►
From YouTube: PSF TC Meeting 9.22.21
Description
Technical Steering Committee Meeting for Sept. 22, 2021
B
C
Awesome
welcome
everybody
to
the
permissionless
software
foundation,
technical
steering
meeting.
My
name
is
chris
troutner.
It
is
wednesday
september
22nd,
and
this
is
the
technical
steering
committee
meeting.
So
it's
our
opportunity
to
sort
of
celebrate
the
technical
achievements
that
we've
had
over
the
last
couple
weeks,
and
so
we've
got
an
agenda
which
I'll
share
shortly
and
then,
after
the
agenda,
we'll
just
go
into
a
round
table
discussion
to
talk
about.
You
know
any
technical
topics
or
news
items
that
have
caught
our
interest.
So,
let's
start
with
a
with
a
quick
round
of
introductions.
C
As
I
said,
I'm
I'm
chris
trouttner,
I
I
helped
found
the
permissionless
software
foundation
and
I
I
manage
fullstack.cache,
which
is
our
commercial
arm
that
does
hosted
blockchain
services
and
infrastructure.
Aaron
shoemaker.
Why
don't
you
go
next?
D
Sorry
I
was
checking
the
sound
on
on
the
phone
here,
so
we're
all
good
with
it.
My
name
is
aaron
shoemaker.
I
work
with
360
video
vr
development
and
that
brought
me
into
the
nft
world
which
brought
me
to
psf
and
I'm
helping
work
with
the
developer
program
and
hope
to
be
getting
a
full
stack
node
going
as
soon
as
I
can
figure
out
the
cisco
servers
I
got
here
in
my
house.
E
A
All
right
go
ahead:
aaron,
I'm
aaron,
sunmen
and
I've
been
a
big
fan
of
of
well
the
dow
creation
idea
and
what
permissionless
software
has
done
to
make
developing
in
this
space,
more
fun,
more
integrated,
easier
and
permissionless.
So
I
know
that's
in
the
name,
but
it
needs
the
obvious
that
there
needs
to
be
some
decentralized
mechanism
to
make
all
this
stuff
work,
and
I'm
so
glad
to
be
a
part
of
this.
This
program
to
make
this
happen,
work.
C
C
C
So,
let's
just
go
down
the
list,
so
this
is
all
the
sort
of
technical
accomplishments
that
that
the
community's
achieved
over
the
last
couple
weeks.
I'm
always
looking
for
editions
of
these
agendas.
People
are
free
to
add
comments
to
the
agendas
or
submit
a
new
issue
with
with
whatever
they've
achieved
and
we'll
add
it
to
the
agenda.
C
C
That
makes
up
pretty
much
the
core
software
I've
been
playing
around
with
doing
some,
some
like
basic
indexing
of
like
the
way
an
indexer
would
work,
and
I
realized
that
bch
api
at
some
point
in
the
past.
Had
this
get
block,
hash
function
accidentally
deleted
and
it's
important.
So
if
you're
the,
if
you
want
to
get
the
information
on
a
block
from
a
full
node,
you
can't
just
ask
it
for
the
block
height.
You
have
to
give
the
block
hash.
So
there's
a
two-step
process.
C
You
have
to
request
a
block
hash
given
a
block
height
and
then
with
the
hash.
You
can
request
the
actual
contents
of
a
block
so
somehow
that
had
gotten
deleted
from
bch
api,
but
it
was
still
in
bchjs
and
that
was
essentially
a
dead
api
call.
So
that's
fixed
now-
and
I
think
somebody
had
reported
this
in
the
past,
but
they
hadn't
done
it
in
a
way
that,
like
I,
I
was
like.
Oh
yeah,
this
functionality
is
missing,
so
anyways,
that's
fixed
now.
C
This
m,
mr
zwetz,
for
how
I
don't
know
how
I
would
normally
pronounce
that
he's
been
in
our
chat,
room
and
he's
been
making
a
series
of
pull
requests
to
the
web
wallet
to
get
it
up
to
speed
with
the
the
ecash
rebranding,
but
there's
both
the
denomination
of
the
currency
and
then
there's
the
rebranding
from
bcha
to
xe
or
to
ecash,
and
so
he's
been
doing
a
series
of
pull
requests.
I've
already
merged
the
the
sort
of
back
end,
pull
requests
that
he
added
to
fix
the
the
redenomination.
C
So
the
ecash
version
of
the
web
wallet
is
working
now
like,
if
you
put
in
one
dollar,
you'll,
actually
get
an
equivalent
amount
of
bcha,
and
so
that's
great.
So
thank
you,
matthew
or
mrs
or,
however,
you
want
to
be
identified,
got
a
link
there
to
your
github
profile
and
and
then
daniel's
reviewing
some
of
the
front-end
requests
that
he
submitted
to
help
with
the
actual
to
get
that
that
web
wallet
actually
rebranded
it
from
bcha
into
ecash.
C
So
that's
that's
pretty
exciting.
I'm
really
stoked!
Whenever
community
members
take
the
initiative
to
to
to
change
the
code
in
the
way
that
you
know
they
they
feel
is
right
and
and
and
this
this
is
a
clear-cut
case
where,
like
clearly,
this
is
work
that
needed
to
be
done.
It
just
needs
to
be
done,
so
I
love
seeing
people
step
up
and
do
it.
C
Gary
who's,
one
of
our
regular
developers
in
venezuela
he's
been
making
steady
improvements
to
the
minimal
ovex
wallet
which
and
bringing
it
up
to
feature
parity
with
our
minimal
slp
wallet.
So
these
are
it's
a
javascript
library
it's
compiled
for
use
in
in
in
front
end.
So
in
the
web
web
page
and
it's
what
powers
the
web
wallet,
it's
essentially
what
handles
the
private
keys
and
making
transactions
and
handling
tokens.
C
C
C
It
uses
the
centralized
method,
which
is
a
rest
api,
which
is
the
way
every
website
on
the
web
works
and
so
we're
we're
nearing
the
end
of
the
integration
phase,
where
you'll
be
able
to
go
into
the
configuration
tab
and
there
will
be
an
I
or
the
configuration
menu
item
and
there
will
be
a
ipfs
tab
and
you
can
hit
decentralized
mode
and
then
it'll
spin
up
a
ipfs
node
within
the
web
page
and
start
to
access
the
bitcoin
cash
blockchain
or
or
the
other
two
blockchains
over
ipfs.
C
And
so
what
this
does.
As
an
american.
You,
probably
if
you're,
an
american.
You
probably
wouldn't
do
this
because
it
would
actually
degrade
performance.
But
if
you're
in
a
place
like
china,
that
who
has
the
firewall
with
ai
that
automatically
looks
and
detects
websites
to
talk
about,
bitcoin
and
block
stem
you'll
be
able
to
circumvent
that
and
get
both
the
front-end
web
app
and
the
end
services
over
ipfs,
which
which
has
proven
to
be
effective
at
circumventing
the
chinese
firewall.
