Meeting Title: AI-Data Platform Team Planning Date: 2025-08-04 Meeting participants: Mustafa Raja, Sam Roberts, Casie Aviles, Uttam Kumaran
WEBVTT
1 00:00:33.610 ⇒ 00:00:34.640 Sam Roberts: Hello!
2 00:00:35.960 ⇒ 00:00:37.130 Mustafa Raja: Hey! How are you?
3 00:00:37.860 ⇒ 00:00:39.350 Sam Roberts: Doing all right. How about yourself?
4 00:00:40.150 ⇒ 00:00:42.090 Mustafa Raja: Doing amazing. How was your weekend.
5 00:00:43.267 ⇒ 00:00:48.349 Sam Roberts: Weekend was pretty good. Weather was beautiful here in Cleveland, so I enjoyed a lot of time outside.
6 00:00:48.820 ⇒ 00:00:49.650 Mustafa Raja: Oh, nice!
7 00:00:50.160 ⇒ 00:00:51.280 Sam Roberts: Where are you located?
8 00:00:51.620 ⇒ 00:00:52.810 Mustafa Raja: I’m in Pakistan.
9 00:00:53.250 ⇒ 00:00:54.710 Sam Roberts: Pakistan, okay? Right? Right?
10 00:00:54.710 ⇒ 00:00:59.840 Mustafa Raja: Yeah. Have you worked with any Pakistani colleagues before.
11 00:01:01.093 ⇒ 00:01:11.850 Sam Roberts: I had another project that I was on where they had some work with some people in Pakistan. But I was kind of like picking up where they left off. So it was just a little bit of back and forth early on.
12 00:01:11.850 ⇒ 00:01:14.090 Mustafa Raja: Oh, nice!
13 00:01:15.540 ⇒ 00:01:16.530 Mustafa Raja: Hey, Casey!
14 00:01:18.150 ⇒ 00:01:19.130 Sam Roberts: Good morning, hey? Guys.
15 00:01:19.130 ⇒ 00:01:19.510 Casie Aviles: Nice.
16 00:01:19.770 ⇒ 00:01:20.460 Sam Roberts: This one.
17 00:01:21.010 ⇒ 00:01:22.310 Casie Aviles: Hey, Mustafa! Heysan.
18 00:01:22.740 ⇒ 00:01:23.230 Mustafa Raja: Hey!
19 00:01:23.230 ⇒ 00:01:23.980 Sam Roberts: Hey?
20 00:01:25.330 ⇒ 00:01:29.049 Sam Roberts: Tom says he’s running little. 10 min of wait.
21 00:01:30.000 ⇒ 00:01:30.650 Mustafa Raja: Oh!
22 00:01:31.630 ⇒ 00:01:32.850 Sam Roberts: You just soft it.
23 00:01:38.160 ⇒ 00:01:40.329 Sam Roberts: How was your weekend, Casey?
24 00:01:42.328 ⇒ 00:01:46.050 Casie Aviles: Yeah, I spent my weekend in the hospital like I was.
25 00:01:46.050 ⇒ 00:01:46.500 Mustafa Raja: Oh!
26 00:01:46.500 ⇒ 00:01:48.639 Casie Aviles: My my mom. She.
27 00:01:48.640 ⇒ 00:01:49.100 Sam Roberts: Oh!
28 00:01:51.490 ⇒ 00:01:51.884 Casie Aviles: Yeah.
29 00:01:52.280 ⇒ 00:01:53.460 Sam Roberts: Sorry to hear that.
30 00:01:54.030 ⇒ 00:01:54.690 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
31 00:01:58.190 ⇒ 00:01:59.579 Mustafa Raja: is he? Okay? Now.
32 00:02:01.101 ⇒ 00:02:05.820 Casie Aviles: Yeah, she’s recovering. She just completed the surgery. So.
33 00:02:05.820 ⇒ 00:02:06.330 Mustafa Raja: Oh!
34 00:02:06.330 ⇒ 00:02:07.130 Sam Roberts: Okay.
35 00:02:07.800 ⇒ 00:02:08.580 Sam Roberts: Wow.
36 00:02:10.716 ⇒ 00:02:13.249 Casie Aviles: To get her appendix removed.
37 00:02:13.720 ⇒ 00:02:14.220 Mustafa Raja: Oh!
38 00:02:15.710 ⇒ 00:02:16.760 Sam Roberts: Was that Sutton.
39 00:02:17.440 ⇒ 00:02:18.979 Casie Aviles: Yeah, yeah, most I didn’t.
40 00:02:18.980 ⇒ 00:02:21.729 Sam Roberts: Yeah. And that’s usually the way those things go. I think, yeah.
41 00:02:21.730 ⇒ 00:02:22.510 Casie Aviles: Yeah.
42 00:02:23.740 ⇒ 00:02:24.590 Sam Roberts: Jeez.
43 00:02:31.110 ⇒ 00:02:33.520 Sam Roberts: I’m glad she’s recovering, at least.
44 00:02:35.121 ⇒ 00:02:41.450 Casie Aviles: Yeah, I think she, she can leave by Wednesday or Thursday, so yeah, that’s good.
45 00:02:41.760 ⇒ 00:02:42.809 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, that’s good.
46 00:02:43.350 ⇒ 00:02:44.030 Sam Roberts: Yeah.
47 00:02:49.040 ⇒ 00:02:54.050 Casie Aviles: How about you guys? Sorry. That was that was, yeah, thanks.
48 00:02:54.050 ⇒ 00:02:56.766 Mustafa Raja: Spent my weekend mostly sleeping.
49 00:02:59.780 ⇒ 00:03:01.330 Sam Roberts: Not a bad way to spend it. To be honest.
50 00:03:01.330 ⇒ 00:03:11.559 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, I I had. I had plans with my friends and all. But last moment I decided to skip it, or, you know, spend it in my bed.
51 00:03:14.920 ⇒ 00:03:17.947 Sam Roberts: I appreciate that. I I really get. I like that
52 00:03:35.130 ⇒ 00:03:39.820 Sam Roberts: close. Are we waiting for anyone else besides me? 2 blue angels here.
53 00:03:40.680 ⇒ 00:03:44.269 Mustafa Raja: I guess we are waiting for Miguel also.
54 00:03:44.870 ⇒ 00:03:46.830 Sam Roberts: Oh, right? Right? Okay. Yes. There we go.
55 00:03:52.230 ⇒ 00:03:56.750 Mustafa Raja: So, Sam, do you have any suggestions on how we can improve the platform.
56 00:03:58.185 ⇒ 00:04:05.059 Sam Roberts: Yeah, I I’m making some notes here, you know. I’m digging through. I’m I mean, I have some questions, I guess, more than anything at this point.
57 00:04:05.060 ⇒ 00:04:05.670 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, yeah.
58 00:04:06.075 ⇒ 00:04:06.480 Sam Roberts: And.
59 00:04:06.480 ⇒ 00:04:06.920 Mustafa Raja: Throw them.
60 00:04:06.920 ⇒ 00:04:21.109 Sam Roberts: Because I was gonna chat with Casey later about the document. But I might as well while I have you guys here. So I’m thinking. Well, actually, one thing I’m wondering about, let me let me pull up my notes. So I’m not just okay. So there’s the the back end repo
61 00:04:21.959 ⇒ 00:04:27.069 Sam Roberts: that’s responsible for the platform and ABC and pool parts. Is that is that what I’m seeing.
62 00:04:27.430 ⇒ 00:04:29.540 Mustafa Raja: I don’t think so. The back.
63 00:04:29.540 ⇒ 00:04:30.150 Sam Roberts: Okay, because there’s.
64 00:04:30.150 ⇒ 00:04:30.710 Mustafa Raja: Cool.
65 00:04:31.410 ⇒ 00:04:32.050 Mustafa Raja: She’s just.
66 00:04:32.050 ⇒ 00:04:34.169 Sam Roberts: That’s the repo, yeah, or just the platform.
67 00:04:34.170 ⇒ 00:04:34.799 Sam Roberts: I mean, okay.
68 00:04:34.800 ⇒ 00:04:36.389 Mustafa Raja: Yeah. Yeah. The backend.
69 00:04:36.390 ⇒ 00:04:36.750 Sam Roberts: Okay.
70 00:04:36.750 ⇒ 00:04:39.070 Mustafa Raja: As far as I know, Casey.
71 00:04:39.070 ⇒ 00:04:40.930 Sam Roberts: Okay, okay, no, that’s fine. That’s fine. I.
72 00:04:42.830 ⇒ 00:04:44.219 Mustafa Raja: And inside, can I see the
73 00:04:48.660 ⇒ 00:04:49.720 Mustafa Raja: okay?
74 00:04:50.810 ⇒ 00:04:55.180 Sam Roberts: I see. Okay. So the 3 clients are just for each of those views. Then is that what.
75 00:04:58.350 ⇒ 00:05:10.699 Casie Aviles: Yeah, yeah, I think I I didn’t work on the this back end part. So I I might not have all the context. But yeah, that was, I think that’s for the client. The client hubs the client views.
