Sahil, can you check if your microphone is working?
She is still a listener, I believe.
Yes, that's all good, Sahil. I can hear you now.
Let's give it a few minutes until more people are coming.
Usually people are dropping like a bit later.
So, yeah, let's wait a little bit.
It is quite late in India, right?
It's 7pm, so not too bad.
Because we tried to match all the different time zones, but it's always a bit of a struggle.
So, John, it's the morning for you, right?
Pauline has the most perfect time zone.
In the middle of everyone.
Europe is pretty great for that, I must say.
When I was in Prague and other European countries, it was perfect, you know?
So, jealous, jealous, Pauline.
Well, like, you know, there's other issue we have, but not the time zone.
Combine with other people.
So, okay, let's wait until 35 and then we can start.
This is another builder session.
So, today we are welcoming Sahil is the developer relation engineer from Quicknode.
So, Quicknode just launched on Mental.
And so, we're super happy to have them.
They've been requested by a lot of our partners.
So, yeah, it's like really, really good for us to have them on the builder session.
So, basically we are going to go through what is Quicknode?
How do we use it on Mental?
What kind of tools do they offer to builders?
And why those tools are important?
And yeah, how can you make the most of it?
So, I will quickly introduce myself and then I'm going to let the other one introduce themselves.
I'm the developer relation engineer at Mental.
So, basically I used to be a, I studied in Web3 as a hacker and I was a software developer for quite some time.
And yeah, and now I'm basically doing the, taking care of the developer community at Mental.
And yeah, we mostly want to talk to builders in the space and we try to help them as much as we can.
So, here, John, your turn.
I'm also a developer relations engineer along with Pauline.
I've been working for Mental for around a year, more than a year now, before Testnet launch.
Yeah, I also joined the space as a hacker at first and got picked up by a very cool HackerHouse program called SocialHouse.
So, first of all, thank you so much, Pauline and John, for organizing this.
And very excited to see what builders and developers have to build with our recent launch of Mantle on the QuickNode platform.
And about me, I am Sahil Sen.
I work on the developer relations team on the QuickNode side as a senior, focusing a lot on the educational front, creating educational content,
teaching developers about how to create different dApps, how to deploy different kinds of smart contracts, et cetera, et cetera.
And about me, I joined this space with QuickNode.
So, before this, I was working as a web developer during my college days.
And I found out about QuickNode.
QuickNode supported a few of my hackathon.
I used to do a lot of hackathons during my college days.
So, QuickNode supported a few of my hackathons during my college days.
And then I reached out to them asking them if they are looking for any person who can be a developer relations person for their team, which they were not during that time.
But the founder, Dimitri, who was kind enough to give me a shot or give me an opportunity to test out and see how it works out, et cetera, et cetera.
So, I worked for some time as an intern and then came in full time.
And since then, I have been working in Web3, learned a lot, like made other people's learned a lot, onboarded a lot of people to Web3, creating content since 2020, like very early days in Web3.
I don't think during that time, the space once even called Web3, this term started getting popularized or romanticized in 2021 or late 2021.
So, yeah, like have been in the space for four years now.
I mean, I know there are a lot of people on this panel itself who are in the space itself who must be in the space for a long time.
But, you know, even four years in the space feels like decades.
This is the one year in crypto, you know, feels like a few years in Web2.
And it's a very cool story.
And I think if we have any dev at the moment in this call, there are builders and they go around in Hackathon and they're just wondering how they can maybe get a, maybe not a full time job, but how do you get inside this space?
Because obviously we get the question a lot.
This is that this is a bull market.
So, of course, it's it's easier to get a job in Web3 when it's a bull market.
But I think one stuff and we are the living proof of this because the three of us started like that.
And it's just if you're a dev and you wonder how well, then really join Hackathon, like just build stuff, just really like it doesn't matter if it's not perfect.
Like a lot of people don't want to to show or talk about their projects because they think it's just not good enough or something.
But you have no idea how much can come out of the Hackathon.
And, you know, I always ended up building stuff that at the end of 48 hours coding, you're amazed by what a few people that didn't know each other can actually build.
So it is definitely the best way and the best proof to to get started in that space.
And I guess you two did the same thing.
And it couldn't agree more on that.
Like hackathons are a very good space to just start out or just to pierce into a particular ecosystem.
And you meet a lot of people, you meet a lot of founders, even founders of like big protocols, big companies at these hackathons, which won't be possible at a conference or at another events.
