NEAR Ecosystem: Road2ETHDenver2024 🏃‍♂️🔥

Recorded: Feb. 2, 2024 Duration: 0:50:48

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Hey, good morning. Good morning, everyone.
All right.
Hey, everyone.
We've got a really big guest here and then we'll get started in just a minute here.
Glad to see so many people this morning.
We've got some really great announcements
and we'll give it one more minute here.
All right, let's kick it off, but we have a really nice crowd here today.
I want to thank NIR Week for co-hosting with us today's space.
This is all about the road to eat Denver.
We're really excited here at Dev Hub to get started.
If you don't know, my name is Joe.
I'm one of the moderators at Dev Hub.
With me on stage here is Maria,
who's under the NIR Dev Hub account who runs all our hackathons.
Then we have Boris who is in charge of our DevRel
near campus and a host of other things.
We have some really great stuff to share with everyone today.
Let's get started.
Maria, why don't we start with you?
Can we just start with,
why is eat Denver such a big event every year,
and why are we putting a lot of effort towards it?
I think if Denver is one of the biggest
Ethereum community conferences and it's also the oldest one.
But we love it for a few different reasons.
For me, I think my favorite part about this Denver is that it's community owned.
There is no committee.
There is no CEO of East Denver.
Can you hear me?
Yes, we can hear you.
Yes, we can hear you just by Maria.
You're doing great.
Ah, awesome.
OK, so my favorite part about East Denver is that it's actually community driven.
So there is there is no boss of East Denver.
There is no CEO. There is no CTO.
There's just a community of stewards that help us navigate through the bounty
onboarding process and connecting with the hackers.
And usually, I think several thousand people from all over the US,
all over the globe attended.
They have travel stipends.
So it's also an accessible conference.
And I think this is why we love East Denver.
And this is my third year at Mir.
And I think this is the third the 30th Denver conference that we're actually supporting.
So we have a history with those guys.
Yeah, no, that's exciting.
And I think it's a great breakdown of this conference.
And if anyone's ever been, it's exciting.
There's tons of events happening.
It's really a great place to kind of get involved in just a larger crypto ecosystem.
But it's really it's going to be a great event.
Boris, from the standpoint of kind of Dev Hub,
what are some things that people should be looking for besides the hacking from,
you know, us attending this event?
Oh, we lost Boris.
Maria, do you want to take that?
Just some of the besides the actual hackathon bounties,
what are some of the things that people should be looking for?
Maria, you're muted.
Let's see, we have a little a little bit technical issues.
I think, Maria, did I lose you too?
Anyways, so while we're waiting for everyone to kind of join back here.
Oh, that's it.
We got a request back.
Here we go.
All right.
Maria, are you back?
Did I get you back here?
All right.
Well, here we go.
All right.
Boris, Maria, let's circle back now.
I think everyone's kind of back connected.
We guys can maybe, nice.
Maybe just touch on a little bit of like what we should expect from the event
besides just the bounds, which we'll get into in a minute here.
But what are some of the things that we should expect?
So the question is what they can, we can expect where we are.
You know, we're from the, for developers, the team will be there.
We're attending the hackathon.
We have a lot of bounties.
We, I think we're hosting a couple of the developer days,
for one developer days.
We are working in some side events focused on developers.
So, and you know, we want you to be, to engage you before the hackathon.
We will have a couple of online workshop before.
So yeah, we will be around.
And if you want to start to work in your bounties before the hackathon,
let us know.
We can help.
We will have this.
We are constantly having the office hours.
We will host the office hours there in Denver.
So yeah, expect to see us around and after the hackathon,
we'll be on the booth.
So yeah, that's in general what you guys can expect.
Yeah, no, I think that's, I'm glad that you shared the part with the office hours,
especially too.
One of the things that if you've ever been to a event where near Dev Hub is there
as a sponsor and as a, just as a booth and support,
we are always available to help.
There's no bad questions.
We want to make sure that you can be successful in anything that you're working on,
whether it's part of the hackathon or whether it's just for fun
or you're working on a larger project.
