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From YouTube: W41 0mega WG: TE Consilience Library Curation
Description
The 0mega Working Group examines the ethos of and ethics in token engineering as well as the shared vision and diversity of its communities.
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A
B
So,
regarding
stewart's
call
like
actually,
we
had
the
kind
of
a
warning
from
zepty
and
I
did
a
cool
meme
about
it
check
it
out
on
the
meme
channel,
like
he
said,
our
library
and
I
explained
like
we
are
still
discovering
what
will
be
the.
C
B
We
are
spending
our
money
in
omega,
so
it's
kind
of
a
research
thing,
so
we
are
experimenting,
that's
why.
But
I
just
wanted
to
say
that
there
was
some
discontent
about
it
like
this
like
they
were,
they
were
curious.
You
got
the
funds,
but
why
are
you
are
not
spending
it?
So
I
just
want
to
like
update
this
and
other
than
that.
I
think
there's
no
specific
questions
and
updates
about
omega
from
stewards.
B
I
I
just
texted
them
like
now:
steward
school
are
on
tuesday,
so
I
know
today
you
asked
me
so.
A
A
Yeah
the
token
drink,
confidence
library,
we
got
the
funds
and
I
love
the
saying
it's
from
you
know:
street
smarts
startups
wisdom.
You
know
as
long
as
soon
as
you
take
other
people's
money.
Their
business
model
becomes
your
business
model
just
to
say,
you
know
we
we
have
to
get
into
into
delivery
mode.
A
That
that
I
mean,
I
think
many
people-
or
I
hope,
like
all
of
you-
knew
as
well,
and
what
I
see
is
that
we
have
many
initiatives
going
on
or
many
things
that
we
would
love
to
research
and
everything,
but
not
enough
time
on
everyone's
energy
budget.
If
you
will
so,
I
think
it
will
come
down
to
us
mostly
focusing
on
working
on
the
token
during
consumers,
library
finishing
this
first
prototype
that
we
have
got
funds
for
and
then
also
make
the
progress
visible.
A
So
that's
one
thing
progress
is
happening,
but
making
it
visible
is
always
the
issue,
especially
on
the
creative
side.
Like
that,
we
need
to
get
some
of
the
work.
I
mean
some
documentation
of
the
work
that
has
been
happening
with
the
nft
self
discovery,
games
and
all
the
ideas.
So
today
I
would
really
like
to
get
that
down
on
our
board
so
that
next
time
matt
can
just
quickly
show
also
what
has
been
the
progress.
A
D
I
think
mert's
merch
point.
I
would
say
that
there
wasn't
discontent.
There
was
concern,
but
not
in
a
bad
way.
It
was
just
curious
concern
about
why
we
use
federal
refunds
and
I
I
think
it
that's
a
good
segue
into
one
of
the
first
points
on
the
agenda,
which
is
the
crin
back
the
current
version
of
the
collective
curation
template.
I
have
a
couple
of
people
that
have
expressed
interest
in
curating
content
for
a
library
synthesizing
a
book
or.
D
Paper
and
updating
it
and
uploading
it
into
a
library,
but
I'm
still-
and
this
might
be
on
my
part,
but
I
just
feel
like
I
don't
know
like
how
to
go
on
about
it
like
it's
like.
What's
the
the
template,
what
template
I
share
with
them?
D
I
how
if
I
frame
the
work
that
they
will
be
doing
and
also
like
the
the
bounty
or
the
incentive
that
they
are
expected
to
to
receive
and
what
are
like
the
milestones
or
the
requirements
that
that
we
ought
to
ask
in
exchange
for
for
for
that
type
of
content.
D
That's
one
thing,
and
we
can
we
can
talk
about
that.
I
I
know
there's
a
link
there
and
I've
seen
that
link
before,
because
I've
already
started
would.
A
You
would
you
like
to
share
at
the
screen
and,
if
you're
in
the
omega
agenda,
maybe
also
just
go
into
into
that
sure.
A
D
The
browser
alone,
but
here
it
is-
and
the
first
point
has
a
link
to
the
collective
curation
template,
which
is
what
we
have
going
on.
I
know
I've
I've
gone
through
this
with
nick
and
with
andrea
as
well,
but
yeah.
I
just
wanted
like
more
clarity
on
this.
I
feel
like
it's.
It's
it's
an
important
topic
and
we
ought
to
yeah.
A
Let's
go,
let's
go
through
this,
and
some
of
the
people
have
shared
it
basically
and
also
there's
some
feedback
for
sure,
I'm
also
getting
into
the
collective
curation
template.
So,
as
you
know,
when
we
started
it
was
like,
let's
have
people
curate,
but
the
whole
point
of
the
library
or
one
point.
One
important
point
of
library
is
that
it
is
trans-disciplinary
right.
So
we
wanted-
and
maybe
that's
a
big
of,
maybe
that's
a
bit
of
a
hurdle,
but
it
should
be
two
people,
hence
collective
curation.
A
A
I
see
that
issue
with
people
who
have
a
lot
on
their
plates,
like
I
reached
out
to
zargham
sherman,
trent
and
simon,
and
I
think
getting
them
to
to
work
on
this
together
is
going
to
be
hard,
but
getting
you
know
getting
any
curation
from
any
one
of
them,
because
they're
literally
the
token
engineering
founding
minds
would
be
great
right.
So
maybe
we
can
loosen
that
a
bit
up
and
that's
how
I
see
it.
D
A
D
Yeah,
I
think,
if,
if
we
make
it
easy
enough
for
them
to
be
engaged,
given
that
they
are
so
in
demand
because,
like
you
mentioned
they're
pioneers,
I
think
that
that
would
be
like
a
good
model
to
use
other
people
that
yeah
they're
like
like
we're
all
pretty
busy
with
our
schedules
and
whatnot.
But
I
think
starting
with
them
like
making
it
just
maybe
just
like
a
pdf
was
like
a
diagram
or
like
just
a
couple
points
of
like
like
go
through
here.
A
Yeah,
that's
exactly
like
one,
two,
three,
four
five:
these
are
the
points
that,
but
also
I
mean
you
know
you
reach
out
to
people
and
you
actually
explain
it
to
them,
and
especially
with
with
these
first
few
people
I
just
realized.
Also
it
would
be
actually
great
to
have
video
with
them.
A
So
maybe
that's
going
to
be
something
else
I'll
be
trying
out.
I
don't
know.
I
would
like
to
hear
from
others
who
shared
this
template
and
what
was
the
feedback
like
what
prevents
people
from
starting
and
if
you,
if
you
move
further,
I
think
also
it
is
just
important
that
we
first
get
the
initial
content.
That
is
transdisciplinary,
meaning
really.