Right. Because conferences are so many people, it gets kind of noisy, but hackathons are a very good and secure space where you can interact with these protocols, people from these protocols.
And yeah, by building projects within 36 hours, 46 hours, it shows you know, and it shows them that how capable you are.
I always tell my friends in college.
It's kind of a nerdy answer.
Even now, whenever I get time, like now, you know, we have, we, all of us, like all three
of us have full time jobs and everything.
But even now, whenever I get even a slightest of moment to go participate in hackathon, I do.
With a few of my friends from different, different protocols.
We go to, like the recent ones were ETH Istanbul and ETH India.
And we were even able to get some bounties out of it.
Like you're not there just for the bounty, like when you started, but, but it's still
And also I think it's a, it's a good way to really understand because this space is basically
And we're going to talk about it also with quick note, because it's also very important
for a lot of partner we have at Mantle.
They, when they make implementation, a lot of them, and, and I, I, I don't need to say
the names because they all out there and they will all, it's all public, but a lot of them
require everything to be open source to be able to implement with you.
So it also shows a lot about how each protocol in the space is kind of like really pushing
for having this open source ecosystem where everything is very transparent, where everybody
And this is something that, you know, in the whole craze of a bull run, a lot of people,
it's very easy to, to say our crypto is this a crypto that, well, at the end of the day,
there is no intake and other space that has all open source.
And, uh, uh, and I think we, we are quick to remember to, to forget about it.
And, uh, and when you go to hackathon, you realize how people are really not, uh, keeping
Everybody is really, you go from one protocol to another and you're like, Hey, I tried to
implement, uh, with them, but it didn't work.
And the guy from the other protocol would end up helping you, uh, maybe implementing on,
on someone else protocol.
And it's, um, it's something that you don't see often, right?
Uh, when you work in tech.
Should we get started with quick note?
The problem with Debra is that they, they lose track when we start talking about hackathon.
Say, um, could you, uh, could you tell us a bit about quick notes and, and, um, what is
it and why is it so special?
So quick note, uh, right now is a web three development platform, which, uh, offers a
bunch of tools, uh, to make, uh, yours and everyone's like be developer, be the builder,
be the company or a big enterprise.
Uh, it's, uh, it's, uh, it offers tools to make the development journey of these personas
So we started, and even now our main product is, uh, RPC nodes or the blockchain nodes.
It can be rest depending on the type of protocol, but, uh, yes, the main product is still those
And, uh, the thing is that why is it special or how is it different from other providers
or, uh, other RPC providers, node providers, et cetera, is that like, there are, there are
a few things, there are few reasons why it's special or how it's different.
The first one is obviously speed, right?
So since, since these blockchain networks, they move so fast, a lot of time, like a lot
of time our nodes or our servers get out of track, they get out of sync.
So it's very crucial to get whatever data we are requesting or whatever data we intend
to pull from those blockchain networks to get those data very fast without any latency
or like close to close to real time latency.
And you can even check out a lot of resources we have around that, that, uh, why quick node
And, uh, then it's, uh, it's about scalability and reliability.
So since quick node has a lot of different, different nodes deployed throughout the globe,
you or anyone on your team does not have to worry about scalability and reliability.
Doesn't matter which region you are calling from, doesn't matter how much amount of traffic
you are sending to the platform, it will be able to handle it.
And, uh, these are, I think these are the pillars of, uh, any blockchain development, like
speed, reliability and scalability, because, uh, scalability goes hand in hand with your product
development life cycle as well.
So like when your product is small, it will have, uh, like a few users, but soon when,
once it starts growing, it will have a lot of users, the number of users will grow.
And that's the speciality of quick node API.
So it grows with your product demand or your traffic demand.
You do not have to worry about it.
You just plug in quick node and that is it.
It grows with the, your traffic and, uh, you can just rest assured work on other developments,
focus on your product itself.
If we, uh, as a node provider takes care of everything on our end, be it, be it hard folks,
be it network upgrades, uh, everything.
You don't have to worry about those.
You just plug quick node in to your application for your blockchain interaction and you're good
Everything is taken care of on our, uh, on our end.
You can just focus on your product development and improving your product, improving your
user experience for your users.
You want, uh, go, go for it.
I, I've always seen cooking out as a, like a, all in one place platform for developers.
You know, a developer could just start their Web3 journey with quick.
You know, it has everything.
Um, and the, the, the good point you mentioned is, um, scalability, especially in the Web3,
you never know when your app will need that scalability, right?
You might think it's just, you might think it's just, it was, it's just a hackathon project,
but then it ends up being one inch or something like that.