You know, our team is there to actually help and support.
So we do encourage you to come by.
Also, there's a lot of different services that are available through Dev Hub.
And so it's a great opportunity to actually be able to have some FaceTime
with somebody from Dev Hub and actually talk about, you know,
some of these different things and how you can contribute and get involved.
So that's an excellent time for that.
Maria, do we have you back on?
Yeah, we have me back on.
It's just Twitter is keeping, keeps pushing me out.
It's probably not the best day to join Twitter here, David.
But I'm ready to talk about what we have aside of the volunteers,
because we have a couple of side events actually hosted by Dev Hub
and hosted by Nier Foundation so we can probably start there
because we have the whole week for the builders.
It's not just your average 48-hour hackathon.
It's a build week.
So people will be hacking for seven whole days.
And it's packed with side events.
It's packed with educational and entertainment so to say content.
And actually we will have our own technical,
technically focused so to say event on day four of build week,
which is February 27th.
We will gather to discuss the new open web stack.
What can actually people build on Nier?
How do we approach the Nier bounces?
We will help you on board.
We will help you look around the ecosystem,
because we've had a lot of major updates.
If you don't follow our blog, this is your loss,
because Ilya himself issued a great article on chain abstraction,
on user-owned AI.
So if you don't know what's happening in the ecosystem, you better know.
Because our bounties are centered around those new and exciting things
that are happening there.
So we are hosting the technical workshop for hours of hacking and coding
and building on February 27th.
And it's followed by chain abstraction day.
It's a summit.
So it's going to be panels and presentations and networking,
which is hosted by Nier Foundation.
And it's going to happen on February 28th.
So we have an event page on Luma.
So register as soon as possible.
Your registration needs to be approved in order for you to attend.
So if you want to be a part of chain abstraction summit,
join us on February 28th.
And if you want to visit the technical workshop, you better come on 27th.
We will roll out the registration page early next week.
So you're more than welcome.
We don't have any limitation on the visitors.
So yeah, I think that's probably it.
That's the agenda for us.
That's an exciting agenda.
I know in the past, some of these things have been online.
Do you know any of these will actually be available as video as well?
Coming in, John, who will be available?
Will any of these events be by video as well or only in person?
I think it would be better to attend in person,
although our technical workshop will be recorded and published,
but it's not going to be the whole four hours.
So if you want to team match, if you want to find people
who will ship this hackathon bounty together with you,
I think the best way to attend would be in person.
Although the main announcements will be on YouTube all across social media.
So I don't think that there is a place for formal.
It's just if you're a hacker, this is the place to be.
Yeah, no, that sounds exciting.
So I know a lot of people are here to learn more about the bounty specifically.
I know there's some really exciting ones.
This is a firsthand look at that.
Can we talk about maybe first some of the categories of the bounties
that are going to be here?
I think I can announce the categories and overall bounty pool,
which is probably the most exciting part.
And then we will ask Boris to speak about the technical details of it.
So for this year, we're going big.
We're offering 35K in bounties for, let me see how much,
four bounties, four different bounties.
So and they're quite different.
We tried to create the bounties that would be more friendly
for developer beginners who are just navigating their first steps
in your ecosystem.
But we also have a separate bounty for early stage startups
supported by our very own accelerator, Near Horizon.
And we have a chain obstruction bounty, obviously.
So to ideate and create and create one of the first submissions through this track.
I think it's also an exciting opportunity.
And Dev Hub has its very own bounty,
which is improving our documentation and examples.
So if you look at Dev Hub and you think to yourself,
okay, this is what's missing here,
and I know exactly what's missing,
East Denver is a place to be because you can build something,
you can create new documentation,
you can ship new examples,
and you will be rewarded for that, as hackers should be.
And I think I'm going to pass it on to Boris to kind of explain
what chain obstruction is
and how can you build something using this chain obstruction stack.
Hey, well, regarding the technical part,
I mean, the general idea here is that you can develop applications
that attract layers of interaction from the users, right?
You can either attract the different end-using balls,
you can extract data with using the data obstruction layer.