76 00:05:11.390 ⇒ 00:05:19.980 Sam Roberts: Okay, okay, so yeah, we probably need to more like, generalize those a little bit so that we can make it easier to add them and stuff like we talked about for other things, right?
77 00:05:20.600 ⇒ 00:05:21.620 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
78 00:05:22.300 ⇒ 00:05:29.129 Sam Roberts: So okay, I’ll take that now. Okay, cause I honestly what I had when I when I opened it up and I saw there was no read me. I had cursor.
79 00:05:29.130 ⇒ 00:05:30.300 Mustafa Raja: Oh, yeah.
80 00:05:30.300 ⇒ 00:05:37.379 Sam Roberts: Through everything and make a read me. And it was. It was kind of suggesting that it was for different functionalities, for different clients, and I hadn’t dug in it.
81 00:05:37.380 ⇒ 00:05:38.020 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
82 00:05:38.020 ⇒ 00:05:40.269 Sam Roberts: If it was right or wrong yet.
83 00:05:40.430 ⇒ 00:05:42.680 Sam Roberts: But that makes more sense. Okay.
84 00:05:42.680 ⇒ 00:05:47.790 Mustafa Raja: So the clients it is referring would be the client views in the platform.
85 00:05:48.330 ⇒ 00:05:54.949 Sam Roberts: Okay, okay, that makes some sense. I just I was. I guess I was confused because there’s different. There’s more views than just that for the clients.
86 00:05:54.950 ⇒ 00:05:55.510 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, yeah.
87 00:05:56.410 ⇒ 00:06:05.750 Sam Roberts: But now, okay, I I can. Okay, I’m still like, I said, digging through trying to understand it all so. And then the other thing I think I talked about is moving it into like one repo potentially.
88 00:06:05.990 ⇒ 00:06:06.520 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
89 00:06:06.840 ⇒ 00:06:07.440 Casie Aviles: I think.
90 00:06:07.440 ⇒ 00:06:12.000 Sam Roberts: I think that’ll make it like especially deployments and testing just easier.
91 00:06:13.340 ⇒ 00:06:20.110 Mustafa Raja: I’m wondering. I’m wondering if we can move to or migrate to next year’s.
92 00:06:20.850 ⇒ 00:06:32.489 Sam Roberts: That was going to be another question. I had because that’s I mean, obviously, you know, would would be a nice way to get everything going, because I also noticed everything’s Javascript, not typescript. At this point.
93 00:06:32.490 ⇒ 00:06:34.359 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, everything is Javascript.
94 00:06:34.360 ⇒ 00:06:37.010 Sam Roberts: Yeah, cause I figured it would be worth, you know, either
95 00:06:37.110 ⇒ 00:06:39.179 Sam Roberts: trying to move a little bit or or move up.
96 00:06:39.180 ⇒ 00:06:40.749 Mustafa Raja: Oh, yeah, we should.
97 00:06:40.750 ⇒ 00:06:44.840 Sam Roberts: Question about my question about next is, it’s.
98 00:06:45.430 ⇒ 00:06:56.220 Sam Roberts: you know I’ve only used it just with for cell, not with Heroku. I know there’s ways to do it. I’m wondering if it’s other long running functions that we need to worry about, or
99 00:06:56.520 ⇒ 00:06:58.169 Sam Roberts: is any like. Where is
100 00:06:58.320 ⇒ 00:07:06.020 Sam Roberts: some of that logic happening, because, you know, next is kind of set up for like serverless endpoints. So they don’t stay
101 00:07:06.700 ⇒ 00:07:08.420 Sam Roberts: stay alive very long.
102 00:07:09.560 ⇒ 00:07:10.270 Mustafa Raja: And
103 00:07:11.460 ⇒ 00:07:16.040 Sam Roberts: But I’m not sure what the back end is doing besides serving this, or, you know, serving the data for this.
104 00:07:16.040 ⇒ 00:07:31.460 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, maybe as far as I know, Miguel would know better, because it’s only been 2 months I’ve been here only for 2 months Miguel would know better. But as far as my knowledge, the back end is only serving data to
105 00:07:31.750 ⇒ 00:07:33.479 Mustafa Raja: no, this platform.
106 00:07:34.510 ⇒ 00:07:37.200 Sam Roberts: Okay, then, in that case, I think moving to next is probably not.
107 00:07:37.200 ⇒ 00:07:43.150 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, I actually did talk about are moving to next with Miguel.
108 00:07:43.590 ⇒ 00:07:44.310 Mustafa Raja: Oh.
109 00:07:44.310 ⇒ 00:07:45.080 Sam Roberts: Great. Okay.
110 00:07:45.080 ⇒ 00:07:47.950 Mustafa Raja: Yeah. It’s it was a while back.
111 00:07:48.850 ⇒ 00:07:50.400 Sam Roberts: Yeah, okay, I’ll make sure to make it.
112 00:07:50.400 ⇒ 00:07:53.079 Mustafa Raja: Aren’t weren’t interested in that at that moment.
113 00:07:54.100 ⇒ 00:07:56.239 Sam Roberts: Yeah, no, I think I think that would
114 00:07:56.630 ⇒ 00:08:01.966 Sam Roberts: be a smart, smart change. It would give us the typescript. It would give us one repo.
115 00:08:02.610 ⇒ 00:08:14.110 Sam Roberts: I’ve just been like I said I was. I was. I’m trying to like account for a lot of things, and there’s just like little things I don’t know yet. You know, like I wasn’t sure how important keeping the git history is, gonna be, and things like that in terms of merging.
116 00:08:14.110 ⇒ 00:08:15.540 Mustafa Raja: Hmm, yeah. Yeah.
117 00:08:15.857 ⇒ 00:08:18.080 Sam Roberts: You know, if it’s if it’s been.
118 00:08:19.100 ⇒ 00:08:30.869 Sam Roberts: you know, not the highest priority. I want to make sure that things are like the important information is still there. But if it’s if I can just make a new repo and drop everything into it and start up a new next project that probably would be
119 00:08:31.210 ⇒ 00:08:32.829 Sam Roberts: a good 1st pass.
120 00:08:34.820 ⇒ 00:08:35.490 Mustafa Raja: Hmm.
121 00:08:36.809 ⇒ 00:08:42.059 Sam Roberts: Alright. Yeah, okay. I’m glad. I’m glad you mentioned that. That was definitely. Another thing I had in my notes was, you know, next is worth it.
122 00:08:42.809 ⇒ 00:08:45.169 Mustafa Raja: I’ve worked with next a lot. So
123 00:08:46.197 ⇒ 00:08:54.889 Mustafa Raja: and also for ui, I feel the mui would take a lot of build space. No.
124 00:08:57.526 ⇒ 00:08:58.659 Sam Roberts: I don’t.
125 00:08:58.870 ⇒ 00:09:02.315 Sam Roberts: I haven’t used a ui a ton in recent things.
126 00:09:02.660 ⇒ 00:09:04.170 Mustafa Raja: Yeah. Same. Here.
127 00:09:04.530 ⇒ 00:09:06.200 Sam Roberts: I’m I’m a fan of.
128 00:09:06.200 ⇒ 00:09:07.080 Sam Roberts: Do a little more.
129 00:09:07.080 ⇒ 00:09:08.989 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, I’m a fan of shared scene.
130 00:09:09.140 ⇒ 00:09:09.860 Mustafa Raja: To be honest.
131 00:09:09.860 ⇒ 00:09:14.410 Sam Roberts: Yeah, of course, of course. Yeah, I’ve been interesting. I use a bit of a daisy ui, which I think is.
132 00:09:14.410 ⇒ 00:09:16.719 Mustafa Raja: Oh, yeah, do I?
133 00:09:17.770 ⇒ 00:09:19.295 Mustafa Raja: It’s especially from like, but.
134 00:09:19.760 ⇒ 00:09:21.839 Sam Roberts: Internal tooling where it’s, you know, we want it.
135 00:09:21.840 ⇒ 00:09:23.769 Sam Roberts: Yeah, usable. But it’s not necessarily.
136 00:09:23.770 ⇒ 00:09:26.190 Mustafa Raja: And it’s super quick also.
137 00:09:26.580 ⇒ 00:09:27.570 Sam Roberts: Exactly.
138 00:09:27.930 ⇒ 00:09:28.590 Mustafa Raja: With all.
139 00:09:28.590 ⇒ 00:09:29.320 Sam Roberts: I think.
140 00:09:29.320 ⇒ 00:09:30.140 Mustafa Raja: She’s been on.
141 00:09:30.600 ⇒ 00:09:33.460 Sam Roberts: A con 100%. Okay? Good. I’m glad. I’m glad you said that.
142 00:09:34.320 ⇒ 00:09:37.309 Sam Roberts: because I I don’t want to just jump in and say, like, let’s use.
143 00:09:37.310 ⇒ 00:09:38.070 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
144 00:09:38.070 ⇒ 00:09:39.693 Sam Roberts: No, but I’m glad
145 00:09:41.500 ⇒ 00:09:46.940 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, I think I think we we have some overlapping tools we we have used before.
146 00:09:47.320 ⇒ 00:09:49.570 Sam Roberts: That’s great. Okay, cool.