A
This
is
something
that
people
picked
up
from
one
domain,
but
it's
it's
a
piece
that
got
them
connected
or
that
in
itself
is
actually
you
know
reaching
out
to
many
of
the
other
other
fields
like
something
that
is
in
in
philosophy,
law,
ethics,
actually
also
on
the
computational
side
or
you
know,
cybernetics
is
typically
operations,
research,
management,
science,
etc.
A
So
if
you
know,
if
you
I
jump
down
to
consilient
space
for
curation,
that
is
basically
the
frame
that
we
have.
E
A
You
have
yeah
no,
no
further
down
this
the
console
space
for
curation.
It
was,
I
think,
david
one
of
the
newcomers
actually
who
provided
this
and
basically
it
helps,
and
there
is
also
an
example
underneath
that
he
also
provided
basically
to
help
with
the
transdisciplinarity
aspect
that
you
really
say.
Okay,
this
is
something
I
that
helped
me
to
make
sense
of.
You
know,
or
I
had
an
aha
moment
reading
this,
and
this
is
how
I
see
it
applies
to
token
engineering,
and
this
is
from
the
domain.
A
Let's
say
of
management
science,
but
it
relates
to
philosophy,
ethics,
political
science
and
psychology
as
well.
So
this
is
basically
the
matrix
where
you
say:
okay,
mainly,
it
comes
from
this
domain,
but
it
also
relates
to
the
others.
So
this
matrix
was
really
really
cool,
and
that
is,
I
think,
one
main
way
to
show
the
transdisciplinarity
of
the
creation.
A
So,
just
just
in
case
and
again
like
from
the
example,
I
think
one
important
part
is,
you
could
have
a
typical
abstract
right,
but
the
more
important
part
is
also
your
anecdotal
curation
that
you
really
share
why
this
piece
was
actually
interesting
or
how,
when
you
encountered
it
in
your
journey
to
token
engineering,
these
anecdotes
or
this
anecdotal
annotation
will
make
the
part
where
it
is
about
connections,
making
connections
quite
different
and
something
that
you
don't
have
in
in
other
libraries.
I
guess.
D
Okay,
yeah!
That's
that's
clear
for
me:
thanks
thanks
I'll
relay
that
information
to
the
people
who
express
interest
and
and
I'll
apply
it
to
myself
as
I'm,
creating
something
as
well.
A
Since
you
know
we
we're
in
the
space
where
it's
a
lot
about
self
realization
self
knowledge.
You
know
as
a
token
injury
am
I
legitimate
to
yeah.
Do
I
know
what
I'm
doing
when
we're
incented
designing
incentives
for
people
for
for
infrastructures
that
are
going
to
be
utility
infrastructures
of
the
digitalizing
society
of
yeah
of
our
era
right?
A
So
that
is
definitely
something
I
would
love
for
us
to
to
get
started.
We
can
have
a
channel
in
the
omega
and
really
share
our
curations.
D
D
Yeah,
I'm
just
looking
for
the
for
the
pdf
of
the
book
that
I'm
working
on
to
see,
given
that
it's
pairs,
maybe
someone-
maybe
maybe
murked
I've-
worked
with
her
before
and
we're
friends.
Maybe
we'd
be
interested,
but
I
know
they
could
be
busy
right
now.
So,
although
let
me
say
merc
that
the
future
of
token
engineering
supersedes
your
finals
in
terms
of
importance.
B
So,
let's
put
the
stuff
and
actually
we're
like.
I
don't
want
to
take
too
much
time,
but
where
it
comes,
I
am
taking
a
course
on
immigration
and
cds
since
the
course
was
so
bad
that
the
old
academic
discourse
is
around
same
literature,
they're
they're,
citing
same
people
all
the
time,
creating
a
difference
like
regime
of
truth
around
same
literature,
they're
just
doing
like
publishing
things
that
they
discuss
without
touching
any
other
like
literature.
B
Actually,
this
was
very
related
to
what
we
are
doing
in
omega
as
like
braver,
so
they
are
discussing
immigration,
not
touching
any
economic
stuff
like
identity
they're,
just
discussing
around
cities.
So
this
was
so
bad
that
actually
inspires
me
to
work
on
more
interdisciplinary
and
interesting
things.
So
it's
good
and
bad.
A
You
know
just
go
through
be
passerby
so,
but
but
no
it's
really
cool
and
great
trust.
The
evolutionary
game
of
mind
and
society.
D
I
I
I
kept
thinking
about
something
that
would
be
universally
valuable
for
for,
for
all
token
engineers
or
aspiring
token
people
who
want
to-
and
I
mean
since
we're
we're
it
might
be
because
I
romanticize
the
technology,
but
at
the
core.
It's
about
it's
about
trust
and
how
blocking
enables
to
to
trust
but
verify.
And
so
I
feel
that
the
emotion
of
trust
is
at
the
core.
What
we're
doing
and
understanding
it.
D
I
mean
if
I
go
a
little
bit
more
in
depth
and
into
the
actual
topics
that
are
discussed
it.
It
goes
into
the
paradox
of
trust,
some
clarifications
of
what
is
trust,
a
theory
of
trust,
and
then
it
goes
into
like,
like
samples
of
like
questionnaires
that
they
did.
I
know
that
we
did
sort
of
like
a
qualitative
investigation
or
research
as
well
in
omega,
so
it's
it's
sort
of
a
line
in
that,
and
then
it
did
several
experiments,
cross-cultural
and
it.
C
D
Their
findings
so
like
overall,
I
thought
it
was
just
a
great
a
great
you
know,
document
to
start
curating
and
and
yeah
I'll,
keep
working
on
this
and
I'll
replay.
The
findings
with
the
group.
A
Yeah,
so
I
will
just
ping
you
all
or
watch
out
for
the
omega
collective
curation
thread.
Okay,
let's,
let's
just
you
know,
have
this
a
copy
of
this
creation,
template
and
just
put
first
of
all
our
creations
and-
and
it's
really
mostly
about
okay.
How
does
it?
How
does
this
piece
relate?
How
do
you
relate
to
it
and,
through
your
perspective,
how
does
it
all
relates
to
token
entering?
A
How
did
it
help
you
to
make
sense-
and
you
know
this
conciliation
space,
meaning
what
other
disciplines
does
it
cover
right
so
and
kind
of
I
have
the
same
issue
manu
like
which
one
should
I
pick
and
I
even
almost
have
an
easier
time
to
say:
oh
letty,
you
know
you
should
have
or
or
manu
you
should.
You
know
really
create
this
for
the
library
and
then
I
can.
D
I've
I've
done
that
with
mert
I've
thrown
I've
thrown
like
five
books
at
him.