C
Pretty
cool
and
yeah
yeah,
I
mean
it's
just
it's
steady
progress
at
this
point
I
feel,
like
I
talk
about
it
every
time
we
have
a
meeting,
but
you
know
it's
what's
important
is
that
we
see
steady
progress
and
and
yeah
and
we
are
just
daniel's
marching
right
along.
I
think
all
the
back
end
stuff's
pretty
much
done
at
this
point.
So
it's
just
this
this
integration
into
the
the
front
end.
C
I
think
that's
that's.
A
Awesome
one
of
the
big
things
about
that,
too,
is
like
the
story.
You
told
last
time
about
the
gal
who
wanted
to
get
paid,
which
you
know.
We
all
know
that
cryptocurrencies
work
globally,
but
still
the
person
needs
to
be
able
to
access
something
that
generates
an
account
and
generates
a
wallet,
and
this
is
the
kind
of
thing
that
that
makes
it
possible
what
you
know.
Rubber
meets
the
road.
It
goes
from
yeah
cryptocurrencies
work
everywhere
too,
it
actually
works
for
a
real
person.
C
Okay,
so
that
kind
of
wraps
up
the
improvements
to
our
core
software,
moving
on
into
this
sort
of
new
field
of
json
rpc
over
ipfs
and
the
pay
to
write
database
here
so
aaron
sunderman
has
claimed
two
of
the
circuit
relay
bounties
and
for
anybody
interested,
I
have
a
link
to
the
bounties,
there's
still
more
more
bounties
to
be
claimed.
He
set
up
a
circuit
relay
in
japan
and
singapore,
and
this
is
the
wonderful
thing
about
being
you
know
on
the
internet.
C
Is
you
don't
actually
have
to
be
located
in
those
areas?
You
just
have
to
find
a
computer
that
you
can
access
in
those
areas,
and
so
thank
you
aaron
for
maintaining
those
and
it's
basically
what
we're
doing
this
whole
ipfs
over
json
rpc
over
ipfs,
and
this
this
way
of
accessing
the
blockchain.
C
What
we're
effectively
doing
is
creating
a
sub
network
on
ipfs,
so
our
nodes
don't
really
interact
with
other
ipfs
nodes,
they're
fully
capable
of
it,
but
but
their
primary
purpose
is
to
create
a
sub
network
of
nodes
that
are,
you
know,
concerned
with
psf
stuff
and
and
just
by
having
these
two
extra
circuit
relays
set
up
and
circuit
relays
are
critical,
because
their
whole
job
is
to
help
other
nodes
talk
to
one
another,
otherwise,
wouldn't
be
able
to
talk
to
one
another,
and
so
just
by
setting
up
these
two
circuit
relays,
I've
noticed
a
huge
improvement
in
the
reliability
of
our
of
our
network.
C
When
you
bring
up
the
command
line
wallet
and
you
issue
commands
like
now
now
the
command
line,
while
it
has
three
or
four
different
options
in
terms
of
how
to
get
from
my
computer
to
whatever
computer's
serving
the
the
blockchain
services
it
can,
it
can
route
through.
I
think
we
have
four
or
five
of
them
on
the
network
now,
so
if,
for
some
reason
it
can't
and
what
I've
noticed
is
it's
not
so
much
about
censorship?
That's
that's
an
extreme!
C
It's
more
about
latency,
where,
if
my
computer
has
to
talk
to
a
computer
in
germany
to
then
go
back
to
a
computer
in
the
states,
it's
a
very
long
route
and
it
leads
to
a
very
poor
user
experience.
So
just
by
simply
having
these
circuit
relays
having
one
geographically
close
to
wherever
the
user
is,
makes
the
whole
experience
better.
D
D
When
you're
saying
you're
creating
a
subnet
on
the
ipfs
network,
meaning
we're
using
ipf
protocol
to
link
these
circuit
relays
together,
correct
so
so
does
somebody
have
to
access
the
circuit
relay
through
an
ipfs
gateway.
C
No
because
what
happens
is
the
gateways
are
typically
just
used
for
consuming
content
over
ipfs,
but
what's
actually
happening
is
in
the
case
of
the
command
line,
wallet,
you're,
spinning
up
a
node
and
you're
accessing
that
other
node
directly
and
so
there's
there's
there's
no
need
for
a
gateway
and
then
same
thing
with
the
web
wallet
in
decentralized
mode,
you're,
actually
spinning
up
an
ipfs
node
within
the
web
page,
and
so
it's
accessing
those
other
nodes
on
the
ipfs
network
directly
and
so
again,
there's
there's
no
need
for
a
gateway.
A
I
also
liked
how,
when
you
were
talking
about
this
at
the
shape
shift
demo,
that
you
did
how
you
were
kind
of
opening
their
eyes
to
this
capability.
I
don't
think
a
lot
of
them
had
considered
this.
At
least
it
didn't
sound
like
it.
They
were
sort
of
asking
a
question,
so
it
feels
like
you
know,
taking
these
ideas
of
what
you've
done
and
helping
these
other
daos
understand
what's
possible
and
it's
great
as
well.
C
Yeah
yeah,
thank
you
yeah.
I
I
think
I
blew
some
minds
with
that
presentation.
Some
of
those
engineers
been
asking
me
questions,
they're,
definitely
interested
and
the
in
that
video.
The
the
guy
asking
the
questions
was
their
head
of
engineering.
So
I'm
really
glad
to
see
that
I
piqued
his
interest
yeah,
so,
okay,
so
yeah,
so
there's
more
bounties
available
for
anybody
who
wants
to
step
up.
C
We
have
boundaries
for
both
circuit
relays
and
wallet
service
providers,
so
just
running
running
a
full
stack
to
be
able
to
access
the
blockchain
and
provide
all
the
wallet
services
which
I'm
going
to
be
releasing
some
videos,
some
like
how-to
videos
on
that
and
aaron's
getting
a
a
new
computer.
So
he's
going
to
be
the
first
guinea
pig
on
that,
and
so
we'll
we'll
be
adding
more
videos
to
help
people
with
those
bounties.
D
Got
a
question
on
that
real
quick.
So
when
you
say
running
a
full
stack,
is
it
does
it
work
as
a
rest
api,
or
is
it
going
to
work
in
this
json
over
rpc
fashion.
C
C
I
must
have
hit
a
button
by
accident,
so
if
you
go
to
fullstack.cash
and
click
on
the
menu,
you
can
go
to
this
hash
strap
page-
and
this
is
this-
is
the
ipf
best
command
to
connect
to
our
file,
server
and
and
so
setting
up
a
cache
stack
involves,
creating
a
bitcoin
cache,
full
node,
the
fulcrum
indexer
and
the
slp
db
indexer,
and
you
need
to
you
need
to
these.