147 00:09:50.508 ⇒ 00:09:58.330 Mustafa Raja: And I remember you mentioned about the keys. The Api, or sorry the environment
148 00:09:58.900 ⇒ 00:10:01.549 Mustafa Raja: that we can hide from Front end.
149 00:10:02.230 ⇒ 00:10:03.040 Sam Roberts: Yes,
150 00:10:04.740 ⇒ 00:10:13.129 Mustafa Raja: I’m interested in how we can do this because it’s something that I’ve faced in the past, and
151 00:10:13.720 ⇒ 00:10:21.669 Mustafa Raja: to my understanding, react for the front end. We can only use the keys that are public in react.
152 00:10:22.340 ⇒ 00:10:23.200 Sam Roberts: Correct. Yeah.
153 00:10:24.480 ⇒ 00:10:33.590 Mustafa Raja: Yeah. If we were in in an environment like Nextjs, we can hide those keys and use that those keys in the back end.
154 00:10:35.910 ⇒ 00:10:42.660 Sam Roberts: Yes, I think we could. We could probably do it, even if we didn’t use next. We would have to do it a bit more manually
155 00:10:43.330 ⇒ 00:10:46.790 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, I’m interested in that process. Actually, because.
156 00:10:46.790 ⇒ 00:10:47.210 Sam Roberts: Yeah.
157 00:10:47.210 ⇒ 00:10:49.689 Mustafa Raja: Because it’s something that I haven’t done before.
158 00:10:49.810 ⇒ 00:10:56.519 Mustafa Raja: And so and so it’s interesting for me to see how it works and to learn it as well.
159 00:10:56.520 ⇒ 00:11:00.549 Sam Roberts: Okay, yeah, definitely, I’m trying to think, because I definitely had a
160 00:11:00.720 ⇒ 00:11:17.450 Sam Roberts: when I was using super based. And next on my last project my last big project. I had to use the you know. The service key and the anony for 2 different, you know. One was the one that went to the front end, and one wasn’t, and I I had a little extra catch in there to make sure it wasn’t. But next handles that pretty well.
161 00:11:18.135 ⇒ 00:11:18.500 Mustafa Raja: But.
162 00:11:18.500 ⇒ 00:11:23.620 Sam Roberts: Even without that, I bet there’s a good way to do it where express has access to it.
163 00:11:24.050 ⇒ 00:11:25.690 Sam Roberts: But React doesn’t.
164 00:11:27.660 ⇒ 00:11:31.147 Mustafa Raja: Hmm, yeah, to my understanding.
165 00:11:33.390 ⇒ 00:11:39.680 Mustafa Raja: for the front end keys in nextjs, you have to use the prefix next public right?
166 00:11:40.080 ⇒ 00:11:41.110 Mustafa Raja: Correct? Yep. And
167 00:11:41.110 ⇒ 00:11:55.440 Mustafa Raja: and for the backend you don’t have to do it. Back. End has access to those and for and the keys with next public prefix would be also public in the code, meaning people might have access to that
168 00:11:56.603 ⇒ 00:12:01.240 Mustafa Raja: and for the back end which do not has the. The. This prefix
169 00:12:01.720 ⇒ 00:12:06.049 Mustafa Raja: wouldn’t have. People wouldn’t have access to it, it would be an hidden key.
170 00:12:06.260 ⇒ 00:12:08.510 Mustafa Raja: This is my understanding. So far.
171 00:12:09.080 ⇒ 00:12:12.297 Sam Roberts: Yeah, I’m pretty sure that’s how next has it set up?
172 00:12:12.960 ⇒ 00:12:13.630 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
173 00:12:13.630 ⇒ 00:12:22.170 Sam Roberts: And yeah, I I was a little paranoid about it when I had it set up because I I trusted next. But I didn’t know exactly how it was managing that. So I
174 00:12:22.170 ⇒ 00:12:22.639 Sam Roberts: oh, I do.
175 00:12:22.640 ⇒ 00:12:31.809 Sam Roberts: was when I imported the the super based service key. I just had it checked to see if window existed. To make sure we were on the server and not on the.
176 00:12:31.810 ⇒ 00:12:32.800 Mustafa Raja: Oh!
177 00:12:33.240 ⇒ 00:12:34.720 Sam Roberts: And if it was I.
178 00:12:34.720 ⇒ 00:12:36.190 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, that’s super smart.
179 00:12:36.740 ⇒ 00:12:41.560 Sam Roberts: I just threw a massive error, and it it never really was needed. Because next handled it pretty.
180 00:12:41.560 ⇒ 00:12:42.270 Mustafa Raja: Well, but just.
181 00:12:42.270 ⇒ 00:12:43.845 Sam Roberts: As a as a backup
182 00:12:44.160 ⇒ 00:12:44.750 Mustafa Raja: And.
183 00:12:44.750 ⇒ 00:12:54.570 Sam Roberts: And so I think we could do something similar. If we don’t go to next, we could do something similar with express. Where it’s just, you know the important keys. We just have an extra check to make sure that never gets loaded in the browser.
184 00:12:55.420 ⇒ 00:12:56.350 Mustafa Raja: Hmm.
185 00:12:56.740 ⇒ 00:12:58.549 Sam Roberts: But next head is not pretty.
186 00:12:58.550 ⇒ 00:12:59.860 Sam Roberts: Also I think it. Yeah.
187 00:12:59.860 ⇒ 00:13:02.870 Mustafa Raja: By express. Do you mean our back end.
188 00:13:03.460 ⇒ 00:13:05.931 Sam Roberts: Correct. Yes, the back end is running express
189 00:13:06.240 ⇒ 00:13:06.890 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, yeah.
190 00:13:06.890 ⇒ 00:13:09.039 Sam Roberts: Which is the framework for that. Yes, I do mean the back end.
191 00:13:09.360 ⇒ 00:13:15.030 Mustafa Raja: Hmm for front end. We are only exposing the Ann key, so I don’t think that’s
192 00:13:16.265 ⇒ 00:13:17.630 Mustafa Raja: any issue. No.
193 00:13:17.750 ⇒ 00:13:20.790 Sam Roberts: Yeah, that’s fine. Yeah, that’s kind of the way superbase has it.
194 00:13:20.790 ⇒ 00:13:21.480 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, yeah.
195 00:13:21.480 ⇒ 00:13:22.250 Sam Roberts: To use, but.
196 00:13:22.250 ⇒ 00:13:28.049 Mustafa Raja: We have, but we have Rls disabled on our tables, so that might become an issue.
197 00:13:28.810 ⇒ 00:13:35.590 Sam Roberts: Yes, I I did see that. I think, for something like this
198 00:13:35.920 ⇒ 00:13:43.290 Sam Roberts: right now. I’m not, you know. It’s it’s like I said. It’s internal. We have the O off for Google. So no
199 00:13:43.780 ⇒ 00:13:49.770 Sam Roberts: getting in there. Ideally, Rls is is A is a, you know.
200 00:13:49.930 ⇒ 00:13:52.509 Sam Roberts: an important thing to concern ourselves with, but
201 00:13:52.650 ⇒ 00:13:58.773 Sam Roberts: because it’s it’s more of an internal tool, you know. We all kind of have that access anyway. Right now.
202 00:13:59.620 ⇒ 00:14:03.312 Sam Roberts: I would say. That’s something to be
203 00:14:04.380 ⇒ 00:14:09.679 Sam Roberts: aware of moving forward. So that’s that’s definitely something that’s gonna go kind of like in the dock.
204 00:14:10.100 ⇒ 00:14:14.679 Mustafa Raja: As I’m yeah, yeah, maybe this should be a protocol.
205 00:14:15.680 ⇒ 00:14:19.980 Sam Roberts: Yes, yeah. So I think, and especially like.
206 00:14:20.230 ⇒ 00:14:37.790 Sam Roberts: you know, I don’t know how things are set up yet in terms of who has access to what client data? Or you know the transcripts for each meeting, or anything like that. But all of that we have to kind of lay out from a business side first, st and then probably translate that to Rls rules.
207 00:14:38.060 ⇒ 00:14:39.360 Sam Roberts: actually, yeah,
208 00:14:40.430 ⇒ 00:14:53.999 Sam Roberts: But I’m not again. It’s because it’s it’s mostly internal. You know, then we there may be features. We want to show people to Demos or things. But we, if if you know, if you need a brain for Ji email to access it. I’m not as worried.
209 00:14:54.260 ⇒ 00:15:00.029 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, it it is. Maybe it is set up in that way. As far as I can recall.
210 00:15:01.840 ⇒ 00:15:02.560 Sam Roberts: Sorry.
211 00:15:03.199 ⇒ 00:15:09.259 Mustafa Raja: It is set up in a in that way that you need the dream. 4 Gi email to.
212 00:15:09.260 ⇒ 00:15:15.239 Sam Roberts: Yes, yeah, exactly. Exactly. So, I think because we have that catch. It’s not just so, you know, you can’t just go to the Heroku URL and get.
213 00:15:15.240 ⇒ 00:15:15.880 Mustafa Raja: Yeah. It’s too.
