 So the bit that I'm most interested in from an outcome perspective is going to be that early afternoon block. So just sort of be thinking about, has anything here resonated with you about standardizing a W3C or standardizing in general and finding an online TF or whatever, right? So we'll just be thinking about that. And I think Julian is set up now and I'm going to turn it over to him. Good afternoon, Julian Smith. I'm the technical co-founder and CEO of Block Freight. I'm also the one-family members of the Melbourne Bitcoin Technology Centre. So just an open invitation if anyone's coming to Melbourne, Australia. Please come to our 600 square meter co-working space and come and have a chat about Bitcoin. So Block Freight is the project that I'm currently working on. So what is Block Freight? Block Freight is a blockchain of global freight. What we're looking to build is a blockchain upon... Essentially seeing ourselves as a way to make more efficient the global supply chain for container freight. That is about 90% of all the products that we use have spent time inside of a cargo container. So how the Block Freight network works is we have a counterparty asset. That counterparty asset is the Block Freight token. We retail that token for one US dollar per token and it acts as a network fee. So parties on the network announce a transaction into the network, which is essentially a XML JSON documentation or a bill of lady. And upon verification, validators in the network include those transactions. So we're using counterparty, it's built on Bitcoin. We're looking at a provision ledger built on tenderman. So there are 360 million container movements annually. And why are we building this? We're looking to deal with some issues that place container freight. So the moment we're holding attention is essentially when a container is sent to its destination, but it's completed in time. So the protocol charge, the mover of the goods is essentially the customer. Daily fees of a hundred US dollars before they can take that off the dock. To eliminate fraud, there are places where the documentation in shipping is used to access finance. If you generate fraudulent documents for goods that don't exist, it means that you can access finance for bogus goods. And also the potential to streamline international compliance. So some countries will have particular averages towards particular classes of goods. There is potentially an opportunity for a compliance application later to create an oracle for goods that have been moved to see that they are consistent with where those goods have been sent. Legacy documentation costs are significant. We have started a blockchain consortium to essentially have partners come and define what the standard for our transaction should be. Anyone that's interested in working with us should reach out and join our consortium. That's our history. That's us. If anyone's interested in blockchain applications for container freight, please feel free to contact me and thank you for your attention this afternoon. Thank you. Is there a linkage here in RFA in technology and all of that? Yeah, so RFA, the technology and physical internet of things, is something that Micka Wemme at AU based research standard is working with IBM's FICO ledger to create a project for there. They're currently working on within this Australia. There's a team at one of our local universities that's equally looking at smart devices that are potentially going to be part of our network. Ultimately, wherever there are hardware applications that make goods trackable, that's the kind of use case where we'd love to have those partners join our consortium and participate in the network. We'd also like to have partners join our consortium. Thank you very much everybody. We've already clapped. So the next time we have Mahesh, he's going to be talking about something interesting to many of us, which is blockchain and Verizon. Thank you to him. So is there anything that people want to make sure we talk about tomorrow? Do I have any talks or other topics? I don't think we'll be talking about today so much. I'd like to talk about it again, except for highly condensed form. There's like the best of 15 major outcomes, so if we could look at them and then build on it, I would want that. I can't think of it right now because it was all fractured. Yeah, so tomorrow, like I said earlier, we're going to try to summarize some of the things that we talked about today. I think different bits are going to be interesting to different people, so I don't think it is the top 15. But everybody, we can certainly have, I mean, that's what the dot voting thing is that Christopher is going to help us through. He's going to do this, but me too, I didn't have a six-metre-high agreement. I'd like to spend a bit of time to figure out how we're all going to meet up with each other once the workshop's over. And specifically, I'm thinking non-email, non-IRC, as much as I hate to admit it, Slack has been really good at keeping people together after workshops and things like this have happened. So I'm wondering if we could add everyone to a Slack channel and then see where that goes. That's a good idea. I think maybe we could set up tonight, maybe, or tomorrow morning or something. Maybe I wouldn't think this is a terrible idea. But what about if there's two or three or how many individuals that are working to represent something that could potentially turn this change, that are willing to stand up and formally say that at least their intent is to work together on a specific piece of code for code. I don't know if that's like, I don't know if the organization can beat up the room, but we can somehow do it. I don't think that might, we can integrate that into the whole thought-building thing that we're going to do tomorrow. Because there is that sort of aspect of work-on-just, we're going to do this thing. So, okay, with that, I'm going to turn it over to my edge. We are looking into the next block, which is very gross. So some of you, before you were, before you were supplying something, it's a browser. Yes, you did. You did do a browser. And it's actually getting market share. You can see some of it. You could say it's a popular browser in North America right now. It's still 7.5 months in share right now, but it's better than Europe and other countries. And it's increasing. So that's why it's so important. Right, I'll get to that. So why is this number? It's because, so Samsung is a pre-installed problem for Samsung devices. And Samsung has a huge share of on-point ecosystem. So, yeah, we are a Chromium-based browser. And Samsung is also a big contributor of the Chromium project. We're such a big company. And the browser also gets, on Samsung devices, we make updates from the base source. So these are, the list below that is all the browsers we have for different devices and platforms. So some features of the browser. We have our device-specific hardware features that we hook up in the browser, like the wind sensors and noise detection. So we used last, I think, a secret mode. It's basically kind of a private mode browsing where all the data is enhanced. But it will also let the data be encrypted and stored in Ops. This