You know, it's, it's, you never know.
So the scalability is huge.
Um, so, um, yeah, maybe I could ask you like a similar question.
Um, what are kind of the main problems that devs would be facing if there was no quick
So, um, maybe you can talk about other features, API and things, things of that nature.
So, um, if I'll talk in general about providers, not just quick note, but I'll go into that
But first of all, if there were no RPC providers or there were no node providers, what the devs
would have to do is to access or interact with a blockchain network.
First, they'll have to run their own nodes.
And, uh, the thing with running their own nodes is that it's, it's possible.
I won't say that it's not possible.
But the thing with running your own node is that it's impractical, right?
Because first you will have to sync the entire blockchain data on a machine.
Then you will have to keep managing those nodes.
And, uh, like with, with the networks like Mantle, where the chain moves so fast, the
transactions are so fast, the data is added so fast on the network.
A lot of the time, the machine on which the node is running may not be able to catch up
with the speed of the chain and it can get out of sync.
So in those cases, you will still have to manage that, uh, give a lot of your precious
time to node management, which you can rather focus on your app development or your own
So that will be the major drawback for developers or builders or even founders.
If something like quick note didn't exist.
And now a lot of people might think that even if that's the case, most of the
the protocols and most of the chains, even Mantle, they have the public endpoint APIs.
You can just go to chain list and get those public endpoint APIs and start using them.
But the thing with them is since they are free and they are open for everyone to use these
These public endpoint APIs has to be rate limited because there can be a lot of people who can
abuse these APIs since they are free.
They can abuse these APIs, use them a lot.
And, uh, since these protocols wants these public endpoint APIs fair and usable by everyone, they
are rate limited on the per user basis.
So you won't be able to use them a lot.
It's good to, they are good to get started, understand how everything works on that particular
But once you actually want to build something, you need something solid.
You will need something robust, which is not a hundred percent free from rate limits,
but which is kind of scalable and has higher rate limits.
And with quick note, you will be able to do that.
For example, you can also sign up for a free account with quick note and get started.
And once your app starts getting more traction, you can gradually and slowly ascend towards
higher tiers where you, where you can get access to more traffic, more number of endpoints,
other products, et cetera, et cetera.
So these are kind of the issues developers would, or problems developers would have faced if
something like quick note wouldn't have exist.
Uh, I can just add something because I don't know if everyone, uh, listening is
either a dev working in a big company or not, but like, uh, basically the, the rate limit is
something we face a lot, uh, at, uh, mental before we had the quick quick note.
So basically if you're a hacker at the hackathon, of course, uh, you can use public
endpoint, but, um, actually you will fairly, uh, reach the limit.
Uh, we've seen a bunch of projects, uh, where they, they actually reached the limit and especially
Uh, when you, uh, expect a very high volume, let's say you are launching, I don't know, a
meme coin or a, uh, NFT collection on one day.
Um, you might not have a product that is like huge, but these guys faced, uh, this, uh, so
I think it's just like to put in the, in the, in the, um, in order of level.
Uh, it doesn't mean that, of course, if you are yourself building your own depth, most likely
you want, but it is not something.
And also those kinds of API are designed in a way that it is better to actually, uh, limits,
uh, fairly on, like early on, because it is much easier for any API design to actually,
uh, increase this limit rather than having to, to basically to have it like completely
open and then shut it down.
So this is also why the reason does a point are like this for security reason.
But, uh, the idea that you will never reach a rate limit, I think we've seen a lot of projects,
uh, reaching it fairly fast.
Uh, and it can be many, I guess, I, I don't know, but like exactly, but I think it really
depends on if you expect a very high, um, rate of call on, on the one specific day that,
that, that, that would, that would be a use case that applies a lot in web three, right?
If you launch, for instance, a meme coin or something like this, that could happen.
Uh, John, do you want to ask another question about this?
I just, yeah, I just wanted to add another thing.
I've heard this, I think in the beginning of my journey, uh, without node providers, like
a quick node, uh, building a web three that would be similar to like, whenever you want to host
a website, you have to build up like the hardware for a server itself.
Uh, which is definitely not something people do these days.
Um, that, so basically thank you to our PC providers.
Uh, but yeah, how was, how was building on mantle overall?
So, uh, first of all, I want to celebrate the, the integration of mantle and the, with quick
Um, if you guys want to check it out, probably I'll send a link in the chat.
Uh, but yeah, how, how was actually building on mantle?
You can maybe, I know you've, uh, you're working on a tutorial as well.
