Meeting Title: AI-Default-ABC Standup Date: 2025-11-06 Meeting participants: Casie Aviles, Gabriel Lam, Mustafa Raja, Samuel Roberts, Rico Rejoso, Uttam, Awaish Kumar, Demilade Agboola, Henry Zhao, Robert Tseng, Amber Lin, Zoran Selinger, Uttam Kumaran
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1 00:00:43.620 ⇒ 00:00:45.050 Samuel Roberts: Hello, everybody.
2 00:00:50.000 ⇒ 00:00:51.379 Gabriel Lam: Hmm… Morning?
3 00:00:52.150 ⇒ 00:00:54.120 Samuel Roberts: Good morning. Hello, everyone, this morning.
4 00:00:56.150 ⇒ 00:00:57.380 Gabriel Lam: Not bad, Hugh.
5 00:00:58.380 ⇒ 00:00:59.460 Samuel Roberts: Alright.
6 00:01:00.370 ⇒ 00:01:05.879 Samuel Roberts: My kid woke up a little early today, so it’s been a little bit of a hectic morning, but besides that, pretty good.
7 00:01:09.120 ⇒ 00:01:11.730 Samuel Roberts: Who is it, Tom?
8 00:01:13.230 ⇒ 00:01:15.410 Samuel Roberts: Finally, is he joining?
9 00:01:17.600 ⇒ 00:01:18.979 Samuel Roberts: See, there you go.
10 00:01:19.500 ⇒ 00:01:23.880 Samuel Roberts: Alright, let’s, I guess, chat about the… progress yesterday.
11 00:01:24.380 ⇒ 00:01:31.279 Samuel Roberts: So, I saw late, I think, Mustafa, you posted, or pushed the, The notes feature?
12 00:01:31.400 ⇒ 00:01:36.130 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, yeah, that… that is the only thing I worked on yesterday.
13 00:01:36.470 ⇒ 00:01:38.220 Samuel Roberts: Okay. Yeah.
14 00:01:38.340 ⇒ 00:01:41.449 Mustafa Raja: What is… Mostly wonderful. Okay.
15 00:01:42.320 ⇒ 00:01:43.140 Samuel Roberts: Cool.
16 00:01:43.140 ⇒ 00:01:43.680 Casie Aviles: Yeah.
17 00:01:44.820 ⇒ 00:01:51.150 Casie Aviles: I also have something right now locally for now, I haven’t really pushed it. I worked
18 00:01:51.320 ⇒ 00:01:55.089 Casie Aviles: On it after Mustaf had worked on the stand-up notes.
19 00:01:55.490 ⇒ 00:01:57.730 Casie Aviles: I can show you right now, if that’s fine.
20 00:01:57.730 ⇒ 00:01:59.150 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, that’d be great, sure.
21 00:02:01.050 ⇒ 00:02:01.640 Casie Aviles: Nope.
22 00:02:01.760 ⇒ 00:02:05.620 Casie Aviles: Okay, are you guys seeing my screen now?
23 00:02:06.450 ⇒ 00:02:07.170 Mustafa Raja: Yes.
24 00:02:09.000 ⇒ 00:02:13.149 Casie Aviles: Okay, so yeah, this is the stand-up notes that Mustafa worked on.
25 00:02:15.090 ⇒ 00:02:19.070 Casie Aviles: And also, he… I tried to work on the Zoom stuff.
26 00:02:19.550 ⇒ 00:02:20.700 Samuel Roberts: Okay. So…
27 00:02:21.170 ⇒ 00:02:25.170 Casie Aviles: If you can see, we have these kind of citations.
28 00:02:25.820 ⇒ 00:02:26.719 Samuel Roberts: Oh, cool.
29 00:02:27.340 ⇒ 00:02:32.860 Casie Aviles: It’s just… here, it’s a bit distracting, because it’s kind of stuck vertically, and there’s a lot
30 00:02:33.760 ⇒ 00:02:34.350 Casie Aviles: I’ll.
31 00:02:34.350 ⇒ 00:02:34.880 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
32 00:02:34.880 ⇒ 00:02:39.100 Casie Aviles: something to fix, I guess, but I’m just,
33 00:02:39.380 ⇒ 00:02:42.720 Casie Aviles: I managed to get it working for the Zoom part, at least.
34 00:02:43.200 ⇒ 00:02:44.280 Samuel Roberts: Okay. And then…
35 00:02:44.420 ⇒ 00:02:48.999 Casie Aviles: if we can… for example, if… I guess if we click here.
36 00:02:50.360 ⇒ 00:02:55.610 Casie Aviles: Then it should, lead us to the… the…
37 00:02:55.800 ⇒ 00:03:00.880 Casie Aviles: which part of, like, the exact timestamp, I guess, for… Cool. The recording.
38 00:03:02.240 ⇒ 00:03:06.950 Casie Aviles: I think that’s… yeah, that’s about it for the change.
39 00:03:08.790 ⇒ 00:03:13.879 Casie Aviles: Issue that this… that I’ve noticed, though, is it might be taking a bit…
40 00:03:14.580 ⇒ 00:03:20.160 Casie Aviles: longer to generate, it generates around… I mean, this zoom step.
41 00:03:20.580 ⇒ 00:03:26.000 Casie Aviles: So it’ll take around… around 40 seconds, I guess, at worst, a minute, but…
42 00:03:26.480 ⇒ 00:03:32.199 Casie Aviles: I think I’ll have… that’s, that’s, what… that’s the state right now.
43 00:03:32.750 ⇒ 00:03:33.629 Samuel Roberts: Okay. So what?
44 00:03:34.190 ⇒ 00:03:38.429 Casie Aviles: Yeah, just to give you guys a bit of an idea how it works.
45 00:03:39.000 ⇒ 00:03:43.909 Casie Aviles: So I basically just added, like, a pre-processing step, so there’s, like, a master agent now.
46 00:03:44.790 ⇒ 00:03:51.220 Casie Aviles: That will… Like, categorize the transcripts.
47 00:03:51.950 ⇒ 00:03:52.420 Samuel Roberts: Cool.
48 00:03:52.420 ⇒ 00:03:53.040 Mustafa Raja: Hmm.
49 00:03:53.880 ⇒ 00:03:58.779 Casie Aviles: I think, yeah, it’s… yeah, it’s this one, transcript preprocessor, so…
50 00:03:59.110 ⇒ 00:04:04.340 Casie Aviles: That’s how it works, and it structures the…
51 00:04:04.460 ⇒ 00:04:10.889 Casie Aviles: It creates, like, a structured output of, like, action items, blockers, you know, follow-ups, and then…
52 00:04:11.070 ⇒ 00:04:15.410 Casie Aviles: Like, the relevant timestamps, and from which meeting it came from.
53 00:04:17.410 ⇒ 00:04:18.010 Samuel Roberts: Cool.
54 00:04:18.779 ⇒ 00:04:19.579 Mustafa Raja: spoon.
55 00:04:20.029 ⇒ 00:04:27.749 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, so is that pulling from the stand-ups? Or, like, it still says 3 Zoom stand-ups, I’m curious if that’s connected still.
56 00:04:28.640 ⇒ 00:04:33.830 Casie Aviles: Yeah, it’s still… the turbo puffer search is not yet implemented here.
57 00:04:34.020 ⇒ 00:04:38.190 Casie Aviles: This is still kind of, like… what I just did…
58 00:04:38.490 ⇒ 00:04:42.339 Casie Aviles: Change, though, is instead of just getting, like, the last
59 00:04:43.910 ⇒ 00:04:48.149 Casie Aviles: or, like, the Zoom meetings from yesterday, it should get, like.
60 00:04:49.010 ⇒ 00:04:58.430 Casie Aviles: the last… or, like, the most recent meetings. So if it… if the meeting ended, like, an hour ago, then it should be able to get that.
61 00:04:58.660 ⇒ 00:05:02.210 Casie Aviles: But then there’s, like, a hard limit for now.
62 00:05:02.210 ⇒ 00:05:02.800 Samuel Roberts: Okay.
63 00:05:04.170 ⇒ 00:05:10.510 Samuel Roberts: Okay, yeah, so we can probably work on that today, of getting, like, the right meetings in, I guess, then, if that’s the question here.
64 00:05:11.090 ⇒ 00:05:14.629 Samuel Roberts: Like, it seems like it did alright. So I guess I’m curious what…
65 00:05:15.290 ⇒ 00:05:19.689 Samuel Roberts: So for… I don’t know what we’re looking at here. We’re looking at insomnia.
66 00:05:20.790 ⇒ 00:05:25.789 Samuel Roberts: So this is pulling… like, which Zoom… this is the stand-up, stand up…
67 00:05:25.940 ⇒ 00:05:28.279 Samuel Roberts: Slack, okay. Yeah, it’s this one.
68 00:05:29.870 ⇒ 00:05:35.010 Casie Aviles: So, yeah, it’s getting from this one big meeting that we had yesterday.
69 00:05:35.400 ⇒ 00:05:37.800 Samuel Roberts: Right, okay, that’s good, okay, but it’s…
70 00:05:38.180 ⇒ 00:05:45.070 Samuel Roberts: Okay, that makes sense. I’m wondering, were there other meetings that we want to include there that we need to do the turbo puffer for, or is this…
71 00:05:45.890 ⇒ 00:05:47.150 Samuel Roberts: Kind of cover us.
72 00:05:47.150 ⇒ 00:05:50.130 Uttam: Man, I feel like it’s probably a good start, like…
73 00:05:50.130 ⇒ 00:05:50.680 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
74 00:05:50.680 ⇒ 00:05:59.189 Uttam: to give you a sense, there could be edge cases where we… a client is actually, like, we… for example, Hype, the NOH, we’re sort of handling
75 00:05:59.390 ⇒ 00:06:04.330 Uttam: kind of, like, mostly in Slack, and then maybe we were talking about the client, like, once or twice a week.
76 00:06:04.550 ⇒ 00:06:07.140 Uttam: So maybe there’s, like, edge cases where if it, like…
77 00:06:07.650 ⇒ 00:06:09.740 Uttam: To also show a view of, like.
78 00:06:09.910 ⇒ 00:06:14.290 Uttam: And here’s the summary of, like, the last 7 days, or last 30 days of meetings.
79 00:06:14.460 ⇒ 00:06:17.429 Uttam: But again, I would say that’s more like edge cases.
80 00:06:17.710 ⇒ 00:06:20.010 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, okay, so this is… I think that makes sense.
81 00:06:20.670 ⇒ 00:06:21.310 Uttam: Clone.
82 00:06:22.140 ⇒ 00:06:28.090 Gabriel Lam: I think that also would be captured if we… like, in each video, you have the client.
83 00:06:28.640 ⇒ 00:06:33.750 Gabriel Lam: That’s associated with… sat-ups are the only ones that I think have multiple, right? But… All the other
84 00:06:34.080 ⇒ 00:06:35.089 Gabriel Lam: Typically, our active.
85 00:06:35.090 ⇒ 00:06:35.420 Samuel Roberts: Give me.
86 00:06:35.420 ⇒ 00:06:37.060 Gabriel Lam: A certain client.
87 00:06:37.200 ⇒ 00:06:41.790 Uttam: Yeah, the stand-up, that problem is the toughest. I think, Casey, it’s smart to kind of…
88 00:06:42.140 ⇒ 00:06:49.740 Uttam: go find the transcript. I mean, usually we are not jumping between clients, we’re usually closing one out, one out, one out.
89 00:06:49.740 ⇒ 00:06:50.570 Samuel Roberts: Right.
90 00:06:50.570 ⇒ 00:06:52.660 Uttam: You know, we… there may, like…
91 00:06:52.970 ⇒ 00:07:02.679 Uttam: You may end up needing to do, like, if needed, you may end up… like, the clips is a great way of, like, having the segments in the video and saying, like, okay, this… at this point, we linked…
92 00:07:02.970 ⇒ 00:07:14.020 Uttam: we talked about, like, the chapters, right? This point we talked about ABC, this point we talked about this, this point we talked about this, and maybe there’s, like, more deep embedding into the… to the chapters, but…
93 00:07:14.440 ⇒ 00:07:15.509 Uttam: This is pretty good.