one is the strongest hardware-secured solution from Samsung. And we also use something with the sensor feature or other working information, for example. And we have been a big supporter of Progressive Web Apps. We talked about it. We talked with developers to get their personal Progressive Web Apps and our browser support for Progressive Web Apps. We introduced and infiltrating extensions last year. And we also have a new feature that we are still under. We haven't released that yet, but it's getting there. And yeah, it's been out of the best developers to build content on VR. So we have that. And we're working on Web Apps. That's why we are in this. So just before we get into that, we also have a browser based in the Middle East for VR VR. That's the VR browser, which basically lets you experience the Web in virtual reality. It supports 360 degree, 3D video playback. Like you can see in the second screen here. You can basically move from a single interview to a full-screen video view. When it's in the VR, that's a web page. Go to what you see in the video. So that's shocked by a bit of the web page for us. It takes advantage of this. It's basically let's you shock on a 360 degree experience. And that's the web we are talking about. It's on the web page inside. So we're working on integrating some of the payment apps. We have also a number of interesting payment working groups. And we have to standardize the APIs. We have some core members here. So this is what would typically come out. We would see it in the Chrome browser. Very similar to Chrome. So if you have any of you are interested in bringing your app, that's a good option. Good stuff. This is our address on this web page. We are interested in micropayments. And there are multiple reasons for micropayments. We can have our physical web in these cases. And we finally want to pay for the creators. So those are these cases for micropayments. And we're interested in doing the end-locking of these guys. So here we have to shout out and say, you guys want to send it out. If you want some sort of quick provide, you're here. You can treat us and we won't forget. Any new questions? OK, I see. Hi, Justin. I see a few questions. Just FYI, we're going to have one more presentation. One has suggested he split this, not quite yet, has suggested he split this presentation. He's going to talk a little bit about IPFS today. And then he's going to do this other stuff tomorrow. So the questions for, OK, let's get it. I have a good question with a little bit of a liability bias. I saw, I think, on page three, a mention of browser for Tizen. And Tizen is your operating somewhere in the devices. I didn't see any mention of RPEG. So can you share any experiences of small compact devices and relevant devices? So I mentioned RPEG and only Dyson, I guess. That's the... So the Dyson platform is in the same program that makes solutions that give me work. It will be headed the same, that payment solution. So, I don't know, I think it would be how to be back to that payment solution. So I think that is the point, but I don't have any idea. So I'm just interested in what APIs you think you're looking for besides what's already going on in the W3C as far as with crypto, the credentials weren't in the web authentication world. That's a good question. That's very early state. We just called it blockchain, and I'm just reading about it. So the kind of biggest case, very broadest case, I've had in mind is like, you know, browser could be a cryptocurrency wallet, right? And browser can keep track of... So content creators can jump, YouTube can jump once, but we don't do... And browser could combine all the videos that we watch and make a good enough amount of transactions so it can justify the fees and everything and then we can make a payment with that. So on those lines, I don't have a... Yeah, I'm going to come up with something that I think is a process. Any more questions? Okay, great. And to close this out, we're going to have one talk about IDFS and the future of the other. We need to sort of enter like a protocol for connecting devices. Could you put it on the web? I mean, it's on the web already. We're going to solve this particular problem tomorrow. And I thank you all for your attention and thank you for attending and making this pretty amazing event. And I will see you all. So yeah, so once I'm going to... We ran into technical problems. So we're going to go tomorrow? Once we can talk tomorrow. We're going to get started at 8.30. Yes, goes with everybody. I think probably... What's that? No, we're not there. So at 8.30 tomorrow, probably, you know, we're a little bit sorry in the morning that we'll try to start straight into the... into the next session. So that's what Biden talks. So Daniel, you had suggestions about people coming up and... Yeah, okay. Any adjourned? Thank you, everybody. And so now we've got some... We've got a mic. Anybody want to come up and suggest a place to meet for a figure of topic? So we heard a couple of suggestions before and now we'll wind up. So what were those suggestions? The answer is I'd say something's fired or... Meat Hall. Meat Hall. I mean, there's like one other one. It's possible options. Something's saying something. Something's saying. If they're not here, they could have been two investors. Yeah, yeah. Okay, Meat Hall is the place that everyone likes. It's pretty cool around there. It's not fired or brand saying it's together. Fired brand saying it's together. It has outside seating. Outside seating. I'm sold. But the food at Meat Hall is apparently not great. So if people want to... I mean, it's called food. We've got a bunch of locals. We have some locals around. I am among them. So if you are looking for a particular kind of food, feel free to ask. This is a beer selection. Good beer selection. Meat Hall or Cambridge throwing company? So is there a feeling in the room? People would get it. What is it? This is Meat Hall. Best beer selection is Meat Hall. Remember the name? Fired brand saying it has good beer and good food. I've never been there. I don't know. I'm pretty close. I looked it up on the map. On the particular topics people want to get together to talk about. That might be more interesting. I'm going to talk about it. So one thing I'm happy to talk about is I'll show you a demo tomorrow. Brown's direction is all looking at these inside tabs based on what type they are. So there's a person and there's nothing else. I'll show you a demo tomorrow about how we can talk about it tonight. Also, for people into the DOW, for folks that are into the DOW distributed autonomous organizations, some of us will probably be talking about the automated legal entity project and how you could have a DOW basically mirror what secretaries of state would be looking for to create a corporation or LLC and able filing to resolve that or a federally chartered entity. So how can we get to the suit and be suitably allowed to be an automated? And where are you going to drink that? Say that again after 100! Yeah, that's all of that. Probably fire brand saints. Fire brand saints, automation with drinking. Where are you going? Fire brand saints. Fire brand saints. Thank you very much. Good night.