I think we lost Boris.
You can create.
Can you hear me?
We can hear you now, yep.
Okay, sorry about that.
So I was saying that the idea here is you can develop applications
that can separate some of the requirements of the protocol
out of the user interaction, right?
So either you can use bots to abstract the payment of the gas
from the user for the higher layer,
like you can use with using React components of bots,
or you can use the data availability layer to allow people to store data
or manage data on your application without having to actually pay for gas constantly.
So that's the gist of what you should be achieving.
We want you to try during the hackathon, right?
Try to separate the blockchain layer from the user experience layer.
That will summarize what you want to do.
So we expect you will be coding on React, you will be coding.
I mean, if you want to, you can do your smart contract in Rust.
And if you want to use some of the lower abstraction layers,
you will need to do some Rust in the smart contracts.
So yeah, that's the stack.
We will have the people there to help you.
We will be doing some workshops.
So yeah, that's in general what we want to expect you to do through the hackathon.
I think you can add a couple of words about the bounty itself.
So if you haven't read this article on near blog by Ilya about the chain abstraction
and how it looks from the user standpoint, basically,
if I had to explain it to my grandma, for example,
it's like you're using an app and the blockchain in somewhere is there,
but she doesn't know it and she doesn't get to touch it even,
to log in through it and to interact with the wallets and whatnot.
So it's not for an average person.
We call them normies.
I think it's a little bit offensive, but it is what it is for the normies.
It looks like your usual app store creation.
So the blockchain is somewhere in there.
Well, who knows where we hit it, right?
So it makes the app more efficient.
It makes me more secure and more fast and reliable,
but the user doesn't interact with the blockchain.
So that's what it is from the user standpoint.
And from the developer standpoint, I think Boris explained it pretty straightforward.
I wanted to add a couple of words about the startup bounty
because we were in touch with Near Horizon to see what their focus is
for the upcoming cohorts and actually this chain obstruction
and user-owned AI are the main focuses for the upcoming several months,
especially for the next cohort.
They will be onboarding.
So if you have any thoughts on how to integrate blockchain
the way that would be the most user-friendly and accessible and understandable,
I think these kind of ideas are the best fit for our bounties whatsoever.
No, that's great.
That's, I think, super exciting.
And one of the things I think is important to note,
and maybe you guys both want to touch on this a little bit of that.
So this is an ETH event.
We are obviously not at the end.
We're at Near.
But we are really friendly, obviously, with the ETH stack win L2s.
And Near gives you a really unique opportunity to actually essentially build on multiple chains at once.
Boris and Marie, do you want to talk a little bit about how,
especially from a hacking standpoint, this is actually something that we can leverage during the event?
First, I want to thank Maria for putting in English what I tried to say.
Sorry about that.
Definitely, Maria's explanations were more clear from the normie language.
But yes, that's regarding the L2s.
Well, you can use BOSS to integrate.
BOSS is a React on chain, right?
And you should be able to interact with any blockchain that can be accessed by EtherGS,
mostly EVN-compatible blockchains.
So yeah, you can easily integrate.
I mean, all of our examples we have, we have many on the workshops are based to integrate with Ethereum,
but you can integrate any other EVN-compatible.
And you should be using the BOSS stack to integrate.
So if you still want to do your application, use Ethereum, just polygon or any other one,
you can do it with BOSS and it still will qualify for some of our bounties, right?
So yeah, and then you could even try to mix it up a little and try to use some of the data layers
or other parts of the stack of the nearest stack.
So yeah, that would be the general approach for L2s.
Just use BOSS, use EtherGS, leverage in BOSS and try to interact with any other blockchain
that is not necessarily near.
Absolutely, I think that's a really exciting piece too, where again,
if you are coming to us and you're hearing about some of these different bounties
and you're looking to actually go and say, hey, can I explore building just a front end
within the air and using the BOSS components to do that,
you can still participate in all this stuff.
Those are the things that we are really trying to emphasize here,
that you don't have to just constantly build on the full nearest stack that we can actually be flexible.