94 00:07:19.140 ⇒ 00:07:21.669 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, yeah, we talked about the chapters a little bit, but I think…
95 00:07:21.850 ⇒ 00:07:25.090 Samuel Roberts: That was kind of the fear, like, if things bounce around a little bit, but…
96 00:07:25.190 ⇒ 00:07:30.939 Samuel Roberts: might be worth adding in the future anyway, but I think this is a good… A good step.
97 00:07:30.940 ⇒ 00:07:38.830 Uttam: And then for, okay, so the remaining blockers, these are… none of these are Slack, so are the… is the Slack hyperlinked, or no?
98 00:07:40.010 ⇒ 00:07:43.180 Casie Aviles: No, it’s not… there’s no links for Slapkid.
99 00:07:43.180 ⇒ 00:07:43.649 Mustafa Raja: I think that.
100 00:07:43.650 ⇒ 00:07:44.510 Samuel Roberts: We can… yeah.
101 00:07:44.510 ⇒ 00:07:49.490 Mustafa Raja: tooltip, if you hover over it, what was the message?
102 00:07:50.310 ⇒ 00:07:54.199 Uttam: No, I guess it’s more important for me to see the message in…
103 00:07:54.730 ⇒ 00:08:02.039 Uttam: like, to give you guys an example, if there’s, like, Amber’s gonna send an analysis outline the segmentation plan, and Robert’s like, oh, I missed that, or…
104 00:08:02.170 ⇒ 00:08:09.049 Uttam: oh yeah, where is that? I would just click Open Slack. So, I don’t know how to… I don’t know how that permalink URL works.
105 00:08:09.510 ⇒ 00:08:11.010 Samuel Roberts: I think we can work, yeah.
106 00:08:11.010 ⇒ 00:08:12.230 Uttam: me into there.
107 00:08:12.650 ⇒ 00:08:13.270 Samuel Roberts: Okay. Yeah.
108 00:08:13.270 ⇒ 00:08:14.390 Uttam: Yeah, that’s best.
109 00:08:14.390 ⇒ 00:08:33.130 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I think right now… so, like, obviously it’s going into Superbase, so that should have the message IDs. I think what’s happening here is that rather than just dumping all that into the context, I had kind of reformatted it to look like a chat, and we lost the IDs there, and I should be able to add that, and then hopefully we can pull those and make the links.
110 00:08:33.350 ⇒ 00:08:33.900 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
111 00:08:33.909 ⇒ 00:08:34.359 Uttam: Okay.
112 00:08:34.460 ⇒ 00:08:36.920 Samuel Roberts: So I… yeah, I think that’s doable.
113 00:08:37.270 ⇒ 00:08:42.679 Samuel Roberts: And then, yeah, the link, we just gotta figure out the right construction, and that should be fine.
114 00:08:43.299 ⇒ 00:08:45.510 Samuel Roberts: I’m sure there’s documentation out there for that, so…
115 00:08:46.110 ⇒ 00:08:46.620 Uttam: Yeah.
116 00:08:47.610 ⇒ 00:08:48.690 Samuel Roberts: Shouldn’t been crazy.
117 00:08:49.420 ⇒ 00:08:50.140 Samuel Roberts: But yeah.
118 00:08:50.140 ⇒ 00:08:50.580 Uttam: fantastic.
119 00:08:50.580 ⇒ 00:08:51.050 Samuel Roberts: Showcasing.
120 00:08:51.050 ⇒ 00:08:58.009 Uttam: I guess my… my other question is, like, about, sort of, the… Summaries of, like, today, yesterday.
121 00:08:59.640 ⇒ 00:09:01.809 Uttam: Are you guys still iterating?
122 00:09:02.560 ⇒ 00:09:04.040 Uttam: On that, or…
123 00:09:04.350 ⇒ 00:09:06.860 Uttam: What do you, like, what do you think?
124 00:09:11.030 ⇒ 00:09:12.769 Uttam: Like, in the status update.
125 00:09:13.070 ⇒ 00:09:14.310 Samuel Roberts: That’s what I was just gonna…
126 00:09:14.870 ⇒ 00:09:21.840 Samuel Roberts: I think we probably need to do a little bit more there, I don’t know… how, today…
127 00:09:21.960 ⇒ 00:09:27.290 Samuel Roberts: what’s above this? Is there a hiding there? Is it urgent, or what was the top one? If you scroll up there…
128 00:09:27.600 ⇒ 00:09:28.689 Gabriel Lam: I think it says yes, sir.
129 00:09:28.690 ⇒ 00:09:31.190 Samuel Roberts: Yesterday, changes today, yeah.
130 00:09:31.560 ⇒ 00:09:35.869 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, okay, so I was making sure I couldn’t remember exactly what the headings were there. Yeah, I mean…
131 00:09:38.270 ⇒ 00:09:39.269 Samuel Roberts: I guess, what is the most.
132 00:09:39.270 ⇒ 00:09:42.810 Uttam: I guess my question is more about, like, for these, like.
133 00:09:43.450 ⇒ 00:09:49.260 Uttam: like, this is less of, like, a UI, this is more of, like, Is the output…
134 00:09:50.540 ⇒ 00:09:55.669 Uttam: to, like, some specification, what we need. Like, what’s helpful? Should I, like…
135 00:09:55.780 ⇒ 00:10:01.889 Uttam: take this and be like, okay, well, it would… like, I can basically, like, kind of write my own.
136 00:10:02.220 ⇒ 00:10:09.589 Uttam: And that way you can do sort of more, like, few-shot, like, what… what is, like, helpful here?
137 00:10:12.040 ⇒ 00:10:20.890 Casie Aviles: Yeah, I think that would also help, having, like, a few-shot examples, so we have, like, an idea what, like, the ideal structure would be.
138 00:10:22.880 ⇒ 00:10:29.029 Uttam: Okay, great. Can you, yeah, can you start on… if there is already, like, a Notion…
139 00:10:29.640 ⇒ 00:10:33.060 Uttam: Or, I mean, actually, you could also just do this in the,
140 00:10:34.120 ⇒ 00:10:38.849 Uttam: We can do this in Cursor, too. If you want to just create an area for me to create those
141 00:10:39.100 ⇒ 00:10:41.350 Uttam: few-shot examples, I can do that.
142 00:10:42.670 ⇒ 00:10:45.190 Casie Aviles: Or if you want me to just write it in Notion.
143 00:10:45.620 ⇒ 00:10:48.309 Uttam: And then we… I can hand it to you, you tell me.
144 00:10:49.240 ⇒ 00:10:50.080 Casie Aviles: Sure, sure.
145 00:10:51.370 ⇒ 00:10:56.019 Uttam: Yeah, cause I… I can… I can work with… I can work with this, and then go…
146 00:10:56.600 ⇒ 00:11:05.490 Uttam: One step further, and then that way, we can… If we’re concerned about the… outputs, Weekend…
147 00:11:05.780 ⇒ 00:11:11.029 Uttam: Just go take a look at, like, okay, is a few-shot example, like, right, yeah, you know?
148 00:11:11.250 ⇒ 00:11:18.869 Uttam: So I guess that’s maybe more of, like, a framework thing, like, anytime we’re doing large bodies of text or large summarization.
149 00:11:18.990 ⇒ 00:11:21.700 Uttam: into something smaller, maybe we do need…
150 00:11:22.380 ⇒ 00:11:26.019 Uttam: And it’s not very deterministic, maybe we do need to do, like.
151 00:11:27.060 ⇒ 00:11:41.340 Uttam: having few-shot examples. And Gabe, I don’t know if I’m… if few-shot, that’s not, like, a common term. Basically, it’s like you provide the AI with a few examples of what the expected output.
152 00:11:41.340 ⇒ 00:11:41.740 Gabriel Lam: Oh, okay.
153 00:11:41.740 ⇒ 00:11:50.929 Uttam: is. And so there’s… basically, in typical AI prompting world, there’s, like, zero-shot, which is, like.
154 00:11:51.040 ⇒ 00:11:56.619 Uttam: hey, give me this, right? Like, hey, take all these linear tickets, give me a summary of what happened yesterday, right?
155 00:11:56.620 ⇒ 00:12:11.309 Uttam: prop, it’s… it’s gonna give you something, it’s not gonna be what you wanted, because you didn’t tell it what you wanted. So then there’s single shot, which is sort of like, here’s what I like, here’s an example of what I like, and then there’s… there’s few shot or multi-shot, which is like, here’s a ton of examples, like.
156 00:12:11.440 ⇒ 00:12:18.569 Gabriel Lam: like, for… and you could go even deeper, right? So you can say, here’s an example where there was limited information, and here’s, like, what I wanted to do then.
157 00:12:18.570 ⇒ 00:12:21.969 Uttam: And you’re almost… it’s almost making it…
158 00:12:22.630 ⇒ 00:12:29.060 Uttam: more… I wouldn’t say more deterministic in that it’s aligning more to, like, what you… the examples…
159 00:12:29.330 ⇒ 00:12:35.030 Uttam: that you provided it. So, in this situation, because these are sort of, like, fixed outputs.
160 00:12:35.220 ⇒ 00:12:44.470 Uttam: like, I think it would be great to start to collect some of those examples of, like, if a human were to write this and we were rated at an A+, what would it look like, right?
161 00:12:46.860 ⇒ 00:12:48.330 Gabriel Lam: Yeah. Makes sense.
162 00:12:48.880 ⇒ 00:12:49.450 Uttam: Cool.
163 00:12:54.830 ⇒ 00:12:57.050 Uttam: Okay, so give me a sense of,
164 00:12:57.480 ⇒ 00:13:00.730 Uttam: You know, what’s remaining for this week?
165 00:13:04.970 ⇒ 00:13:06.040 Samuel Roberts: So,
166 00:13:06.150 ⇒ 00:13:10.979 Samuel Roberts: Casey, you said that this can take, like, 40 seconds to a minute to load? Is that what you said?
167 00:13:11.520 ⇒ 00:13:12.050 Casie Aviles: Yeah, dude.
168 00:13:12.050 ⇒ 00:13:15.790 Samuel Roberts: Is it… does it have the… the streaming on this? Did you…
169 00:13:17.630 ⇒ 00:13:18.200 Casie Aviles: Where is it?
170 00:13:18.200 ⇒ 00:13:20.260 Samuel Roberts: Is it blocking still? Like, will Heroku…
171 00:13:20.520 ⇒ 00:13:23.609 Samuel Roberts: I just, like, the code that I got to stream it, is that in here now, or…
172 00:13:23.860 ⇒ 00:13:26.279 Casie Aviles: Yeah, it is working like that.
173 00:13:26.280 ⇒ 00:13:26.900 Samuel Roberts: Cool.
174 00:13:28.670 ⇒ 00:13:32.179 Uttam: And then, I guess my question on that is, like, why not just, like.
175 00:13:33.530 ⇒ 00:13:37.579 Uttam: Oh, because you’re not saving the results, like, I have to click it in the morning?
176 00:13:38.530 ⇒ 00:13:42.830 Samuel Roberts: Well, that’s what I was just about to suggest. Maybe that’s something we want to do, like, maybe at a certain time.
177 00:13:43.020 ⇒ 00:13:45.579 Samuel Roberts: This all gets… Mmm… right.
178 00:13:45.580 ⇒ 00:13:48.690 Uttam: Yeah, like, trigger it, trigger it at 7am, like, nothing’s gonna happen.
179 00:13:48.690 ⇒ 00:13:54.679 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, that’s what I… that’s what I was just thinking. I think that’s… that’s gonna be… helpful, I think.
180 00:13:54.820 ⇒ 00:13:59.919 Samuel Roberts: That kind of dovetails into the tracking and storing and superbase thing.
181 00:14:00.520 ⇒ 00:14:04.449 Samuel Roberts: Because… I don’t know if there’s much to speed up.