Um, so yeah, maybe you could talk about that.
Yes, that's a really good question.
So since you mentioned that I am working on a tutorial around, uh, how to, how to create
your own ERC 20 token, or even you can say like meme coin, how to create your own token
on the mantle network and then add liquidity to a decentralized exchange like fusion X.
So that, uh, other people who are using that decentralized exchange can also start using
So the, I would say that the experience was kind of very smooth.
First of all, the transactions were very fast.
So as soon as I was hitting deploy and, uh, the thing is that I have worked, I have created
these tutorials in the past, right.
With the, with the, with the, with the main Ethereum testnet networks.
And, uh, usually what happens is while recording video, you hit deploy and then you have to wait
for some time and then you cut short to the point where the contract is actually deployed.
But in this case on mantle, as soon as I hit deploy, and, uh, as soon as I was about to
speak that, okay, we will wait until the transaction is completed.
The transaction was already, already accepted and already completed.
So I would say that it's very fast, but, uh, I did face one issue.
I'm not sure it, it, it was related to EVM version or not, but, uh, I did face issue
with the, with the open Zeppelin permit dot soil contract that, uh, it wasn't once, uh,
when I was using the contract with open Zeppelin permit dot soil contract, uh, the metadata
of the token was not getting propagated properly on the mental network.
But, uh, I think it's just, uh, issue with the EVM version mismatch or probably like you
guys need to work with open Zeppelin dream that, uh, they are permit dot soil contract is, uh,
compatible with mantle as well.
But apart from that, I think everything was very smooth.
Another thing is that, uh, to get, uh, to get test net MNT or mantle token, I first had
to mint those on, uh, Ethereum Sipolia network and then bridge them to mantle Sipolia network.
So just one piece of suggestion or feedback would be that, uh, if, if I was able to mint
those token directly on the mantle Sipolia network, that would have been nice.
Um, we can, we can take, we can chat about this offline.
Uh, we, we, we at quick note run a multi-chain faucet as well.
And, uh, hopefully soon we will able to support, uh, mantle test net tokens on that as well.
So developers don't have to go through this process, but they can directly mint on the
mantle Sipolia network itself.
But long story short, it was smooth.
The experience was, uh, smooth since it's EVM compatible.
So I was able to deploy my contract, which I already had on mantle as well.
We, we welcome all feedback and, uh, thanks for the, like pointing out some of our issues.
Um, yeah, maybe in the future quickly.
Quick note will run our faucets with, which would be perfect.
I mean, I think, uh, it's like in the, um, I think we, of course we know, and, uh, mental,
they will be much easier for the, for the dev to not have to bridge from Sipolia to, um,
but, uh, yeah, I think we are trying to, to get that done, but for sure, I think it will
be even better if, uh, if we, we go through like you guys get the faucet as well.
Uh, so yeah, definitely we can talk about that.
But, uh, at the moment, I mean, Pauline and I, we have a lot of testnet tokens.
So if you guys need testnet tokens, I'll sell each for $5.
Just, just, like, we, we, we feel very rich in testnet tokens.
But unfortunately, yes, that's all.
And, uh, since, uh, since we are having this space to celebrate our commentary, the launch
of mantle on quick note, I would like to give out a coupon code to sign up for mantle on a
We already have a free plan.
You can join using like just using your email address.
You just have to verify and that's it.
You will be able to spin up your mantle endpoint on quick note for free.
But, uh, if you're feeling lucky, if you want like more than one endpoint, let's say that
you want to test out on testnet first and then deploy on mainnet, you will need a paid
plan because those will be two endpoints, right?
So for that, uh, we have a coupon code because, uh, we had just launched on mainnet, uh, uh,
So celebrate that the coupon code is M A N T L E mantle 10, 10 as in the digit 10, one,
So you can just use this coupon code to sign up for the discover plus plan on quick note,
and you will be able to spin up two endpoints.
So it's mantle 10 and is it all, uh, lowercase?
I hope you guys like whoever needs a second endpoints, uh, just like go for it.
That's super nice of you guys.
And even after this, uh, space ends, my DMS are always open.
If you need any assistance developing on mantle, if you need any assistance.
With quick note or even on mantle, you can reach out to me.
Setting that everything up.
This is, uh, uh, Devrel at heart.
We don't always have just Devrel on the call.
We always, uh, try to, to mix with that.
Actually, now we have some, uh, I have some, um, uh, kind of products, a bit more orientated question for you.
