,
and
so
the
database
can
show
not
only
have
they
proven
that
they've
burned
a
token
they've
proven
that
they
own
the
address.
That
burn
the
token.
A
So
it
prevents
us
this
potential
ability
for
someone
to
front
run
them,
and
it
also
makes
it
not
such
a
time
critical
thing
like
if
there's
a
significant
period
of
time
between
the
burning
of
the
token
and
the
submission
of
the
data.
You
know
that's
not
an
issue
now,
so
pretty
excited
steady
progress
on
that
still
theoretical
we're
still
working
on.
You
know
pragmatic
applications
that
people
could
get
excited
about.
A
So
to
refresh
this,
we
are
have
been
building
a
bridge
between
the
avalanche,
blockchain
and
the
bitcoin
cash
blockchain
in
order
to
move
tokens
across
blockchains,
and
we
actually
have
this
token
bridge
fully
functional,
it's
working,
there's
only
a
few
people
right
now
that
have
the
information
to
interact
with
it,
because
we're
just
trying
to
do
sort
of
internal
testing
before
we
open
it
up
to
a
wider
audience
and
gary
nadir,
big
shout
out
to
him
he's
been
he's
been
heading
up
the
the
development
of
this
project,
so
he's
created
a
faucet
api.
A
So
we
have
all
this
code
is
in
the
the
permission
the
software
github
repository.
You
can
follow
these
links.
If
you
want
to
get
to
the
code,
but
it's
a
rest
api
that
you
can
query
and
it
will
send
you
it's
just
a
faucet
that
you
can
set
up
with
tokens
on
the
avalanche
side
and
tokens
on
the
on
the
bch
side,
and
it's
just
a
way
to
get
these
these
sort
of
test
tokens
for
for
tests.
A
So
this
is
what
the
developers
right
now
are
using
to
request
these
test
tokens
to
test
the
bridge,
and
so
that's
this
one
and
then
he's
also
got
the
the.
As
I
mentioned,
the
the
bridge
is
working
in
both
directions
and
it's
undergoing
internal
testing
and
he's
beginning
to
work
now
on.
So
we've
had
this
piece
of
software
called
slp,
clywallet
and
there's
a
link
here,
and
this
is
a
command
line,
hd
wallet
with
token
support
on
the
bitcoin
cash
network,
and
it's
because
there's
no
user
interface.
A
A
And
so
it's
the
same
idea
just
on
the
avalanche
chain
and
it's
got
basic
functionality
in
place
where
you
can
generate
a
wallet
and
you
can
update
your
balance
and
you
can
send
avalanche.
And
those
are
the
three
commands
that
work
right
now
and
we're
working
towards.
A
Increasing
the
hd
wallet
capability
because
because
there's
there's
a
lack
of
hd
wallets
on
the
avalanche
chain
and
and
then
once
we
do
that
you'll
be
able
to
then
then
we'll
focus
on
the
tokens.
That
should
be
fairly
simple.
So
that's
that's
coming
soon.
I'm
really
excited
about
this,
because
the
these
cli
wallets
are
which
is
short
for
command
line
interface.
They
are
like
my
go-to
tool.
If
I
want,
if
I
have
some
idea
and
I'm
like-
oh,
I
wonder
if
you
know
whatever
is
possible.
A
This
is
how
I
explore
those
ideas,
because
there's
no
user
interface,
you
can
very
quickly
prototype
and
iterate.
So
I'm
very
excited
about
this.
I'm
excited
about
doing
a
little
more
hands-on
rapid
prototyping
on
the
avalanche
chain
as
well.
With
this.
A
Okay,
so
the
last
category
miscellaneous
we've
done
a
few
specification
updates,
and
so
I
I
gotta
give
a
big
thanks
to
you,
aaron
for
inspiring
me
to
update
this
and
doing
a
lot
of
the
the
heavy
lifting
and
light
work
there
in
terms
of
the
research
this.
This
mutable
data
specification
is
vastly
improved
from
where
it
was
it's
much
clearer
and
it
I
think
it's
going
to
have
huge
repercussions
in
this
industry
in
terms
of
sort
of
cracking
the
nut.
A
In
terms
of
how
do
you
point
at
mutable,
which
is
changeable
data
from
an
immutable
token,
and
so
the
sort
of
some
of
the
canonical
use
cases
is
token
icons.
There
is
still
no
good
way
to
submit
a
token
icon
for
slp
tokens.
A
If
you
do
it
this
way,
not
only
can
you
do
it
in
a
permissionless
way
that
wallets
can
automatically
discover
your
token
without
any
sort
of
top-down
approach
to
it.
You
can,
if
you
ever
decide
to
rebrand
your
logo.
You
can
easily
update
your
logo,
which
is
currently
a
big
problem,
that
some
of
the
larger
companies
like
tether
and
usdh
and
spice
token,
like
their
icons,
are
fixed.
They
can't
those
condoms
are
part
of
the
token
itself
like
they
can't
they
can't
change
those
tokens.
A
So
that's
so
that's
a
nice
thing,
but
yet
there's
much
bigger
implications
here
in
terms
of
like
a
video
game
character
representing
them
with
a
token,
with
an
nft,
a
video
game
character
whose
stats
could
change
over
time
or
a
piece
of
artwork
that
will
have
certain
immutable
qualities
that
never
change
but
then
also
have
other
mutable
qualities
that
do
change
like
the
ownership
and
you
know
same
with
real
estate.
A
C
C
A
Yeah
yeah,
that's
a
good
point.
One
option:
that's
always
available.
Is
the
memo
field
in
the
genesis
transaction.
That's
sort
of.
C
C
A
And
then
last
thing
on
the
agenda
here:
is
this
consolidating
coin
join
specification
that
has
also
been
updated
mostly
to
reflect
the
progress
that
has
been
made
with
the
json
rpc
over
ipfs.
The
initial
version
of
the
specific
so
so
coinjoin
is
a
way
to
add
privacy
to
financial
transactions
and
when
the
specification
was
first
drafted
it
in
it
anticipated
something
like
the
json
rpc
over
ipfs,
because
the
difficult
part
of
a
coin
join
is
not
the
actual
transaction.