Like
hey
you.
Should
you
maybe
create
this?
Because
you
know
I
don't
have
enough
time
to
do
it.
You
might.
I'm
already
have
like
a
couple
like
three
books
that
I
won't
do,
but
but
yeah,
that's
that's
what
I
got.
G
D
Good
idea,
I
think
we
covered
the
two
points
we're
halfway
through.
I
don't
know
if
we're
ready
to
move
forward
or
if
some
other
people
would
like
to
comment
on
what
we've
discussed.
E
G
G
G
The
thing
is
like,
I'm
speaking
for
myself,
it's
like
a
little
bit
difficult
to
every
time,
I'm
on
discord
and
with
the
other
screens
open-
and
I
have
these
wonderful
links
that
appear
on
my
screen,
because
we
are
researching
all
these
things
and
then
going
to
the
gmail.
Doc
is
kind
of
difficult
for
me.
G
So
if
we
have
this
thread-
and
we
just
just
export
all
the
links
we
have
been
just
putting
out
in
there
it's
kind
of
like
we
have
all
our
creations
and
we
can
just
put
our
name
and
say:
okay,
if
we
are
part
of
tech
omega,
we
put
our
curator
name
and
take
omega,
and
this
could
be
like.
After
for
the
publications
meeting
in
the
whole
architectural
design,
which
is,
I
think,
the
most
needed
application
right
now
to
create,
because
we,
I
think
this
was
kind
of
a
chicken
and
a
problem.
G
We
wanted
to
do
the
crisis,
but
we
feel
like
we
needed
a
new
structure
to
do
those
and
to
to
have
all
the
initiatives
coming
together
right.
So
if
we
have
this
specific
thread,
we
just
export,
maybe
all
the
creases
that
are
a
little
bit
lost
inside
its
main
channel
omega
and
we
can
put
our
creator
names
and
take
omega
and
if
other
people
are
from
other
or
if
they
share
the
names
is
fantastic
too.
G
But
we
have
this
specific
name
curator
and
that's
our
collective
racing
that,
after
in
the
app,
is
going
to
come
up
in
a
mandala
and
it's
our
creation.
So
because
we
are
the
contributors,
we
come
up
with
this
whole
curation.
So
it's
like
our
map
in
many
sections
as
well.
So
I
see
this.
This
can
be
connected
with
the
creator
name
for
after
the
architecture
and
we
can
come
up
with
and
have
people
come
in
because
I
feel
like
the
example
is
get
ready.
G
We
don't
have
this,
it's
difficult
for
people
to
come
in
as
well
and
we
can
solve
yeah.
A
Exactly
exactly
just
having
these
examples
and
just
another
yeah,
I
think
we
should
have
these
threads.
Maybe
those
threats
could
be
also
for
others
to
to
come
in
and
join.
Let's
see
how
that
works
out,
so
one
insight
is
really.
We
are
trying
our
way.
What
is
the
most
motivational
least
resistance,
resistant
path
of
of
curation,
and
what
so
another
feedback
is
that
people
come
together
and
they're
sharing
this
content
in
in
the
realm
of
their
organizations.
A
For
example,
we
have
this
free
file,
boot
camp
coming
up
and
for
the
boot
camp,
we're
doing
reading
list
right
and
it's
a
collective.
A
couple
of
you
know:
ltf
the
unity
crypto
that
the
company
that
I'm
working
with
now
etc.
They
are
part
of
it.
So
I
believe
these
those
initiatives
that
are
going
on
that
are
also
in
token
entering
academy
once
I'm
sure
they
have
already
right.
A
So
I
think
that
that
is
definitely
a
win-win
for
for
for
those
communities,
and
those
will
be
also
the
the
richest
when
it
comes
to
curation
and
and
maybe
not
so
much
the
annotation
part.
That's
what
might
be
missing
that
people
in
those.
A
Like
if
it's
a
boot
camp
or
a
learning
track
or
a
course,
then
obviously
the
creation
has
been
done
with
that
outcome
in
mind
and
there
is
no
personal
anecdote
or
nothing
so
that
we
would
lose
that
quality
a
bit.
But
on
the
other
hand,
we
gain
basically
a
direction
towards
hey.
This
is
refi
boot
camp.
You
can
participate
there
or
this
is
token
engineering
academy.
You
can
participate
in
those
courses
and
these
are
the
curations
or
reading
lists.
If
you
will.
A
Right
so
it's
it's
going
to
be
a
bit
more
library
and
less
of
a
surprise,
but
it
is
useful
right.
So
I
think
definitely
let's
go
with
that
as
well,
because
it's
these
low
hanging
fruits,
then
what
else
like
who
else
had
experience
reaching
out
to
people
or
organizations.
B
Yeah,
like
I
talked
with
turbo
apps,
so
actually
what
you
mentioned
was
very
related
because
chevrolet's
team
asked
me.
So
what
are
we
gaining
it?
So
I
was
framed.
B
You
will
be
part
of
an
ecosystem
where
the
best
of
the
best
minds
are
part
of
so
it's
kind
of
a
reputable
thing.
I
try
to
mention
that
you
know
to
be
able
to
create
enough
as
a
seed
creator.
B
A
So,
and
the
other
thing
is,
I
think,
for
these
organizations-
also,
it's
just
cool
to
have
a
place
in
the
library
that
says
I
don't
know
block
science
curve
labs
some
startups
do
that,
actually
that
they
have
a
common
library
of
this
is
what
we
we
read
because
reading
the
same
books
also
helps
in
alignment
finding
alignment.
A
So
these
are
the
things
that
we
could.
Additionally,
if
you
will
incentivize
when
it
comes
to
token
or
monetary
incentives,
we
have
15k
and
there
is
a
budget
also
that
have
been
allocated
for
curations.
A
Yeah,
just
if,
if
that
is
something
that
is
needed,
let's
synchronize
on
that,
but
mostly
for
for
those
whom
I
reach
to.
I
don't
think
that
you
know
hundreds
or
1k
or
so
will
make
a
difference.
It's
really
what's
more
or
less
finding
the
time,
and
but
if
that
gives
visibility
to
their
organizations
or
the
to
the
topic
area
that
they
care
about.
That's
some
sort
of
an
intrinsic
motivation
that
there
is
that
we
can
reach
out
to
so.
A
Okay,
I
just
want
to
ask
one
more
time,
because
I
think
we
need
to
organize
the
work
or
synchronize
the
work
on
token
engineering
concerns
library.
Additionally,
it
won't
be
enough,
I
think,
to
sync
every
other
week
through
the
working
group
calls.
A
I
just
wanted
to
ask
again
like
who
are
the
ones
who
are
directly
contributing.