That's the chain abstraction piece.
So I think that's a really big part of it.
One of the things I think that people are always interested in,
and I get a lot of questions are of like, what are some good tips for attending a hackathon?
Let's say this is like your first hackathon and you want to get the most out of it.
Now you're just necessarily winning a bounty, but even just getting something out of it.
Maria Bora, what would you actually suggest for that?
I can probably take this one.
We had a really interesting experience last year at New Yorkon.
We had a pitching competition and a guy called Sam won this pitching competition.
He was a solo hacker.
I interviewed him after the hackathon to ask what his experience was
and how did he manage to do this on his own.
He actually wrote a book on how to win a hackathon.
In such a good read, I recommend it to everyone who wants to join any hackathon,
especially a major one like either Denver.
Sam kind of explains the whole process because in his opinion,
I would agree with him.
By the way, the name of the guy is Sam Larsen Disney.
You can Google his book.
His main suggestion is that the hackathons are won not by the best developers,
but the best project managers who can plan things out,
who can define the scope and just not build outside of the scope.
In this case, you will have a whole week,
but usually you have even less time to ship a workable prototype.
So just define what does the success look like, minimal viable success.
Do your best to just achieve this, exactly this,
not ship the full blown application in just 48 hours,
but just a minimal viable prototype.
That would be enough.
My second advice would be probably to reserve some time in your working schedule,
maybe a couple of hours to work on your presentation
because however great and perfect your technology might be,
you will only have this few slides or a couple of minutes to explain what's great about it.
And it's not understandable, comprehensible to an outsider
who wasn't there with your team building the stuff.
So I would suggest just really pay some attention
and spend some time trying to explain what is this,
what problem does it address and how does it work.
I think in the eyes of the judges and people from venture capitalist funds
who will be there in Denver, the presentation is what betters the most
because it's your first impression, first five seconds and the impression is done.
And then people will dive into your GitHub,
they will crunch on the numbers in your business model,
they will take a look at the interface, but the first impression is always the pitch.
So just reserve some time to work on the pitch.
That would be my suggestion.
Boris, would you like to add something?
Yeah, I usually have to advise here.
So the first one is don't stay stuck for a long time.
Save help. I don't know if this is a long hackathon,
but sometimes we tend to leave some of the issues for later.
So if you've been two, three, four hours stuck, just don't wait.
Just try to find help.
If you're doing it with us, you know,
Pingas will try to help you immediately to get you unstuck.
That would be the first one.
The second one is specifically for near or boss bounties,
is don't let the front end to the end, right?
Because in the case of boss, the front end is a very, you know, it's new, right?
If you've never done anything in boss, this will be new for you.
So we recommend that you don't leave it to the end, right?
So don't leave the front end to the end and, you know, don't wait.
Don't get stuck.
Come to us and knock our door on Telegram or Discord, whatever,
and we will be there.
Great advice. Great advice.
I, you know, and one part to really emphasize here, too,
is any time of day, if you're able to, you know,
at least go on to our Telegram channels or Discord and ask a question,
even if one of the Dev Hub members can actually support you,
we have an amazing community here at Near of Builders
who are always willing to help and answer questions.
And so really take advantage of that.
And I can tell you both from experience on both sides of it.
As Boris said, don't wait to ask questions either.
If you feel like you're stuck, really go ask for help.
You know, get yourself moving.
Don't get stuck in one area.
And we, because we're there to help you, we want you to be successful.
It's not supposed to be a big mystery.
So one thing I want to touch on here, too,
is because this is actually one of the longer ETH events, right?
So it spans about almost 10 days here.
Any advice from, you know, from previous years
of how to actually maximize and really make use of a time
if you are going to attend most of the event?
Do you have any thoughts on that?
I think my best advice would be to network,
to meet people, to try to find some team members,
because ETH Denver is a place where the best of the best come.
And usually each year we have some fresh blood,
but we also have some really cool developers experience ones
that are ready to mentor, that are ready to share the experience.
So I think if you have an idea and you want to build it with someone,
because I think in the long run you will need your team at some point anyways.