Are
these
are
pre-sync
databases,
so
you
don't
have
to
sync
from
genesis,
so
this
is
much
faster.
C
You
can
just
download
it
and
then
the
syncing
will
only
take
like
an
hour
or
two
to
catch
up
from
from
where
the
snapshot
was,
and
so
it's
running
it
involves
running
a
series
of
docker
containers
and
so
that
will
set
up
a
complete
cache
stack.
So
it's
these
these
lo.
These
three
three
bottom
layers
is
what
it's
primarily
concerned
with
is
setting
these
up
and
you
should.
C
C
The
next
layer
of
software
on
top
of
the
rest,
api
is
the
ipfs
bch
wallet
service
and
it
will
operate
that
that
will
pipe
the
rest
api
over
over
ipfs,
and
so
the
people
with
the
web
wallet
or
the
command
line
wallet
will
then
be
able
to
connect
to
your
computer
over
ipfs
via
a
circuit
relay
and
and
access
the
blockchain
through
through
your
machine
and
but
then
you
locally,
if
you're,
developing
locally
you'll
have
direct
access
to
the
blockchain
it'll
be
very
fast,
very
snappy
because
you
you'll
have
you
know
a
latency
of
zero,
essentially.
A
Okay,
yeah-
that
was
one
of
my
questions
too,
is
so
I
want
to
stand
one
up
to
make
sure
that
I'm
helping
out
the
mesh
network
and
the
ipfs,
but
I'd
also
like
to
be
able
to,
like
you
said,
have
my
own
access
to
quickly.
So
I
just
have
to
configure
these
settings
so
that
I
point
at
my
own
box.
Is
that
correct.
C
E
Chris,
what
what
are
the
network
requirements
for
this
configuration
you
mentioned
about
the
ram
and
the
hdd,
but
what
about
the
network?
What
kind
of
network
should
these
guys.
C
Have
yeah
that's
a
good
question
and
that's
been
part
of
what
I've
been
working
on
with
the
ipfs
cord
library
is
trying
to
there.
There
were
some
bugs
in
ipfs
that
would
make
the
network,
like
bandwidth,
just
spike,
for
like
no
good
reason
and
that's
been
fixed.
So
what
I've
noticed
is
the
the
bandwidth
kind
of
alternates
between
100
kilobits
and,
like
maybe
500
kilobits,
like
maybe
half
a
meg.
C
So
if
you're
on
dsl
like
like
I've,
got
two
of
them
running
right
now,
I
I'm
still
managing
to
do
a
zoom
call
pretty
well
and
and
I'm
on
a
pretty
crappy
dsl
connection,
and
so
it
so
the
network
requirements
are
not
big.
I
mean.
Obviously,
if
a
lot
of
people
start
using
the
service,
then
then
that's
going
to
increase
the
network
usage,
but
but
in
terms
of
just
sitting
there
passively
the
yeah.
C
I
think
it's
somewhere
between
100
kilobits
and
a
in
500
kilobits
of
network
usage
of
just
the
the
ipfs
node.
Basically
talking
to
the
other
nodes
in
the
mesh
network.
D
If
a
lot
of
people
start
using
the
service
too,
though,
that's
going
to
create
demand
for
more
of
these,
these
cash
stacks
to
run,
and
so
economic
demand
should
help
to
settle
that.
C
Yeah
exactly,
and
so
that's
just
it
that
as
the
network
grows
in
usage,
it
also
grows
in
capacity,
and
so
no
one
node
should
be
bearing
a
burden
and
you
can
always
use
particularly
if
you
set
one
of
these
hash
stacks
up
on
a
on
a
dedicated
computer,
then
you
can
use
operating
system
level.
Bandwidth
throttling.
I
don't
know
if
it's
ufw
that
I
used
last
time.
C
I'd
have
to
look,
but
there
are
ways
to
essentially
set
up
the
bandwidth
limiting
at
the
operating
system
level,
so
that
so
that
you
know
you
can
offer
you
know
up
to
like
maybe
a
megabit
or
or
something
of
traffic
to
the
network
and
then
and
then
throttle
you
know
you
just
you
just
won't
go
over
that
people
will
just
have
a
higher
latency
if
they.
C
If
it
starts
going
over
that
and
at
which
point
like
that's,
I
have
a
video
on
the
on
the
command
line,
wallet
showing
how
to
look
at
all
the
available
service
providers
and
select
a
specific
one,
and
so
the
idea
there
is
like
if
you
start
experiencing,
you
know
having
a
poor
experience.
You
would
just
switch
to
a
different
service
provider.
E
I
have
one
more
question:
will
this
stack
work
behind
the
firewall?
Also,
like
I
mean
what
are
requirements
for
the
incoming
port
connections.
C
Well,
yeah,
that's
the
beauty
of
using
these
circuit
relays.
They
take
care
of
all
of
that.
You,
you
don't
have
to
think
about
the
networking
at
all
or
the
firewalls
at
all.
What
you,
what
essentially
is
happening
is
the
the
circuit
relays.
Are
these
lightweight
ipfs
nodes
that
need
to
be
connected
to
like
a
vps
like
some
sort
of
cloud
provider
with
a
good
internet
connection
that
everybody
can
connect
to
and
no
firewalls?
C
And
as
long
as
that's
there,
then,
if
you're
running
one
of
these
service
provider
stacks
one
of
these
cache
stacks,
you
don't
need
to
think
about
the
networking,
because,
because
your
node's
going
to
connect
to
the
circuit
relay
and
or
all
the
relays
and
everyone
else
is
going
to
be
able
to
connect
your
node
through
one
of
those
circuit
relays,
and
so
that's
the
that's.
The
beauty
of
this
whole
thing
is
like
you,
don't
have
to
worry
about
port
forwarding
and
firewalls.
You
don't
have
to
worry
about
ssl
certificates.
C
You
know
everything's
automatically
end
to
end
encrypted,
and
so
that's
that's.
One
of
the
things
that
makes
this
paradigm
like
very
different
is
the
lack
of
devops
required.
D
C
A
C
Hardware,
yeah,
I
mean
you,
can
see
some
of
these
desktop
here,
this
one's
300,
this
one's
got
32,
I
don't
know,
but
basically
around
400,
is
what
we're
buying
these
these
these,
these
old
dells
for
you
can
install
linux
on
them
and
I'm
going
to
cover
this
in
a
video.
But
but
what
I'm
doing
is
so
it's
yeah,
they
typically
ship
with
32
gigabytes
of
ram
and
a
one
terabyte
ssd,
and
what
I've
been
doing
is
installing
a
usb
3.0
card
on
there.