You
know.
Let's
say
you
have
spoken
steph
and
satori.
You
have
also
contributed
and
and
want
to
continue
to
contribute
right.
A
Yeah,
of
course,
would
that
be
okay?
If
we
meet
monday's
afternoon
afternoon
in
which
time
zone
I
think
saturday,
it's
your
mornings
and
our
evenings.
A
B
I'm
sorry
afternoon,
like
three
four
yeah:
it's
four
p.m.
City
city
so
yeah
like,
but
this
will
be
a
bit.
A
Okay,
so
let's,
let's
synchronize
around
that
after
this
call
and
if
we
can
have
one
or
two
things,
I
think
we're
we're
ready
to
to
wrap
it
up.
A
Okay,
good:
we
have
19
more
minutes
and.
D
D
Well,
I
hold
out
like
a
flower
session,
where
I
basically
just
just
studying
the
the
the
the
book
that
I
the
book
that
inspired
my
interest
in
the
capabilities
approach,
because
it's
it's
it's
an
economic
formulation
of
the
capabilities
approach
and
it's
a
way
that
ic
can
be
applied
into
token
engineering.
D
So
I
just
put
it
out
there.
I
mean
it's
it's
in
it's
in
the
afternoon
of
central
time
next
week's
time,
so
it's
very
very
late
for
europe,
europe
time
so
perhaps
lady
and
and
and
you
suddenly
won't
be
able
to
to
assist,
but
maybe
mertz
and
and
other
people
I
know
mert
nick,
maybe
andrea,
would
be
able
to
assist
if
they
want.
D
But
it's
pretty
much
just
a
space
where
I
devote
two
hours,
I
just
go
into
the
book
synthesizing
it
and
just
just
seeing
how
I
can
take
that
and
apply
it
into
tokenized
ecosystems.
So
I
just
wanted
to
it's
pretty
much
just
a
notice
or
or
something
that
I
wanted
to
share
with
everyone
that
this
friday
will
be
happening
as
well
I'll
be
putting
it
in
the
calendar.
D
A
It
yeah,
but
but
are
you
also
sharing
some
research,
brief
or
insights
that
you
have
from
session
to
session?
That
would
be
also
super
helpful.
A
D
Idea
is,
is
that
I
I
do
the
the
I
hold
the
research
session
on
fridays
and
I
do
the
fight
links
on
like
just
briefly.
Maybe
five
minutes.
I
don't
want
to
take
too
much
of
the
call.
I
know
there's
a
lot
of
things
are
played,
but
the
idea
is
to
have
another
call
where
we
work
on
on
on
this
new
initiative
with
this
approach
and
then
what
we
find
for
one
time.
I
just
do
a
briefing
here
on
the
call
that
that's
pretty
much
it.
C
A
Missed
or
wasn't
there
yet
so
manu
did
brought
this
capabilities
approach
pretty
early
on
when
we
had
the
token
engineering
ethics
anti-ethical
principles
that
emerged
from
our
first
focus
group.
A
One
of
the
ethical
principles
is
enable
informed
participation
and
there
basically
manu
brought
this
capabilities
approaches
had
also
a
presentation
like
mart
did,
and
it
was
really
quite
interesting
and
appealing
that
we
said
we
definitely
should
go
into
that.
A
I'm
super
interested
as
well
as
much
as
I
can
so
having
these
updates
and
the
working
group
calls
would
be
great.
I
know
it
might
not
be
every
week
an
update,
but
also
we
can
have
every
other
week.
A
We
can
have
updates
on
the
token
engineering
ethics
participatory
research,
then
we
could
also
go
deeper
into
your
insides
manu
if
yeah,
if
there
are
more
and
that's
coming
up
there,
but
it
would
be
great
to
connect
this
to
token
entering
ethics
at
the
end
and
also
at
some
point
really
have
you
know,
share
with
the
wider
community
about
the
insights,
as
you
say,
and
if
you
need
again
like
definitely
have
a
thread
and
definitely
share
your
insights
or
current
questions.
A
Also
during
after
the
sessions
that
you
have
so
that
other
people
might
not
be
able
to
join
or
not
every
time
that
they
have
a
place
to
go
and
pick
up
the
insights
and
also
join
the
discussions
that
I'm
sure
will
be
great
and
will
be
coming
up.
A
A
That
good,
so
yes,
okay,
perfect
and
just
one
more
update
I
had
mentioned
tomorrow,
but
we
will
get
it
then
next
week
or
do
it
in
parallel.
A
A
Those
four
that
we
have
a
few
insights
there
and
also
points
to
this
current
research
or
the
already
current
research
that
we're
having
and
point
to
the
potential
practice
sessions
that
we
can
already
have
yeah.
That's
another
direction
manu.
If
you
see
that
you
could
come
up
with
it's
hard
to
say
best
practice,
but
emerging
practices
or
anything
that
is
really
practically
helpful.
A
That's
the
goal
from
this
capabilities
approach
that
will,
you
know,
put
more
behind
this
token
entering
ethical
principle
of
informed
participation.
The
you
know
that
yeah
yeah.
D
The
basic
idea
that
I
have
right
now
is,
since
it
deals
with
trying
to
come
up
with
the
the
value
of
freedom
in
terms
of
the
the
value
of
freedom
in
terms
of
what
you
want
to
pursue
and
and
who
you
want
to
become
so
sort
of
like
the
tools
that
you
have
available
at
your
disposal
and,
like,
I
guess,
that's
very
related
to
public
goods
in
terms
of
imagine,
someone
that
doesn't
have
like
doesn't
have
a
bike
and
needs
to
walk
to
the
school
like
four
hours
every
day.
D
All
of
a
sudden,
if
you
give
that
person
a
bike
now,
it's
just
like
a
20
minute
like
a
30
minute
ride
to
school,
and
so
you
say
that
person
3.5
hours
and
that's
something,
that's
that
you
can
graph
and
and
so
the
web3
application
that
would
be
we're
building
software
and
how?
How
do
this?
How
does
the
software
that
we're
building
it's
open
source?
D
Yes,
how
does
does
that
increase
the
capabilities
that
that
we
that
we
can
do,
and
how
can
we
put
a
tangible
value
on
that,
because
that
relates
directly.
C
D
The
incentives
and
the
token-
and
maybe
the
praise,
so
I
do
see
the
talking
to
the
reward
system
working
group-
maybe
praise
v2
or
v3,
or
something
like
that
where
people
contribute
and
if
their
contribution
is,
for
example,
the
commons
configuration
dashboard.
I
mean
people
value
a
lot
of
the
contribution
of
programmers,
but
why?