214 00:15:16.280 ⇒ 00:15:18.090 Sam Roberts: I think I think it’s, you know.
215 00:15:18.240 ⇒ 00:15:20.609 Sam Roberts: you definitely want to follow best practices. But you also.
216 00:15:20.610 ⇒ 00:15:21.130 Mustafa Raja: Somewhat.
217 00:15:21.130 ⇒ 00:15:23.980 Sam Roberts: To not add a ton of overhead, you know.
218 00:15:23.980 ⇒ 00:15:24.450 Mustafa Raja: Obviously.
219 00:15:24.450 ⇒ 00:15:35.360 Sam Roberts: Or something that it’s that’s not important, you know. My, my biggest thing has always been, especially, you know, being like a startup guy working with limited resources has always been avoiding premature optimization.
220 00:15:36.401 ⇒ 00:15:44.300 Sam Roberts: Where you know. Yeah, you want to do everything the right way. But you also have to shave certain corners off at certain times and
221 00:15:45.770 ⇒ 00:15:48.739 Sam Roberts: you gotta know what’s important to focus on at different times.
222 00:15:49.050 ⇒ 00:15:49.590 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
223 00:15:49.893 ⇒ 00:15:57.169 Sam Roberts: You know. Rls, and the the rules, I think, is is a kind of a feature we need to worry about to make sure.
224 00:15:59.870 ⇒ 00:16:05.589 Sam Roberts: yeah, that certain data doesn’t leak. But right now it can only leak to other people in the company. And if you know.
225 00:16:05.810 ⇒ 00:16:07.919 Sam Roberts: if that’s it, then I think we’re okay for now.
226 00:16:08.130 ⇒ 00:16:08.820 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
227 00:16:11.840 ⇒ 00:16:15.479 Sam Roberts: But that is definitely something to be aware of, and something that I will
228 00:16:15.890 ⇒ 00:16:24.453 Sam Roberts: include as we’re working on the architecture, Doc. In general, but also, like as I’m clicking around and understanding how things are running.
229 00:16:26.280 ⇒ 00:16:28.080 Sam Roberts: that’s good to know.
230 00:16:28.790 ⇒ 00:16:29.340 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
231 00:16:29.340 ⇒ 00:16:30.560 Mustafa Raja: Any other questions.
232 00:16:31.224 ⇒ 00:16:34.780 Sam Roberts: I’m trying to think. Let me see what else I’ve got on the platform.
233 00:16:35.150 ⇒ 00:16:42.118 Sam Roberts: We got her. Sorry I’m on. I’m in Heroku now. So I at least have access to that. That was a big question. I wasn’t sure where things were hosted for a minute.
234 00:16:46.140 ⇒ 00:16:51.220 Sam Roberts: yeah, a lot of. I have like little Ui things I’m noticing. But that’s not a big deal. Obviously, at this point.
235 00:16:53.400 ⇒ 00:17:04.195 Sam Roberts: yeah, no, not a ton of questions. Specifically, this is actually very helpful, just in general, to to chat through it. Are there any other things you think I should be like specifically looking at or
236 00:17:04.839 ⇒ 00:17:07.540 Sam Roberts: you know things you’re aware of, but.
237 00:17:07.540 ⇒ 00:17:09.800 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, I think you have captured a lot of it.
238 00:17:10.490 ⇒ 00:17:11.210 Sam Roberts: Okay.
239 00:17:11.210 ⇒ 00:17:12.239 Mustafa Raja: That’s good.
240 00:17:12.880 ⇒ 00:17:19.289 Sam Roberts: Yeah, alright. Good. Yeah, no. It’s definitely. It’s 1 of those things where you come in and you gotta get up and running. And there’s lots of code and.
241 00:17:19.510 ⇒ 00:17:19.960 Mustafa Raja: You know it’s.
242 00:17:19.960 ⇒ 00:17:20.579 Sam Roberts: It’s.
243 00:17:20.589 ⇒ 00:17:22.539 Mustafa Raja: Months of work to catch up on.
244 00:17:23.079 ⇒ 00:17:32.009 Sam Roberts: Exactly exactly, and so I don’t. Wanna again I’m not trying to like. Come in and be like, let’s use all the tools I know, but I’m glad we talked a few about about a few of them that I feel comfortable with. So that’s good.
245 00:17:32.179 ⇒ 00:17:34.559 Sam Roberts: Yeah.
246 00:17:35.829 ⇒ 00:17:41.009 Sam Roberts: Casey, I know we’re chatting later about the doc and stuff. But any other thoughts from you about any of the platform stuff.
247 00:17:43.287 ⇒ 00:17:48.352 Casie Aviles: I think that’s pretty much I did. I didn’t. I’m not too familiar with
248 00:17:49.060 ⇒ 00:17:51.660 Casie Aviles: like the frameworks like with Javascript.
249 00:17:52.000 ⇒ 00:17:54.899 Casie Aviles: but I can give some context with the
250 00:17:55.150 ⇒ 00:18:03.330 Casie Aviles: like, the AI side of things like the N. 8, and workflows and like how the Zoom transcripts. You know how we get.
251 00:18:03.330 ⇒ 00:18:03.670 Sam Roberts: Yeah.
252 00:18:03.670 ⇒ 00:18:05.889 Casie Aviles: Some transcripts, you know. Yeah.
253 00:18:05.890 ⇒ 00:18:06.580 Sam Roberts: Okay, great.
254 00:18:06.980 ⇒ 00:18:10.666 Sam Roberts: Yeah. Let’s I think, yeah, we have some time set later. So let’s
255 00:18:11.390 ⇒ 00:18:19.810 Sam Roberts: I mean getting a little later here. So I thought income would have been here by now. But we can keep, you know, if you want to dig into it now, but I think later is probably good, because we can actually lay it out in the doc
256 00:18:19.960 ⇒ 00:18:21.749 Sam Roberts: and get it down on.
257 00:18:22.270 ⇒ 00:18:25.189 Sam Roberts: I was gonna say, down on paper, but down in notion.
258 00:18:25.190 ⇒ 00:18:25.670 Casie Aviles: Okay.
259 00:18:25.670 ⇒ 00:18:29.759 Sam Roberts: So I can at least wrap my head around. So yeah, I appreciate that. We’ll get to that.
260 00:18:32.800 ⇒ 00:18:33.760 Sam Roberts: Yeah.
261 00:18:34.720 ⇒ 00:18:44.140 Sam Roberts: Yeah. Besides that, like, I said. I’m just. I’m just digging through. I’m glad, and I I probably should talk to Miguel to make sure that I understand. Like some of the intent behind certain things.
262 00:18:44.693 ⇒ 00:18:48.500 Sam Roberts: For the platform. But I think I’m getting to a point now where I’m like.
263 00:18:48.870 ⇒ 00:18:55.600 Sam Roberts: yes, let’s get it all in one repo, probably something like next unless there’s
264 00:18:56.290 ⇒ 00:19:00.380 Sam Roberts: like, I said, long running processes that need to happen. But if that’s all happening off
265 00:19:00.830 ⇒ 00:19:02.559 Sam Roberts: of the back end.
266 00:19:03.710 ⇒ 00:19:04.400 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
267 00:19:04.400 ⇒ 00:19:05.930 Sam Roberts: Then it’s not as big a deal.
268 00:19:09.110 ⇒ 00:19:09.950 Sam Roberts: So yeah.
269 00:19:10.890 ⇒ 00:19:21.109 Sam Roberts: any other questions for me about anything that like, you know, I mean, I’ve sort of just stepped in. I had a week, you know. I’m still still getting my feelings around things, my feelers, but
270 00:19:21.570 ⇒ 00:19:22.320 Sam Roberts: you know
271 00:19:23.610 ⇒ 00:19:27.759 Sam Roberts: anything anything you want to know. I’m happy to, you know. I’m kind of an open book that way. So.
272 00:19:30.670 ⇒ 00:19:37.760 Mustafa Raja: Yeah. Told us that you had a hair salon also.
273 00:19:37.960 ⇒ 00:19:38.750 Mustafa Raja: So how did it.
274 00:19:40.880 ⇒ 00:19:49.770 Sam Roberts: Oh, yes, okay. So the hair, the hair stuff. Yeah, okay. So I’ll I’ll give you a quick little background on me. So I I studied mechanical engineering in.
275 00:19:49.770 ⇒ 00:19:50.210 Mustafa Raja: Oh!
276 00:19:51.020 ⇒ 00:19:55.759 Sam Roberts: And then I I did a program here called Venture for America.
277 00:19:56.120 ⇒ 00:20:19.000 Sam Roberts: which is like a program for recent graduates, where they they had a number of cities around the country, and the idea was to place recent grads in startups that needed them in places like Cleveland, for example, you know, instead of going to some like New York or San Francisco. Let’s go to like Cleveland or Baltimore, or all these cities that need more
278 00:20:19.350 ⇒ 00:20:23.999 Sam Roberts: need more people to go there and and build companies. And so I did that
279 00:20:24.460 ⇒ 00:20:38.089 Sam Roberts: and I started a company. I worked at a company, I actually, you know, did a whole bunch of stuff that I can, I can, you know, have it for you guys in later about, if it was exciting times. But at a certain point, I had a friend through this program
280 00:20:38.230 ⇒ 00:20:47.530 Sam Roberts: who was starting a hair care company. And she was making avocado deep conditioner.