A
It's
the
coordination
of
the
people
involved
in
the
transaction,
and
so
it
needs
a
robust
way
for
all
these
parties
to
find
one
another
and
then
coordinate
and
collaborate
on
building
a
transaction,
and
so
mostly
that
specification
has
been
updated
just
to
reflect
the
the
software
libraries
that
have
been
developed
around
the
json
rpc
over
ipfs.
A
So
if
anybody
wants
to
check
that
out,
we're
not
gonna
move
super
fast
on
this
coin
join
idea,
but
it's
definitely
on
the
radar
for
the
psf
there's
a
lot
of
interest
in
seeing
it
developed
on
all
the
different
blockchains
this.
This
works
on
any
utxo
based
blockchain,
so
ecash,
bch
and
avalanche
can
all
leverage
the
specification
for
adding
financial
privacy
awesome.
A
I'll,
add
I'll
open
the
floor
to
discussion.
What
what's
everybody
working
on?
What
are
you
guys
excited
about?
What
do
you?
What's
what
blips
have
popped
up
on
your
radar.
C
C
A
D
If
I
start
talking,
it
will
take
maybe
about
30
minutes.
If
it's
okay,
I
know
I'm
not
sure,
is
it
better
to
talk
or
just
to
share
my
screen.
Yeah
I've
got.
A
C
D
So
what
I
was
going
to
talk
about
from
before
maybe
a
week
or
two
weeks,
dales
started
this
open
web
community
conference
in
hackathon.
Did
somebody
know
about.
D
Over
the
place,
so
it
was
how
to
see
the
interesting
part.
It's
organized,
maybe
mostly
by
this-
create
base
guys.
But
the
difference
is
this
time
there
was
not
so
focused
on
the
technicality.
D
D
D
So
if
you
see
the
that
this
presenter
guys
they
are
like,
there
was
musicians,
there
was
artists
and
I
will
maybe
put
one
url
in
the
chat.
D
So
where
is
the
chat?
I
will
put
it
on
after.
A
D
This
on
this
crowd
cast
the
presentations.
Are
there
it's
like
10
hours
of
gems?
It's
like
I
don't
know
it's
like.
I
still
looking
on
these
things,
but
what
these
guys,
how
to
see
huge
on
nfts
and
dao?
A
D
Be
coming
up
in
a
big
way,
but
these
guys
how
to
see
their
blockchain
is
pretty
good.
It's
maybe
close
to
avalanche,
because
it's
a
proof
of
stake.
D
They
have
smart
contracts,
they
have
shouldering
so
fees
are
like,
like
I
don't
know,
minimal,
very,
very
small
fees,
so
it's
great,
but
most
of
what
was
good.
I
think
they
hit
a
lot
of
standards,
so
the
stuff
that
we
are
talking
now
they
already
have
a
standard.
What
should
be
the
the
json
representing
the
nft
tokens?
What
exactly
you
need
there
like
id,
something
something
for
the
media?
They
have
standards
for
everything
they
already
have
a
bridge
built
between
ethernet
and
their
chain
for
transferring
nfts,
not
usual
tokens.
E
D
Great
joanne,
and
during
this,
so
this
new
protocol
was
the
first
jmi
discovered
they
have
a
lot
of
standards.
This
also
on
the
on
the
storage
topic
we
was
talking
just
before,
with
this
pay
to
pay
to
write
database.
Just
take
a
look
on
ceramic
network.
D
Oh
I've
been
I've
been
looking
into
them
as
well.
Yeah.
These
guys
already
have
this.
It's
I
tried
it.
It's
like
how
to
see
you
can
upload
schema
to
the
ipfs,
so
you
can
update
your
records
and
it
will
even
check
if
they
have
to
see
much
the
schema.
So
if
you
have
some
problems
with
your
entries
like
different
fields
on
something,
they
will
check
this
one
and
they
will
display
error.
A
Okay,
yeah,
I
really
they
popped
up
on
my
radar,
and
I
know
that
a
big
emphasis
of
their
focus
is
dids,
decentralized,
ids
and.
A
A
json
document
that
that
is
not
dependent
on
any
one
network
that
should
be
accessible
from
several
different
networks
and
I
think
they
have
something
akin
to
a
full
node.
A
I
haven't
really
gotten
too
deep
into
it,
but
I
have
been
really
exploring
these
concepts
of
linked
data
and
particularly
json
linked
data
and
and
then
dids
or
decentralized.
Ids
are
sort
of
the
next.
The
most
recent
progress.
D
It's
another:
it's
same
company,
it's
name.
It's
named
three
box
labs
and
this
ceramic
network
is
like
a
base
layer
and
on
top
of
this
they
have
idx
dot,
x,
y
z,
x
y
z,
and
this
one
is
this
d
id
stuff
that
you're
talking
about
it's
identity
protocol.
D
So
you
can
link
like
it's
shown
here.
You
can
link
your
crypto
accounts
or
your
social
accounts,
something
like
this
one
and
create
something
like
a
profile,
and
you
can
just
share
part
of
this
profile
with
some
applications,
like
only
crypto
accounts.
Only
this
depends
of
what
you
want
to
do,
but
it's
based
on
the
web3
standards
did
standards,
so
everything
is
like
standard
style.
A
I
love
those
standards
yeah.
The
reason
I've
been
looking
into
this
is
the
the
service
provider
idea,
I'd
like
this,
each
service
provider,
when
they
sort
of
announced
themselves
to
the
network
like
hey.
Here's
who
I
am
this
is
the
service
that
I
offer
it
would
leverage
these
dids
these
these
you'd.
Essentially
they
would,
they
would
pass
on
a
json
document
that
follows
the
standard
that's
like
this
is
who
I
am.
This
is
what
I
offer.
This
is
what
my
prices
are.
A
You
know
this
is
my
api
documentation,
like
anything
that
you'd
want
to
know
about.