Because
they
build
tools
that
are
very
useful
for
people
and
that
enable
people
to
reach
new
capabilities.
D
So
it's
something
that
sort
of
like
organically,
and
that
is
the
basic
idea
that
I
have
right
now
like
okay,
how
can
we
start
putting
a
value
on
the
qualitative
upgrades
that
that
we
are
enabling,
through
the
creation
of
the
development
of
software
tools,.
A
Cool
that
reminds
me
of
the
bicycle
for
the
mind.
No,
definitely
I
I
also
see
a
likely.
You
know
the
the
whole
regenerative
workflow
research
connection
there.
A
You
know
how
it
helps
us
to
actually
when
we
manage
to
configure
our
processes
and
tools
such
that
they
really
help
us
progress
instead
of
taking
more
time
into
managing
the
tools
and
the
processes
on
top
of
everything
else,
and
could
also
see
relations
there.
So
super
interesting,
please
keep
sharing
and
yeah
we're
almost
coming
to
the
end,
as
mentioned
the
coincidence,
library
creation.
We
need
other
single
points
on
monday.
A
I
just
wanted
to
get
your
attention
or
have
your
ideas
about
what
you
think
about
these:
the
environment,
how
the
environment
also
shares
shapes.
A
Yeah,
our
our
behavior
or
our
actions
right
and
if
you
can
keep
sharing
sorry,
if
you
can
so
basically
there
is
this
other
group
I'm
working
with,
and
it's
called
our.
A
This
is
called
invisible
economy,
because
many
things
that
are
qualitative
are
actually
invisible
in
in
the
economy
and
only
that
what
can
be
counted
basically
can
be
tokenized,
and
that's
a
fact.
A
However,
when
it's
about
incentive
design
which
token
engineering
is
about,
we
are
not
bound
to
only
think
in
terms
of
what
can
we
program
into
smart
contracts,
but
obviously
what
is
in
our
reach
to
to
shape
behaviors
number
one?
Are
we
legitimate
to
do
so?
A
That's
why
people
come
into
omega,
because
all
of
this
power
actually
throws
up
more
questions
of
legitimacy,
but
I
said
you
know
we
are
building
these
leaderboards
and
what
have
you
and
all
of
this
are
you
know,
proposals
and
only
one
winner?
A
All
of
that
is
typically
creating
a
competitive
environment
and
that's
what
we
are
used
to
from
what
we
know
like
in
school.
You
need
to
get
best
grades.
You
need
to
graduate
top
three.
What
have
you
so
we
have
all
these
easy
filtering
systems
which
result
in
competitive
environment,
and
this
group
is
all
about
number
one
saying
that
actual
people
love
what
they
do
and
people
recognize
that
that
action
in
and
of
itself
as
a
reward,
and
if
that
action
can
actually
be
a
contribution
to
a
commons.
A
That's
where
magic
happens.
That
would
be
this
collaborative
environment
in
which
there's
creativity,
there's
abundance
and
because
people
do
what
they
do
because
they
enjoy
it,
and
it
primarily
doesn't
matter
first
if
it
has
direct
use
immediately,
but
if
it
has
then
basically
that's
where
abundance
happens
or
that's
where
you
have
this
positive
sum
game.
I
have
been
doing
something
I
love
anyways
and
the
community
can
actually
make
use
of
it
great
right.
So
I
I
just
wanted
to
hear
you
know
six
more
minutes
left
what
you
think
about
this.
A
Do
you
have
experience
working
like
this
already,
maybe
in
in
other
areas,
and
if
you
can
actually
add
now
with
respect
to
consultants,
library
when
you're
working
and
contributing
whether
that
rings
a
bell
or
whether
you
you
see
it
differently,
yeah,
if
you
could
have
a
quick
round
of
of
sharing,
that
would
be
great.
I
Okay
satori,
thank
you
because
this
goes
into
what
actually
everybody
from
the
energy
flow
first
meetings,
not
here,
but
that's
kind
of
what
we're
doing
in
the
energy
flow
just
kind
of
initial
research.
It's
about.
I
You
know
generally
the
philosophy
of
like
how
energy,
like
physics
flow,
but
using
that
for
your
own
stuff,
like
you,
only
have
so
much
energy
and
time
to
dedicate
to
like
what
we're
talking
about
right
now
to.
I
And
so
picking
stuff
that
is
low
hanging
fruit,
that
you're
already
kind
of
interested
in
and
you're
already.
You
know,
naturally
with
my
friend
that
I
do
the
mandala
research
with
is
like
I,
I
said
it
that
we,
we
recognized,
that
we
had
his
own
personal,
itch
of
like
something
that
we
we've
been
doing
like
six
years
and
then
like
when
we
lined
up
it
was
like.
Oh,
we
speak
like
at
least
in
that
aspect,
the
same
language
and
we're
like
oh
hell,
yeah.
I
Okay,
I
was
like
we
don't
have
to
explain
anything
to
each
other.
We
could
just
continue
on
like
talking
about
like
where
we
are
in,
like
this
kind
of
like
field
of
like
kind
of
study
like
this
weird
kind
of
area
of
like
robert.
C
I
Wilson
and
douglas
rushkoff
and
kind
of
where
we
are
right
now,
like
culturally,
in
the
digital
landscape
of
like
siberia
or
whatever
so
like.
I
find
that
like
interesting
in
how
we
connected
there,
but
in
the
same
respect
for
the
energy
flow
one.
Is
that
we're
kind
of
overlapping
our
studies?
You
know
gene
proposed
this.
I
I
Actually
that
came
out
of
this
reaction
in
this
steam
hive
community
of
we
had
a
poetry
group,
and
we
noticed
that
like
after
sometimes
we
called
it
dead
post
and
like
something
that
we
we
spent
a
lot
of
time
and
that
we
thought
was
really
good.
Like
didn't
get
the
attention
that
we
wanted.
So
then
we
started
to
do
like
these
lists
and
then
we
called
in
the
dead
pose
and
like,
and
then
we
did
our
own
dead
posts
like
poems,
and
I
was
like
oh
I'm
going
to
do.
I
That's
all
to
say
that,
like
all
this
is
like
connected
to
me,
because
it's
like
these
things
that
we
do
already
but
then
like
when
we
team
up
with
people
going
to
like
this,
and
so
in
that
poetry
group.
We
all
write,
poetry,
naturally
right,
but
when
we
share
it
we
kind
of
like,
especially
in
the
open
mic
night,
we
were
competitive
in
a
good
way.