C
With
these
indexers
once
they're,
fully
synced
when
they're
syncing,
you
need
to
have
those
on
an
ssd,
because
it's
speed
is
everything
but
then
once
it's
fully,
synced
they're,
just
kind
of
like
they're
not
really
doing
a
whole
lot
until
a
new
block
comes
in
they're,
just
they're
just
processing
like
the
transactions
as
they
come
in
over
the
wire
and
and
it
doesn't
really
require
much
in
terms
of
performance.
C
I
did
some
tests
and
I
was
actually
getting
over
four
gigabits.
I
think
it's
like
technically
45
or
48
or
4.8,
and
I
was
actually
yeah.
I
did
some
tests
and
I
actually,
like
you,
know,
just
a
bulk
move
from
like
an
ssd
to
a
to
a
one
of
these
external
hard
drives,
and
I
was
getting
about
four
gigabits.
C
D
In
mind
for
the
heart,
for
the
storage
again
for
people
ssds
do
not
last
forever
they
don't.
They
have
a
maximum
right
and
read
that
after
a
while,
they
start
to
degrade.
That's
why
chris
is
right.
Getting
a
spinny
drive
to
back
this
stuff
up
on
is
probably
a
good
idea,
and
then
you,
maybe
those
spinny
drives,
are
so
cheap.
You
could
get
eight
terabytes
for,
like
a
hundred
bucks
now,
maybe
going
redundant
in
doing
a
raid
storage,
something
like
that.
D
D
C
Yeah
yeah
you
do
have
to
watch
out
with
the
solid
state
drives.
Is
you
want
to
remove
swap
space?
That's
why
it's
important
to
get
32
gigabytes
of
ram
or
as
much
ram
as
you
can,
because
you
don't
want
to
use
swap
space
on
a
solid-state
drive
because
that'll
cause
early
failure
because
you're
right
they
only.
They
only
have
so
many
rights
and
reads,
and
if
you
set
them
up
for
swap
space
you're
going
to
get
extremely
rapid
rights
and
reads
and
it'll
it'll
cause
your
solid
state
drive
to
fail
prematurely.
A
D
D
The
the
reason
I
say
that
is
because
a
lot
of
people
don't
don't
even
know
that,
and
they
don't
keep
that
in
mind
when
they're
getting
an
ssd.
They
just
think
this
is
it.
I
bought
my
really
fast
drive
and
that's
it.
Mvmes
are
also
a
an
alternative.
Those
tend
to
be
a
little
bit
more
expensive,
but
they
are
if
you
match
them
with
a
pci
3
or
even
a
pci
4.
You
have
incredible,
read,
write
speed.
D
I
think
those
can
go
up
to
20
gigabits,
so
they're
they're,
really
fast,
that's
pci4
and
again
not
everybody's
going
to
have
pci4
on
their
computer.
Only
I
think
asus
is
or
not
asus.
The
amd
is
the
only
one
making
motherboards
with
pci
for
express
right
now.
So.
C
Yeah,
so
I
encourage
people
like
so
what
aaron's
doing
and
what
I've
done
is.
Is
you
know,
you're
you're,
looking
at
about
400
bucks,
if
you
want
to
get
a
nice
desktop
with
32
gigs
of
ram
and
a
one
terabyte
ssd,
that
should
be
enough
to
run
your
own
cash
stack
and
that
way,
you're
like
totally
independent
as
a
developer.
C
In
terms
of
these
things,
and
then
that's
and
then
from
there
you
can,
you
can
expand
it,
like.
I
said,
with
usb
3.0
external
hard
drives,
you
know
whatever
whatever,
but
that
at
least
like
gets.
If
anybody
out
there
wants
to
develop,
you
know
bitcoin
cash,
apps
and
and
and
be
completely
independent
from
from
any
third
party.
That's
that's
what
you
can
do.
That's
the
that's!
The
price
tag
for
about
400
bucks.
C
Okay,
so
we
talked
about
bounties,
so
as
part
of
the
bounties,
I
slapped
together
an
app
real,
quick
called
ipfs
service
metrics,
and
actually
this
is
so
cool.
I
do
want
to
share
this.
So
if
you
go
to
explore.fullstack.cache,
this
is
the
explorer
for
the
pay
to
write
database
and
we're
going
to
be
adding.
I've
got
several
tasks
assigned
to
daniel
to
to
make
some
pretty
cool
improvements
to
this
explorer.
So
basically
you
bring
it
up
and
you
want
to
go
to
this
explorer
tab
on
the
left
and
pretty
soon
it'll.
C
Just
automatically
do
that,
you
won't
have
to
manually.
Do
that
and
every
20
seconds
it
will
refresh
this
list
this.
These
are
all
the
latest
database
entries
in
the
pay
to
write
database
and
the
most
of
them
will
be.
Let
me
see
if
I
can
make
this
bigger
for
the
screen
most
of
them
on
the
right
here.
Is
this
psf
metrics
app
that
I
have
running
so
once
an
hour?
C
It
records
the
database,
the
statistics
on
what's
on
the
the
other
nodes
in
the
mesh
network,
and
so,
if
you
click
on
the
transaction
link,
that'll
take
you
to
the
block
explorer,
which
is
the
transaction
where
that
was
the
proof
of
burn
that
burned
a
psf
token
to
allow
this
right
to
the
database
and
if
you
click
on
the
hash
link,
it'll
open
up
a
summary
of
the
data,
that's
in
the
database
and
usually
it's
json.
So
what
we're
going
to
be
doing?
C
One
of
the
other
improvements
we're
going
to
make
is
that
this
will
automatically
be
prettified
pretty
if
I'd
for
you-
and
I
don't
know-
if
I
can
do
it-
yeah,
I'm
not
gonna,
bother
doing
it
right
now.
But
if
you
put
this
in
or
actually
you
know
another
thing
that
you
can
do,
I
know
this
will
work
is
I
can
take
the
hat
so,
like
I
said
we're
going
to
make
some
improvements
here
in
the
next
couple
weeks,
hopefully
by
the
next
meeting,
where
this
isn't
so
painful.
C
C
So
here
is
the
node
in
singapore
and
yeah
technical
difficulties
and
and
then
there's
these
latency
scores
so
essentially
yeah.
It
looks,
looks
pretty
ugly
here,
but
essentially,
what
it's
doing
is
it's.
It's
measuring
the
latency
to
each
circuit
really
relay
that
it
can
find
on
the
database
and
then
it's
recording
that
data
once
an
hour
to
the
right
database,
and
so
this
this
is
just
a
very
basic
metrics,
and
this
is
how
we're
going
to
pay
out
the
the
bounties
for
running
these.
C
These
nodes
on
the
network
just
will
have
this
metrics
service
just
checking
out
the
relays,
and
so
the
con
the
the
requirement
for
the
bounty
is.
You
have
to
have
your
thing
up
for
a
month,
and
so
this
metrics
app
will
we'll
just
verify
that
and
record
it.
So,
at
the
end
of
each
month
someone
can
just
look
at
you,
know
the
entries
in
the
database
and
make
sure
that
yeah,
okay,
this
this
node,
looks
like
it
was
up
for
most
of
the
month.