This
service
provider
would
be
captured
in
in
a
did
following
this
standard
yeah,
and
it's
based
on
this
ceramic.
A
Including
including
so
one
of
the
things
that
I'm
really
excited
about,
this
is
it's.
I
don't
know
necessarily
what
the
right
word
is,
but
but
sort
of
self
verification
or
self
authentication
where
in
this
did
like
when
a
service
provider,
I
mean
I'm
using
the
example
for
service
providers.
This
is
really
a
general
idea
when
they,
when
some
when,
when
someone
is
like
hey
here's,
here's
my
services
like
send
me
some
money,
and
these
are
the
things
that
you
can,
that
I'll
give
you
they
can
they
can.
A
They
could
put
like
a
proof
of
like
a
like
a
transaction
on
the
blockchain
so
that
you
could,
you
could
see,
like
oh
they've,
been
around
for
a
while.
They
didn't
just
spin
up
a
node
five
minutes
ago.
They
they've
been
around,
and
people
and
they've
been
around
for
like
a
year
and-
and
you
know,
x,
number
of
people
have
used
their
services
and
maybe
there's
a
link
to
another,
like
decentralized
like
review
of
of
the
service,
and
that's
what
gets
me
really
excited
about
this
particular
niche
is,
is
yeah
this
this?
D
D
It
was
how
to
see
one
of
these.
You
can
take
a
look
on
these
sessions,
but
one
of
them
was
specially
for
nfc
storage.
It
was
great,
there
was
a
pinata
fi
file
coin
and
ipfs,
and
one
more
I
forgot,
so
all
of
all
of
the
nft
back-ends
guys
was
there
talking
about
it.
So
it
was
good.
D
It
was
this
one
you
maybe
I
don't
know.
If
you
know
it
it's
our
wave,
I
think
they
pronounced
our
weave.
Are
we
yes
yeah,
so
this
they
they're
trying
to
to
do
this
permanent
web
everything
to
be
on
the
top
of
the
to
be
permanent?
You
you
can
like
make
some
contract
or
something
with
them
to
your
data,
will
be
there
like
this
period
of
time.
A
D
A
These
guys
have
been
on
my
radar
for
a
while,
and
I'm
curious
if
you
know
the
answers
to
the
story
and
the
so
their
business
model.
The
thing
that
really
sets
them
apart
from
like
see
a
coin
or
file
coin,
is
that
you
pay
up
front
and
then
the
their
business
model
assumes
that
the
price
of
storage
goes
down
over
time
and
that's
why
they
can
call
it
like
permanent,
because
this,
this
cost
of
storing
the
data
decreases
over
time.
And
so
it's
it's
an
interesting
idea.
It.
A
But
the
question
in
my
mind,
is
what
about
redundancy
and
repairability,
because
because
one
of
the
things
I
really
like
about
powergate
software
from
textile
that
runs
on
filecoin
is
that
they
have
this
baked
in
this
idea
of
redundancy
and
automatic
repairability,
so
that
if
I
have
the
same
file
stored
with
more
than
one
miner
and
the
miner
goes
offline,
the
other
miner
it'll
automatically
find
another
minor
and
repair
or
restore
the
the
file
content
and
in
this
business
model.
I
just
I
don't
know,
I'm
just
ignorant,
I'm
not
saying
they
can't
do
this.
A
I'm
just
saying
I
don't
know
how
that
jives
with
this
business
model
of
theirs,
and
I'm
just
curious
to
find
the
answer
to
that.
I'm
not
sure
what
they're
using
maybe
they're
using.
D
D
Service,
it
was
specially
provided
for
the
this
near
protocol,
but
you
can
have
all
of
this
thing
that
you're
talking
about
just
with
these
lines
in
of
javascript,
and
I
think
they
may
be
providing
some
services
for
this
our
wave
guys
they
don't
don't,
maybe
use
the
pure
ipfs.
D
A
Yeah,
that's
that's!
Essentially
what
if
you
powergate
the
idea
behind
powergate
is
based
on
the
idea
of
like
ipfs
is
hot
storage
and
filecoin
is
cold
storage
so,
like
a
tape,
drive
slow
but,
and
so
powergate
is,
I
believe,
that's
all
what's
running
nft.storage
and
I
believe
that
that's
all
being
directly
subsidized
by
protocol
labs
and
but
that's
essentially,
what
it's
doing
is
like
if
say,
nft
contents
is
just
sitting
there
and
it's
not
hasn't
been
requested
for
a
period
of
time.
A
It'll
move
that
content
to
file
coin,
to
free
up
the
hot
the
hot
space.
But
then,
if
someone
makes
a
request,
it'll
really
quickly
retrieve
it
from
filecoin
load
it
onto
ipfs
and
then
it
can
and
it
can
serve
it.
So
it's
essentially
the
I
know
what
what
do
you
call
that,
like
the
cdn?
Essentially,
yes,.
D
A
Yeah,
I
know
I
don't
know,
I
don't
know
how
it
would
be
possible
to
get
a
little
love
from
the
ipf.
I
mean
a
lot
of
the
a
lot
of
people.
There
are
starting
to
pay
attention
to
the
permissionless
software
foundation.
So
I
think
if
we
just
keep
doing
what
we're
doing,
we
might
get
a
little
love
like
that.
D
C
D
D
D
D
This
is
fascinating
every
time.
Every
time
when
somebody
like
sell
this
nft,
this
thing
will
go
to
the
to
the
creator,
so
how
to
see
it's,
not
the
people
who
own
it,
but
only
the
p.
Also,
the
people
who
created
this
thing.
D
Yes,
it's
smart
contract;
they
they
most
of
the
nft,
is
like
a
smart
contract
and
it's
very
interesting.
It's
not
solidity.
They
using
assemble.
What
was
this
scripting
language
very
close
to
javascript
like
assembly
script
or
rust,
but
the
final.
The
final
binary
is
webassembler
wssm
and
they
upload
this
one
to
their
blockchain.