182 00:14:04.760 ⇒ 00:14:07.700 Samuel Roberts: you know, if it has to do all this stuff with Zoom and everything, like.
183 00:14:08.510 ⇒ 00:14:09.080 Uttam: No, I’d rather…
184 00:14:09.080 ⇒ 00:14:09.890 Samuel Roberts: Do you have the best album?
185 00:14:09.890 ⇒ 00:14:10.730 Uttam: Let’s…
186 00:14:10.730 ⇒ 00:14:12.729 Samuel Roberts: Exactly, exactly, so that’s what I’m saying. I think…
187 00:14:12.730 ⇒ 00:14:13.180 Uttam: Yeah.
188 00:14:13.180 ⇒ 00:14:24.780 Samuel Roberts: for tomorrow, I don’t know if that’s something we can set up, but, like, we can now start to have those conversations about storing this in Supabase, triggering them on a 7AM cycle.
189 00:14:25.700 ⇒ 00:14:32.929 Samuel Roberts: I think… but yeah, like I said, like I said before, I wanted to make sure we got this in a good state, rather than focus on the other stuff, but… Okay.
190 00:14:33.350 ⇒ 00:14:34.320 Samuel Roberts: I would say…
191 00:14:34.320 ⇒ 00:14:34.680 Uttam: So…
192 00:14:34.680 ⇒ 00:14:35.360 Samuel Roberts: I mean…
193 00:14:35.660 ⇒ 00:14:42.000 Uttam: That makes sense. So we still have changes, probably a little bit, to how we’re doing the…
194 00:14:42.170 ⇒ 00:14:46.379 Uttam: Yesterday, today, like, what other changes are still remaining?
195 00:14:47.360 ⇒ 00:14:53.359 Gabriel Lam: I think… I don’t know if the internal slacks have been captured yet. Does anyone have a…
196 00:14:53.790 ⇒ 00:14:55.069 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, I don’t mean too.
197 00:14:55.260 ⇒ 00:14:56.400 Casie Aviles: No, not yet.
198 00:14:56.960 ⇒ 00:14:57.470 Gabriel Lam: Okay.
199 00:14:57.470 ⇒ 00:15:02.529 Samuel Roberts: Right, so this only works for the internal client channel slacks, correct?
200 00:15:02.970 ⇒ 00:15:06.209 Mustafa Raja: External ones, oh, oh yeah, yeah, internal ones, yeah, yeah.
201 00:15:06.420 ⇒ 00:15:06.899 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, yeah, yeah.
202 00:15:06.900 ⇒ 00:15:12.160 Uttam: So you’re saying, like, because the Brainforge bot doesn’t have access to the external ones?
203 00:15:13.760 ⇒ 00:15:17.439 Uttam: Or, like, what… so what is the… what does the solver ask there?
204 00:15:19.640 ⇒ 00:15:32.079 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I mean, either we have to add the Brainforge bot to the external, we have to add them to the internal as well, we have to make those tables. I need to get with Away still and chat through whether or not we even want to merge those tables into one.
205 00:15:32.370 ⇒ 00:15:35.830 Samuel Roberts: So it’s a little bit of a longer thing there.
206 00:15:36.160 ⇒ 00:15:38.120 Samuel Roberts: Potentially. Okay.
207 00:15:41.210 ⇒ 00:15:43.520 Samuel Roberts: how… I mean, I guess the question is, like, is there…
208 00:15:44.210 ⇒ 00:15:48.719 Samuel Roberts: There’s obviously a lot of chatter on the external for certain clients, so we definitely want that.
209 00:15:50.900 ⇒ 00:15:55.110 Uttam: Yeah, I mean, you guys just gotta tell… you just gotta tell me which ones you need.
210 00:15:55.210 ⇒ 00:15:58.860 Uttam: And I’ll go at them, and I’ll send a message to folks, like, what’s what it is.
211 00:16:00.240 ⇒ 00:16:01.270 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
212 00:16:02.230 ⇒ 00:16:05.350 Samuel Roberts: I think that’s fine, we just have to make sure that the backend’s ready for it.
213 00:16:05.630 ⇒ 00:16:11.250 Samuel Roberts: Because, Casey and stuff, I think we would need to set up the tables for that, right?
214 00:16:12.230 ⇒ 00:16:18.529 Mustafa Raja: I think that that’s the pipeline, that’s the Python takes care of the tables.
215 00:16:20.250 ⇒ 00:16:21.859 Samuel Roberts: Oh, so if we just add the Brainforge body to create.
216 00:16:21.860 ⇒ 00:16:22.860 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, yeah.
217 00:16:23.520 ⇒ 00:16:26.250 Samuel Roberts: Including for the… that would work for internal, too, or…
218 00:16:26.440 ⇒ 00:16:28.490 Mustafa Raja: Yes.
219 00:16:28.890 ⇒ 00:16:29.730 Samuel Roberts: Okay.
220 00:16:32.310 ⇒ 00:16:34.070 Gabriel Lam: And do we know if it captures…
221 00:16:34.290 ⇒ 00:16:36.770 Gabriel Lam: The history of the channel, or is it just…
222 00:16:36.770 ⇒ 00:16:43.279 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, I think, Casey, correct me if I’m wrong, I think it does capture, previous messages also.
223 00:16:43.680 ⇒ 00:16:48.570 Casie Aviles: Yeah, I did, I did check, yesterday. Should be able to get it.
224 00:16:50.600 ⇒ 00:16:52.930 Uttam: Okay, so yeah, can you give me a list of which…
225 00:16:53.100 ⇒ 00:16:57.280 Uttam: We just have 12 active clients, give me a list of which ones you need, I’ll add them today.
226 00:16:59.830 ⇒ 00:17:01.280 Mustafa Raja: I thi- .
227 00:17:01.280 ⇒ 00:17:02.469 Casie Aviles: Okay, yeah, well…
228 00:17:02.470 ⇒ 00:17:03.100 Mustafa Raja: Hmm.
229 00:17:03.810 ⇒ 00:17:06.549 Samuel Roberts: Also, we need to add the internal AI one also.
230 00:17:09.890 ⇒ 00:17:12.690 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I mean, there’s probably other internal ones too, I’d assume, right?
231 00:17:13.660 ⇒ 00:17:14.380 Mustafa Raja: Yes.
232 00:17:15.710 ⇒ 00:17:17.330 Uttam: Yeah, just add them on your own. Yeah, I don’t care.
233 00:17:17.339 ⇒ 00:17:18.259 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, yeah, put them…
234 00:17:18.260 ⇒ 00:17:20.280 Uttam: Yes, if Oh gosh, who cares, yeah.
235 00:17:20.640 ⇒ 00:17:32.090 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, and if Daxter already handles creating it, I would say let’s go ahead and do that. The kind of longer conversation about the actual, like, underlying table stuff, like, is not as relevant then, that’s fine. We’ll deal with that later.
236 00:17:32.740 ⇒ 00:17:37.330 Uttam: Gabe, do you wanna… do you wanna handle doing that? I think you can just go to every channel and invite…
237 00:17:37.330 ⇒ 00:17:38.100 Gabriel Lam: I didn’t do that.
238 00:17:38.440 ⇒ 00:17:39.759 Uttam: Yeah, cool.
239 00:17:44.810 ⇒ 00:17:50.790 Uttam: Okay, great, so I think if we can get the few-shot examples, and then, yeah, I mean, I think there’s just a lot of, like, back-end work.
240 00:17:51.200 ⇒ 00:17:58.810 Uttam: I guess my… more of my point would be, like, let’s say next week we switch to…
241 00:17:59.020 ⇒ 00:18:05.200 Uttam: another assistant. Like, what would need to be done this week to feel like, okay, at least it’s, like.
242 00:18:06.020 ⇒ 00:18:08.179 Uttam: MVP, it’s pretty usable.
243 00:18:08.920 ⇒ 00:18:16.140 Uttam: Yeah. Right, like, what… that’s… I guess I don’t… I guess if we were to… it would also be helpful to see, like, what are the remaining…
244 00:18:16.460 ⇒ 00:18:22.420 Uttam: issues or big rocks, and then I can vote to be, like, live with this, live with this, live with this.
245 00:18:22.990 ⇒ 00:18:23.790 Uttam: you know.
246 00:18:23.790 ⇒ 00:18:31.099 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, the Slack links, I think, is the biggest one. The few shot, like you said, just making sure the best format is good.
247 00:18:31.520 ⇒ 00:18:36.880 Samuel Roberts: And then I think it’s really just probably testing it a bit today and seeing if there are any other little…
248 00:18:37.170 ⇒ 00:18:43.490 Samuel Roberts: you know, quirks or edge cases that are not quite edge cases, you know? .
249 00:18:43.490 ⇒ 00:18:44.110 Uttam: Okay.
250 00:18:45.020 ⇒ 00:18:55.939 Samuel Roberts: And then, yeah, the only other thing, like I said, would be the kind of storage use thing, but that might become just its own, like, this is the V1, that becomes the V2, kind of thing.
251 00:18:56.100 ⇒ 00:18:57.469 Samuel Roberts: For another week.
252 00:18:57.920 ⇒ 00:18:58.720 Samuel Roberts: But…
253 00:18:59.360 ⇒ 00:19:04.549 Samuel Roberts: That’s what I can think of. Does anyone have anything other? Any other thoughts that Wendy still needs to go in here?
254 00:19:06.140 ⇒ 00:19:11.430 Gabriel Lam: I’m curious about when we talked about, like, a summary of yesterday’s meeting with…
255 00:19:11.540 ⇒ 00:19:16.780 Gabriel Lam: In some sense, that would be captured from the Zoom video.
256 00:19:18.310 ⇒ 00:19:26.790 Gabriel Lam: Do we want to additionally capture… like, if we have notes, now that we have a stand-up notes area, is that going to be captured as well, or is that going to be something we need to add?
257 00:19:27.860 ⇒ 00:19:32.939 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I think for now, the notes is kind of just a place to take some notes.
258 00:19:33.400 ⇒ 00:19:35.220 Samuel Roberts: Eventually, when we add the kind of
259 00:19:35.520 ⇒ 00:19:40.889 Samuel Roberts: storage of yesterday to the day before, all that stuff, then we can start to do that kind of…
260 00:19:41.590 ⇒ 00:19:45.090 Samuel Roberts: Beyond just the transcript summary, stuff.
261 00:19:46.030 ⇒ 00:19:51.070 Samuel Roberts: For now, I think that’s probably gonna be a little out of scope for the Lara.
262 00:19:51.370 ⇒ 00:19:58.290 Uttam: So what happens to those notes? Like, will they persist on my browser until, like, for each day, basically?
263 00:19:58.590 ⇒ 00:19:59.310 Mustafa Raja: Oh…
264 00:19:59.310 ⇒ 00:20:00.380 Uttam: Just a pen.
265 00:20:00.680 ⇒ 00:20:08.810 Mustafa Raja: For now, for now, they persist. They’re just, like, goals, how weekly goals persist.
266 00:20:08.950 ⇒ 00:20:14.320 Mustafa Raja: So you just type, and, it’s just standard notes per client.
267 00:20:14.690 ⇒ 00:20:16.579 Mustafa Raja: And they’re going to persist in your browser.
268 00:20:19.790 ⇒ 00:20:22.590 Samuel Roberts: So is that… is that being added to the context at all, or is it just a place to take.
269 00:20:22.590 ⇒ 00:20:28.740 Mustafa Raja: No, no, no, it isn’t… the agent doesn’t have access to those.
270 00:20:28.760 ⇒ 00:20:31.529 Samuel Roberts: Okay, cool. Yeah, I think going…
271 00:20:32.020 ⇒ 00:20:35.309 Samuel Roberts: like I said, talking about the storage stuff, that would then become something we would
272 00:20:36.140 ⇒ 00:20:39.430 Samuel Roberts: we would sort. So it’s kind of the stepping stone to that, but I wouldn’t say it’s actually…
273 00:20:40.150 ⇒ 00:20:47.300 Samuel Roberts: really useful yet. I mean, it’s useful in that it’s a place to take notes in the meeting, rather than just, like, in Notion or something, but I think we can…
274 00:20:47.460 ⇒ 00:20:51.219 Samuel Roberts: Fold that into the kind of summaries of the previous day.