And at the hackathon, when the jury is looking for the best teams,
they're looking at the team as well, the team itself.
Will it stick in the ecosystem long term?
Because one person is great when it comes to shipping something
on a short distance, but when it comes to the long run, you need the team.
So I would say utilize your experience as hard as possible,
meet new people, talk to new people, approach different booths,
approach our booth, that's probably the first stop,
but I would encourage you to go to different booths
and meet different developers.
And this is how you actually earn this experience of the in-person hackathon.
I think it's been hard during the pandemic where pretty much
there was no in-person events and people had to hack at home
just sitting in front of the screen.
And I'm really grateful that we have this experience again, once again,
just to meet people, to exchange this energy, to exchange the ideas
and to share our experience and our perception and vision
of where Web3 as an industry should go.
How do we envision it?
Because it's not invented by the founders, not just the founders.
It's invented by the community, and Denver is probably one of the greatest places
to reconnect with the community and to feel this pulse
and to feel this common vision that we have as Web3 native people.
Boris, what do you think?
Yeah, definitely networking is the top one.
So yeah, follow Maria's advice.
Also, I recommend also, if you, you know, these hackathons,
you always want to do to hack with multiple bounties in order for one.
So if you're doing both, you're doing near and you want to do another bounties
from another protocol, so spend time talking to them too, right?
Try to figure out how to integrate into both,
but get to know if they are a good match.
So spend some time on talking with them,
and yeah, that's basically the advice I give you.
I could follow up probably on what Boris said about BOSS.
BOSS is basically a decentralized frontend,
so it's pretty much compatible with any bounty that you choose.
So if you want to hack on several chains,
if you want to multiply your chances to win, BOSS is the best bounty
to ship in addition to your main submission, so to say.
So if you're not sure what to hack, take something exciting,
take something else, and take BOSS as addition to that.
And I think three shots would be better than one in that case.
And BOSS is the best bounty to take.
Yeah, and BOSS will allow you to hack together with other bounties,
so I definitely encourage you to look at it.
And look at it early so you get the nuances
and then you can come to us with the patches that are new to you.
If you are not new to BOSS, it will be easier for you,
but if you're new to BOSS, come to us, we will help you on that part, right?
If you want to integrate other bounties.
And so yeah, don't leave it to the end to do that.
Great advice.
I think that's really stuff that I think is really important
for people to remember.
There's opportunity there.
Again, if this is not something that is your main skill set,
it's always good to try and you never know what might come out of that.
And hopefully that becomes an opportunity that down the road,
if you don't win this time, that maybe you've learned a new skill
that you can actually use later on.
One thing before maybe we can see if there's any questions
that we want to maybe take here too,
but one of the exciting things here is that this kind of kicks off
kind of the new year, so for events and everything.
What can we look forward to for the year of building and hacking
on near and kind of in real life events, Maria?
It's a great question because we just sent a construct
with East Global Foundation to support five more hackathons
throughout the globe from San Francisco to Singapore.
So wherever you are, wherever you hack
and wherever you're willing to travel, we are near, quite literally.
So take a look at our community calendar.
Actually, one of the bounties that in Denver hackathon is to create
a community calendar on BOS that would be truly community owned.
So if you are great with interfaces and user experience
and if you want to win some cash, I would encourage you
to try and create this community calendar to see
what kind of exciting hackathons are there for us.
So this is with partnerships, but we also have four hackbox cohorts.
Hackbox is a plug and play hackathon solution
and you can apply it to be a local lead
to host your own near hackathon, the small one.
We will also ship the meetup framework
in addition to the hackathon framework.
So we would love our events to be more community driven
and community owned. So just apply as a host
and bring near hackathon to your own city.
And I think Boris has also an exciting announcement
to make regarding our near campus program
where near actually comes to technical schools and universities.
Yeah, definitely the near campus will be there.
We are bringing some of the students of existing campuses
and the whole team will be there.
We are hosting multiple events in multiple cities,
so we'll be announcing them, most of them around the eight global hackathons.