D
Yes,
but
you
can
how
to
see
you
can
run
this
contract
by
yourself,
so
you
can
have
the
same
shop
and
then
you
can
have
one
percent
for
you
on
everything,
and
this
you
can
split.
Also
the
revenue
between
the
people.
You
just
create
a
little.
How
to
see
dow
here
which,
how
to
see
several
people
can
own
different
percentage
of
this
one,
and
when
somebody
sell
it,
they
will
get
different
percent
of
the
ho.
The
total
revenue
depends
of
how
much
they,
for
example,
purchase
it
in
the
beginning
or
something
so.
D
Contract,
it's
like
ethereum
the
same
one,
so
it's
like
a
small
program
which
is
have
a
hockey
decided
methods
which
you
call
like
get
balance
on
something
some
things
so,
but
everything
is
open
sourced
on
their
repository
and
they
have
standards
with
it.
Now,
that's
cool.
D
D
D
Other
good,
so
I
told
you
did
how
to
see
huge
on
nfts
and
they're
huge
on
dao,
like
this
thing
here,
for
example,
sputnik
dot
fund-
maybe
some
russian
guy
made
it
because
it's
main
satellite
in
russian,
but
how
to
see
you
create
some
dao,
you
fund
it
and
when
you
create
some
proposal
like
this
is
mine.
I
don't
know
why
it's
still
here,
but
when
you
how
to
see
when
these
guys,
when
they
vote
for
this
proposal,
it
will
automatically
pay.
D
D
A
A
A
That's
exactly
the
type
of
application
that
I
think
is
more
appropriate
for
a
smart
contract
than
than
a
job
done,
an
off-chain
piece
of
software.
So
much
of
the
software
I
see
going
on
chain
on
ethereum
is
like
not.
It
just
doesn't
need
to
go
on
chain.
It
did.
There's
there's
there's
like
either
there's
nothing
to
worry
about
in
terms
of
trust,
trustlessness
or
you
know,
they're
just
they're,
just
essentially
using
it
like.
A
C
D
So
in
here
you
can
go
here
this
there
was
like
one.
It
was
like
presentation,
but
by
musicians
how
they
using
nft,
for
example,
one
of
the
musicians
she
was
like
not
technical
at
all,
like
her
communities
are
not
teachers
they're,
like
usual
people,
so
she
was
talking
how
difficult
is
to
tell
them
what
is
nft
in
fact
how
they
can
use
it,
but
how
to
see
they
just
my
mind
with
ideas
like
there's,
something
if
you're
on
music.
D
I
don't
know
this
something
named
async
or
something
I
think
music
like
you,
can
create
this
one
async.art
music.
You
can
have
a
nft
group
which
will
be
like
your
main
teama,
but
anytime
you
purchase
some
child.
It
will
how
to
see
change
a
little
the
beat
to
be
just
your
music
yeah.
You
are
market
yeah
and
nobody
else
don't
have.
This
beat
only
the
guy
who
owned
this
nft
token.
A
This
goes
right
to
sort
of
this
big
o
problem
with
trying
to
encrypt
payloads
with
nfts
is,
and
I've
been
thinking
about
this
too.
I
think
the
only
way
to
accomplish
this
really
is
with
a
smart
contract,
where
only
the
smart
contract
has
access
to
the
unencrypted
original
piece
of
art
and
many
anytime,
someone
build,
buys
a
you
know
an
instance
of
the
art,
then
it
then
it
encrypts
it
or
watermarks
it,
and
then
it.
D
It
was
not
like
this
girl.
She
was
talking
that
even
before
there
was
mp3
so
on
the
web
right,
you
can
download
them,
and
even
now
everything
on
any
ipfs
is
free
right.
Why
people
will
purchase
nft
and
she
was
talking.
D
The
main
purpose
of
nft
is
something
more
than
just
a
media
like
if
you
purchase
like
this
original
nft,
you
get
the
help,
see
vip
access
to
this
directly.
To
this,
how
to
see
musicians,
for
example,
you
can
go
on
his
concerts
like
you
get
you'll
be
the
first
who
will
get
the
tickets
or
you
can
meet
her
or
something?
D
So
it's
not
about
the
the
media.
That's
why
it's
not
maybe
so
much
about
the
encrypting,
the
the
this
music
file,
or
this
like
image.
It's
how
you
can
make
services
around
this
art
like,
for
example,
you
can
provide,
like
I
don't
know,
additional
something
right.
A
D
Services,
because
the
media
itself,
you
want
everybody
to
hear
this
music
right.
So,
okay,
let's
go
to
iphs
and
hear
it,
but
if
you
want,
for
example,
to
meet
the
musician
or
even
if
you
it's
some
huge
musician,
you
can
have
how
to
see
session
with
him
to
create
something
together
like
this
kind
of
services,
the
future
of
nft
for
the
artists
scenes,
not
the
the
foxy,
the
final
media
file.
C
Well
like
to
piggyback
off
what
you're
saying,
storing
stoin
and
what
it
sounds
like
they're
doing
with
these
nfts
is
more
than
a
watermark.
It
is
changing
the
synthesized
sound.
So
like
say,
I
make
a
chord
and
I
have
a
four
bar
measure
and
I've
got
four
chords
on
that.
If
I
change
the
synthesizer,
which
goes
through
when
I
sell
the
nft
to
you,
you're
gonna
have
a
different
version
than
the
next
guy.
E
C
If
that
can
create
unique
versions
of
this
song,
that's
completely
unique
to
you
and
completely
unique
to
me
just
because
my
version
runs
through
a
mini
moog
and
your
your
version
runs
through
a
profit,
six
emulator
and
so
and
then
another
thing
on
top
of
that
is
in
the
music
industry.
We
have
what's
called
stems
where,
instead
of
exporting
a
stereo,
left
right
image
of
the
audio
track,
you
export
every
individual
component,
and
so
people
can
remove
and
add
components
as
they
want
and
so
like.
C
Or
say
somebody
wants
to
remix
or
stuff
like
that
they
are
they're
already
using
stems
anyways
a
lot
of
times,
but
sometimes
they're
not
always
easy
to
find.