275 00:20:51.970 ⇒ 00:21:00.510 Samuel Roberts: more… helpfully, with the… Like, underlying data model setup.
276 00:21:02.110 ⇒ 00:21:06.139 Samuel Roberts: Like, how hard is this? Right, like, what’s the lift on persistence?
277 00:21:06.140 ⇒ 00:21:08.640 Uttam: Like, even just for the goals and for…
278 00:21:08.750 ⇒ 00:21:11.130 Uttam: This, like, just save a log of, like.
279 00:21:11.620 ⇒ 00:21:19.199 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I mean, we could do it. I was just trying to keep it… I was just trying to limit the scope to, like, this focus on this, but we could… I mean, we could spend time on that today. I just don’t know if we’ll get to a…
280 00:21:19.670 ⇒ 00:21:23.330 Samuel Roberts: Well, I guess that’s what… I guess, like, maybe, Gabe, it would be helpful if, like.
281 00:21:23.330 ⇒ 00:21:29.800 Uttam: in Slack, you could just give me, like, a list of, like, okay, here’s what, like, Like, a menu?
282 00:21:30.160 ⇒ 00:21:30.800 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, yeah.
283 00:21:30.800 ⇒ 00:21:31.380 Gabriel Lam: Yeah.
284 00:21:31.380 ⇒ 00:21:35.250 Uttam: Pick, you have 5 points. Pick.
285 00:21:35.390 ⇒ 00:21:38.320 Gabriel Lam: Choose your characters, you know?
286 00:21:39.330 ⇒ 00:21:45.490 Uttam: It’s sort of like when they have those little games where it’s like, you have 10 points, you gotta choose, like, your team or whatever, like…
287 00:21:45.600 ⇒ 00:21:47.239 Uttam: That’s what I would,
288 00:21:47.730 ⇒ 00:21:51.170 Uttam: That would be very helpful, because I can make the tough decision, and that’s important.
289 00:21:51.170 ⇒ 00:21:57.589 Samuel Roberts: I will say, like, what we’re talking about is not a ton, like, the Slack, the… the few shot…
290 00:21:57.590 ⇒ 00:22:01.430 Uttam: No, no, no, it’s not a ton either, but I also have, like, 10 other ideas.
291 00:22:01.430 ⇒ 00:22:14.880 Samuel Roberts: Well, that’s what I’m saying, I think we could probably do that. I’m like, I’m… in the next, you know, two days, I feel like we could probably get something, you know, stood up to keep track over time. It was just, like I said, I didn’t know where we were going with it, so I didn’t want to, like…
292 00:22:15.110 ⇒ 00:22:25.109 Samuel Roberts: distract ourselves from this, but I think we’ve got this in a pretty good place. You know, you may have more… more things once you use it, but beyond what you already have in your mind, but…
293 00:22:25.450 ⇒ 00:22:26.060 Uttam: Okay.
294 00:22:26.060 ⇒ 00:22:29.630 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I would say I’m happy to do that, so yeah, maybe we can…
295 00:22:30.320 ⇒ 00:22:32.870 Samuel Roberts: Think that through a little bit, and make some progress, and…
296 00:22:33.360 ⇒ 00:22:35.519 Samuel Roberts: On that, yeah, that’s not a bad idea.
297 00:22:36.210 ⇒ 00:22:36.780 Uttam: Okay.
298 00:22:37.440 ⇒ 00:22:39.300 Uttam: Yeah, that would be helpful. We can just list.
299 00:22:39.300 ⇒ 00:22:39.730 Samuel Roberts: Yak.
300 00:22:39.730 ⇒ 00:22:45.520 Uttam: list those out, list, like, the t-shirt size on them, and then I’ll… I’ll give you the must-have
301 00:22:45.850 ⇒ 00:22:48.149 Uttam: Like, would be great and nice to have.
302 00:22:48.480 ⇒ 00:22:52.389 Uttam: And then, that way, I would like this to move to another…
303 00:22:52.560 ⇒ 00:22:56.090 Uttam: area on… on Monday. Which…
304 00:22:56.270 ⇒ 00:22:59.840 Uttam: which we can decide as a team. I’ll come… I have a couple options.
305 00:22:59.960 ⇒ 00:23:06.490 Uttam: If we want to continue to stay in project management land, I have a few options around,
306 00:23:07.450 ⇒ 00:23:13.040 Uttam: grooming or sprint planning that we can talk through. But yeah, I would like us to kind of wrap this…
307 00:23:13.040 ⇒ 00:23:13.630 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
308 00:23:15.430 ⇒ 00:23:16.420 Uttam: You pick it back up.
309 00:23:16.420 ⇒ 00:23:16.920 Samuel Roberts: Cool.
310 00:23:17.480 ⇒ 00:23:18.299 Uttam: Oh, we’ve…
311 00:23:22.270 ⇒ 00:23:26.220 Samuel Roberts: Okay, yeah, I mean, I’m feeling pretty good about it, I think…
312 00:23:26.770 ⇒ 00:23:33.110 Samuel Roberts: You know, obviously use is going to be important, and feedback, but… Yeah, we’ll get this together.
313 00:23:34.870 ⇒ 00:23:35.235 Uttam: H.
314 00:23:39.550 ⇒ 00:23:40.609 Samuel Roberts: Here’s your TV.
315 00:23:40.710 ⇒ 00:23:42.260 Samuel Roberts: Any other thoughts, guys?
316 00:23:44.810 ⇒ 00:23:46.520 Casie Aviles: Yeah, that’s… that’s all I had, Frank.
317 00:23:46.520 ⇒ 00:23:47.179 Gabriel Lam: We’re good.
318 00:23:48.240 ⇒ 00:23:48.840 Samuel Roberts: Cool.
319 00:23:50.170 ⇒ 00:23:50.620 Uttam: Well, thanks.
320 00:23:50.620 ⇒ 00:23:54.569 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, so Casey, I would say go ahead and push this to the branch.
321 00:23:54.570 ⇒ 00:23:56.259 Uttam: So we can all get in there.
322 00:23:56.720 ⇒ 00:24:02.460 Samuel Roberts: And then, yeah, did we decide, are you doing it in cursor or in Notion?
323 00:24:02.650 ⇒ 00:24:03.520 Samuel Roberts: For the future.
324 00:24:03.900 ⇒ 00:24:06.109 Casie Aviles: I sent a Notion link for now.
325 00:24:06.110 ⇒ 00:24:06.430 Samuel Roberts: Oh.
326 00:24:06.430 ⇒ 00:24:08.970 Casie Aviles: Okay, great.
327 00:24:08.970 ⇒ 00:24:11.580 Samuel Roberts: Alright, cool, cool, I just want to make sure we had that settled. Great, alright, cool.
328 00:24:11.980 ⇒ 00:24:12.869 Samuel Roberts: I didn’t see that.
329 00:24:13.180 ⇒ 00:24:14.120 Samuel Roberts: Excellent.
330 00:24:14.120 ⇒ 00:24:17.440 Uttam: Okay, guys. Thank you, I’m gonna try and use it today, on the next meeting.
331 00:24:17.440 ⇒ 00:24:18.140 Samuel Roberts: Perfect.
332 00:24:19.360 ⇒ 00:24:25.970 Samuel Roberts: All right, yeah, let’s, Casey, get that pushed up, and then get… send the link… the link should be the same, hopefully, but get it pushed up to the PR branch.
333 00:24:26.700 ⇒ 00:24:27.280 Casie Aviles: Sure.
334 00:24:27.950 ⇒ 00:24:28.620 Samuel Roberts: Cool.
335 00:24:29.320 ⇒ 00:24:29.950 Uttam: Okay.
336 00:24:30.470 ⇒ 00:24:31.859 Uttam: Thank you, guys. I’ll talk to you later.
337 00:24:31.860 ⇒ 00:24:33.620 Samuel Roberts: Yeah. Alrighty.
338 00:24:36.500 ⇒ 00:24:39.599 Samuel Roberts: Do we want to just put together, like, that quick… that list?
339 00:24:39.840 ⇒ 00:24:40.670 Mustafa Raja: Yes.
340 00:24:41.680 ⇒ 00:24:43.499 Samuel Roberts: Okay, so what did we,
341 00:24:44.040 ⇒ 00:24:48.079 Samuel Roberts: The slack weights is one, the few shot is the other.
342 00:24:48.490 ⇒ 00:24:52.450 Samuel Roberts: The, like, persistence.
343 00:24:53.440 ⇒ 00:24:58.239 Mustafa Raja: I mean, it’s persisting in local storage, do we want to persist it in Superbase or something?
344 00:24:58.770 ⇒ 00:25:01.890 Samuel Roberts: That’s what, that’s what we’re talking about, yeah. So the idea would be…
345 00:25:02.050 ⇒ 00:25:06.810 Samuel Roberts: You know, every day one of these gets triggered,
346 00:25:07.930 ⇒ 00:25:13.619 Samuel Roberts: It would store yesterday’s… it would be able to potentially even use that as part of context, potentially.
347 00:25:13.920 ⇒ 00:25:21.080 Samuel Roberts: The notes would be certainly used by context, the goals, these could all be part of a kind of broader sprint.
348 00:25:21.390 ⇒ 00:25:22.570 Samuel Roberts: object.
349 00:25:27.500 ⇒ 00:25:35.799 Samuel Roberts: So, yeah, I mean, the storage and the local storage in his browser was kind of just to make sure it wasn’t refreshing every time, but the kind of long-term
350 00:25:35.900 ⇒ 00:25:42.500 Samuel Roberts: Goal is that this is something that is… in Superbase, historical.
351 00:25:43.160 ⇒ 00:25:45.570 Samuel Roberts: So that might be something we want to try to think through today, though.
352 00:25:47.890 ⇒ 00:25:51.480 Gabriel Lam: But that seems to be lower priority compared to, like, the Slack.
353 00:25:51.880 ⇒ 00:26:04.979 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, but the Slack one I don’t think is gonna be crazy. The Fuseot, hopefully, works pretty well once he’s got a couple of the examples, so that might be what is worth focusing on. I’m trying to think if there were other things we even… like, that’s a big one, that’s a…
354 00:26:05.660 ⇒ 00:26:06.730 Samuel Roberts: you know.
355 00:26:07.220 ⇒ 00:26:12.379 Samuel Roberts: But the other ones are kind of smaller and higher priority, so we definitely want to, like, bang those out quickly.
356 00:26:12.900 ⇒ 00:26:14.789 Samuel Roberts: Slack and the few-shot.
357 00:26:14.930 ⇒ 00:26:17.950 Samuel Roberts: Are there other things that I’m not thinking about that we just talked about?
358 00:26:22.530 ⇒ 00:26:26.930 Gabriel Lam: I think there’s, like, very small features we talked about yesterday, like tooltips and bug report.
359 00:26:28.280 ⇒ 00:26:28.910 Casie Aviles: Yeah.
360 00:26:28.910 ⇒ 00:26:33.799 Mustafa Raja: Bug report, I guess, would be, would not be related to just this, though, right?
361 00:26:34.150 ⇒ 00:26:42.969 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, that would be a bigger… yeah, which is all… I mean, that’s definitely something that’s probably a, like, individual, like… that’s not all gonna be a full week sprint, probably, to add something like that, but I think that…
362 00:26:43.160 ⇒ 00:26:43.910 Samuel Roberts: you know.
363 00:26:44.160 ⇒ 00:26:45.619 Samuel Roberts: We could definitely add that.
364 00:26:45.730 ⇒ 00:26:52.039 Samuel Roberts: Sooner rather than later, maybe. Tooltips, there’s probably a few to add here that would be helpful, wouldn’t it?
