 Awesome. That brings us into our spotlights. Wes, take it away. Yes. Thank you so much. We're happy to announce that the Computer Overdata Working Group is launched. We've had our third meeting. All this information is available on cod.cloud as well as YouTube page. The purposes behind the Working Group are to create a space for collaboration. There are many different teams in addition to Baccalaureate that are trying to solve this problem of Computer Overdata. Increase awareness, marketing, go-to-market, because these projects, some of them are younger and they're attracted to user, VC interests, and then also to foster collaboration. There are often shared standards between different Computer Overdata projects, and we want to really invest in support those shared standards. We do have this upcoming second round of our Computer Overdata Summit. It's going to be Lisbon, November 2nd through 3rd. We very much encourage you to pencil in the dates. We'd love to have your attendance. Also, please jump into the Slack channel if you'd like to stay up to date on the developments there. The next big ask is, if you know of any Computer Overdata projects that are not part of the community yet, please do send them our way. We do want to grow the community. It's a big ecosystem out there, so we're always looking to add folks who are trying to solve these problems. Again, big thank you to Patrick and the Retrieval Working Groups for all their help getting this started. They definitely paved the way for us, so that's all we have for today. Thank you very much. Hi, Sam. Overdap and Skarka is Saturn. Good morning, all you beautiful people. So Saturn is Filecoin's content delivery network. Our mission every day, every single day is to make Filecoin fast. So we've got a lot of progress to report. While the network is still in testing, it has been growing, growing, growing. We are now 44 points of presence globally. That means L1 nodes. These are nodes running in data centers that end users will talk to first. And we have been loading those nodes, so we're now pushing over 80 terabytes and 120 million requests a day. And if that sounds familiar, that's our target. Our initial target is the IPFS gateway network load. So that's the same load. And how are we doing performance-wise of that load? We are 800 milliseconds faster at 95th percentile, time the first byte than the IPFS gateway. You can see a little graph of that in the upper right. And we're twice as fast as the IPFS gateway at the 50th percentile. And the L2 nodes, this is like the next step in the network. So L1s will cache missed the L2s. L2s will run on user desktops and station. You'll hear about station Julian shortly. And L2s will cache missed the IPFS network. And storage providers, that's forthcoming. Now, what's in the pipeline? What are we, what's on our menu next? We want to continue to improve the time the first byte faster, faster, faster. We want to integrate with the IPFS gateway and see how we can bring Saturn to the existing kind of production load with the IPFS gateway. And thereafter, we are aiming for a public L1 loss. That means anyone, your friends, your family, your mother, your dog can go run an L1 node in Saturn's network, contribute to that network and be remunerated in Filecoin for their contributions. And we'd love for you to join in on our little party. You can come jump in in Filecoin Saturn channel on Filecoin Slack. Check out the orchestrator, which is a piece of software that monitors the whole network, monitor our progress on GitHub. And then a huge shout out to the best little team of protocol labs, the Saturn team, let's keep cranking. And that's it. Woohoo, awesome. And now the other part of that station, Julian. Hey, I'm Julian. I'm part of the Filecoin Station project. And so we're building a desktop app for the Filecoin network, which actually spun out of the Saturn project. For users, this means that everyone can participate in the network by running the app and everyone can run Filecoin by doing so. And it should be easy to install and run so that we can just grow the network as much as possible. And so that, yeah, basically shouldn't even notice it's running for developers, station is a deployment target. The first module that will be deployed to station is the Saturn L2, which adds edge caching in the future. There's going to be a lot of computer over data use cases, which can be very interesting and whatever else you can think of. So we're building this as a open platform, right? And an open platform obviously also needs a good security model. We are still working on that. We might use IPVM and the other platform will also handle a resource allocation for you so that module authors can focus on the actual business logic and don't need to be concerned with using people's machines too much. If you have questions or ideas, please join us like. Thanks. Awesome. Jesse, quick update on the off-summit. Hey, okay. Jesse again. So last month we go into the Iceland with the IPFS thing together to our off-summit. We go to have a lot of learning and knowledge sharing which you can see the leasing here. We will slowly sharing with the community what we're going to do and I think today the data team will share a little bit about what the plan we're going to do in the data platform. You can see we have a lot of topic in there. Also we travel, go into the biking, marketing biking. It's pretty nice, very beautiful country and a lot of activity. So that's a head of a highlight from our off-summit. If you're interested in what we are doing here or want to join us for the next summit, please let us know. We also have a hiring page in here. If you want to do something with us, please reach out. Awesome. Thank you. We have a couple more and then on to deep guides. CryptoEcon Lab, Hishan. Awesome. So we had a very successful CryptoEcon Day in Paris. We had over 300 registrations and over 100 people attend. So I think that was our biggest one yet. We've been branching out to more non-PL speakers. I think our ratio at Paris was 50% from outside PL and 50% inside PL. And you can see the links on our CryptoEcon Day website. We keep all the talks there. So if anybody wants to watch them, they're there. We've also had two new team members join. Juan Pablo, he joined in Paris and Shyam is joining part-time in next week and then full-time in September. Some upcoming things. We have a new CryptoEcon website that Dave is working on. And then we have CryptoEcon Days in Singapore, Bogota and Lisbon. So if you guys are interested, please register and come to our events. I think they're gonna be great. And Dave has done a great job of finding new people to give talks at each of the events. And then some ongoing projects. So we're working on the sector duration FIP, which I think is pretty well-known and Tom and Vik have been doing a great job there. Saturn Aliens, we just started working on doing some gas modeling, hierarchical consensus and then project Atlas. And then we are also looking to hire a couple of research scientists and three to four software engineers. So if you know anyone who's interested in working on this type of projects, please ping me and I will reach out. Awesome, I give us things, Steve. Yeah, awesome. This happened earlier here last month in July in Iceland. There's been different mentions to it, but yeah, we got around 80 folks, 30 different projects represented, 12 different tracks you can see. A lot of recorded video from this, that'll be going live early next week. So stay tuned for that. But emphasis on multiple areas, certainly the various implementations and experimentation. We talked about the spec improvement process and kind of as soon as that got lit up, like we immediately had people engaging with it, which is great to see. And I think a real highlight for me was to see that there was a lot of orgs outside of protocol labs really working together in a networked fashion. The IPFS and wasm track, kind of birthed the Interplanetary Virtual Machine Working Group. So you can join that on Discord and Filecoin Slack. And similarly, the Content Addressable Alliance, Working Group has gotten started with that, you know, it advocates and promotes the usage of content addressing in different places. So good stuff there. There's more coming here in terms of recap blog posts. Right after this call, there was actually a bi-weekly implementers sync to carry on some of the conversation. And we're gonna be creating a monthly builder sync as well. And for folks to be aware of IPFS camp will be coming where we'll gather the whole community. And details on that will be shared in the ipfs.tech blog and IPFS newsletter as soon as we have it. But thanks all for those involved. Good times. Awesome.