Well
now,
here's
a
way
to
break
up
your
song
and
sell
it
piece
by
piece.
So
if
I'm
just
trying
to
remix-
and
I
want
to
put
a
new
beat
over
over
top
of
everything-
I
can
drop
the
beat
off
and
then
I
can
put
it
put
my
own
beat
on
there
and
make
a
remix
you.
C
D
C
D
A
A
Interesting
there
was
what
was
that
one
where
you
can
buy
an
individual
pixel?
This
was
done,
I
think,
on
the
bch
blockchain,
maybe
already.
A
A
A
Yeah
the
big
question
in
my
mind
when
I
look
at
all
this
is
like
what's
on
chain
and
what's
off
chain
like
how
much
of
this
is
like
application
specific
and
how
much
of
this
is.
You
know
the
smart
contract
and
you
know
I
I
just
need
to
look
at
it
to
answer
that
question.
But
but
that's
always
the
thing.
That's
in
the
back
of
my
mind,.
C
A
Yeah,
that's
a
I
mean,
that's
one
of
the
biggest
hype
problems
with
hype
in
our
is
like
people
don't
understand
where
the
where
to
draw
the
lines
or
or
even
that
you
like
it's
a
good
thing
to
draw
lines.
This
is
like
as
an
investor.
If
someone
was
looking
at
anybody
who
talks
to
me
about
anything
about
putting
money
into
the
crypto
space,
that's
one
of
the
first
questions.
I'm
always
like
you
know.
A
C
Yeah
and
I
you
know,
I
like
the
idea
of
what
that
we've
been
talking
about
about
putting
json
data
into
into
these
tokens
into
these
nfts,
to
allow
them
functionality
and
then
referencing
that
somewhere
else
ipfs
could
be
standard
web.
But
I
think
that
gives
you
a
lot
of
play
and
a
good
marriage
between
both.
You
have
that
immutability
factor,
but
then
you
have
this
mutability
factor
we've
been
talking
about,
could
be
an
entire
program.
A
A
That
then
points
to
all
your
off-chain
data,
but
then,
but
then
now
we're
starting
to
discover
like
with
dids
that
that
well,
you
can
actually
like
layer,
your
off-chain
data
and
then
and
and
by
that
way-
and
there
therefore
like
incorporate
so
like
the
example
of
the
where
it
was
showing
all
the
different
images
that
were
all
nfts
like.
I
don't
know
how
that
was
built,
but
an
efficient
way
to
build.
Something
like
that
would
be
that
each
nft
just
has
a
hash.
A
You
know
it
can
start
like
with
like
this
crumb
on
the
database,
build
up
and
get
the
metadata
that
it
needs.
You
know
to
essentially
like
fill
in
the
the
the
user
interface
and
then
and
then,
and
then
the
user
can
sort
of
drill
down
into
deeper
and
deeper
levels
of
content
and
so
yeah.
I
really
want
to
take
a
look
at
some
of
those
those
those
examples
to
show
to
stoian
and
sort
of
really
figure
out
like
where,
where
the
blockchain
begins
and
ends
yeah,
this.
D
Ceramic
stuff,
they
have
like
this
kind
of
organization.
You
can
read
it,
they,
they
have
something
named
index,
which
is
the
bigger
level
which
is
pointing
to
records
which
are
pointing
to
something
something
else.
Yeah.
E
D
A
You
know
the
the
the
software
itself
can
very
quickly
sort
of
like.
Oh,
you
want
to
do
this
now,
okay!
Well,
let
me
figure
that
one
out
and
it
just
sort
of
all
the
links
between
the
data.
You
know
just
sort
of
tells
the
machine
like
okay,
like
if
you
you
can
do.
You
can
do
a
lot
of
what's
the
word
like
emergent,
emergent
behavior,
where,
like
you,
didn't
necessarily
program
it
to
specifically
do
this,
but
it
can
do
it.
A
C
Well,
it
seems
like
there's
a
lot
of
work
to
be
done
and
a
lot
of
bridges
to
be
built
between
people
like
that
are
doing
this
in
this
space
and
looking
at
these
other
examples
that
stewing
is
talking
about
is
great.
You
know,
and
I
find
it
hard
to
keep
up,
sometimes
with
all
the
stuff.
That's
out
there.
You
know
it's
a
it's
a
lot.
A
C
D
A
C
A
I
mean
we've
got,
I've
got
my
own
ideas
and
as
an
organization,
we
work
on
our
own
ideas,
but
this
is
so
helpful
because
it's
important
that
we
stay
cognizant
of
what's
what's
going
on.
You
know
not
just
outside
of
our
group
but
outside
of
our
blockchains.
You
know
like
like
a
lot
of
these
ideas.
They
they
translate.
It
doesn't
really
they're,
not
blockchain,
specific
they're,
just
being
done
on
a
specific
blockchain
yeah.
D
A
C
D
It's
how
to
see
it's
good
to
have
it
implemented,
and
I
told
you
they:
they
have
a
whole
repository
only
with
documentation,
standard
standard
standard.
So
if
you
can
store
this
stuff
and
do
this
close
to
these
standards,
we
can
exchange
after
this
nfts.
With
this
new
protocol
or
ethereum
or
avex,
it
will
become
like
a
huge
circle.
A
Yeah
definitely
this
this
interoperability
layer
and
like
to
get
back
to
the
the
the
linked
data.
That's
the
promise
of
the
linked
data
is
like,
in
fact
I'm
just
about
it's
on
my
list
of
things
to
read
today
is
I
protocol
labs.
Has
this
new
tutorial,
or
at
least
new
to
me
on
their
their
link?
They
have
a
system.
The
ipld
is
their
ipfs
linked
data
and
they
have
a
system
where,
like
you
know,
I
think
any
of
us
who
have
played
with
ipfs
were
familiar
with
retrieving
files
with
ipfs.
A
You
can
actually
retrieve
bitcoin
and
ethereum
transactions
as
long
as
you
know
how
to
format
the
hash
correctly.