Um, so they're a bit less technical, but I think it's, uh, it's really nice.
Basically you've been in the space.
Quick note has been in the space for a very long time.
And, and as we said at the beginning of the session, it's very easy.
Like, like we kind of forget that for protocol to have been live or on main it for, I don't
know, a few years, it's quite rare actually.
So, uh, quick note has been around for what?
Like, uh, uh, five years, seven years, seven years, seven years, seven years.
Um, so, um, first, uh, I'd wanted to ask, like, what is your, okay, let's say it's been around
So they they've seen a lot, right?
Like, uh, over the, the, the, the past seven years, what are the thoughts?
What are your thoughts about the current state of web three?
Like, is it, um, you know, like, um, do you feel that every, of course we go through bear,
bear market, bull market and different cycle, but like, uh, do you see in terms of infra,
there is, um, obviously improvements, but you know, what are your thoughts generally?
Like, are you optimistic?
Do you think this, uh, this, um, this time now is, um, best time that has ever been in the
What, what, what are your thoughts about that?
Um, about being optimistic.
I am, yes, a hundred percent optimistic.
I have been optimistic since the beginning, but, uh, about the current state.
Uh, the thing is that even though the space has been matured a lot, we have like, we at
quick note have seen transformations growth since 2017, but, uh, about the current state of
web three, I see a lot of potentials.
I see a lot of, uh, end user applications being built.
Like we are seeing social, uh, we are seeing social applications, which are being used by
day-to-day users who does not even know anything about web three, who does not even know anything
They are using those applications.
So I see a lot of potential there.
Just like, uh, just like those social applications.
If me as a community, as an industry starts building more of these applications where, uh,
end user has a greater usability where, uh, people do not even realize that there is a blockchain
working under the, uh, under the hood or there is a blockchain layer underlying of this application.
That I think will be the day where this industry, like this industry has reached a significant
But, uh, at the current state, it does need a lot of improvements, uh, in user experience
and mainstream adoption pick that because that are those that are the challenges that are
the major challenges, which this industry faces.
But I think it's getting addressed with the applications like social applications, et cetera.
And, uh, in the near future, we will see a lot of these coming up where even, uh, even
our friends who are not into tech or into blockchain, or even our parents who are not into, uh,
into, uh, blockchain or even tech, uh, they do not understand anything about blockchain.
Even they can use these applications without any hassle.
That is the, that is the future I'd see.
And I hope for this industry.
So yes, that I think that's, uh, that answers your question around the current state of the
I think it's, uh, yeah, has been a common, uh, a common problem around.
We, we just spoke about it, uh, with John, I think like five minutes before this.
Um, we, we mentioned that because, uh, we, we know of course that bridging is really
the bottleneck of, uh, of, uh, all the layer two.
Um, I was myself ending up like thinking, uh, you know, I have, uh, with like a wrapped
And I was thinking, how, how can I get rid of those?
Like I went to, I didn't know what I wanted to do exactly, but I was like, I have 50 bucks
And then like, you know, just the idea that I work in that space, I should, like, this
is not something that I should struggle to figure it out, like how to swap and what's
But like, I'm thinking, my God, like if my mother is here, like she, she's not even going
to understand how she even got this wrap teeth.
Like, uh, so, uh, so yeah.
Um, there is definitely, definitely, um, improvement to do.
John, any thought of that?
Well, let's just say crypto and blockchain.
We're not really ready for a billion users yet, but soon enough.
Uh, I'm also an optimist, um, about the space.
So let's see, maybe all of us are at some point contributing to the, to this goal of,
uh, some, at some point reaching like billion billion plus years for crypto.
But, uh, I guess the question I have for you, maybe one of the last ones before we wrap
up, um, what does the future of quick note look like?
Um, maybe like a roadmap because honestly, I, I just go on your documentation.
There's like a million things there.
So tenderly simulator, like million cool things that, um, I think I haven't checked out yet,
but I will check out, um, like streams, clusters, quick alerts.
Um, what else, what else are you guys building and, uh, what's the future looking like?
So at quick note, our major goal is our, our major, uh, like, uh, major ethos or our major,
uh, uh, like, uh, value is to make the lives of our users who are developers, builders, companies,
companies can be anyone easier.
And, uh, to continuously move towards that goal or to continuously keeping that particular
value in mind, we are continuously working to increase our current capabilities as well
as working on new products as well.