281 00:20:48.050 ⇒ 00:20:51.890 Sam Roberts: So it’s like guacamole for your hair. Basically.
282 00:20:51.890 ⇒ 00:20:52.300 Casie Aviles: Oh!
283 00:20:52.300 ⇒ 00:21:02.059 Sam Roberts: So she was. She was Sudanese, and has this, like, you know, long, beautiful, curly hair, and had been vlogging and and talking about her hair journey and all this stuff. So she had a really good like
284 00:21:02.280 ⇒ 00:21:10.150 Sam Roberts: marketing presence, a really good like sales presence. But you needed someone more operations. And so at that point I had.
285 00:21:10.260 ⇒ 00:21:16.599 Sam Roberts: you know, shut down. My 1st company was freelancing. She needed someone that was more.
286 00:21:17.090 ⇒ 00:21:23.379 Sam Roberts: you know, more analytical, could do spreadsheets, and you know everything like that for her. So I helped in. I stepped in to help.
287 00:21:23.520 ⇒ 00:21:26.540 Sam Roberts: and kind of got sucked in being the
288 00:21:27.040 ⇒ 00:21:33.449 Sam Roberts: coo of that company doing operations for 4 or 5 years. And we went from
289 00:21:36.050 ⇒ 00:21:58.970 Sam Roberts: like 2 of us in the kitchen, making, you know, blending avocados and stuff to like a 20,000 square foot warehouse here in Cleveland, with like 40 people we did, you know millions of dollars of revenue? It was. It was. It was crazy we did y combinator, which was really weird for our company, because we’re not the typical. We weren’t the typical Y combinator company.
290 00:22:00.670 ⇒ 00:22:25.965 Sam Roberts: But it was, you know, it was a great, great time, but I also knew I didn’t want to do hair care forever. And so right before, Covid, you know. Not not planning that, but right around 2020. I decided to leave. I wanted to get back into tech you know. I guess I’ve been mechanical. I had done a lot of web stuff for my startups. Did the hair care realized? I missed a lot of the technology stuff. So
291 00:22:26.850 ⇒ 00:22:31.114 Sam Roberts: There was kind of a little side quest that way, and then
292 00:22:31.790 ⇒ 00:22:34.190 Sam Roberts: When I came back. So I was.
293 00:22:34.890 ⇒ 00:22:46.529 Sam Roberts: You know I’ve been out of tech for a little bit. I worked on our like shopify website, but that was probably the most technical stuff I did. For 4 or 5 years I came back, and you know I had been doing angular
294 00:22:46.680 ⇒ 00:22:50.570 Sam Roberts: and Django Python back end stuff.
295 00:22:50.810 ⇒ 00:23:00.309 Sam Roberts: And so I came back and was like everything was react. Everything was typescript. Everything was, you know, things changed a lot in the few years I was gone, especially in the Javascript world.
296 00:23:00.600 ⇒ 00:23:05.859 Sam Roberts: And so I just kind of, you know, went back to the basics and and got up and running. And
297 00:23:06.220 ⇒ 00:23:15.935 Sam Roberts: yeah, just kind of got back into things worked on a company in London because my wife took a job there. So I lived there for a couple of years, and then
298 00:23:17.580 ⇒ 00:23:25.217 Sam Roberts: yeah, glad that company, you know. It was. It was an exciting time. That was the next app with a react or with a super based back end.
299 00:23:26.130 ⇒ 00:23:30.049 Sam Roberts: so it was very similar tooling that I’m you know, talking about here. But
300 00:23:31.380 ⇒ 00:23:37.490 Sam Roberts: But yeah, so it’s kind of, you know. I’ve been all over the place. I kind of got into startups because I wanted to do lots of different stuff.
301 00:23:38.134 ⇒ 00:23:41.129 Sam Roberts: And so that was kind of how I got to the hair. Care world.
302 00:23:42.420 ⇒ 00:23:47.389 Sam Roberts: Which was it was. It was a ride. It was a different, different beast, you know. Physical products.
303 00:23:47.988 ⇒ 00:23:54.029 Sam Roberts: You know, shipping out the shipping things, fulfillment all that sort of stuff very different than software, you know.
304 00:23:54.490 ⇒ 00:23:55.280 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
305 00:23:55.570 ⇒ 00:24:06.640 Sam Roberts: But good experience, just for, for you know, running a company growing, a company hiring, firing, expansion, all this sort of stuff that I was, you know.
306 00:24:06.780 ⇒ 00:24:10.419 Sam Roberts: looking looking for so got a lot of good experience that way.
307 00:24:11.110 ⇒ 00:24:14.300 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, that’s a that’s a nice nice journey you have.
308 00:24:14.940 ⇒ 00:24:20.314 Sam Roberts: Yeah, yeah, it’s been interesting. It’s been, you know. My resume is is a weird one, for that reason, you know.
309 00:24:20.800 ⇒ 00:24:26.019 Sam Roberts: but it’s I I’ve you know, looking back at everything like I’ve learned something from every every little.
310 00:24:26.020 ⇒ 00:24:26.730 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, yeah.
311 00:24:26.730 ⇒ 00:24:30.323 Sam Roberts: Company I’ve worked on and and project I’ve been on and
312 00:24:30.840 ⇒ 00:24:35.009 Sam Roberts: you know I’m learning more and more what I like to do and what I don’t like to do. And
313 00:24:35.868 ⇒ 00:24:37.579 Sam Roberts: yeah, it’s been cool.
314 00:24:42.190 ⇒ 00:24:42.800 Mustafa Raja: Cool.
315 00:24:43.700 ⇒ 00:24:49.100 Sam Roberts: Yeah, what time we got? We’re gonna 24. Alright. Let’s see.
316 00:24:50.310 ⇒ 00:24:52.440 Mustafa Raja: Maybe we should ping with them and see.
317 00:24:52.440 ⇒ 00:25:01.659 Sam Roberts: Yeah, I’ll just message that back be like aiming for 9, 10, and
318 00:25:08.460 ⇒ 00:25:13.408 Sam Roberts: here so many windows open, so many tabs, everything.
319 00:25:14.010 ⇒ 00:25:15.100 Sam Roberts: Oh, there we go!
320 00:25:15.830 ⇒ 00:25:17.060 Sam Roberts: Speak! The devil!
321 00:25:18.540 ⇒ 00:25:19.310 Uttam Kumaran: Hey, guys.
322 00:25:19.560 ⇒ 00:25:24.620 Sam Roberts: Hello, hey! We’re just. We were just about to ping. You make sure everything was still good. So good timing.
323 00:25:25.510 ⇒ 00:25:28.035 Uttam Kumaran: Okay. Great. Sorry about that.
324 00:25:28.540 ⇒ 00:25:35.479 Sam Roberts: You’re totally fine. We had a good. We had a good chat about some of the platform stuff, and they they got me, you know, answer some questions I had, so it was. Well, it’s not a waste of time. Don’t worry.
325 00:25:35.480 ⇒ 00:25:42.699 Uttam Kumaran: Okay, great cool. Yeah. So I love to cool. So
326 00:25:42.820 ⇒ 00:25:48.769 Uttam Kumaran: yeah, another week. Let me let me get some stuff in front of us, and then we can talk through.
327 00:25:52.360 ⇒ 00:25:53.579 Uttam Kumaran: Okay, so
328 00:25:55.230 ⇒ 00:26:02.440 Uttam Kumaran: couple of things to chat about. So I think, Mustafa, for you for default and interlude. I think you
329 00:26:02.640 ⇒ 00:26:03.649 Uttam Kumaran: have a good
330 00:26:03.890 ⇒ 00:26:10.929 Uttam Kumaran: grasp on on everything. I think the kind of the big thing that I I’d like to see before Wednesday is
331 00:26:11.090 ⇒ 00:26:17.049 Uttam Kumaran: the end to end. Test of the top. 2 combinations.
332 00:26:17.050 ⇒ 00:26:22.080 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, yeah, yeah. I’d love to know. I’d love to know. What do we mean by end to end?
333 00:26:22.190 ⇒ 00:26:23.190 Mustafa Raja: That’s all.
334 00:26:23.860 ⇒ 00:26:32.980 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah. So the end to end means we can pull accounts from salesforce into clay.
335 00:26:33.610 ⇒ 00:26:39.200 Uttam Kumaran: We’re then able to enrich them, and then we’re able to write back to those accounts in salesforce.
336 00:26:39.360 ⇒ 00:26:41.299 Mustafa Raja: Okay, so this is all we need to do.
337 00:26:41.890 ⇒ 00:26:42.370 Uttam Kumaran: Yes.
338 00:26:43.201 ⇒ 00:26:53.749 Mustafa Raja: And when we pull them from salesforce. The enrichment we want to do is is based on the combos that we have in our sheet right.