365 00:26:54.900 ⇒ 00:26:57.040 Samuel Roberts: Trying to think what would be… so we have…
366 00:26:58.670 ⇒ 00:27:07.520 Samuel Roberts: what, we have links out to Linear and stuff, we have links out to Zoom, we’re adding the links to Slack. I suppose we could add some tooltips for some of those, that would be…
367 00:27:08.380 ⇒ 00:27:10.100 Samuel Roberts: Not having to click away?
368 00:27:10.320 ⇒ 00:27:11.819 Samuel Roberts: Would that be worth it?
369 00:27:13.210 ⇒ 00:27:18.899 Samuel Roberts: Oh, the Turbo Puffer, the right number of stand-ups.
370 00:27:18.900 ⇒ 00:27:20.500 Casie Aviles: Yeah, yeah, they’re both.
371 00:27:20.500 ⇒ 00:27:22.629 Samuel Roberts: That’s another thing to do, too. Okay.
372 00:27:26.800 ⇒ 00:27:31.910 Samuel Roberts: Alright, so yeah, I think we just have, like, a few small, like, important things.
373 00:27:32.020 ⇒ 00:27:33.989 Samuel Roberts: And then that kind of big one.
374 00:27:35.480 ⇒ 00:27:37.539 Samuel Roberts: Does that… is that tracked right?
375 00:27:37.850 ⇒ 00:27:39.830 Gabriel Lam: That’s… yeah.
376 00:27:40.270 ⇒ 00:27:55.609 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, the tooltips, we could definitely add a few. I think, again, some of this is going to be, like, feedback as well, where it’s gonna be like, okay, a tooltip here would be helpful, I don’t want to have to click a link out to Linear if I’m not… if I’m just trying to read about it more, or, you know, what… what is being shown for the ticket versus the Slack message versus the…
377 00:27:55.850 ⇒ 00:28:01.930 Samuel Roberts: the Zoom, but… excuse me.
378 00:28:03.050 ⇒ 00:28:06.390 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, so I think we have, like… what is that, 4 things?
379 00:28:08.970 ⇒ 00:28:10.500 Samuel Roberts: It’s black link.
380 00:28:10.860 ⇒ 00:28:13.269 Gabriel Lam: Slack wings, few shot.
381 00:28:13.270 ⇒ 00:28:13.720 Samuel Roberts: shot.
382 00:28:13.720 ⇒ 00:28:14.779 Gabriel Lam: Whether we want notes.
383 00:28:15.060 ⇒ 00:28:15.530 Mustafa Raja: Dude…
384 00:28:15.530 ⇒ 00:28:23.010 Gabriel Lam: Local storage, or to somehow… Put it on Supabase for later, Turbo Puffer, and maybe Tooltips.
385 00:28:23.450 ⇒ 00:28:24.030 Gabriel Lam: Fox thing.
386 00:28:25.100 ⇒ 00:28:26.000 Samuel Roberts: settings.
387 00:28:26.730 ⇒ 00:28:38.079 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, so I think the only one that I feel like is big is that, like, super-based persistence one, just because I don’t know how we’re gonna… like, it’s not huge, I guess, but compared to the other ones, it’s bigger.
388 00:28:38.760 ⇒ 00:28:43.470 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, I’m thinking of, a table in, internally, I-Core.
389 00:28:43.610 ⇒ 00:28:49.150 Mustafa Raja: And then maybe we could link it with the, we could reference it with the clients table.
390 00:28:49.760 ⇒ 00:28:57.599 Mustafa Raja: I’m just wondering if you want to, if you want to store it, store it, with time series?
391 00:28:58.000 ⇒ 00:29:00.560 Mustafa Raja: Or we just keep refreshing the fields.
392 00:29:02.500 ⇒ 00:29:06.699 Samuel Roberts: I think we’d want to store… yeah, we want to have a stand-up entry for every day, I think.
393 00:29:06.700 ⇒ 00:29:07.400 Mustafa Raja: Okay.
394 00:29:08.090 ⇒ 00:29:16.310 Samuel Roberts: Otherwise, I don’t think it’s really worth any. I don’t think it’s worth persisting in superbase at all at that point, unless we need more people to see it. But I think the whole point is that, yeah, there should be a…
395 00:29:16.660 ⇒ 00:29:19.070 Samuel Roberts: So maybe instead of hitting the refresh button.
396 00:29:19.190 ⇒ 00:29:23.640 Samuel Roberts: It would be, you know, 7 o’clock, We run this agent.
397 00:29:23.790 ⇒ 00:29:27.409 Samuel Roberts: it saves it into Superbase, and that’s the newest one that gets fetched.
398 00:29:28.330 ⇒ 00:29:28.830 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
399 00:29:28.830 ⇒ 00:29:29.859 Samuel Roberts: on the view.
400 00:29:29.950 ⇒ 00:29:30.970 Casie Aviles: Okay.
401 00:29:31.360 ⇒ 00:29:38.130 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I think, I think let’s, let’s… Those 5 things aren’t… I’m sorry?
402 00:29:38.450 ⇒ 00:29:43.830 Gabriel Lam: Sorry, I’m just a little confused when you were talking about the 7AM agent versus the refresh. Yes.
403 00:29:44.540 ⇒ 00:29:44.980 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
404 00:29:46.820 ⇒ 00:29:52.810 Samuel Roberts: So the idea, I think, would be, all of these…
405 00:29:53.110 ⇒ 00:29:56.889 Samuel Roberts: Would get run on a… on a time schedule.
406 00:29:57.260 ⇒ 00:29:57.990 Gabriel Lam: Got it.
407 00:29:57.990 ⇒ 00:30:01.609 Samuel Roberts: So, right now, you just go in, you hit the refresh button, it does the last…
408 00:30:01.720 ⇒ 00:30:05.480 Samuel Roberts: you know, 24 hours of meetings, the last 24 hours of Slack messages,
409 00:30:05.840 ⇒ 00:30:16.699 Samuel Roberts: and you hit it again, it’s gonna get basically the same thing. Like, for testing it’s great, but it’s not really super helpful. And then if it’s gonna take, like, a minute to run, that’s gonna be a bunch to do for every client.
410 00:30:16.990 ⇒ 00:30:27.150 Gabriel Lam: I see. So, like, whatever, when we open it first thing in the morning, it’ll have a 7AM snapshot, and then if we want to have something super updated, we can do it again, but it’s pretty unnecessary.
411 00:30:27.430 ⇒ 00:30:31.370 Samuel Roberts: I think so, yeah, that’s what I’m thinking. That’s for the kind of persistent stuff.
412 00:30:31.730 ⇒ 00:30:38.629 Samuel Roberts: But yeah, I think that’s… that’s good then. I think we can share those, and I also think it’s…
413 00:30:39.050 ⇒ 00:30:42.860 Samuel Roberts: 10.30 a.m, so we’re… the other meeting’s about to start here, too, so…
414 00:30:42.860 ⇒ 00:30:43.430 Gabriel Lam: Yep.
415 00:30:44.160 ⇒ 00:30:45.610 Samuel Roberts: Cool. Alright.
416 00:30:46.360 ⇒ 00:30:51.069 Samuel Roberts: AI team, are we good then? We can also convene on Slack if we have any other questions, but…
417 00:30:51.270 ⇒ 00:30:52.130 Mustafa Raja: Yes.
418 00:30:52.400 ⇒ 00:30:53.030 Mustafa Raja: I guess…
419 00:30:53.030 ⇒ 00:30:53.520 Samuel Roberts: Alright, cool.
420 00:30:53.520 ⇒ 00:30:56.160 Mustafa Raja: First is, who’s stating what.
421 00:30:57.900 ⇒ 00:30:58.350 Casie Aviles: Yeah.
422 00:30:58.350 ⇒ 00:30:59.020 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, let’s…
423 00:30:59.500 ⇒ 00:31:02.889 Casie Aviles: If… if we’re able to get all of those by Friday.
424 00:31:03.190 ⇒ 00:31:04.110 Casie Aviles: Yeah, I just want…
425 00:31:04.110 ⇒ 00:31:09.869 Mustafa Raja: We want to sync with the team once, so we know who’s doing what, just for the.
426 00:31:09.870 ⇒ 00:31:10.569 Casie Aviles: Yeah, yeah.
427 00:31:11.100 ⇒ 00:31:13.590 Samuel Roberts: Okay, yeah, let’s do that after this meeting, then. Yes.
428 00:31:14.110 ⇒ 00:31:15.980 Samuel Roberts: maybe, maybe async on Slack will get posted.
429 00:31:15.980 ⇒ 00:31:16.530 Mustafa Raja: just…
430 00:31:17.010 ⇒ 00:31:18.430 Samuel Roberts: Okay, cool, sounds good.
431 00:31:20.600 ⇒ 00:31:25.160 Samuel Roberts: Alrighty, I guess that’s us done here.
432 00:31:28.360 ⇒ 00:31:31.299 Samuel Roberts: But it’s the same link, so we might just hang on here.
433 00:31:44.070 ⇒ 00:31:45.120 Robert Tseng: Hello!
434 00:31:45.900 ⇒ 00:31:46.760 Samuel Roberts: Hello.
435 00:31:48.190 ⇒ 00:31:51.210 Robert Tseng: Was your Tom even on the last call?
436 00:31:52.030 ⇒ 00:31:56.360 Samuel Roberts: He was, he jumped off, I don’t know if he’s jumping back on, I don’t know.
437 00:31:57.410 ⇒ 00:31:58.100 Robert Tseng: Okay.
438 00:31:58.530 ⇒ 00:32:03.689 Robert Tseng: Well… I’ll… I’ll wait a minute. I’d prefer him to run these things.
439 00:32:03.690 ⇒ 00:32:04.500 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
440 00:32:05.210 ⇒ 00:32:10.200 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, we’re talking about the new stand-up assistant tool, so yeah, I think he was planning to use it, so I don’t know.
441 00:32:10.590 ⇒ 00:32:11.730 Robert Tseng: Oh, very cool.
442 00:32:11.730 ⇒ 00:32:14.320 Samuel Roberts: hopping back on. Yeah, we’re… we’re getting there.
443 00:32:15.670 ⇒ 00:32:16.390 Robert Tseng: Nice.
444 00:32:57.380 ⇒ 00:33:06.289 Robert Tseng: Okay, I guess, I am taking over this stand-up. Okay. All right. All right. Well, I mean, I guess if Amber’s here, maybe you could assist me.
445 00:33:06.770 ⇒ 00:33:07.920 Amber Lin: Oh, okay.
446 00:33:08.090 ⇒ 00:33:09.940 Amber Lin: Is Uten busy?
447 00:33:10.340 ⇒ 00:33:18.210 Robert Tseng: Yeah, yeah, Utah can’t work it, or he’s basically at a WeWork, but he’s kind of, like, stuck. He’s traveling, today, so…
448 00:33:18.520 ⇒ 00:33:19.380 Amber Lin: Oh, okay.
449 00:33:20.010 ⇒ 00:33:24.579 Amber Lin: Yeah, I can… I can run this, let me pull it up first.
450 00:33:25.380 ⇒ 00:33:26.500 Amber Lin: And…
451 00:33:31.120 ⇒ 00:33:36.800 Robert Tseng: So, sorry, I don’t know if we’ll be using the stand-up assistant, because I don’t think neither of him or I have seen it.
452 00:33:36.800 ⇒ 00:33:37.350 Samuel Roberts: Bye, you’re fine.
453 00:33:37.350 ⇒ 00:33:38.329 Amber Lin: It’s good to know what?
454 00:33:38.330 ⇒ 00:33:45.289 Samuel Roberts: It’s still a work in progress anyway, Utom is the one that we’ve been chatting with, but we will get in front of Amber soon, hopefully, to get some feedback, too, so…
455 00:33:45.290 ⇒ 00:33:46.190 Robert Tseng: Great.
456 00:33:47.660 ⇒ 00:33:48.570 Amber Lin: Alright.