And by that, what I mean is making, making the internet or this new generation of internet,
which is web three more accessible to not just people who understand it in and out, but also
to people who are new to it, who does not understand it very thoroughly or who does not understand
So we came up, we, we recently came up with this new product called streams, which, which
is, uh, which is a testament of that, that ideology, making the internet or making this new generation
of internet more accessible to everyone who does not understand it.
So with streams, what people can basically do is, uh, they can set up, uh, a polling ETL pipeline
And they do not have to set up their own filters.
They do not have to set up their own, uh, own ETL, which is extra transform load pipelines,
which in itself is very like a tedious job.
And, uh, on top of that, adding blockchain doesn't help, right?
Like, uh, it gets even more complex.
So people can just use streams to stream data or blockchain.
It can be transaction receives data, et cetera, et cetera.
They can fetch data for, for the latest blocks.
They can fetch data for a given range of blocks.
They can directly feed the data right from blockchain into their databases or servers or even data
And, uh, to further simplify this or to further make this process of extract, transforming and
even more easier stream will be accompanied, but not just stream.
Uh, there will be a new product, which will be coming up very soon.
It's, uh, it's in closed beta right now.
So on function using functions, people will be able to.
Do filtration of the data on the server side itself.
So first this will in, this will decrease the latency by a lot.
Since your data is getting transformed on server side itself, you don't have to get the data,
transform it on your end, then do something with data.
You will be able to invoke functions from server side itself.
So that will be very helpful for people who does not understand a lot about blockchain data,
but do understand about tech to understand how to work with the server side functions, et cetera, et cetera.
So that is how we are solving.
And that is how we are preparing ourselves as well with by coming up with these new products,
which just makes the development process on web three easier.
A lot of time people doesn't even need to know about how blockchain works, but we have a lot, so many resources.
We have such kind of products that they can get started easily and quickly around building their blockchain applications.
And yeah, they don't need to know a lot about blockchain.
They can just get started easily and with extensive resources of guides, documents and accompanied with videos.
If someone is a visual learner, we also have a lot of videos on our YouTube channel.
So that's how we are preparing for the new generation of builders and the next billion users of Web3, which we all talk about.
I love the future of QuickNote.
I love the functions you guys are working on.
I would personally love to check it out.
And, you know, if I needed any help, I'll reach out to you, Sahil.
Not like you have a billion tutorials that already help everyone.
But yeah, I have this, you know, I know some people.
So yeah, let's maybe wrap it up.
And we have a few, we have a bit more.
But just like one last word about what you just say, Sahil, I really think that the DevX is so important for Web3 infrastructure.
And then that, you know, any, because the main problems that we always say that is a lack of Web3 developer.
If you make that, if you make feel every single Web2 backend dev or full stack dev can just jump in and feel very familiar with the infrastructure.
And everything will look like GraphQL or AWS and so on.
Then what's the problem really?
Like, you know, it's not that much.
Because I used to work in Web2 and big corporate and all those like super, super great developer, they were like, oh, no, we understand nothing of Web3.
And I was like, but you're like an awesome, awesome Python dev, like you can do C sharp.
Like, what stops you here, you know, and they just get put off by this idea that they need to relearn all those concepts and everything.
Well, at the end, you know, calling function and, you know, fetching data, really.
I think it's a really great goal that QuickNode has, for sure.
Yeah, we need to wrap up.
So, one thing we want to tell everyone is to always go to our Telegram channel and Discord channel.
This is where we really put everything that is happening for developers on Mantle.
So, if you are not part of the TJ group or on the Discord, really go there.
We also, for any builder, we just want to say that Mantle has released something that's called a Scout program.
So, we will also add the link and it's like a new grant program.
And then, you know, if you are building anything, do not hesitate to reach out to us.
And, yeah, and talking about, again, Hackathon, it's all that we are obsessed.
But, we have East Sydney coming.
Sozu House, the big Hacker House is also taking place in Australia.
Next one will be ETHPRAG, right, John?
You will be there, Sahil, right?
I have been talking with the team.
If I get the confirmation, I will be there.
Yeah, I know there's also ETH, Berlin, and Belgrin.
But, for now, Mantle will be in Sydney and in Prague.
And, of course, in ECC in Brussels in July.
So, if any one of you is there, don't hesitate to come.
And especially if you want to build a Mantle, like, we can help, for sure.
I think you'll hopefully see you guys somewhere around the world.
And hope to meet you one day, Sahil, too.
And whenever you are building at these Hackathons on Mantle,
you can use Quicknode RPC Endpoints to interact with the Mantle Network.
See you at the next Builder session in two weeks.
Thank you so much for having me.