C
I
think
the
requirement
is
like
25
days
out
of
the
month.
It
needs
to
be
up
and-
and
that's
that'll
be
that'll,
determine
the
the
bounty.
C
So
kind
of
fun,
you
know
baby
steps
towards
good
developer
tools.
That's
that's
what
we're
trying
to
achieve
here.
A
Well,
that's
cool!
It's
available
that
you
can
actually
go
back
and
query
that
does
one
question
on
the
pedorite
database.
Is
it?
Is
it
one
psf
token
or
is
it
like
point
one?
What
is
the
to
actually
right?
What
is
the
like
value?
What
is
the
cost
structure
to
write
to
it.
C
Yeah
right
now,
it's
0.01,
so
it's
1
100
of
a
psf
token,
which
the
psf
token
is
around
50
cents
right
now,
yeah
about
50.
I
think
yeah
yeah.
So
it
ends
up
coming
out
to
like
around
a
penny
depending
on.
C
If
you
do
it
directly,
you
can
get
it
a
little
cheaper
and
if
you
use
the
command
line,
while
it's
a
little
more
because
there's
a
little
donation
to
the
psf
they're
using
it
yeah
yeah,
so
that
that's
that's
how
you
write
it
and
then
the
pay
to
write
database
we've
got
three
or
four
instances
of
it
up
right
now,
but
I
anticipate
that
that
database
will
that
the
people
will
want
to
run
their
own
copies
of
the
database
because
it
gives
them
access.
C
C
In
fact,
it's
it's
right
here
and
the
agenda
is
a
token
swap
app,
and
so
this
is
based
on
finn.
Armani
swap
protocol,
which
is
a
trustless
atomic
protocol
for
trading
slp
tokens
and
there's
three
parts
to
it.
There's
the
signal
and
the
watch
and
the
pay.
That's
where
the
swap
comes
from
and
I've
the
signal
part
is
the
is
the
hardest
part
and
I've
got
that
completed
and,
in
fact,
since
I
still
have
that
tab
open,
I
can
hopefully
find
one
of
the
one
of
the
entries
from
my
tests.
C
Oh
yeah,
it
looks
like
it
looks
like
it
got
buried
but
anyways
the
so
the
the
idea
there
is
like
someone
who
has
a
token
that
they
want
to
sell
or
a
token
they
want
to
buy,
would
put
up,
would
create
an
offer
and
they'd
submit
that
offer
and
they
would
pay.
You
know
0.01.
They
would
burn
0.01
psf
tokens
in
order
to
add
that
offer
to
the
database
and
what
it
does
is.
C
It
describes
the
utxo
that
they
that
they
want
to
sell
and
so
part
of
the
app
also
is
like
it'll
it'll
move
your
the
tokens.
You
want
to
sell,
it'll
move
them
into
a
sec,
a
new
address
to
hold
them
while
they're
being
sold,
because
what
you're
actually
selling
is
utxo
and
and
then
it
creates
a
an
entry
in
the
database.
And
then
the
next
step
is
that
someone
who
wants
to
buy
or
sell
a
token
would
browse
all
the
entries
in
the
database.
C
And
so
there's
going
to
be
a
front-end
component
here
to
display
an
order
book
and
and
then
they
would
find
an
order.
They
want
to
buy
and
or
you
know,
buy
or
sell
and
take
the
other
side
of
an
offer
basically,
and
they
would
construct
a
partially
signed
transaction
with
their
with
their
other
half
of
the
transaction
and
and
then
submit
that
to
the
database.
C
I
mean
they
don't
they
won't
have
to
we're
going
to
offer
it
publicly.
But
if
you
want
to
do
it
privately
and
send
you
know
in
a
sense,
I
don't
if
we
offer
this
service,
I
don't
know
how
long
we'll
be
able
to
do
that
legally
like
right.
Now,
I'm
pretty
sure
that's
a
gray
area
because
we're
not
actually
custodying
anything
we're
just
you
know
it's
just
a
web
page.
C
Essentially
that
provides
public
access
to
public
data,
we're
not
doing
anything
that
could
be
considered
like
a
counterparty
to
a
trade
and
and
that's
the
beauty
of
this
protocol
is
as
far
as
I
can
tell,
and
then
this
is
what
has
been
did
a
lot
of
research
on
this.
C
A
A
I
wasn't
sure
how
he
had
actually
planned
on
everyone
actually
accessing,
because
when
I
first
read
the
protocol,
I
loved
it,
but
I
couldn't
figure
out
how
like
someone's,
going
to
index
everything
in
the
slp
and
put
them
somewhere,
so
that
people,
but
then
it
becomes
centralized.
So
this
removes
that.
C
Well,
not
really,
I
mean
the
way
he
was
doing
it
there's
nothing
wrong
with
the
way
he
was
doing
it.
It's
just
that
it
put
all
that
data
went
on
shane,
and
I
just
have
I
just
don't
like
that.
I
mean
really.
I
mean
that's
really
what
it
comes
down
to
it's,
a
matter
of
preference,
there's
really
no
right
or
wrong.
It
was
still,
it
was
still
decentralized
and
it
was
still
end
and
encrypted.
C
Just
like
ours
are
we're
really
just
moving
the
data
off
the
chain
and
and
then
he
was
going
to
use
a
piece
of
software
called
bitdb,
which
is
originally
what
slp
db
was
based
off
of,
and
it's
an
incredibly
inefficient
indexer
and
it,
but
it
you
know
it
could
be
used
for
that
sort
of
thing.
There's
nothing
wrong
with
doing
it
that
way,
other
than
you're
going
to
run
into
all
of
the
scaling
issues
like
slpdb
has
and
yeah
yeah.
C
I
just
think
that
this
is
a
more
elegant
solution,
plus
this
sort
of
gave
us
this.
I
I
see
the
the
pay
to
write
database
as
being
the
real
money
maker
for
this
dow.
In
terms
of
funding
development,
it's
basically
at
scale,
it
will
fund
everything
else
right
and
the
way
we're
doing
it.
Everything
is
decentralized,
everything
is
end-to-end
encrypted
and
private,
and
but
but
this
pay
to
write
database
is
sort
of
like
our
our
like
we
have.
C
If,
if
people
burn
tokens
to
interact
with
the
database,
then
that
means
that
our
organization
has
the
income
coming
in
to
pay
for
ongoing
development,
so
it
creates
a
symbiotic
relationship
between
the
users
and
the
developers
and
that's
what
a
lot
of
these
open
source
projects
lack,
and
so
this
that's.
Why
I'm
so
focused
on
this
right
now,
it's
great.
C
Okay
last
thing
on
the
agenda:
daniel
added
this
video
page
to
the
psf
website.
I
think
I
have
it
yeah
right
here.