So
the
ipfs,
like
is
from
what
I
understand,
and
I'm
gonna,
find
out
more
information
about
this,
but
they
have
their
multi-hash
scheme
like
like
in
in,
like
I'm
I'm
thinking
about.
I
want
to
understand
it,
so
I
can
create
a
multi-hash
for
for
some
of
the
stuff
that
we're
doing
where
you
know
this.
A
This
is
the
this
is
the
the
promise
of
linked
data
of
like
you
can
have
one
single
hash,
and
not
only
is
that
a
trustless
link
to
the
data,
it
also
is
like
it
describes
like
what
blockchain
it's
on
and-
and
you
know,
maybe
a
link
to
some
link
to
data
on
how
the
machine
can
even
interact
with
it.
And-
and
this
is
how
we
just
seamlessly
get
money
and
artwork
and
content
like
to
flow
between
blockchains.
C
Yeah
and
I
agree
and
and
being
able
to
have
these
nfts
link
that
stuff,
no
matter
what
blockchain
they
are,
helps
for
moving
them
between
those
blockchains.
C
So,
and
I
I
think
it's
great
to
see.
I
think
this
is
probably
built
on
ethereum
storyan,
that
what
you
showed
us,
the
nft
stuff.
D
Like
I
don't
know,
even
they're,
even
cheaper
than
bsh,
but
they
have
something
named
aurora
aurora
bridge,
so
you
can
start.
I
was
thinking
you
can
start
on
this
near
protocol
create
mintyo
token
there
like
make
everything
ready
and
after
this,
when
somebody
show
interest,
you
can
move
it
to
the
interior
blockchain
and
start
selling
it
on
this
openc
or
variable
somewhere
else,
but
this
near
protocol
twos,
they're,
so
cheap
that
and
they're
most
of
them
are
like
ethereum
ready
like
it's
smart
contract,
everything
everything.
A
A
Anything
that's
evm
compatible.
You
know
you
can
drop
it
in
ethereum.
You
can
drop
it
in
the
avalanche.
Sie
chain,
you
can
drop
it
on.
You
know
bsc
the
binance
smart
chain.
You
know
any
anything.
That's
evm
compatible
these
yeah.
If
it's
claimed
to
be
evm
compatible.
That
means
you.
You
can
sort
of
develop
your
stuff
on
it
on
a
cheap
blockchain
and
then
bring
it
over
and
drop
it
into.
You
know
where
all
the
people
are
at,
which
is
like
ethereum.
D
Yes,
but
when
I
started
interacting
with
this,
I
didn't
feel
I
want
to
go
to
the
ethereum
at
all,
because
it
was
so
cheap
to
meet
tokens
to
like
move
them
around.
Why
to
go
to
to
this
ethereum
at
all,
yeah,
you
can
yeah
make
everything
there
make
how
to
see,
make
money
near
tokens
and
one
time
just
cuts.
It
cover
this
near
token
to
what
you
want.
I
know
yeah.
C
D
A
D
D
One,
and
now
we
was
talking
about
it's
some
interesting
standards,
which
is,
I
will
put
irc
99
this
one,
it's
the
ethereum
standard
for
composable
nfts,
so
I
think
the
the
it's
nimplex
cnht,
maybe
like
this
one.
D
So
it's
how
to
see,
I
think
the
the
nft
so
on
the
this
sop
they're.
Just
a
subset
of
this
thing.
It's
a
very
big
standard
and
in
fact
there
is
still
no
implementation.
D
It's
still
like
standard,
but
you
can
have
like
down
to
a
hot
c
top
to
down
containers
of
nfts,
which
the
the
main
container
will
contain,
like
pointers
to
the
other
nftc
inside
or
even
not
nfts,
to
use
your
tokens
or
you
can
have
the
reverse
bottom
to
to
top.
So
all
this
child
will
have
a
pointer
to
the
parent.
D
These
guys
are
trying
to
do
this
on
their
chain
near
protocol
and
ethereum
guys
are
trying
to
do
this
on
the
chain,
because
this
standard,
for
example,
if
you
have
some
container
when
you
give
this
token
to
somebody
else,
you
will
give
also
the
the
the
child
token
insight,
for
example,
for
the
game.
E
D
But
I
mean
this:
this
is
the
I
think,
one
of
the
possible
futures,
so
there's
a
lot
to
be
study
yeah
from
this
and
yeah
yeah.
So.
D
A
D
A
A
D
A
So
speaking
of
storage,
I
am
in
the
process
of
setting
up
a
filecoin
node
and
a
powergate
instance
that
then
tops
taps
into
that
node.
So
right.
C
A
Yeah
yeah
I've,
the
textile
io
guys
they
gave
me
beta
access
to
one
of
their
hosted
powergate
instances,
and
I
played
with
that
a
bit
and
I
really
liked
it
once
I
got
the
hang
of
it
and
then
I
was
like,
of
course
the
next
step
is
like
I
want
to
run
at
home
and
so
yeah,
hopefully
next
week,
if
I'll
have
you
know,
I
have
like
a
whole
computer,
just
dedicated
to
filecoin,
ipfs
and
powergate,
and
so,
if.
A
Upload
data
to
filecoin
I'll,
hopefully
have
a
way
to
do
that,
and
hopefully,
like
I
mean
what
I
want
to
do,
is
just
hook
it
up
to
one
of
these
ipfs
service
providers
so
that
you
could
go
to
chat.fullstack.cache
and
and
just
interact
with
it
and
and
give
it.
Your
data,
upload
data
and
download
data
like
files
to
and
from
awesome.
C
Yeah,
I
was
wondering
about
the:
are
you
running
ipfs
node
right
now
through
like
the
chat,
so
when
you
upload
a
file
on
chat.fullstack.cache,
it's
going
to
your
node
or
is
it
going.
A
A
And
then
that's
how
it
connects
to
the
rest
of
the
network.
I
think
it's
like
a
js
ipfs
right.
A
Well,
it
can't
pin
the
content.
So
what
is
this?
I
have
a
link.
Let
me
I
think
I
see
if
I
have
it
handy.