But we will also have some student oriented
or student only hackathons in a few cities.
So if you are with a blockchain club, if you are with a junior university
and you want to join near campus, the team will be there.
We can help you with the application
and explain to you what it means to join near campus
and we will definitely see you on the road.
We have already a few events already in the United States
and we will start rolling out in Europe
and hopefully in Asia too this year there in real life events.
So if you come from the educational part,
if you want to be involved with your college university,
yes, we'll be there. Let's talk about it.
That's super exciting. Yeah, I think there's, again,
there's a lot of great opportunities all across the globe.
We really want to make sure that we're giving a lot of opportunities
to people from all different developer journeys.
And so this is a great opportunity to start getting involved
through these different in person events.
So any last things about the event specifically?
And maybe we can see that any questions for the last few minutes?
I would probably want to add just an industry insight, so to say.
So I observe a lot of the hackathons going on in the ecosystem,
in the broader web tree ecosystem, not just near.
And I see what people ship and I see what kind of teams win.
And I see this trend where people ship a certain solution
and they bring it from one hackathon to another.
We call those people bounty hunters.
So don't be a bounty hunter, invent something new
and try something exciting, learn something.
Don't just bring one project to East Denver and then East London
and then East Brussels and whatnot.
Because usually the judges and the mentors are actually the same people.
So we kind of know who's building what in the ecosystem
and we are happy to support the builders.
But a hackathon is not an accelerator.
It's not an incubational program.
It's a learning experience.
And as hackathon hosts and facilitators,
we would love to see you learn and share your experience.
So I think my last suggestion would be exactly that.
If you're coming to East Denver, try to have some fun and enjoy.
I think at any age and at any level of experience,
learning and connecting with new people, team matching,
is an awesome outcome.
So yeah, that's what I wanted to add.
Yeah, for my part, I definitely agree with Maria.
It comes with an open mind.
You have an idea and this is the best place to refine it
because you will be able to run it with a lot of people.
A lot of people from the industry, various more people will be around.
So you can piece your idea and see what you have right, what you have run
and then you will even be able to bring some people to your team.
So that's something I will definitely take advantage of these events
like near East Denver.
Also, go to the side events, there are great opportunities.
One of the things, I used to be traditional before crypto
and the industry events, the side events weren't that friendly,
but the crypto events are always very friendly.
Everyone will talk to you.
Everyone is willing to listen to your project and discuss an idea.
So take advantage of that and finally, we'll be around.
If you want to discuss your project, if you want to discuss technical stuff,
you want to talk about the weather or your favorite music band.
The team will be there, whatever you want to talk about.
We'll be in the side events.
We'll probably be using one party around.
So yeah, approach to us and let's build something.
Let's help you to deploy whatever ideas you're in during the hackathon.
Hope to see you there.
Awesome stuff and really great advice.
And again, as a developer myself,
and again, I've been on both sides of this,
this is really excellent advice
and really not to overthink and use help and leverage other people
and it really can be a really fun, great experience
and maximize that time that you're at these events.
We have a few minutes at the end.
We're happy that if someone has some specific questions about Eat Denver
and the hackathons, just a general question about Dev Hub,
we can take a couple of minutes.
I really appreciate all the people coming out today and learning more.
Or alternatively, if you don't have a question,
pitch your idea what you're going to build at this Denver
and maybe we can find you teammates and co-founders
just during this Twitter space.
Just imagine how cool that would be.
Great. I love it. Great idea. Great idea.
Well, I will pitch one thing and I will say,
and that's a specific idea,
but if you are looking to go hacking, you are looking to go build,
even if you have a project right now that you're working on,
hackathons are an awesome time to really explore
and really try something new.
So if there's a feature on near that you haven't tried
and you've been looking at,
there's something that you want to see how something really works,
this is the time to do it.
And because one, there's no pressure.
If you get a prize, it's great.
If you don't, maybe you get an awesome experience.
But the best piece about all this is that
you don't have to just worry about building on your own.
You're going to have amazing people there to help you.