So
it's
at
psfoundation.cache
video
and
it's
for
those
who
haven't
noticed
on
our
main
web
page.
C
C
Let
me
see
yeah,
there's
horizontal
scrolling
and
then
you
can
click
on
an
info
with
a
little
blurb
about
it
and
then
click
on
the
watch
button
to
actually
open
it,
and
we
need
to
fix
that
permissions
actually,
but
any
of
these
other
ones.
You
can
click
on,
watch
and
it'll
open
it,
and
then
you
can
also
go,
go
to
youtube
and
watch
it.
If
you
don't
want
to
watch
it
in
the
modal
there.
C
This
video
page
is
something
I've
been
wanting
to
do
for
a
while,
and
I
could
really
use
some
community
help
on
this.
The
way
I
had
him
do.
It
is
just
the
same
five
sections
repeated
over
and
over
again,
and
so
I'd
love
the
top
section
to
be
like
an
introduction,
a
really
high
level
stuff,
really
fun
entertaining
short
stuff
and
then
sort
of.
As
you
go
down
into
the
right,
it
should
get
more
difficult
and
more
technical,
and
so
I
was
thinking
like
the
top
level.
Might
just
be.
C
You
know,
governance
meetings
like
this
and
introduction
introductory,
or
maybe
the
top
levels,
just
really
short
fun
introductory
videos
and
then
the
next
one's
more
like
governance,
more
in-depth
governance,
stuff
and
then
maybe
like
the
next
row,
is
more
like
how
to
set
up
your
own
cache
stack
or
how
to
get
in
get
started
with
the
web
wallet
or
or
the
javascript.
So
just
like
break
these
up
into
sections
I'm.
This
is
really
pretty
rough
at
this
point,
and
so
I'm
open
to
ideas
and
I'm
going
to
keep
chipping
away
at
this
desire
of
time.
C
But
this
would
be
a
great
way
for
community
developers
to
participate
or
non-developers
to
participate
and-
and
we
definitely,
we
have
the
slush
fund
to
pay
to
reward
people
who
who
do
this
sort
of
work
so
I'll,
throw
that
out
there
to
the
community
awesome.
C
So
that's
that's
pretty
nice
yeah.
We
definitely
we've
got
a
lot
of
video
content
and
but
we're
not
leveraging
it
properly
because
it's
not
organized
properly.
So
I'm
hoping
this
video
will
will
solve
that
problem.
E
Is
it
more
easy,
for
example,
to
use
this
dedicated
services
like
odc
or
what
was
the
name?
It's
also
blockchain
based
it's
decentralized,
but
they
have
all
video
related
stuff
already
in
place
like
voting
and
stuff
like
this
one.
So
we
would
be
easier
just
to
have
a
channel
there
and
put
all
the
content
there.
C
C
D
I
need
to
mirror
some
of
these
things,
but
I
I
don't
know
if
there's
a
setting
where
I
can't
rip
stuff
off
of
youtube
or
not
that
I
need
to
go
in
and
look
at
the
other
problem
with
odyssey.
Is
they
have
a
subscriber
limit
to
where
you
need
to
have
a
certain
amount
of
subscribers
in
order
to
access
the
functions
of
odyssey?
D
So
once
you
reach
a
certain
amount
of
subscribers,
you
don't
even
need
to
mirror
upload
to
another
channel.
What
it
will
do
is
it'll
automatically
upload
that
for
you,
like
back
it
up
to
odyssey,
but
unfortunately,
since
I
started
the
psf
channel
and
we
have
like
20
subscribers
and
there's
not
enough
subscribers
on
youtube,
it
says
we're
not
going
to
do
that
and
you
can't
live
stream
to
odyssey.
So,
while
that's
a
great
functionality
and
I'd
love
to
see
us
use
it,
we
need
a
higher
subscriber
count
to
access
some
of
those
features.
C
I
am
backing
up
all
of
our
videos
onto
well.
I
have
a
raid
one
array
and
so
like,
for
instance,
this
video,
because
we're
live
streaming,
it's
going
directly
to
youtube,
we're
not
gonna,
have
a
local
recording
of
it,
and
so
I've
been
using
a
node.js
app
to
download
content
from
youtube,
and
then
I
store
the
videos
on
my
raid10ray
because
just
in
general,
what
you
raised
stoyan
is
a
good
point.
Is
that
yeah
we
need.
C
We
need
to
make
sure
that
we're
not
just
only
on
youtube,
because
the
day
will
come
when
they
will
de-platform
us
for
being
into
the
in
the
crypto
space
and
and
so
I've.
C
For
some
reason,
rumble
has
been
getting
a
lot
of
traction
and
I
need
to
check
that
place
out,
but
I'm
definitely
a
big
fan
of
odyssey,
I'm
actually
pretty
good
friends
with
jeremy
kaufman,
the
ceo
from
back
in
the
day
when
he
just
started
library
and
so
a
big
fan
of
what
they're
doing
and
definitely
want
to
get
our
content
be
more
proactive
about
getting
our
content
up
there.
I'm
hoping
that,
like
as
our
community
grows,
we'll
have.
C
And
yeah
that
concludes
the
the
agenda.
Is
there
any
sort
of
newsworthy
items
caught
your
guys's
attention
this
week
that
you
want
to
check
out
about.
E
If
he's
gonna
want
the
floor,
for
that,
it'd
be
great
this
week,
topic
nfcs
and
education,
so
I
hope
you
like
it.
C
E
Bookmark
this
site,
it's
another
gem
in
the
crown.
This
thing
is
like
a
visual
editor
where
you
can
build
the
crypto
related
everything
it's
a
ready
box.
So
let
me
show
you,
for
example,
we
will
be
build
a
small
wallet.
I
already
have
it
so
I
I
will
just
remove
this
thing.
E
E
E
E
E
So,
for
example,
you
can
have
like
a
balance
checker,
so
you
have
a
balance
block
and
the
great
stuff
is
that
so
you
will
get
the
address
from
here.
E
E
B
E
See
you
have
qr
codes
already,
so
this
is
like
educational
tool.
I
think,
is
priceless.
You
can
yeah
you
can
they.
I
think
they
even
have
a
blockchain
like
see
the
components
here
like
burner
wallet
like
a
component
and
stuff
like
this
one
rc
20
token,
so
you
can
educate
yourself
here.
So
easy,
just
put
the
ready
blocks,
you
combine
them.
You
demonstrate
your
like
point.
B
C
A
C
A
C
That
might
be
one
of
the
next
things
I
try
and
do
I
was.
I
was
poking
around
their
website
and
they
it's
just
a
fold
node.
It
looks
like
a
full
node.
You
have
to
have
a
bch
full
node
running,
which
I
do,
and
so
you
sound
like
you
can
just
get
one
of
these
smart
bch
full
nodes
hook
it
up
to
the
bch,
full
node
and
then
there's
probably
a
syncing
process
involved
and
and
then
you
can
use
that
and
connect
to
it
directly.