457 00:33:48.730 ⇒ 00:33:50.740 Amber Lin: So, let’s start with Ethan.
458 00:33:52.830 ⇒ 00:33:59.699 Amber Lin: Let’s see, anything… That’s in… Preview, okay.
459 00:34:00.260 ⇒ 00:34:02.930 Amber Lin: What about this one?
460 00:34:02.930 ⇒ 00:34:07.550 Henry Zhao: That? Yeah, that one I’ve done, and I’m gonna go over it with Robert today.
461 00:34:07.840 ⇒ 00:34:08.489 Amber Lin: Okay.
462 00:34:10.260 ⇒ 00:34:17.190 Amber Lin: And then… this is a… Duplicate… Alright.
463 00:34:17.480 ⇒ 00:34:19.430 Amber Lin: Let’s go from here…
464 00:34:23.030 ⇒ 00:34:24.259 Zoran Selinger: the low list.
465 00:34:24.670 ⇒ 00:34:27.699 Zoran Selinger: 1116.
466 00:34:28.260 ⇒ 00:34:30.670 Zoran Selinger: Just below that, that’s done.
467 00:34:33.790 ⇒ 00:34:34.859 Robert Tseng: Do we need to talk.
468 00:34:34.860 ⇒ 00:34:35.230 Amber Lin: Right.
469 00:34:35.239 ⇒ 00:34:38.889 Robert Tseng: chat about the North Beam decision.
470 00:34:41.139 ⇒ 00:34:45.469 Zoran Selinger: I have a call with Wicked right after this.
471 00:34:45.860 ⇒ 00:34:46.570 Robert Tseng: Okay.
472 00:34:46.699 ⇒ 00:34:53.709 Robert Tseng: Alright, if you want to chat after that call, let me know, and we can kind of just get our final opinion, and hopefully have something for them.
473 00:34:54.170 ⇒ 00:34:55.110 Zoran Selinger: Yeah, okay.
474 00:34:59.660 ⇒ 00:35:00.290 Amber Lin: Okay.
475 00:35:02.330 ⇒ 00:35:03.760 Amber Lin: And then…
476 00:35:07.620 ⇒ 00:35:09.310 Amber Lin: Alright, for this one.
477 00:35:10.950 ⇒ 00:35:13.760 Amber Lin: the DPT model for a final attribution.
478 00:35:14.620 ⇒ 00:35:18.630 Henry Zhao: Not yet. So I just need a few more columns from Zoran. Zoran, we can talk later.
479 00:35:19.090 ⇒ 00:35:20.350 Henry Zhao: I sent you a message.
480 00:35:30.600 ⇒ 00:35:39.830 Amber Lin: Okay, and then… I saw that we replied, I think, what’s the…
481 00:35:40.330 ⇒ 00:35:46.709 Henry Zhao: I’ll give her a dash for this, but for edge layer, we need the distribution stuff. But either way, we only have data since November anyway, so…
482 00:35:49.140 ⇒ 00:35:54.360 Henry Zhao: So, is this something that we’ll have to wait till next week, or until we have the…
483 00:35:54.360 ⇒ 00:35:54.760 Amber Lin: data?
484 00:35:54.760 ⇒ 00:35:55.639 Henry Zhao: Yeah, okay.
485 00:35:56.100 ⇒ 00:35:56.840 Amber Lin: Okay.
486 00:35:57.240 ⇒ 00:35:58.979 Henry Zhao: I’ll make sure I’m better in Trinidino.
487 00:35:59.650 ⇒ 00:36:00.570 Amber Lin: Okay.
488 00:36:04.860 ⇒ 00:36:07.180 Amber Lin: Shake.
489 00:36:07.360 ⇒ 00:36:13.780 Amber Lin: And then… We… we spiked on this… Okay.
490 00:36:13.900 ⇒ 00:36:20.209 Amber Lin: Cool. And on this one, can I know when we need this by? By tomorrow?
491 00:36:26.290 ⇒ 00:36:27.890 Amber Lin: Question for Robert.
492 00:36:34.770 ⇒ 00:36:37.409 Robert Tseng: Sorry, why is this assigned to me?
493 00:36:37.410 ⇒ 00:36:41.039 Amber Lin: No, no, no, assigned to me, like, when do you need this?
494 00:36:41.160 ⇒ 00:36:42.949 Amber Lin: When do you need this by?
495 00:36:43.710 ⇒ 00:36:52.899 Robert Tseng: Yeah, end of week. We… we had a… we spent, like, 30 minutes yesterday, kind of… I don’t think you… I don’t know if you were on that call, but we,
496 00:36:54.720 ⇒ 00:36:55.690 Robert Tseng: Yeah.
497 00:36:56.060 ⇒ 00:37:00.309 Robert Tseng: Yeah, they have to record it. Okay, yeah, there are some…
498 00:37:00.540 ⇒ 00:37:14.370 Robert Tseng: they’re pretty high level, but it’s just like, these are the OKRs we want to send. We don’t need a full-on roadmap broken out by projects and tickets. I just… we can… we can save that for the ELT deck next week, but by the end of week, I want to let them know
499 00:37:14.370 ⇒ 00:37:26.800 Robert Tseng: hey, we discussed, like, these are the priorities that we’re gonna have, like, for the rest of the quarter and leading to Q1. So, yeah, like, this should… this is executive, like… like, this is a C-suite level. We don’t… we don’t need to have…
500 00:37:26.810 ⇒ 00:37:27.560 Robert Tseng: the projects.
501 00:37:27.880 ⇒ 00:37:28.920 Robert Tseng: rocking out yet.
502 00:37:30.640 ⇒ 00:37:37.329 Robert Tseng: There is a Notion doc that’s linked, and yeah, and the recording should have everything, but if you have questions, you can ask.
503 00:37:37.920 ⇒ 00:37:41.470 Amber Lin: Cool, sounds good. I have…
504 00:37:48.790 ⇒ 00:37:49.570 Amber Lin: Okay.
505 00:37:50.860 ⇒ 00:37:55.179 Amber Lin: Okay, Zoan, what about these tickets?
506 00:38:02.510 ⇒ 00:38:06.160 Zoran Selinger: Let me just… Open that, so what is…
507 00:38:06.480 ⇒ 00:38:07.449 Henry Zhao: Is that what’s wrong?
508 00:38:08.260 ⇒ 00:38:13.459 Amber Lin: There’s one for Catalyst, and one for… Cloudflare worker.
509 00:38:21.760 ⇒ 00:38:22.580 Zoran Selinger: Windic cut.
510 00:38:23.340 ⇒ 00:38:26.740 Zoran Selinger: Oh yeah, so that was from one of the stand-ups.
511 00:38:26.880 ⇒ 00:38:28.560 Zoran Selinger: Yeah, that’s good.
512 00:38:32.080 ⇒ 00:38:34.450 Zoran Selinger: That is… we completed this, yeah.
513 00:38:34.870 ⇒ 00:38:35.380 Amber Lin: Oh, this one?
514 00:38:35.380 ⇒ 00:38:36.970 Zoran Selinger: That’s good, yeah, yeah.
515 00:38:38.530 ⇒ 00:38:40.500 Amber Lin: And then…
516 00:38:40.910 ⇒ 00:38:41.930 Zoran Selinger: So what else?
517 00:38:43.390 ⇒ 00:38:48.570 Zoran Selinger: Oh yeah, we haven’t even started this week, we haven’t had a chance to look into this.
518 00:38:49.150 ⇒ 00:38:52.749 Amber Lin: Okay, do you think this would be started this week, or this would have to be next week?
519 00:38:52.750 ⇒ 00:38:54.909 Zoran Selinger: D-Suite? No, definitely not, no.
520 00:38:54.910 ⇒ 00:38:55.560 Amber Lin: Okay.
521 00:38:56.580 ⇒ 00:39:04.500 Amber Lin: Mmm… Next cycle… Alright. I think this was a… this was a ticket for a wage?
522 00:39:09.610 ⇒ 00:39:13.949 Amber Lin: We’ve created it as stand, I’m not fully sure what this is.
523 00:39:13.950 ⇒ 00:39:16.979 Awaish Kumar: I think, I mean, it is done well.
524 00:39:17.780 ⇒ 00:39:19.240 Amber Lin: This is done? Okay, good.
525 00:39:19.240 ⇒ 00:39:21.889 Awaish Kumar: Because for me, it is, like, we can move it to Dublin.
526 00:39:22.320 ⇒ 00:39:23.820 Amber Lin: Okay, awesome.
527 00:39:23.930 ⇒ 00:39:28.850 Amber Lin: And then for Demlade, one for Stewart and one for MedApply.
528 00:39:31.250 ⇒ 00:39:37.630 Demilade Agboola: So for the… You know what? I reached out to him, so you can check…
529 00:39:38.010 ⇒ 00:39:43.110 Demilade Agboola: black, but I basically reached out to him, and he said that is not something we need to look at.
530 00:39:43.380 ⇒ 00:39:46.179 Demilade Agboola: Right now, that will be a console task.
531 00:39:48.240 ⇒ 00:39:49.960 Demilade Agboola: I’m just tagging it right now.
532 00:39:51.010 ⇒ 00:39:59.500 Demilade Agboola: Then… Well, the other one, yeah, that’s work in progress, so I’ll just share that with you.
533 00:40:00.290 ⇒ 00:40:01.619 Amber Lin: Okay, sounds good.
534 00:40:01.990 ⇒ 00:40:04.440 Awaish Kumar: And what is 1115?
535 00:40:05.050 ⇒ 00:40:07.080 Amber Lin: 11115… yes.
536 00:40:07.540 ⇒ 00:40:13.670 Awaish Kumar: So is it something we can help with? Like, I think it’s… if we… if it’s a DVD model.
537 00:40:14.450 ⇒ 00:40:17.199 Henry Zhao: Yeah, y’all need you to look at my PR when it’s done.
538 00:40:19.610 ⇒ 00:40:22.369 Awaish Kumar: Do we already have a PR, or are you going.
539 00:40:22.370 ⇒ 00:40:25.359 Henry Zhao: No, not yet. So, I need those columns from Zoran, then I’ll have it.
540 00:40:25.940 ⇒ 00:40:31.080 Awaish Kumar: Okay, yeah, I think… yeah, if you need my help, like, let me know, like, maybe it would be…
541 00:40:31.660 ⇒ 00:40:34.650 Awaish Kumar: Easier for me, like, to implement it quickly.
542 00:40:34.910 ⇒ 00:40:35.969 Awaish Kumar: But, yeah.
543 00:40:37.180 ⇒ 00:40:37.720 Amber Lin: Cool.
544 00:40:37.720 ⇒ 00:40:38.440 Henry Zhao: Okay.
545 00:40:38.440 ⇒ 00:40:46.970 Zoran Selinger: I just want to manage expectations here. This is, what you’re asking. I don’t think it’s immediately doable. We’ll have to figure things.
546 00:40:46.970 ⇒ 00:40:47.480 Henry Zhao: Oh, really?
547 00:40:47.480 ⇒ 00:40:48.829 Zoran Selinger: Before we can do that, yeah.
548 00:40:49.650 ⇒ 00:40:54.019 Henry Zhao: Even the identifies one, because we did that, even for the pages one, because we did that easily for identifies.
549 00:40:54.910 ⇒ 00:40:57.949 Amber Lin: Do you guys want to sync with Awish after this? I think he can help.
550 00:40:57.950 ⇒ 00:41:00.599 Zoran Selinger: Yeah, we need a separate conversation, yeah.
551 00:41:01.540 ⇒ 00:41:02.260 Amber Lin: Awesome.
552 00:41:02.530 ⇒ 00:41:11.039 Amber Lin: Alright. I feel pretty good about Eden. What about Ellie? Did we send the next steps, Robert? Yeah.
553 00:41:11.560 ⇒ 00:41:12.440 Amber Lin: Okay, so…
554 00:41:12.440 ⇒ 00:41:16.649 Robert Tseng: I’m gonna bump her, but I don’t really think that he’s gonna move today.