339 00:26:54.220 ⇒ 00:26:59.560 Uttam Kumaran: Yes, but I would, but I would like to just do the 1st 2 combinations.
340 00:26:59.560 ⇒ 00:27:01.540 Mustafa Raja: Okay, yeah, yeah. I read your message.
341 00:27:01.540 ⇒ 00:27:08.069 Uttam Kumaran: But also, like, I think, the combinations are actually things that we can manage in salesforce
342 00:27:08.480 ⇒ 00:27:15.160 Uttam Kumaran: meaning the the combinations are combinations of signals, but the signals are just columns and clay.
343 00:27:15.580 ⇒ 00:27:19.910 Uttam Kumaran: So you don’t actually have to create a clay report per combination.
344 00:27:20.910 ⇒ 00:27:22.310 Uttam Kumaran: Do you see what I mean?
345 00:27:26.360 ⇒ 00:27:28.229 Mustafa Raja: Play, report, per combination.
346 00:27:28.940 ⇒ 00:27:32.699 Uttam Kumaran: Because the combinations are just combination of properties. So.
347 00:27:32.700 ⇒ 00:27:33.080 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
348 00:27:33.080 ⇒ 00:27:35.510 Uttam Kumaran: Plate, getting the property itself.
349 00:27:35.910 ⇒ 00:27:36.610 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
350 00:27:36.990 ⇒ 00:27:45.600 Uttam Kumaran: So ideally what whatever? Like 5 or 10 signals that need to be done for the 1st 2 combinations? Let’s just create a clay table with those.
351 00:27:45.840 ⇒ 00:27:46.630 Mustafa Raja: Okay?
352 00:27:47.570 ⇒ 00:27:53.459 Mustafa Raja: And that relatable would also write back, meaning update the entity right?
353 00:27:53.910 ⇒ 00:27:55.400 Uttam Kumaran: Yes, they don’t.
354 00:27:55.400 ⇒ 00:28:01.670 Mustafa Raja: Properties. And for that we would need to create some custom properties right.
355 00:28:02.870 ⇒ 00:28:08.610 Uttam Kumaran: Yes, but those are. Those are also in the spreadsheet.
356 00:28:10.200 ⇒ 00:28:15.810 Mustafa Raja: Like what to call the the custom properties that we need to create right.
357 00:28:16.270 ⇒ 00:28:19.600 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, we we would create them just like you did.
358 00:28:20.130 ⇒ 00:28:24.179 Mustafa Raja: Yeah. Yeah. The other one. Yeah, yeah, that’s good.
359 00:28:25.980 ⇒ 00:28:26.540 Uttam Kumaran: Okay.
360 00:28:29.830 ⇒ 00:28:35.049 Mustafa Raja: For integral. We need to talk about the scorers, the custom scorers that we need to create.
361 00:28:37.960 ⇒ 00:28:41.120 Uttam Kumaran: For interlude. But what is the what is the score?
362 00:28:42.213 ⇒ 00:28:45.520 Mustafa Raja: Meaning that we do the evals. That’s.
363 00:28:45.520 ⇒ 00:28:47.110 Uttam Kumaran: Oh, okay. Okay.
364 00:28:47.870 ⇒ 00:29:04.760 Mustafa Raja: But then how are we evaluating it? How are we evaluating our output? Because what the current one is is it sees if it’s semantically similar to the expected output. But I don’t think that’s that’s what we should look for.
365 00:29:04.960 ⇒ 00:29:07.750 Mustafa Raja: We should look for some certain metrics instead.
366 00:29:08.220 ⇒ 00:29:11.259 Uttam Kumaran: But I think like as part of ABC. We picked some.
367 00:29:11.890 ⇒ 00:29:14.410 Uttam Kumaran: We pick some of scores right.
368 00:29:14.670 ⇒ 00:29:15.069 Casie Aviles: I’m fine.
369 00:29:15.070 ⇒ 00:29:23.030 Mustafa Raja: I looked into the ABC. One. It’s I think it’s the semantic similarity one.
370 00:29:23.250 ⇒ 00:29:25.150 Casie Aviles: We have 3 scores there.
371 00:29:25.150 ⇒ 00:29:25.640 Mustafa Raja: Oh!
372 00:29:26.300 ⇒ 00:29:30.739 Casie Aviles: Yeah, one is semantic similarity, and then the other is leverage theme.
373 00:29:31.130 ⇒ 00:29:33.360 Mustafa Raja: Which is like the edit distance.
374 00:29:35.641 ⇒ 00:29:40.619 Casie Aviles: Yeah. And I think the other one is I think, relevance. Let me double check.
375 00:29:42.730 ⇒ 00:29:44.850 Casie Aviles: Yeah, those are 3 scorers.
376 00:29:45.570 ⇒ 00:29:49.939 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, I would recommend Mustafa. You research the scores and then let me know.
377 00:29:50.260 ⇒ 00:29:53.110 Mustafa Raja: Okay, okay, I’ll look in. I’ll look into.
378 00:29:53.310 ⇒ 00:29:56.889 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, it’ll give you some understanding of like what all the score types are.
379 00:29:58.920 ⇒ 00:29:59.770 Mustafa Raja: I think.
380 00:30:00.540 ⇒ 00:30:04.400 Mustafa Raja: Can I share my screen? And we can look into it right now?
381 00:30:05.750 ⇒ 00:30:07.929 Uttam Kumaran: Well, actually, let’s just keep going through. Stand up.
382 00:30:07.930 ⇒ 00:30:08.730 Mustafa Raja: Okay. Okay.
383 00:30:10.010 ⇒ 00:30:13.890 Uttam Kumaran: And if we have time at the end, yeah, we can go through. So okay, perfect.
384 00:30:20.330 ⇒ 00:30:25.750 Uttam Kumaran: Okay, so one thing I’m gonna do for
385 00:30:31.145 ⇒ 00:30:31.840 Uttam Kumaran: this.
386 00:30:35.370 ⇒ 00:30:39.849 Uttam Kumaran: So this one you’re this is still in progress, then, or should I.
387 00:30:41.150 ⇒ 00:30:41.570 Mustafa Raja: Go.
388 00:30:41.960 ⇒ 00:30:47.030 Sam Roberts: Sheet in Bt. This, this one is the Eval stuff. No.
389 00:30:48.740 ⇒ 00:30:51.210 Uttam Kumaran: So that you want. I create another ticket for this.
390 00:30:51.570 ⇒ 00:30:52.980 Uttam Kumaran: Choose scores.
391 00:30:53.420 ⇒ 00:31:00.850 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, yeah, we need we, we just need to work on scooters. Now.
392 00:31:02.298 ⇒ 00:31:08.459 Mustafa Raja: also, I have a Pr open in what’s it called daxter pipeline.
393 00:31:08.940 ⇒ 00:31:09.580 Uttam Kumaran: Okay.
394 00:31:10.020 ⇒ 00:31:13.980 Mustafa Raja: And I have a Vhs as reviewer in that.
395 00:31:15.600 ⇒ 00:31:16.210 Uttam Kumaran: Okay.
396 00:31:30.740 ⇒ 00:31:37.059 Uttam Kumaran: okay, great. And then for default, we’ll have our stand up today. And we can.
397 00:31:37.590 ⇒ 00:31:38.400 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, yeah.
398 00:31:40.090 ⇒ 00:31:42.519 Uttam Kumaran: Some of these with Henry will clear up there.
399 00:31:46.400 ⇒ 00:31:53.909 Uttam Kumaran: Cool. Okay, let’s talk about stuff for AI team.
400 00:31:55.940 ⇒ 00:31:59.229 Uttam Kumaran: So if I look at stuff that was in progress.
401 00:31:59.941 ⇒ 00:32:06.419 Uttam Kumaran: So this one looks like this was done.
402 00:32:10.790 ⇒ 00:32:16.205 Uttam Kumaran: This spike I’m sent sent a note for everyone to leave comments.
403 00:32:17.250 ⇒ 00:32:20.120 Uttam Kumaran: Did everyone have a moment to checklist.
404 00:32:20.120 ⇒ 00:32:22.339 Casie Aviles: Yes, I did test it.
405 00:32:22.550 ⇒ 00:32:28.210 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, I didn’t look into it. I’ll look into it after this centerpiece app.
406 00:32:29.340 ⇒ 00:32:33.199 Uttam Kumaran: So I guess, like, maybe, as a group like, how do we want to?
407 00:32:33.834 ⇒ 00:32:42.590 Uttam Kumaran: Sort of call these spike tickets like done, I mean in my, in my typical past, like we would do a spike review meeting
408 00:32:44.099 ⇒ 00:32:49.890 Uttam Kumaran: where, like whoever wrote the spike would walk through, and everybody would add comments, and then we’d reach some decision
409 00:32:50.310 ⇒ 00:32:54.009 Uttam Kumaran: like, I don’t think this like I think we could do that, Async.
410 00:32:56.760 ⇒ 00:32:57.640 Uttam Kumaran: Okay.
411 00:32:58.200 ⇒ 00:32:59.160 Uttam Kumaran: So
412 00:33:00.050 ⇒ 00:33:06.879 Uttam Kumaran: as long as as long as Mustafa, maybe I’ll look for your comments there and then. Let’s try to close this out today.