E
This
smart
bch
tested
it's
like
great
environment
like
it's
so
cheap
and
fast,
and
the
the
things
are
hard
to
see
they're
compatible
with
the
other
evm
chains.
So
when
you
develop
something
here
for
chip
you
can,
after
this
using
on
whatever
chain,
you
want
it's
like
great
development
environments.
So,
even
if
you.
B
A
A
E
Okay,
so
next
next
interesting
stuff,
so
this
smart,
the
scaffold
it
it's
growing
on
me
like
I
have
this
repository,
zh
scaffold,
eat
and
the
original
one
have
already
200
like
clones
branches.
But
I
already
have
a
lot
of
mine
see.
This
is
only
mine
and
the
the
the
main
one.
Is
this
smart
bch?
E
If
you
want
to
play
with
these
components
and
everything
you
just
clone
this
one
and
start
from
there,
it's
ported
to
smart
vch.
So
the
this
configuration
everything,
the
not
working
components
are
removed.
So
it's
pretty
much
plug
and
play
you
just
download
it
and
start
working
with
it,
and
I
already
created
several
like
this.
One
is
pretty
general
one,
but
if
you
want
to
start
for
example,
you
want
token
you
may
start
with
this
one
or
for
the
nfts.
E
So
first,
let's
see
this
simple
decks,
because
this
one
is
good.
I
think
it's
very
again,
educational,
so
the
usual
process.
Is
you
start
your
chain?
You
start
your
local
chain
because
going
every
time
through
this
metamax
or
something
it's
time
consuming,
you
need
to
approve
every
transaction
or
everything,
but
starting
you
own.
One
is
great.
E
After
this
you
usually
deploy
some
contract
so
deploy,
and
this
does
the
help
see
the
regular
solidity
contracts.
Maybe
I
will
show
them
after
this,
but
it's
fast,
it's
local
network
so
boom
everything
is
there
and
every
of
this
web
tree
application.
It
have
back
end,
which
is
the
blockchain,
and
you
need
maybe
some
front
end
because
doing
everything
from
the
command
line
is
pretty
like
difficult.
E
E
E
So
this
is
the
curve
that
will
be
the
prices
for
this
stuff.
Just.
B
E
B
B
E
C
Yeah,
this
is
exactly
how
the
token
liquidity
app
I
mean
it
was.
It
was
bancor.
Their
white
paper
was
the
first
as
far
as
I
know,
they're
the
first
one
to
introduce
this
concept,
and-
and
that's
that's
what
the
token
liquidity
app
is
based
off
of.
E
Yes,
but
yeah,
this
is
pretty
visual.
I
think
yeah
great
stuff
is
it's
the
contract.
So
everything
of
this
is
done
inside
this
dex
contract,
the
price
and
conversions
everything.
So
it's
unstoppable.
It's
a
dex,
a
simple
decks.
For
one
token,
it's
cozy
what
the
unisop
is
doing,
but
just
for
one
pair
bch.
D
E
C
So,
in
that
first
tab,
when
you
I
think
it
was,
was
the
first
command
you
ran,
and
you
said
it
it
needed
to
it
needed
to
sync.
So
is
that
is
that
running
is?
Are
you
connected
to
the
test
net?
Are
you
running
your
own
local.
E
Network,
no,
it's
a
closed
local
network,
but
okay,
you,
you
can
deploy
this
contract
like
this
deploy
command.
I
showed
previous
tweak.
It
just
have
a
parameter.
You
can
deploy
this
contract
to
test
it
and
after
this
you
can
connect
here
with
your
metamask
and
start
working
with
testnet
without
any
changes.
Just
with
this
one,
you
get
this
burner
wallet
for
free,
so
you
don't
need
any
time
to
go
through
the
metamask.
You
have
this
full
featured
wallet
here.
E
E
Was
first
very
fancy
stuff,
the
simple
decks
and
the
other
one
is
nft
everybody
like
nft,
so
this
one
I
already
deployed
even
on
the
test
net.
It's
test,
nfts,
search,
dot,
sh
and
I
think
it's
the
best
nft
market
in
the
bch
universe.
E
Yeah,
it's
hard
to
see
just
a
second,
because
all
of
the
pictures
are
on
the
ipfs,
so
it's
take
some
time
to
load
them,
but
pretty
much.
E
It's
here
is
the
market
and
inside
your
your
own,
like
nfts,
you
can
cl,
you
can
make
something
for
sale,
just
put
a
price
here
on
it
and
it
will
go
to
the
to
the
assets
area
here
for
selling
or
you
can.
E
E
E
C
E
E
If
you
see
the
you
can
see
this
debug
tab,
all
of
these
are
functions
so,
for
example,
you
can.
Where
is
this
thing?
Just
let
me
found
it.
So
here
is
the
canceling.
E
The
sale-
and
here
is
where
this
thing
here
you
can
sell
something
just
put
here,
the
id
of
your
nft
and
the
price,
and
you
can
buy
something
or
something.
So
everything
is
just
a
smart
contract.
You
can
send
this
calls
from
everything
from
every.
B
E
So
all
of
these
funk
are
just
functions
here.
Cell
item
cancel
item
buy
item.
You
can
send
this
from
remix
or
let
me
make
it
bigger,
so
you
don't
need
in
fact
this
ui
you
can
have
decentralized
market.
Everybody
with
access
to
the
blockchain.
Just
sent
rpc
calls
and
he
can
create
nfts
wow,
sell
them,
buy
them
mean
them.
E
Beginning,
yes,
because
how
to
see
they're
already,
providing
already
this
this
they
have.
This
is
innumerable.
It
will
give
you
any
next
nft
number.
It
will
be
like
how
to
increment
in
the
databases,
and
you
can
burn
them
dishonorable
you
can
have
an
owner
and
so
pretty
much
open
zeppelin
give
you
like
ready,
like
template
to
start
with,
but
you
still
need
to
to
this
sale
item
buy
item
in
cancel.
They
are
not
part
of
the
of
this
irc721
it's.
They
are
not
part
of
this.
E
E
So
all
of
these
contracts,
when
you
do
something
they're
meeting
action,
this
signal,
so
your
application.
B
C
And
then
so
that's
a
contract
making
this
cell
so
like
there's
no
way
yeah.
There's
there's
no
way
for
someone
to
like
spoof
spoof
one
of
those
signals,
because
it's
it's
all
based
on.
I
imagine
it's
all
based
on
private
keys
and
signs.
E
C
I
mean
I'm
glad
that
we
can
have
both
like
this
is
my
stance.
It's
like
this
is.
This
is
a
little
too
crazy
for
me
like
like,
but
but
the
fact
that
there's
all
this
tooling
so
like
you,
don't
have
to
reinvent
the
wheel.