I
I
To
respond
back,
and
so
like
that
kind
of
like
magic-
and
I
think
you
know
even
how
we're
doing
it
in
the
threads
like
this
asynchronous
of
like
sharing
our
different
things
and
then
when
we
have
time-
and
this
is
something
I
learned
working
in
imaginarium-
I
actually
did
call
this
thread
dead,
spoken,
poetics
and,
and
that
one
you
could
only
talk
in
poetry
and
so
like
over
time.
I
You
know
like
not
being
distracted
by
like
pinging
of
notifications,
but
to
actually
like
read
and
to
actually
you
know,
respond
in,
like
you
know
the
felt
experience
of
whatever
that
person
was
sharing,
poetically
and
so
like
this
became
like
this,
like
practice
that
we
did,
but,
but
I
think
to
the
to
the
extent
of
what
we're
talking
about
here,
finding
what
what
we
could
give
our
time
and
energy
to
that
will
refill
us.
That
gives
us
energy,
and
so
it
doesn't
feel
like
a
draining
task.
I
It
feels
energizing
and
you
and
you
feel,
even
more
energized
to
keep
on
digging
down
that
like
rabbit
hole
and
keep
on
like
scratching
on
that
thing
and
to
see
where
those
disconnections
alive
and
that's
kind
of
what
I
feel
my
own
personal,
like
journey
of
the
creative
flow
and
the
energy
flow
of
this,
like
overlapping,
of
what
we're
doing
and
real
quickly
to
the
energy
creative
flow.
I
It's
kind
of
like
merging
me,
streamer
d
and
jolly
kind
of
like
working
for
like
working
together
to
do
this
kind
of
like
mock
or
or
like
prototype
to
the
south
discovery.
Consultants,
library,
which.
I
And
so
we're
we're
we're
talking
directly
and
then
we'll
probably
have
more
sinks
to
where
we
we
finally
get.
A
Something
yeah
yeah,
that's
super
cool,
so
I
I
want
to
be
able
to
join
so
that
I
can
actually
make
visible
the
contribution
that
you're
doing.
I
don't
know,
I
think,
that's
the
that's.
The
main
issue
always
like
kind
of
reporting
documenting
that
comes
to
short,
but
definitely
just
rest
assured
that
for
some
people
it's
definitely
visible.
A
How
well
this
place
for
the
ones
who
who
knew
or
who
I
have
might
have
missed
those
sessions.
But
we
have
value
flows
of
the
token
dream.
Consultants,
library
and
the
most
valuable
aspects
that
we
have
found
in
this
co-creative
sessions
is
that
this
library
is
transdisciplinary
through
the
curations,
of
course,
but
also
the
novelty
aspect
that
the
people
who
have
found
each
other
here
are
able
to
contribute
is
definitely
going
to
make
a
difference,
and
that
is
also
something
that
olipov
and
others
also
bear.
A
You
have
pointed
out
what,
if
this
library
would
be
a
different
experience
right
and
the
other
part,
the
third
one
is
the
connection.
So
it's
quite
important
that
we
don't
just
put
out
place
things
that
are
consumables,
yet
another
list
of
reading,
but
actually
help
people
to
connect
and
what
satori
is
bringing
in
is
amazing.
A
So
thanks
a
lot,
so
I
I
look
forward
to
my
own
self-discovery
game
through
the
library
it
really
you
know
connecting
to
yourself.
First
understanding
what
has
been
drawing
you
to
talk
in
engineering.
Why
are
you
taking
this
this
path
through
the
library?
Maybe
even,
and
also
who
are
you
meeting
on
your
path?
I
can
imagine
that
this
is
going
to
become
a
really
wonderful
experience.
A
A
A
I
would
say
that
the
official
working
group
session
is
over,
but
whoever
wants
to
share
some
more
about
their
contributions
and
or
wanted
contributions
to
token
engineering
concerns
library,
I'll
be
here
or
I'm
here
and
yeah,
or
if
everyone
has
got
enough,
it
could
could
also
call
it
a
day
or
evening.
C
I
just
wanted
to
confirm
that
you'll
be
sending
that
link
for
that
monday
meeting,
or
is
it
going
to
be
an
invite?
Okay,
perfect
and
yeah
that
that
I
just
have
been
really
enjoying
doing
some
of
my
own
personal
research
for
the
library,
because
you
kind
of
mentioned
it
does
really
make
you
connect
with
yourself,
because
it
brings
you
almost.
C
C
You
know
energized
to
use
that
to
grow,
and
so
I
feel
like
it's
a
great
opportunity
to
definitely
do
a
lot
of
self-reflection
and
then
also
the
antidote
part
is
so
great
because
you
can,
then
you
know
really
put
it
down
in
words,
how
you
felt
and
how
it's
you
in
the
process.
So
I
just
wanted
to
share
that.
Just
my
personal
experience
so
far.
H
Andrea
yeah.
H
Shortly
something
I've
been
reflecting
a
bit
since
last
week's
talk,
I
have
a
feeling
that
I
need
to
kind
of
reverse
myself,
a
little
which
I
think
is
also
very
much
to
kind
of
start
at
the
end
and
find
your
way
back
somehow
to
where
I
don't
know
how
story
gets
started,
and
so
I've
been
thinking
a
lot
about
like
this
kind
of
thing,
where
I
want
to
get
in
the
long
term,
and
I
guess
it
would
be
more
interesting
from
my
point
of
view
also
how
to
kind
of
connect
with
this
through
the
transdisciplinary
art
website
there
I've
been
doing
kind
of
since
I
guess
2015
when
I
finished
the
a
pass
there.
C
H
Yeah
like
what
I'm
working
on
is
actually
coming
out
of,
like
between
2008
and
2016.
I've
been
doing
like
an
underground
workspace
kind
of
like
running
it
kind
of
on
our
own
funds.
I've
been
always
like
producing
a
lot
of
things,
doing
things
for
the
sake
of
doing
art,
because,
like
not
finding
any.
H
H
It
was
this
kind
of
thing
that
I
started
in
2016
and
now
I
kind
of
like
let
it
have
its
second
business
cycle
with
other
people
taking
over
since
2020,
like
I
kind
of
always
felt
like
starting
up
things
and
then
seeing
it
kind
of
like
have
it's
making
its
own
walk
and
then
like
letting
it
go.
So
others
can.
You
know
like
empowering
and
like
getting
out
of
the
way
kind
of
yeah
so.
C
H
Economy
principles.
So
all
these
things
coming
out
of
co-ops
and
coming
out
of
solidarity
systems,
not
only
for
persons
that
are
precarious,
but
just
kind
of
finding
something
that
deals
with
disparity
at
large
or
something
that
actually
rethinks
this
kind
of
divisions
that
normally
happen
within
competition
that
the
winner.
H
And
all
the
rest
kind
of
has
to
go
over
the
scraps
so
to
find
something
that
rethinks
the
system,
despite
the
practice
of
it.