And so now if you really want to try something out,
this is a great time to do that
because you can have really that in-person approach.
And if anyone who kind of came and hacked with us at NearCon,
hopefully you got to see that.
The Dev Hub booth is always available.
There's always great developers,
not just who you see on stage here today,
but we have developers from the ecosystem come and help,
come talk and mentor,
and it's really a great event,
an opportunity to kind of explore deeper.
So please, please take advantage of that if you're there.
And if you're not there, really follow along
and you can still jump in on our chats.
We have really active Telegram groups on Near
for both our development
and then as well as if you have questions about Dev Hub,
if you're looking to get more feedback
about some of the putting in a proposal at Dev Hub
where you want to join the communities,
we have great work groups.
So please come check out what we're doing over there
and let us kind of get you started and hacking away.
Yeah, I wanted to add something I forgot.
We have a lot of programs for engagement after the hackathon.
If you submit, if you win one of their bounties
and you're just in Boston and you didn't win,
we have multiple programs that can keep you engaged,
especially if you want to keep pushing your idea.
We can put you in contact with accelerators.
We have engagement activities
that we want to keep you interested
in what you're doing in Near.
So it's an important part.
So once you should meet,
the team will be there and we can talk about it,
but keep in mind when deciding
if you're hacking with Near or not.
We have a lot of problems.
We have some problems like the bounty booster.
We want to, if you participate in Near events
and you then win another hackathon with Boss,
we can match part of your winnings in the other hackathons.
We have the ex-founders, accelerators,
specifically a creator for founders that win hackathons
and want to push their idea to the next level.
And multiple other programs we probably would need horizon.
So that's another thing you may want to consider.
We want to help you after the hackathon.
So yeah, and if you want to contact us,
Twitter is a good, you can send DMs to,
in Twitter you can contact me directly
to me, to Joe, to Maria, to Jose,
and we will put you, I'll try to answer your question.
If we cannot answer, we will put you with the right person.
Really great stuff.
I really appreciate Maria and Boris today
really kind of diving into this.
I think this hopefully people can learn something
and got some ideas from this.
If you, in the meantime, as we are on the road
to eat Denver over the next few weeks,
if you do have questions in preparation,
if you do have ideas that you want to run by people,
you know, again, great community to do that.
We're happy to do that.
You can reach out even privately
if you don't want to share it with the larger community
and just have some questions.
You know, we want to make sure that we're available to you
and we can help you out.
And if we don't know the answer, we know someone who will.
And so please, please come to us
so we can help you with that.
But I really hope everyone learned something from this
and I really appreciate everyone coming out today.
Thank you for joining us today, everyone.
And we hope to see you at this Denver.
Yeah, thank you.
We have any questions, but yes, really, again,
thanks so much for listening.
Please come to questions, you know, online for us.
We hope to see, if we don't see you at eat Denver,
we hope to see you at one of our many events this year.
Again, if you want more information
about some of the other goings on,
join different community groups and work groups
near devhub.org is the website.
All the information is there.
We really encourage you to kind of come check that out.
Looks like maybe we have a quick question here.
Yeah, we'll do this real quick before we go.
Did they connect in?
All right.
Sunny, did you have a question?
Sunny, if you want to unmute,
you can ask a question if you have one.
All right.
Hi, good morning.
Oh, hey, Sunny, how are you?
I am fine.
How are you, sir?
Good, good, good.
Do you have a question?
So, where are you from, sir?
I'm from the United States.
Well, nice, sir.
I am from India, sir.
Very nice, very nice.
What's your quote?
You've done for hacking with us.
So, what about your purpose on project?
What opinion, sir?
Thanks for joining.
When talking, sir.
When talking, sir.
When talking, sir.
When talking, sir.
When talking, sir.
When talking, sir.
When talking, sir.
When talking, sir.
So, I was waiting for one of those.
I appreciate that.
I think that that wraps it up nicely.
We had the full Twitter spaces experience.
So, appreciate everybody coming out.
And again, please reach out to us if you have any questions.
And have a wonderful day and keep building.