555 00:41:16.650 ⇒ 00:41:18.190 Amber Lin: Okay, great.
556 00:41:18.560 ⇒ 00:41:19.820 Amber Lin: I’m very hype.
557 00:41:20.680 ⇒ 00:41:25.030 Amber Lin: Project review. These are, like, internal.
558 00:41:25.030 ⇒ 00:41:28.979 Robert Tseng: Everything’s paused on hype, so there’s nothing, there’s nothing to say here.
559 00:41:29.390 ⇒ 00:41:31.740 Amber Lin: Okay, on insomnia.
560 00:41:32.260 ⇒ 00:41:37.280 Amber Lin: Okay, let’s pass through README, and then we’ll do Insomnia. Readme…
561 00:41:38.150 ⇒ 00:41:43.209 Robert Tseng: Yeah, README is at an off-site, so also, like, we didn’t do anything this week, which is fine.
562 00:41:43.210 ⇒ 00:41:44.930 Amber Lin: Okay, great.
563 00:41:45.540 ⇒ 00:41:51.400 Amber Lin: Now, on insomnia, let’s see… Recycled data audit.
564 00:41:52.150 ⇒ 00:41:57.529 Amber Lin: Is anyone reviewing them all as PR, or is that for Utam?
565 00:42:00.730 ⇒ 00:42:01.980 Demilade Agboola: Serving waste of all the time.
566 00:42:02.270 ⇒ 00:42:02.960 Demilade Agboola: Pop.
567 00:42:03.060 ⇒ 00:42:04.650 Awaish Kumar: I’m sorry, I see.
568 00:42:05.180 ⇒ 00:42:07.359 Demilade Agboola: It’s a PR for insomnia Cookies.
569 00:42:07.780 ⇒ 00:42:13.780 Demilade Agboola: So, I just initialized the models that we will use, like, the staging structure.
570 00:42:14.360 ⇒ 00:42:17.179 Demilade Agboola: So I believe Old Town…
571 00:42:18.270 ⇒ 00:42:18.940 Awaish Kumar: Come on.
572 00:42:18.940 ⇒ 00:42:21.840 Demilade Agboola: was to look at it, but I will also just, like.
573 00:42:22.200 ⇒ 00:42:24.149 Demilade Agboola: It’s our bumpy his way, basically.
574 00:42:25.020 ⇒ 00:42:25.870 Amber Lin: Okay.
575 00:42:25.870 ⇒ 00:42:26.410 Awaish Kumar: Okay.
576 00:42:26.410 ⇒ 00:42:28.229 Amber Lin: Okay, Cacton.
577 00:42:28.230 ⇒ 00:42:28.980 Awaish Kumar: Okay, alright.
578 00:42:30.200 ⇒ 00:42:34.090 Awaish Kumar: I’m not even sure if I’m on that GitHub repo.
579 00:42:35.000 ⇒ 00:42:37.400 Awaish Kumar: Otherwise, I could also review it.
580 00:42:40.350 ⇒ 00:42:41.719 Demilade Agboola: Okay, sounds good.
581 00:42:42.210 ⇒ 00:42:43.989 Amber Lin: We’ll look at that.
582 00:42:44.770 ⇒ 00:42:45.370 Amber Lin: Okay.
583 00:42:46.060 ⇒ 00:42:50.340 Amber Lin: Any updates from Braze on the data side?
584 00:42:51.370 ⇒ 00:42:52.970 Amber Lin: On the current Stata.
585 00:42:53.240 ⇒ 00:42:56.019 Amber Lin: Or the snowflake decision, I think.
586 00:43:01.950 ⇒ 00:43:05.230 Amber Lin: Okay. Did we decide on Snowflake?
587 00:43:11.030 ⇒ 00:43:13.499 Robert Tseng: No, this is Uoutan. Can you, can you nudge Utan?
588 00:43:14.020 ⇒ 00:43:15.190 Amber Lin: Yeah, okay.
589 00:43:20.580 ⇒ 00:43:34.430 Robert Tseng: they have Redshift, they have Azure, like, they have two data warehouses already. I find it unlikely that they’re gonna wanna do Snowflake. If we’re gonna do Snowflake, it’s because we’re just gonna do it, and then tell them that
590 00:43:34.800 ⇒ 00:43:39.910 Robert Tseng: and tell them afterwards, like, I… I think, yeah, but that’s, that’s, that’s Utam’s call.
591 00:43:40.520 ⇒ 00:43:41.810 Amber Lin: Okay.
592 00:43:42.190 ⇒ 00:43:47.010 Amber Lin: Let me just put one… I’ll take position.
593 00:43:47.300 ⇒ 00:43:52.079 Awaish Kumar: Like, they do have data warehouses, but we don’t have access to any of it, right?
594 00:43:57.680 ⇒ 00:43:58.430 Amber Lin: Hmm.
595 00:44:02.360 ⇒ 00:44:07.909 Demilade Agboola: I don’t know, Paul, but I think we could ask… I think we could ask them, just see if they do.
596 00:44:11.810 ⇒ 00:44:12.820 Amber Lin: Alright.
597 00:44:13.420 ⇒ 00:44:17.760 Amber Lin: Any updates on this one? Are we still doing this, Casey?
598 00:44:22.490 ⇒ 00:44:30.080 Casie Aviles: Oh, sorry, which one? Yeah, I did this right now. I did this for today, I updated the FDA.
599 00:44:30.560 ⇒ 00:44:32.910 Casie Aviles: Okay. This is a recurring, ticket.
600 00:44:32.910 ⇒ 00:44:35.430 Amber Lin: Oh, okay, okay, cool, sounds good.
601 00:44:35.540 ⇒ 00:44:43.110 Amber Lin: Copies of… Copies Insomnia Pipeline to the repo.
602 00:44:44.040 ⇒ 00:44:50.450 Amber Lin: Okay, so for me, I started on the…
603 00:44:50.610 ⇒ 00:44:56.309 Amber Lin: Started on this yesterday, so mostly just working with existing data and
604 00:44:57.120 ⇒ 00:45:02.860 Amber Lin: Exploring if it, like, exploring what type of insights it gives me, and if it’s…
605 00:45:03.150 ⇒ 00:45:08.559 Amber Lin: valid or actionable insights, and then they’ll write it out.
606 00:45:09.900 ⇒ 00:45:21.210 Amber Lin: I think I’ll… I’ll need to do it… have it by end of day, or earlier tomorrow, because I have some other meetings that I have to go to. Is… does that timeline work for you, Robert?
607 00:45:23.940 ⇒ 00:45:25.190 Robert Tseng: Yeah, sure.
608 00:45:26.060 ⇒ 00:45:26.720 Amber Lin: Okay.
609 00:45:27.790 ⇒ 00:45:29.050 Amber Lin: Yeah, so for…
610 00:45:29.050 ⇒ 00:45:31.740 Uttam Kumaran: This one, we just wanted to create, like, a running deck.
611 00:45:31.950 ⇒ 00:45:38.620 Uttam Kumaran: Amber, so we can just… we can just start a deck for… Insomnia,
612 00:45:38.750 ⇒ 00:45:41.600 Uttam Kumaran: Or we can just use the last one and append to it, but…
613 00:45:41.950 ⇒ 00:45:46.300 Uttam Kumaran: That way we can add slides there, so if you want to send those in the channel.
614 00:45:46.620 ⇒ 00:45:49.479 Uttam Kumaran: And then we can just start adding, like, what are the wins?
615 00:45:50.210 ⇒ 00:45:56.820 Amber Lin: Okay, okay. And also, we asked about Snowflake decision for… from you.
616 00:45:57.590 ⇒ 00:46:00.959 Uttam Kumaran: Yep, I’m sort of going back and forth with them on that. Okay.
617 00:46:00.960 ⇒ 00:46:02.289 Amber Lin: Okay, sounds good.
618 00:46:02.770 ⇒ 00:46:07.619 Amber Lin: That’s what I have so far.
619 00:46:07.970 ⇒ 00:46:13.159 Amber Lin: Robert, can I grab time with you to go over the analysis?
620 00:46:14.090 ⇒ 00:46:14.880 Robert Tseng: Yeah.
621 00:46:14.880 ⇒ 00:46:15.460 Amber Lin: kidding.
622 00:46:15.850 ⇒ 00:46:20.290 Robert Tseng: I have another, like, like, I’ve been doing, like, a…
623 00:46:20.750 ⇒ 00:46:30.689 Robert Tseng: light discovery for, like, a new client, so I prefer, like, after my call with them, which is, like, sometime after 1PM. Whatever I have available after 1PM Eastern.
624 00:46:30.690 ⇒ 00:46:32.850 Amber Lin: Cool, okay, okay, that works for me too.
625 00:46:33.390 ⇒ 00:46:33.880 Robert Tseng: Yeah.
626 00:46:33.880 ⇒ 00:46:37.040 Amber Lin: Alright, that’s all here.
627 00:46:37.040 ⇒ 00:46:43.650 Uttam Kumaran: And one thing, Amber, for maybe you to think about for next week is, like, if we can somehow do, like, a batch analysis review.
628 00:46:44.230 ⇒ 00:46:47.549 Uttam Kumaran: We’re gonna start having analysis across several clients.
629 00:46:47.800 ⇒ 00:46:48.689 Amber Lin: Hmm. That…
630 00:46:49.550 ⇒ 00:46:54.689 Uttam Kumaran: if you were to grab… there would be… it would be no way for you to get time for… with Robert for each one.
631 00:46:54.830 ⇒ 00:46:57.810 Uttam Kumaran: And we’re gonna have other folks that are doing analysis, so…
632 00:46:57.920 ⇒ 00:47:01.150 Uttam Kumaran: Maybe let’s think about, like, an hour…
633 00:47:01.610 ⇒ 00:47:04.569 Uttam Kumaran: Or an hour and a half, like, just analysis review.
634 00:47:04.760 ⇒ 00:47:09.780 Uttam Kumaran: That way, other people can start getting involved, and then, ideally, it just becomes more of, like.
635 00:47:09.930 ⇒ 00:47:15.610 Uttam Kumaran: Similar to how we were thinking about running architecture reviews. So, after… maybe after this week, let’s… let’s plan on that for next week.
636 00:47:16.160 ⇒ 00:47:20.690 Amber Lin: Okay, as long as Robert has time for that, I’m happy to do that.
637 00:47:20.960 ⇒ 00:47:25.189 Robert Tseng: Yeah, yeah, you can… you can grab time whenever you see openings, yeah.
638 00:47:25.630 ⇒ 00:47:26.380 Amber Lin: Okay.
639 00:47:26.810 ⇒ 00:47:27.770 Amber Lin: Sounds good.
640 00:47:28.920 ⇒ 00:47:31.770 Uttam Kumaran: But yeah, who is, who is Baha? Is this guy from,
641 00:47:32.320 ⇒ 00:47:34.439 Uttam Kumaran: I don’t know, that’s maybe an AMRA question.
642 00:47:35.210 ⇒ 00:47:43.159 Robert Tseng: Yeah, I was like, why is this guy’s name popping up on our linear? Like, I don’t know why someone would be snooping, but, like, I’m just kind of like, I’ve never seen that name before.
643 00:47:45.550 ⇒ 00:47:47.080 Uttam Kumaran: Is this someone from ABC?
644 00:47:48.160 ⇒ 00:47:49.160 Amber Lin: Who is that?
645 00:47:50.120 ⇒ 00:47:51.019 Uttam Kumaran: Zoom chat.
646 00:47:51.020 ⇒ 00:47:56.089 Robert Tseng: And you were linear when you were sharing screen, or… yeah. It was, like, when you were sharing your linear projects, I…
647 00:47:56.510 ⇒ 00:47:58.400 Robert Tseng: This person’s in our linear, and he…
648 00:47:58.400 ⇒ 00:47:59.629 Amber Lin: I don’t know.