You
can
just
you
know
not
roll
your
own
crypto,
that's
great,
but
yeah.
I'm
I'd
I'd
love
to
see
a
world
where
you
where
you
can
do
either
or
you
know
well
guys.
I
gotta
wrap
this
up
in
the
next
ten
ish
minutes.
I
gotta
catch
a
ferry.
B
Yes,
okay,
this.
E
B
C
Those
were
great,
that's
that's!
Incredibly.
I
love,
I
mean
honestly
stewie.
You
just
blew
my
mind
because,
like
you
just
showed
how
to
set
up
an
online
store,
an
uncensorable
online
store,
that's
yeah!
That's
pretty
incredible!
I
think
you
know
the
what
I,
what
I
think
is
going
to
happen
is
everything's
going
to
be
tokenized,
which
I
know
people
have
been
saying
that
for
years,
but
I
can
finally
see
how
it's
like,
like.
Let's
say
you
want
to,
I
don't
know,
buy,
buy
something
on
amazon
like
a
video
game.
C
Well,
if
that's
represented
as
a
token
then
like
that
token
can
be
bought
and
sold
and
have
this
whole
like
life
of
its
own
before
it
eventually
ends
up
in
the
hands
of
the
person
who
then
redeems
that
token,
for
the
actual
video
game
on
amazon.com,
and
so
like
everything,
literally
everything
can
have
a
secondary
market
yeah,
a
very
fluid.
D
And-
and
I've
talked
about
this
with
other
people,
money
was
brought
in
as
a
means
of
exchange
for
intangible
goods
right.
So
how
do
you
trade
trade,
a
bushel
of
apples
to
a
guy
who
builds
a
house?
Well,
you
have
an
immediate
intermediary,
which
is
money,
but
now
we
can
tokenize
that
builders
skills
and
we
can
tokenize
the
apples
and
they
can
trade
them
directly,
which
is
pretty
incredible
to
have
this
idea
that
this
could
be.
We
could
essentially
be
going
back
to
a
barter
system,
but
in
another
way,
right.
A
Yeah,
in
a
way
that's
actually
efficient,
rather
than
completely
only
two-party,
you
know
works
at
a
time
right.
D
That's
amazing
yeah.
I
I
do
see
that
this
is
kind
of
the
future
of
where
things
are
headed
as
far
as
economies
function
and
think
about
what
that
does
for
global
trade.
You
know
now,
if
you're
trading,
a
bunch
of
soybeans
from
america
to
say,
brazil,
you
don't
have
to
transfer
over
currencies
or
anything
like
that.
You
tokenize
the
soybeans
and
then
you
trade,
with
based
on
tokenization
of
another
product
and.
D
Be
with
brazil,
maybe
you're
trading,
your
brazil
is
getting
some
tokens
from.
You
know,
japan,
something
we
want
from
japan
and
then
they're
trading,
the
japan
tokens
for
maybe
electronics
to
the
united
states.
You
know.
C
Yeah,
well,
I'm
thinking
also
just
on
a
much
smaller
scale
of
local
communities
like
here
on
on
this
little
remote
island
that
I
live
on.
I
want
to
get
a
local
currency
going
so
that
like
because
there's
the
people
who
are
here
during
it's
a
it's-
it's
booming
over
here
during
the
summer,
but
but
there's
almost
no
economic
activity
during
the
winter
when
all
the
tourists
leave
and
but
there's
there
are
people
here
who
would
work
if
they
could
get
paid
and
so
by
having
our
own
local
currency.
C
The
you
know
the
local
excavator
operator
can
trade
services
with
the
local
artists
who
you
know,
and
we
have
our
own
local,
local
money
and
economy
just
just
for
the
locals
and
yeah,
but
then,
but
then
that
that
well,
if
we
can
get
like
half
a
dozen
people
sort
of
just
trading
services,
then
then
then
you
know
that
eventually
it's
very
easy
to
build
that
up
and
like
okay.
C
Well
now
the
person
who
runs
the
store
accepts
them
for
groceries,
and
you
know
because
she
needs
excavation
work
done
and
you
know
now
you
have
like
a
real
like
you
can
actually
buy
food
with
this
local
currency.
D
Think
about
what
it
does
for,
like
farmers,
co-ops
right.
Typically
right
now
you
enter
into
a
farmer's
co-op.
You
pay
x
amount
of
dollars,
you're
in
the
co-op.
You
get
a
yield
on
the
food,
but
this
does
create
a
secondary
market
where
you
say
all
right.
I
bought
into
this
farmer's
co-op.
I
have
these
farmers
co-op
tokens.
I
can
then
sell
them.
Should
I
not
need
this
food
to
somebody
who
does
and
everybody
benefits
and
it
becomes
a
form
of
crop
insurance
for
a
lot
of
these
companies
too.
D
Like
a
lot
of
farmers
like
say
you
got
it,
you
could
tokenize
your
cow
that
you're
going
to
get
meat
from,
and
you
can
sell
that
off
to
people,
and
then
people
can
redeem
the
tokens
for
the
actual
meat
once
it's
gone
to
slaughter
right
and
in
the
meantime
I
could
say
you
know
what
I
bought
a
cow.
Six
months
ago
we
haven't
gone
through
it,
I
scheduled
by
another
cow.
I
don't
need
it.
I
don't
have
any
place
to
put
this
meat
which
becomes
a
problem
for
some
people
because
they
just
don't
end.
B
D
C
Component
in
that
example,
is
the
ability
to
the
the
information
the
data
around
like.
I
have
this
thing
that
I
want
to
sell,
and
I
need
other
people
to
see
that
information
and
that's
that's
where
I
think
the
pay
to
write
database
could
play
a
big
role
is
like
this.
This
idea
behind,
like
an
unsensible
craigslist,
we
need
in
some
equivalent
to
a
classified
ad.
You
know
we
need
the
token
component,
but
we
also
need
some
equivalent
to
a
classified
ad
right.
D
C
C
Yeah
stoian,
thank
you
for
those
gems
keep
them
coming.
I
love
I
love.
I
love
that,
like
you're,
that
you're
you're
you're
bringing
this
this,
this
evm
knowledge
to
us,
because,
because
that's
just
I
I
otherwise
we
wouldn't
have
it
it's
great,
okay,
guys
well,
yeah,
keep
working
and
I'll
see
you
online
and
yeah.
C
They're
expect
more
videos
to
on
those,
though,
for
those
bounties
for
the
circuit
relays
and
the
in
the
setting
up
the
cash
stack,
and
if
you
guys
want
to
push,
I
probably
won't
get
the
videos
out
in
time
aaron
for
for
when
you
need
them,
so
I
would
say
either
if
you
don't
have
time
or
go
ahead
and
try
and
struggle
through
it
and
ping
me
on
telegram.
If
you
have
questions
I'm,
you
know,
I'm
happy
to
coach
you
through
it
yeah.