Oh,
you
know
I
I
think
it
got
deleted,
but
there
is
a
web
page
yeah.
I
don't
have
it
handy
I'll,
find
it
but
yeah
it's
a
way
for
like
it
like.
If
you
wanted
to
send
me
a
file,
there
is
an
ipfs
based
web
app
that
we
can
both
go
to
and
as
long
as
you're
on,
like
basically
you
go
to
this
web
page.
A
C
A
On
the
web
page,
while
I'm
downloading
it,
because
there's
no
server
in
between
I'm
downloading
it
directly
from
your
computer
to
my
computer,
yeah,
we're
just
using
the
web
page,
which
sets
up
an
ipfs
node
and
then
connects
the
two
nodes
together
to
allow
the
file
transfer
to
happen.
A
That's
essentially
what
it's
using
yeah
and
so
yeah.
So
that's
what
I
want
to
do
the
same
thing
where
if
I
have
this
file
coin
node,
then
I
will
I'll
have
that
on
a
on
a
service
provider,
and
then
you
could
essentially
go
to
the
same
web
page
and
just
connect
to
it
and
upload
your
file
to
filecoin.
Just
by
going
to
web
page
and
hitting
a
normal
upload
and
like
you,
don't
need
to.
C
C
Very
cool
I've.
I've
got
one
more
suggestion
if
we
got
a
second,
so
I
was
talking
last
night
having
a
conversation
and
we
were
talking
about
one,
how
banking
apps
are
targeting
kids
to
to
get
them
on
to
the
banking
system
and
one
of
the
things
I
I've
done
with
my
girls
is
I've.
I've
created
tokens,
slp
tokens
and
I
try
to
give
them
tokens
for
doing
chores
and
stuff
like
that,
and
they
can
redeem
those
sort
of
thing
but
going
a
step
further.
C
They
connect
to
the
internet,
they
can
play
games
and
stuff
like
that,
but
how
cool
would
it
be
for
them
to
create
their
own
currency
that
they
use
with
their
friends
and
trade
back
and
forth
in
make
believe?
C
C
C
C
D
E
D
They
they
also
have
some
kind
of
nfts
and
everything,
but
zero
transaction
is
the
way
it's
like.
You
can
give
these
guys
just
0
10,
5
bananas
and
after
this
get
this
back
and
there
was
it's
no
lose
calcium,
no
loss.
Sure.
C
D
C
See
because
I
know
with
my
girls,
they
would
like
they'll.
Do
these
art
stuff
on
on.
You
know,
phone
apps
and
stuff
like
that,
and
then,
if
they
could
take
that
and
create
a
a
token
that
they
could
then
send
to
grandma
and
grandpa
they
would
be.
They
would
think
that.
C
Just
to
be
able
to
send
it
that
way
and
share
it
with
their
friends
because
they
have
a
they
have
a
different
idea
of
what
they
own
and
value
than
even
we
do
you
know,
and
so,
if
it's.
D
C
Yeah
well
because
they
don't
necessarily
want
to
make
payments,
you
know
so
like
if
they
create
their
artwork
and
they
create
a
token
with
it,
and
then
they
can
give
that
token
to
their
friends.
Then
their
friends
have
that
token
on
their
phone
in
their
app,
and
that's
that's
something
that
I
know
that
they
would
find
really
cool
where
they
I
created
this,
especially
for
my
friend,
and
they
do
this
already.
They
create
they
use
construction
paper,
they
make
an
artwork
and
then
they
give
it
to
their
friends.
C
C
She
attached
it
to
something
that
can
be
easily
sent
and
shared
and
then
sends
it
to
her
friend
and
her
friend
could
then
send
it
to
another
friend
or
something
like
that,
and
it's
not
anything
of
necessarily
value
to
the
to
the
girls
as
far
as
money,
but
the
experience
is
really
fun
for
them
and
it
provides
that
counterfoil
for
what
the
bank,
the
banking
industry
is
doing,
where
they're
trying
to
get
these
kids
into
yeah
use
our
services.
Kids,
you
know
and
teaching
them.
A
A
good
yeah-
this
is
a
good
segue
into
you,
know,
wallet.fullstack.cache,
and
the
next
steps
that
I'd
like
to
take
with
with
these
nft
endpoints.
Is
god
I'd
love
to
see
a
plug-in
for
the
wallet
where
you
could
upload
a
piece
of
artwork
and
then
it
would
generate
an
nft
and
boy.
Wouldn't
that
be
a
slick
plug-in.
D
A
A
Yeah
right
I
mean
everything's
kind
of
I
know:
you've
done
pretty
much
all
the
work
there.
We
just
you
know
that
would
be
another
great
bounty
stoin.
If
you
wanted
to
to
actually
create
a
plug-in
there's.
A
What
is
it
there's
one
specification
I
need
to
write
and
then
and
then
I'm
gonna
start
updating
the
documentation
on
fullstack.cache
on
how
to
work
with
the
web
wallet
like
like
how
to
cut
build
your
own
and
customize
it
and
how
to
do
plug-ins.
I
don't
know
if
you
need
that
information,
but
yeah.
C
A
Part
of
it
or
you
can
use
pinata
or
use
whatever,
but
yeah.
We
just
need
the
ui.
D
A
Like
I
know
right
well,
I
think
that
that
would
be
the
main
thrust
of
the
plugin.
Would
I
mean
the
file
uploads,
a
pretty
simple
thing,
and
so
I
mean
there'd
be
two
parts
of
the
plugin.
I
think
like
one
would
be
the
file
upload
which,
if
you
used
our
ipfs
file,
upload
service.
That
could
all
happen.
You
know
automatically.
A
The
web
wallet
can
handle
that
part
of
it
and
then
would
get
a
it
would
get
an
ipfs
url
where
the
artwork
can
be
found,
and
then
the
second
part
would
be.
You
know,
generating
the
genesis
transaction
to
actually
create
the
nft.
I
was
thinking
more
about
the
fixing.