413 00:33:06.880 ⇒ 00:33:07.510 Mustafa Raja: Okay.
414 00:33:11.120 ⇒ 00:33:11.950 Uttam Kumaran: Great
415 00:33:16.160 ⇒ 00:33:22.169 Uttam Kumaran: perfect, and then transcript search, very same thing as well.
416 00:33:25.100 ⇒ 00:33:25.820 Casie Aviles: Okay.
417 00:33:28.280 ⇒ 00:33:30.789 Uttam Kumaran: But this one I don’t know. I feel like maybe
418 00:33:31.030 ⇒ 00:33:35.840 Uttam Kumaran: I mean I I left some comments on on Friday. So.
419 00:33:39.290 ⇒ 00:33:42.560 Uttam Kumaran: but well, I wanna kind of close this one out today, too.
420 00:33:46.640 ⇒ 00:33:47.310 Mustafa Raja: Okay.
421 00:33:47.950 ⇒ 00:33:48.820 Uttam Kumaran: Perfect.
422 00:33:51.230 ⇒ 00:33:55.259 Uttam Kumaran: Cool this one still in. Oh, this one’s all.
423 00:33:56.010 ⇒ 00:33:59.329 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, this one is merged. I just need to deploy.
424 00:34:00.140 ⇒ 00:34:02.319 Uttam Kumaran: Okay, can we deploy this.
425 00:34:02.690 ⇒ 00:34:03.500 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
426 00:34:11.389 ⇒ 00:34:12.549 Sam Roberts: Yeah, okay.
427 00:34:13.850 ⇒ 00:34:14.449 Uttam Kumaran: Okay.
428 00:34:16.141 ⇒ 00:34:25.649 Uttam Kumaran: I mean, maybe we should create a dip like, the problem is, we we have, we have a AI team board, and we don’t have like a deploy step, because some of the things aren’t
429 00:34:26.489 ⇒ 00:34:28.309 Uttam Kumaran: deployable. But I may.
430 00:34:28.310 ⇒ 00:34:29.310 Sam Roberts: You mean.
431 00:34:29.310 ⇒ 00:34:30.419 Uttam Kumaran: One of these
432 00:34:31.159 ⇒ 00:34:36.730 Uttam Kumaran: cause. The the problem is like these are, these are kind of the same statuses across all clients
433 00:34:37.420 ⇒ 00:34:43.760 Uttam Kumaran: like, we typically don’t have a deploy step for for other clients.
434 00:34:47.710 ⇒ 00:34:53.509 Uttam Kumaran: So I’m gonna think about maybe the AI team has another additional deploy step.
435 00:34:56.380 ⇒ 00:34:59.389 Uttam Kumaran: But I will leave this in internal review, for now
436 00:35:00.160 ⇒ 00:35:02.580 Uttam Kumaran: I don’t want to mark it as done. We’ll forget to deploy.
437 00:35:03.850 ⇒ 00:35:04.520 Sam Roberts: Yeah, I mean.
438 00:35:04.520 ⇒ 00:35:10.590 Sam Roberts: could I mean for now be deploy, you know, like it? If it’s not, if it hasn’t been deployed, it’s still in review technically, for now you know.
439 00:35:10.590 ⇒ 00:35:20.800 Uttam Kumaran: Yes, yes, okay, cool. So let me move some of these back, and then let’s talk through
440 00:35:21.100 ⇒ 00:35:22.880 Uttam Kumaran: stuff for this week.
441 00:35:26.080 ⇒ 00:35:29.800 Uttam Kumaran: So let’s see.
442 00:35:36.760 ⇒ 00:35:41.859 Uttam Kumaran: I know. This is something that Hannah requested. That was a little bit more urgent.
443 00:35:44.240 ⇒ 00:35:47.930 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, yeah. For this, we need
444 00:35:48.310 ⇒ 00:35:52.930 Mustafa Raja: create some sort of sync in super base with the Github repo.
445 00:35:54.910 ⇒ 00:35:55.570 Uttam Kumaran: Okay.
446 00:35:55.570 ⇒ 00:35:58.990 Mustafa Raja: To create these columns and associate these with the files.
447 00:36:01.380 ⇒ 00:36:04.849 Uttam Kumaran: I see. Is there any way we can get that from Github.
448 00:36:06.890 ⇒ 00:36:13.339 Mustafa Raja: We can associate files with the. We can associate these columns with direct directly to the files.
449 00:36:15.090 ⇒ 00:36:17.098 Uttam Kumaran: Like, let me give everyone
450 00:36:18.910 ⇒ 00:36:21.770 Uttam Kumaran: an explanation of like what this is. So.
451 00:36:21.770 ⇒ 00:36:22.450 Sam Roberts: Perfect.
452 00:36:26.340 ⇒ 00:36:30.240 Uttam Kumaran: We have a repo called Brainforge files.
453 00:36:30.640 ⇒ 00:36:35.499 Uttam Kumaran: Basically, these are marketing related assets.
454 00:36:36.670 ⇒ 00:36:37.260 Sam Roberts: Okay.
455 00:36:37.260 ⇒ 00:36:44.400 Uttam Kumaran: I. The point at which we we made this is because when marketing assets get created, they get shoved into like a Google drive.
456 00:36:45.069 ⇒ 00:36:56.880 Uttam Kumaran: It’s very hard to search, and it’s like the link that’s used to share is pretty ugly. So we decided we wanted to be around behind like files out, brainforge.ai.
457 00:36:57.040 ⇒ 00:37:01.000 Uttam Kumaran: So now, if you go into the platform
458 00:37:03.960 ⇒ 00:37:07.770 Uttam Kumaran: and you go onto marketing assets here.
459 00:37:09.620 ⇒ 00:37:12.029 Uttam Kumaran: you’re actually gonna see all of the different files.
460 00:37:12.030 ⇒ 00:37:13.539 Sam Roberts: Oh, nice. Okay.
461 00:37:13.960 ⇒ 00:37:17.649 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, this is just pulling directly from Github.
462 00:37:18.860 ⇒ 00:37:20.870 Uttam Kumaran: which is like a really simple intro.
463 00:37:21.160 ⇒ 00:37:28.260 Uttam Kumaran: The only thing that Hannah requested is that she wanted to add title and description like both strings.
464 00:37:30.510 ⇒ 00:37:32.879 Uttam Kumaran: And so the debate right now is like.
465 00:37:33.550 ⇒ 00:37:38.929 Uttam Kumaran: do we create something in super base where Github syncs there, and everything has a title and description field.
466 00:37:39.400 ⇒ 00:37:41.010 Uttam Kumaran: Alternatively.
467 00:37:41.140 ⇒ 00:37:49.910 Uttam Kumaran: My point is that maybe there’s something that gets uploaded with every file, that is, that are those strings.
468 00:37:50.650 ⇒ 00:37:51.300 Sam Roberts: Yeah.
469 00:37:51.900 ⇒ 00:37:52.580 Uttam Kumaran: But
470 00:37:52.940 ⇒ 00:37:57.789 Uttam Kumaran: I don’t know. I guess I would more point towards like, what is the level of effort for for each.
471 00:38:02.160 ⇒ 00:38:06.389 Sam Roberts: Is there any record of these in a super base right now like, or would that be had? Would that have to be added.
472 00:38:06.860 ⇒ 00:38:13.079 Mustafa Raja: No, currently it does not have any sort of link with the super base.
473 00:38:13.470 ⇒ 00:38:15.609 Sam Roberts: So this is just being pulled right from the Github.
474 00:38:15.610 ⇒ 00:38:16.080 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
475 00:38:16.080 ⇒ 00:38:17.439 Sam Roberts: How this is working. Okay, cool.
476 00:38:17.440 ⇒ 00:38:33.740 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, why? Why am I suggesting the super beast? Is because, we need to some sort of we need to create some sort of association of those 2 columns, the title and the description with the file right.
477 00:38:36.400 ⇒ 00:38:37.230 Uttam Kumaran: Yes.
478 00:38:38.609 ⇒ 00:38:43.020 Mustafa Raja: And that we can do. If we sync super base with the Github.
479 00:38:44.490 ⇒ 00:38:47.860 Mustafa Raja: we need to store the title and description somewhere.
480 00:38:48.380 ⇒ 00:38:52.249 Mustafa Raja: Maybe it’s best if we do it in superbase and sync the guitar.
481 00:38:52.250 ⇒ 00:38:52.900 Sam Roberts: Yeah.
482 00:38:52.900 ⇒ 00:38:53.620 Mustafa Raja: With that.
483 00:38:55.860 ⇒ 00:38:57.839 Mustafa Raja: But I am open to suggestions.
484 00:39:02.477 ⇒ 00:39:09.020 Mustafa Raja: Suggested. Maybe we can create a file of the same name with dot txt
485 00:39:09.633 ⇒ 00:39:13.580 Mustafa Raja: and have it parse as title and description.
486 00:39:15.050 ⇒ 00:39:16.630 Mustafa Raja: We can do that in Github.