So
that's
a
bit
like
where
I'm
coming
in
from,
and
I
guess
I
need
to
think
these
things
within
a
research
format
which
then
kind
of
tokenizes
somewhere
this
value
flows
and
that
those
value
flows
which
are
not
actually
so
much
numerical,
but
that
somehow
this
can
connect
to
this
kind
of
employee
system,
which
then
actually
nurtures
each
other
in
some
kind
of
way.
That's
like
a
concept
that
I'm
working
on.
A
H
A
A
A
A
But
that
would
be
something
you
could
be
sharing,
for
example
like
if
you
again,
if
you're
sharing
your
your
research
or
these
insights,
you
can
have
a
thread,
make
a
thread
and
just
share
there
and
see
also,
who
else
is
chiming
in
and
the
best
encounter
that
you
could
have.
As
another
token
engineer,
data
scientist
or
systems
modeler
who's,
really
interested
in
the
same
topics
and
and
get
started
with
you
like.
Those
type
of
encounters
is
also
something
we
can.
A
Yeah
yeah,
so
so,
but
then
for
that
again
like
you,
you
need
to
be
sharing
and
I
think
this
is
really
a
place
where
you
can
share
and
and
would
also
get
insights.
A
I
just
want
to
say
it's
it's
the
question,
it's
the
question
because
right
now
we're
seeing
crypto
a
lot
of
the
same
same.
You
know
the
financial
quants
princes
of
the
universe
are
replaced
by
smart
contracts,
hackers
and
and
unicorn
token
engineers.
A
Who
are
now
the
princes
of
the
universe
because
they're
doing
the
programmable
financial
flows
and
so
on,
but
the
the
models
are
same
same
so
obviously
not
something
else
is
going
to
come
out
of
it.
But
at
the
same
time
we
have
a
lot
of
currents
that.
A
Do
question
you
know
economic
space
agency
curve
labs,
so
you
know,
as
we
could
start
and
connect
the
bigger
community
to
those
questions
and
that
type
of
thread,
if
you
want
to
make,
might
become
one
of
the
liveliest.
To
be
honest
because
we
kind
of
want
to
you
know:
okay,
it's
not
capitalism,
but
it's
not
communism,
either
right
and
and
is
it
is
it
being
an
employee
or
you
are
creating
you're,
creating
value
and
others
are
building
on
that
value.
A
In
my
view,
you're
always
an
investor,
it's
an
intellectual
investor
and
what
you
have
with
art.
We
have
with
science
and
actually
many
other
even
care
related
areas,
and
so
on
so
health
kind
of
current
thinking.
A
Are
totally
screwed?
Obviously
the
incentives
are
screwed
like
you,
don't
heal
people
you
just
medicate
them
and
so
on
or
you
don't.
You
know,
value
health,
you
value
how
you
can
make
money
with
treating
symptoms
and
so,
and
this
then
obviously
leads
to
money
making
machinery,
but
not
healthy
people.
C
C
C
H
Like
working
within
the
comments,
because
what
you
say,
I
find
also
very
true
like
once
it
starts
to
be
the
idea
of
I'm
gonna,
be
a
millionaire
like
for
me.
That's
not
so
interesting,
like
my
father
was
like
a
consultant
in
a
lot
of
big
companies
doing
like
help
desks
with
like
ibm
as
the
only
like
a
competitor
in
the
time.
So
I
grew
up
like
seeing
a
lot
of
really
rich
people
myself
not
being
rich,
and
I
know
that
these
kind
environments
for
me
are
not
like
thriving.
C
H
This
competitive
kind
of
predatorial
mindsets,
and
that's
where
I
feel
also
like
in
2018-
I
had
like
a
really
bad
burnout
after
starting
the
artist's
comments.
So
then
I
really
had
to
rethink
so
now
somewhere
at
the
end
of
my
30s,
I
see
like
this
kind
of
very
slow
way
of
working
and
like
gently
progressing
and
seeing
ways
of
actually
creating
something
that
is
not
necessarily
resilient,
just
proposes
a
complementary
alternative.
A
H
C
H
I
see
here
there's
a
lot
of
different
approaches,
so
it's
a
very
fertile
field
to
actually
create
ideas
which
nobody
can
come
up
with
on
by
themselves.
So
that's
I
guess,
like
the
yeah
like
I
I'm
a
bit
skeptical
of
the
uber
model.
A
Yes,
totally,
we
shouldn't,
I
don't
think
it's
an
ideal.
We
should
go
for
her
anyways,
so
yeah,
but
no
yeah
again,
like
the
best
way
is
really
to
share
and
if
it
is
specific
and
if
you
want
to
continue-
and
I
know
like
the
the
thing
that
you
start
with
desire-
and
I
haven't
even
dived
into
transdisciplinary
art
yet,
but
I
know
it's
deep,
like
your
research
is
also
amazing.
A
So
if
you
just
share
the
type
of
what
you
say
about
desire,
for
example,
we
talk
here
a
lot
or
in
token
entering
a
lot
about
motivation,
intrinsic
motivation
and
so
on
and
during
that
research.
Also,
where
I
got
hung
up
on,
is
like
need
and
need
based
modeling.
But
if
you
dig
dig,
dig,
dig
and
dig
really
deep,
you
can
question
every
need
or
every
desire,
and
it
is
actually
a
construct
and
it's
called
memetic
memetic
desire,
like
it's
the
things
that
you
pick
up
and
you
think
you
need
to
want.
G
We
didn't
come
up
with
this
richard
dawkins
book.
Yes,
so
this
meme
is
so
pernicious
everywhere
and
we
are
just
trying
to
apply
this
natural
sciences
perspective
and
we
didn't
explain
them
in
itself.
G
But
it
comes
from
this
biology
also
connected
with
genetics,
right,
it's
so
pernicious
and
it's
a
meme
which
is
like
the
shadow
coming
up
in
all
these
systems,
and
that
would
like
take
us
back
to
the
iron
problem,
which
was
like
my
first
like
grabbing
here
in
this
world,
because
I
thought,
if
we
could
solve
this
science
problem,
there
was
nothing
else
to
do
and
just
speaking
up
about
what
you
shared
about
this
just
grabbing
and
digging
deep
into
our
desires
and
needs
so
yeah.
G
H
Yeah
john
coptic,
like
like,
where
I'm
at
with
my
research
and
transdisciplinary
I've
been
just
kind
of
like
you
know
the
talking
cure
when
you
actually
use
language
to
kind
of
reprogram.
Your
subconscious,
I've
been
just.