649 00:48:00.850 ⇒ 00:48:01.710 Amber Lin: It is so…
650 00:48:01.710 ⇒ 00:48:02.160 Uttam Kumaran: Interesting.
651 00:48:02.160 ⇒ 00:48:03.939 Amber Lin: Who is that?
652 00:48:05.070 ⇒ 00:48:05.750 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, I’ll show you.
653 00:48:08.040 ⇒ 00:48:09.820 Amber Lin: It’s from Urban Steps.
654 00:48:10.370 ⇒ 00:48:12.309 Uttam Kumaran: Oh, someone from the Urban Stems team, okay.
655 00:48:13.770 ⇒ 00:48:17.999 Amber Lin: I’m gonna change this view owner to Uto. It’s so funny.
656 00:48:18.000 ⇒ 00:48:20.479 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, Rico, can you go follow up and see?
657 00:48:20.690 ⇒ 00:48:21.740 Uttam Kumaran: How that happened?
658 00:48:25.400 ⇒ 00:48:26.120 Uttam Kumaran: Cool.
659 00:48:29.190 ⇒ 00:48:30.130 Amber Lin: Okay.
660 00:48:32.830 ⇒ 00:48:38.570 Amber Lin: Anything else that… we went through all the bats to your stand-ups?
661 00:48:39.260 ⇒ 00:48:39.910 Uttam Kumaran: Cool.
662 00:48:40.170 ⇒ 00:48:46.620 Amber Lin: Yeah, probably… probably big things for today. I just want to make sure that we start on the decks for…
663 00:48:46.700 ⇒ 00:48:50.430 Uttam Kumaran: Insomnia, Eden…
664 00:48:51.830 ⇒ 00:48:56.599 Uttam Kumaran: And we just, like, have those ready so that I can start to tag people in them to add wins.
665 00:48:56.840 ⇒ 00:48:57.520 Uttam Kumaran: Okay.
666 00:48:57.520 ⇒ 00:48:59.330 Amber Lin: I will… I will start that.
667 00:49:00.330 ⇒ 00:49:03.539 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, I guess it… yeah, if you can start those, that would be really helpful.
668 00:49:03.720 ⇒ 00:49:09.229 Uttam Kumaran: I think it’s probably best we just keep one deck, and then we just append to it each week.
669 00:49:11.570 ⇒ 00:49:18.869 Uttam Kumaran: Versus having, like, a thousand decks. So whatever the most recent Eden deck is, let’s just use that for Eden, and…
670 00:49:19.130 ⇒ 00:49:22.770 Uttam Kumaran: We can just copy the slides to the top of that, same with Insomnia.
671 00:49:23.160 ⇒ 00:49:31.129 Uttam Kumaran: And then, if you send those in the channel, I can just put in, like, the high level, and then start to tag people to fill out, and then that way we can hand it to
672 00:49:31.370 ⇒ 00:49:35.110 Uttam Kumaran: design to… Help make really pretty.
673 00:49:35.830 ⇒ 00:49:39.480 Amber Lin: Okay, I did do the, like, Q4
674 00:49:40.140 ⇒ 00:49:44.659 Amber Lin: planning or OKRs and different, like, but we can move them along.
675 00:49:45.150 ⇒ 00:49:52.970 Robert Tseng: Yeah, I would say, like, strategy, like, or, like, checking decks would be the same one, but then analysis can be separate ones. Sure, sure. Yeah.
676 00:49:52.970 ⇒ 00:49:53.630 Amber Lin: Okay.
677 00:49:54.410 ⇒ 00:49:56.310 Amber Lin: Alright, I’ll get to those.
678 00:49:57.290 ⇒ 00:49:59.060 Uttam Kumaran: And if anyone, if anyone…
679 00:49:59.060 ⇒ 00:50:01.129 Amber Lin: Sorry, sorry, go ahead.
680 00:50:01.130 ⇒ 00:50:09.150 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, we can… yeah, I guess my last point is, like, if anyone wants to… we had a great meeting yesterday on Eden, Honey Stinger, and insomnia.
681 00:50:10.330 ⇒ 00:50:20.370 Uttam Kumaran: Great planning session between me, Awaish, Henry, and Robert. If anyone is interested to watch that today, that’s, get a lot of insight into, kind of, like, where these accounts are heading.
682 00:50:20.670 ⇒ 00:50:21.440 Uttam Kumaran: Wow.
683 00:50:21.870 ⇒ 00:50:22.640 Uttam Kumaran: Yep.
684 00:50:23.240 ⇒ 00:50:26.820 Uttam Kumaran: Especially for the folks on Eden and Insomnia, I think it would be helpful to watch.
685 00:50:27.640 ⇒ 00:50:28.350 Amber Lin: Cool.
686 00:50:28.570 ⇒ 00:50:29.280 Uttam Kumaran: -Oh.
687 00:50:29.680 ⇒ 00:50:33.499 Uttam Kumaran: Cool, and then, yeah, we… maybe let’s… maybe we can just have the Urban STEMS folks
688 00:50:33.730 ⇒ 00:50:41.649 Uttam Kumaran: Actually, we can just… we can just wait till the meeting with Emily, and Amber, you don’t have to attend that one if me… me or Wisht Demolade can just hit that.
689 00:50:41.650 ⇒ 00:50:43.230 Amber Lin: Oh, cool. Okay, cool.
690 00:50:43.510 ⇒ 00:50:45.310 Uttam Kumaran: Let me know what happens.
691 00:50:46.140 ⇒ 00:50:50.059 Robert Tseng: Do we need to get anything done for Honey Stinger this week? Because we didn’t talk about…
692 00:50:50.060 ⇒ 00:50:56.300 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, I mean, I sent a message. I’m basically gonna take what we talked about yesterday, form it into a roadmap, Rico.
693 00:50:56.300 ⇒ 00:50:59.490 Robert Tseng: You’re gonna talk to Byron tomorrow, and that’s good for this week?
694 00:50:59.490 ⇒ 00:51:03.910 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, I’m gonna talk to Byron tomorrow. I know, I think you have a… you have a…
695 00:51:04.280 ⇒ 00:51:15.370 Uttam Kumaran: conflict there, but yeah, I’m just gonna kind of say what our plan is. And then, based on the tickets, I will ping… I’ll see maybe, Henry, I may ping you, or someone else to just help me start to land data.
696 00:51:15.530 ⇒ 00:51:16.420 Uttam Kumaran: Somewhere.
697 00:51:17.330 ⇒ 00:51:17.950 Henry Zhao: Okay.
698 00:51:18.680 ⇒ 00:51:19.210 Uttam Kumaran: gap.
699 00:51:19.690 ⇒ 00:51:21.210 Amber Lin: Okay, we should, we should…
700 00:51:21.210 ⇒ 00:51:22.630 Uttam Kumaran: We should have some progress.
701 00:51:23.080 ⇒ 00:51:23.490 Amber Lin: Great.
702 00:51:24.350 ⇒ 00:51:25.400 Amber Lin: Yeah.
703 00:51:25.400 ⇒ 00:51:26.860 Robert Tseng: Finish my audit.
704 00:51:27.180 ⇒ 00:51:28.130 Robert Tseng: Oh, okay, go ahead.
705 00:51:28.930 ⇒ 00:51:29.280 Amber Lin: There you go.
706 00:51:29.280 ⇒ 00:51:39.789 Robert Tseng: I was gonna… I was just gonna say, I’m gonna finish my audit for the crazy persimmon lady, in, like, an hour or so, like, I… yeah, that’s what I’ll be doing next hour.
707 00:51:45.210 ⇒ 00:51:49.120 Amber Lin: Yeah, question was, will we be talking to Brady this week?
708 00:51:49.120 ⇒ 00:51:51.940 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, I’m gonna try to get her on the phone today.
709 00:51:51.940 ⇒ 00:51:52.580 Amber Lin: Okay.
710 00:51:52.580 ⇒ 00:51:54.349 Uttam Kumaran: I’m gonna send her times right now.
711 00:51:54.870 ⇒ 00:51:56.789 Amber Lin: Alright, let me know if I can join.
712 00:51:56.970 ⇒ 00:52:01.090 Robert Tseng: I am talking to Amrita tomorrow, so it would be good to just have some…
713 00:52:01.520 ⇒ 00:52:19.639 Robert Tseng: some things to say. I mean, I generally know what I’m gonna… I know how to handle her objections to our engineering work, but then, like, on the analysis side of it, anything that we have there, I think I… I’m just gonna run through the takeaways from what we’ve already sent them in the past week, but then if there’s anything else that comes out of your conversations, just keep me in the loop.
714 00:52:19.770 ⇒ 00:52:20.300 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah.
715 00:52:20.300 ⇒ 00:52:20.870 Amber Lin: Okay.
716 00:52:22.860 ⇒ 00:52:32.200 Mustafa Raja: Well, for integrating product data into Catalyst for default, and he suggested that we should integrate segment with… .
717 00:52:32.200 ⇒ 00:52:33.550 Henry Zhao: No, there’s, like…
718 00:52:34.470 ⇒ 00:52:39.879 Uttam Kumaran: Well, yeah, I guess, like, they don’t… like, they’re trying to use Catalyst, so there’s no, like, tool
719 00:52:40.280 ⇒ 00:52:41.769 Uttam Kumaran: Change we can do here.
720 00:52:42.090 ⇒ 00:52:43.760 Uttam Kumaran: So, Catalyst is just…
721 00:52:43.760 ⇒ 00:52:44.880 Robert Tseng: using Catalyst?
722 00:52:45.260 ⇒ 00:52:46.700 Uttam Kumaran: Different catalyst.
723 00:52:46.920 ⇒ 00:52:50.490 Uttam Kumaran: Oh, okay. It’s like a game site, it’s like an account management tool.
724 00:52:50.690 ⇒ 00:52:52.500 Robert Tseng: Okay, okay.
725 00:52:53.090 ⇒ 00:52:59.870 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, but we can’t, like, implement another tool here, so… but the ask is really simple. We just need to send data from the warehouse.
726 00:52:59.870 ⇒ 00:53:01.620 Mustafa Raja: body, Yeah.
727 00:53:01.620 ⇒ 00:53:02.360 Uttam Kumaran: catalyst.
728 00:53:02.520 ⇒ 00:53:03.530 Mustafa Raja: Yeah. So…
729 00:53:03.530 ⇒ 00:53:05.359 Robert Tseng: And they have a tool called BAS.
730 00:53:10.880 ⇒ 00:53:15.139 Robert Tseng: Okay, I’m just… we’re just… They’re all called the same thing.
731 00:53:18.240 ⇒ 00:53:36.780 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, so, I mean, I don’t know, I would say… I would say it’s like, yeah, Henry, we just… I just told Mustafa that if he has questions on how to do reverse ETL to ask you, but yeah, I would… if you guys want to meet and come with a conclude… a reasonable conclusion here is not implement another tool. Okay. So, I don’t know what the open questions are, but…
732 00:53:37.680 ⇒ 00:53:38.420 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah.
733 00:53:39.000 ⇒ 00:53:40.739 Henry Zhao: And I think Oasis good at this stuff, too.
734 00:53:43.340 ⇒ 00:53:44.170 Henry Zhao: If we can’t figure it out.
735 00:53:44.170 ⇒ 00:53:50.239 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, I’m just trying to say, if there’s questions, ask someone else, but of course, I can help if I need to, so…
736 00:53:50.690 ⇒ 00:53:51.320 Mustafa Raja: Okay.
737 00:53:51.820 ⇒ 00:53:52.460 Uttam Kumaran: Got it.
738 00:53:52.940 ⇒ 00:53:53.630 Uttam Kumaran: Alright.
739 00:53:55.020 ⇒ 00:53:55.660 Amber Lin: Oh, fantastic.
740 00:53:55.660 ⇒ 00:53:58.139 Robert Tseng: Alright, let’s get it.
741 00:53:58.490 ⇒ 00:53:59.270 Uttam Kumaran: Bye.
742 00:53:59.640 ⇒ 00:54:00.370 Amber Lin: Mike.