 The best part of Launchpad has definitely been the organization of the curriculum. There's a lot of resources in PL, which is really nice, but having it all laid out in like a really nice, easy-to-follow format is amazing. And Koloik has been really cool. I think learning about all the projects in the ecosystem was just immensely useful. I really enjoyed today's session on the computer for data. It was just great. Great to see where the whole Filecoin vision is moving to. Basically, just getting a bunch of new time when you join the PLN to learn and get paid to learn all the technology involved. Not just time to learn, but time with the people who made it, as well as just the Launchpad staff who already know a lot of the stuff. It's super valuable to be able to ask questions when you get stuff and immediately go on to learning more. The best part for me was getting to meet all the people in Koloik. All the people in the cohort who joined at the same time, went through the same experience, learned Web3 for the first time. Most people hadn't worked in Web3 before, and so there was camaraderie with learning together, being together. And then just meeting people and having a good time, you know, with the lunches and the dinners and the socials and stuff like that. The best part of Launchpad is the uncomped session. People get to see the picture of the talent within Protocol Apps, how Protocol Apps found, keep and nurture these talents, which turns into the beliefs and trust. This program helped me embark into the PL Network by showing me how complex it is. There are so many things happening at the same time in different projects with different people, doing different things that I wouldn't have no visibility on. Having the new connections with new employees is super helpful, especially with this cohort. I feel like there's a lot of teams that I don't interact with on a daily basis, and now I can put faces to those teams, which is really helpful. I think with just two days here, I started having good ideas. The companies that we met here and people from Protocol Apps, we see some common things that we could collaborate on, where we could definitely give the value to the network, and at the same time kind of leverage our product for that needs. It is a networking opportunity where you get to see course material from a lot of people who are doing those various things, and so suddenly you've got faces and names around a bunch of the different parts of the org, so you know who to ask and where you should be going, and that's a useful thing to demystify and make more personal. By the end of day number two, I think I have 15 new contacts in Slack, so I kind of have a better understanding of what is going on, like maybe a longer-term roadmap, so I also had a chance to chat to quite a few people about what projects I built on Filecoin, so it's really interesting to see what real stuff that is happening right now. Having the dedicated space to learn things and to ask questions and engage with people that are part of different teams is going to be super helpful going forward. I think also having some of that structure of a cohort that you go through helps you not feel quite as alone and gives you also a set of other people who are coming through at the same time as you that you make friends with. It's a nice cross-cutting set of people that you can make connections with who go through that cohort with you, where there's a lot less of that feel of awkwardness in asking questions. The members who go through Launchpad have a much better, broad understanding of Filecoin, Poor Call Labs, and the Web3 community than people who don't. They not only have connections with people that are part of PLN, which is huge, so getting those connections is super important, but also just the deep knowledge that comes with going through the program I think is super helpful no matter what role you're in. So even if you're in a non-technical role, like having that knowledge and having the resources for it is like super helpful. The Launchpad program is a great jumpstart that is able to bring on new people to our team who already have the vocabulary throughout the space. It offloads a bunch of that sort of ramp up education and gets people functioning much faster than I think they otherwise would. We've now encouraged new crypto econ lab members to go through Launchpad because you kind of get this learning experience through the curriculum and through the members in your cohort that really can't be replicated anywhere else. There's like core concept to everything that they do. So for example, like the icebreaker, the questions that they ask really brings people closer. Like without having a small talk or spending time to talk, I really know who to go to. I have these instant connections because the questions and the way they frame their icebreaker really reveal the person in a deeper level. I got to meet people who were in previous cohorts and also people who would come to the Launchpad social or the events that happened during the same week as Launchpad. I highly encourage people to do Launchpad, but not only that, I highly encourage Launchpad alumni and protocol lab members to come out and meet the new cohort because they're always a great group of people. And you learn a lot and you get to meet new people.