H
Loud
for
a
couple
of
years,
I
just
kind
of
made
audio
books
another,
I
have
to
say
I'm,
I'm
just
somebody
who's
just
reading
out
loud
texts
that
don't
stay
within
its
own
memory.
That's
the
stage
that
I'm
at
as
a
researcher
like
where
I'm
moving
into
now
is
like
slowly
cutting
my
mind
with
all
these
kind
of
places
that
I
know
like
make
new
stories
and
bring
those
things
together.
H
That's
where
I
can
say,
okay
read,
like
john
kopchek
read
my
desire.
It's
like
a
critique
of
like
oh,
which
is
diametrically
diametrically
opposed
to
like
richard
dawkins
and
all
these
kind
of
things,
but
that's
very
interesting
that
to
see
what
comes
out
of
putting
those
things
together
and
like
what
could
be
a
discourse
that
actually
becomes
a
new
critique
and
then
how
does
this
relate.
C
C
C
B
A
J
I
don't
know
we're
about
to
wrap
up,
but
yeah
I
don't
know
I
I
I'm
seeing
a
lot
of
things
across.
You
know
soft
gov
and
gravity
that
you
know
seem
like
they're
a
bit
overlapping.
In
terms
of
you
know
the
stuff.
C
J
You
know
during
those
meetings
and
yeah
so.
A
With
the
people
who
are
in
in
the
in
in
multiple
groups
etc,
so
it's
up
to
us
to
keep
the
connections
and
and
make
read
the
threads.
A
But
what
we
had
started
with
today
and
I
think
that's
going
to
be
done
until
we
finish
the
first
prototype
that
we
will
likely.
No,
we
will
definitely
focus
on
our
energies,
our
attention,
because
I
think
all
of
us
are
just
contributing
couple
of
hours
at
most,
so
that
we
focus
our
attention
now,
on
finishing
the
first
prototype
of
the
token
engineering
coincidence,
library,
with
those
curations
getting
in
and
so
on
and
so
forth,
but
in
parallel
also
that
we
write
up
our
findings
with
respect
to
token
engineering
ethical
principles.
A
You
know
those
four
that
we
came
up
with
and
so
on.
Where
you
have
also
contributions,
I
would
just
ping
you
either
in
the
chat
or
or
directly.
I
think
there
are
some
areas
that
you
can
should
be
definitely
contributing
about
this
right,
app
on
token
entering
ethics.
A
That's
just
from
from
our
side
from
my
side,
but
yeah.
The
following
weeks
will
be
likely
determined
by
finishing
up
the
first
prototype
and
then
I
would
also
like
to
have
around
what
is
the
experience
like
like
the
funds
that
are
that
are
provided
versus
the
yeah.
I
feel
like
always
losing
a
bit
of
freedom
when
I
have
to
yeah
do
just
yeah
as
soon
as
I
cannot
say.
Okay,
this
takes
as
long
as
it
takes,
but
kind
of
there
is
some
expectations:
yeah
roadmap,
weekly
progress,
etc.
A
That's
kind
of
in
omega
I
want
to,
or
let
me
put
it
that
way
I
wanted
to
have
a
place
in
all
of
this,
where
we
can
think
differently
really
go
deep.
I
mean
it's
the
philosophy,
the
the
wisdom
of
web
3,
that
we
want
to
go
into,
and
so
on.
A
A
We
are,
after
in
in
omega
like
token
entering
ethics,
the
deep
questions
right
as
steph
puts
when
you
would
be
going
after
the
research.
There
is
really
a
lot
of
ripe
directions
that
need
work
on,
but
it
is
typical
science
and
research
work.
A
You
don't
know,
obviously,
when
it
will
finish
when
you
start
so
kind
of
I'm
in
this
middle
of
personally,
I'm
in
the
middle
of
this
a
bit
of
a
frustrated
place
where
I
see
you
not
doing
some
anything
differently
like
in
academia
in
the
corporation
or
any
other
place
that
I've
been
in
also
not
in
a
startup.
So
I
don't
see
how
we're
changing
the
game.
A
A
Yes,
we
don't
know
any
other
way,
so
I
kind
of
would
rather
love
to
have
the
freedom
to
come
up
with
a
new
way,
rather
than
you
know,
using
the
little
time
that
I
personally
have
to
follow
up
on
proposals
and
the
project
management.
You
know
others
say
or
hurting
cats,
and
what
have
you
it's
just.
It's
really
tough
to
get
stuff
done
if
you're
working
with
people
who
all
of
us
are
contributing
just
a
few
hours
right.
So
it's
literally
the
worst
place
to
get
stuff
stuff
done
on
time.
C
A
Yeah
at
the
end,
now
it
comes
out
it's
my
place
of
frustration
at
the
moment,
but
I
love
what,
but
all
of
us
are
contributing.
Doing
it's
really
coming
into
omega
is
always
a
fresh
breath
of
air
and
a
lot
of
food
for
thought
so
yeah.
I
just
want
to
thank
you
all
for
for
participating
and
let's
get
to
talking
engine
consonants
library
do
the
prototype
yeah.
A
A
Okay,
so
that
that
was
also
from
from
my
chest.
So
if
anyone
else,
if
you
have
not
anything
to
add,
then
we
can
also
close
this
extended
half
hour
and
that
I
think
we're
starting
that.
I
Yeah,
oh
I
just
wanted
to.
I
had
this
note
of
it's
like
staring
at
me
right
now,
and
it's
from
the
reading
of
the
energy
dynamic
energy
budget
anyways,
you
know
the
guy.
I
took
a
little
pieces
of
the
quote,
but
anyways
it's
the
removal
of
this
anxiety,
this
elusive
attitude,
freedom
of
mind
and
just
like
this
removal
of
that
anxiety
of,
like
you,
know
the
old
way
of
doing
the
treadmill.
I
I
I
Freedom
of
mine
aspect
of
trying
to
being
in
that
space
of
this
connection
and
and
where
we
kind
of
ideally,
I
think
well,
at
least
for
myself
want
to
be
at,
and
I
think
it
comes
into
like
cycles
of,
I
think
even
too,
when
I
propose
this
mode
of
the
the
nft.
I
forgot
how
I
framed
it,
but.
C
I
I
Yeah
I
mean
yeah
and
then
and
then,
like
the
third
part,
is
kind
of
like
you
digesting
it
the
metabolism
giving
that
space.
For
for,
like
that
emergence
to
happen,
and
then
like
that
kind
of
yeah
yeah.
A
I
want
to
make
time
to
come
to
your
sessions.
This
is
literally
I'm
picking
up
things
just
from
the
text
that
you
share
and
and
like
all
of
you,
it's
really
cool.
A
Okay,
talk
soon.
Everyone
and
yeah.