D
The
this,
not
maybe
the
minimal
wallet,
but
to
fix
the
the
command
line
wallet
with
the
nft
part,
so
the
the
web
wallet
itself
will
just
use
we'll
call
these
functions
like
now.
You
have
this
minimal
web
wallet.
If
we
just
add
their
like,
create
group
and
create
child
calls
called.
C
D
A
D
A
Because
this
is
exactly
how
the
plug-in
architecture
is
supposed
to
work,
where
the
the
graphical
part
is
based
on
gatsby
ipfs
web
wallet
and
then
the
actual
bitcoin
cache
wallet
engine
is
minimal,
slp
wallet
and
then,
when
you
build
a
plug-in,
you
reference
them
as
pure
dependencies.
C
A
That
you
could
create
just
the
code
around
nfts
and
you
don't
have
to
like
duplicate
the
code
in
minimal
slp
wall.
You
would
just
reference
that
as
a
pure
dependency
and
build
on
top
of
that
for
the
actual
bitcoin
cash
interface
stuff
and
then
and
then
in
the
actual
user
interface.
You
just
reference
gatsby
ipfs
web
wallet
as
a
pure
dependency,
so
that
you
you
just
have
to
build
the
the
user
interface
part.
That's
specific
to
your
plugin.
D
Maybe
just
just
creating
minimal
nft
wallet
will
be
good.
One
cut
c
same.
C
A
Yeah,
that's
exactly
the
architecture
so
like
in
minimal
nft
wallet.
You
would
require
minimal,
slp
wallet
in
the
package.json.
It
would
list
it
as
a
pure
dependency
and
and
then
yeah
yeah.
So
then
you
just
have
to
write
the
only
the
code.
That's
specific
to
you
know
the
new
feature
that
you're
adding.
D
A
Yeah
yeah,
yeah
and
then
and
then
once
we
have
the
mpm
package
you
could
you
could
bring
that
into
the
cly
wallet
to
you
know
to
do
rapid
prototyping,
the
I'm
trying
the
kly
wallet
was
built
like
way
before
minimal
slp
wallet,
then
minimal.
Slp
wallet
has
been
refined
over
over
the
last
few
years
or
last
year
and
or
two
and
but
the
there's.
There's
a
architectural
difference
between
the
two.
A
Where
minimal
slp
wallet
is
a
single
address,
wallet
and
the
clywall
is
an
hd
wallet,
and
so
so
you
can
import
your
wallet
from
the
minimal
sp
wallet
into
the
cloud
wallet,
but
not
the
other
way,
and
so
it's
just
that
one
caveat
you
got
to
keep
in
mind,
but
otherwise
they
they
work
like
like
the.
What
I'd
like
to
do.
Moving
forward
is
like
the
cly
wallet
has
its
own
like
send
bch
function
and
it
shouldn't
it
should
just
leverage
that
function.
A
That's
in
minimal,
slp
wallet
that
way
we
just
have
one
code
base,
but
it's
it's
that
specific
code
around
addresses
and
updating
balances,
that's
different
between
a
single
address
wallet
and
a
hd
wallet,
but
yeah.
I
definitely
want
to
reduce
as
much
redundancy
as
possible
and
that's
that's
work
that
still
needs
to
be
done.
C
So,
with
the
send
bch
and
using
the
minimal
wallet,
would
the
cly
wallet
then
just
insert
the
address
like
because
how
do
you
know
which
child
address
you're
sending
from?
Would
it
just
use
insert
the
chop
that
child
address
for
this
the
send
function
of
the
minimum
wallet.
C
A
Every
address
it
knows
about
and
then
there's
there's
a
the
standard.
Is
you
scan
20
you
keep
scanning
until
you
get
to
20
addresses
that
doesn't
have
any
transaction
history
and
that's
how
you
know
to
stop
and
but
in
it's
a
much
simpler
process
in
a
single
address
wall,
because
you,
you
know,
you
just
have
to
worry
about
the
one
address.
A
And
that's
really
the
only
difference,
and
so
there's
that's
why
I
like
I
mean
this,
isn't
hard
work
right.
The
the
nice
thing
about
the
cly
wallet
is
that
it's
it's
broken
up
by
specific
commands.
All
the
code
is
like
self-contained
in
one
command,
so
it's
like
like,
for
instance,
so
like
get
address
and
update
balances.
Those
are
two
commands
that
that
would
be
impacted
by
these
changes,
but
then
the
command
of
like
send
bch.
A
A
In
an
hd
wall
you
always
want
to
send
to
a
new
address.
You
don't
want
to
reuse
addresses,
that's
the
whole
point
of
an
hd
wallet,
so
yeah,
so
there's
I'd
have
to
do
a
flag,
probably
whether
like
probably
put
the
client
yeah,
that's
probably
how
this
should
be
handled
is
put
the
clywal
have
a
flag.
So
you
signal
to
the
wallet
software,
whether
you
want
to
use
a
single
address
or
an
hd,
the
hd
capability
yeah,
and
then
you
could
have
the
different
code
paths
depending
on
that
flag.
A
Cool
cool
yeah
I'm
so
I'm
really
excited
to
have
the
cly
wallet
on
both
the
avalanche,
blockchain
and
vch,
because
we'll
have
a
bridge
command
where
like.
If
you
want
to
send
a
token
across
blockchains
it'll,
just
be
a
very
simple
command
like
get
my
address
from
avalanche,
go
to
the
be
the
clywal,
the
slp
client
wallet
send
token
here's
my
address
bam
and
now
the
tokens
on
the
other
blockchain.
A
A
I
appreciate
you
guys
coming
and
it's
been
a
really
stimulating
conversation.
I
mean
it
seems
it
seems
to
me
like
every
time
we
have
this
meeting,
we
are
just
doing
a
great
job
at
staying
at
the
forefront
of
what's
happening
with
nfts.
I
mean
largely
thanks
to
you
too.
You
guys
both
bring
a
lot
to
the
table
in
terms
of
you
know,
what's
going
on
with
nfts,
how
is
it
being
done?
How
are
we
doing
it?
What
should
we
think
about.