487 00:39:20.630 ⇒ 00:39:24.020 Uttam Kumaran: That’s what I was gonna suggest. But again, I don’t want it to like
488 00:39:24.540 ⇒ 00:39:27.769 Uttam Kumaran: if the soup, if the zoom based thing is pretty simple.
489 00:39:28.250 ⇒ 00:39:32.049 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, I guess because then Hannah needs to update it also. No.
490 00:39:35.460 ⇒ 00:39:36.460 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, but.
491 00:39:36.460 ⇒ 00:39:36.910 Sam Roberts: Yeah, we’ll.
492 00:39:36.910 ⇒ 00:39:39.030 Uttam Kumaran: Maybe it’s just making a new commit.
493 00:39:39.840 ⇒ 00:39:40.700 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, yeah.
494 00:39:43.680 ⇒ 00:39:48.050 Uttam Kumaran: I don’t know. I guess I’ll let you guys decide like, what do you think.
495 00:39:49.000 ⇒ 00:39:53.739 Sam Roberts: I mean is there is there versioning we need to worry about in terms of name changes and anything
496 00:39:54.500 ⇒ 00:40:03.749 Sam Roberts: like, you know? I mean, that’s that’s 1 reason to keep it in, Github, if you want to know like, when this was changed and things like that and what it used to be otherwise.
497 00:40:04.170 ⇒ 00:40:04.660 Sam Roberts: Oh, really.
498 00:40:05.310 ⇒ 00:40:11.509 Sam Roberts: yeah, then, in that case it might not be worth it, because it, you know, especially if you wanted to change things from here.
499 00:40:12.200 ⇒ 00:40:23.620 Sam Roberts: you know, making a new commit just to change a file name seems, or a you know, title or description seems like an unnecessary tracking. Whereas super basic. It’s just tied to.
500 00:40:23.890 ⇒ 00:40:27.460 Sam Roberts: you know, whatever the identifying piece is.
501 00:40:27.870 ⇒ 00:40:28.350 Uttam Kumaran: Okay.
502 00:40:28.350 ⇒ 00:40:33.840 Sam Roberts: It’d be a lot easier to update and change. And you know, probably even from this ui, we can do that much more easily. I bet.
503 00:40:34.060 ⇒ 00:40:34.380 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
504 00:40:34.380 ⇒ 00:40:35.070 Uttam Kumaran: Okay.
505 00:40:35.630 ⇒ 00:40:43.179 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, so we should. Yeah. So we we then should create some sort of sync between Github and so base. Right?
506 00:40:46.810 ⇒ 00:40:54.715 Sam Roberts: I was just Googling quickly. I was trying to see if there’s anything that like is out there that manages like as like an asset management, using Github kind of thing.
507 00:40:56.420 ⇒ 00:41:10.549 Sam Roberts: what might already exist. Because that’s kind of what we’re setting up in super base is like some sort of asset management that’s using Github as a store. So I’m I’m wondering maybe I’ll do a quick little search around and make a comment if I find anything good otherwise. Yeah, it shouldn’t be too hard. But you know.
508 00:41:10.690 ⇒ 00:41:11.536 Sam Roberts: whatever is
509 00:41:12.520 ⇒ 00:41:20.849 Sam Roberts: whatever is already out there might be might be good enough to. Just if there’s a you know. It might just automatically store the metadata somewhere else, and if it if it does that and we can tie to that, I’ll take.
510 00:41:20.850 ⇒ 00:41:21.260 Mustafa Raja: No problem.
511 00:41:21.260 ⇒ 00:41:23.670 Sam Roberts: Because could be something, you know.
512 00:41:23.670 ⇒ 00:41:25.770 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, basically, this is like content management.
513 00:41:26.340 ⇒ 00:41:26.730 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah.
514 00:41:26.730 ⇒ 00:41:34.870 Uttam Kumaran: is not really a priority. It’s more of like, we just need these strings somewhere. And I’m trying to think about like, what other assets like.
515 00:41:35.140 ⇒ 00:41:40.259 Uttam Kumaran: The only other assets that I would think about is like, we’re gonna have videos and stuff like that.
516 00:41:41.280 ⇒ 00:41:41.880 Sam Roberts: Right.
517 00:41:41.880 ⇒ 00:41:49.560 Uttam Kumaran: So there actually may be different asset types that aren’t just in Github. So yeah, it’s probably best.
518 00:41:49.560 ⇒ 00:41:50.250 Sam Roberts: That’s fair.
519 00:42:09.250 ⇒ 00:42:09.930 Uttam Kumaran: Okay.
520 00:42:13.180 ⇒ 00:42:17.210 Uttam Kumaran: okay, great. Let’s look.
521 00:42:19.870 ⇒ 00:42:20.910 Uttam Kumaran: And
522 00:42:26.390 ⇒ 00:42:29.110 Uttam Kumaran: yeah, this one would be great.
523 00:42:32.280 ⇒ 00:42:33.630 Sam Roberts: Yeah. Oh, yes, it’s.
524 00:42:34.170 ⇒ 00:42:35.660 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, that’ll be good.
525 00:42:38.480 ⇒ 00:42:40.879 Sam Roberts: Who who was on there? Do we have anyone on.
526 00:42:41.563 ⇒ 00:42:44.600 Uttam Kumaran: We had Miguel before, but I’ll just leave it empty, for now.
527 00:42:44.600 ⇒ 00:42:49.290 Sam Roberts: Okay, yeah, I’ve I’ve it’s been a little while. So I know things have changed with it. But I could maybe.
528 00:42:50.340 ⇒ 00:42:53.579 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, if you wanna take, actually, this would be lovely. If you want to take a look.
529 00:42:54.050 ⇒ 00:43:04.210 Sam Roberts: Yeah, cause I I definitely have have played around with this. I have a little bit of implementation experience with it, but I know it’s changed in the last bit because they’ve been. I’ve seen emails and updates, but definitely can do that.
530 00:43:11.970 ⇒ 00:43:13.039 Uttam Kumaran: It’s a smaller one.
531 00:43:32.930 ⇒ 00:43:39.090 Uttam Kumaran: So I think the biggest thing is like we need the support for creating new client hubs
532 00:43:40.600 ⇒ 00:43:42.240 Uttam Kumaran: like in the back end.
533 00:43:43.030 ⇒ 00:43:43.550 Sam Roberts: Yeah.
534 00:43:45.810 ⇒ 00:43:50.620 Uttam Kumaran: I guess my question for y’all is like, do you want to manually create
535 00:43:51.050 ⇒ 00:43:59.770 Uttam Kumaran: these? First, st the these ones, or like.
536 00:44:01.990 ⇒ 00:44:04.289 Uttam Kumaran: should we work on this first.st
537 00:44:05.130 ⇒ 00:44:10.110 Uttam Kumaran: The thing is, these are like, there are meetings happening. So it’s kind of urgent that we have these.
538 00:44:14.490 ⇒ 00:44:22.280 Casie Aviles: Oh, then I guess we could do. We could create them first, st manually.
539 00:44:22.950 ⇒ 00:44:23.600 Uttam Kumaran: Okay.
540 00:44:24.390 ⇒ 00:44:25.519 Casie Aviles: If they’re urgent.
541 00:44:26.470 ⇒ 00:44:27.880 Uttam Kumaran: They are urgent.
542 00:44:28.970 ⇒ 00:44:36.320 Uttam Kumaran: Like all of these, I would say, these are the 3 urgent ones.
543 00:44:38.250 ⇒ 00:44:38.930 Casie Aviles: Okay.
544 00:44:42.460 ⇒ 00:44:46.530 Uttam Kumaran: That I would like to, you know. Clear out
545 00:44:56.960 ⇒ 00:45:00.540 Sam Roberts: This is related to that sop, that was on notion.
546 00:45:00.650 ⇒ 00:45:02.770 Sam Roberts: Yeah, we’re looking at right? Okay.
547 00:45:08.570 ⇒ 00:45:11.760 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, like sop for the new client hub creation.
548 00:45:17.180 ⇒ 00:45:23.449 Uttam Kumaran: I mean, there is one other one here that’s also like meeting summarizer support for new clients and channels.
549 00:45:27.610 ⇒ 00:45:29.470 Uttam Kumaran: I’m gonna look at this as
550 00:45:35.270 ⇒ 00:45:37.150 Uttam Kumaran: I’m going to backlog
551 00:46:04.140 ⇒ 00:46:09.599 Uttam Kumaran: this ticket. They added. Zapier integrations for Granola
552 00:46:09.830 ⇒ 00:46:16.720 Uttam Kumaran: and a couple of us are using granola for meetings that are outside zoom.
553 00:46:18.170 ⇒ 00:46:26.450 Uttam Kumaran: So one of the things I thought about was like, basically right now, it’s manual. If we have to go add those meetings to the platform.
554 00:46:26.690 ⇒ 00:46:30.119 Uttam Kumaran: you know, using the add meeting thing.
555 00:46:31.810 ⇒ 00:46:39.990 Uttam Kumaran: but I think we can also probably build some integration that automatically moves them in. But it’s not a video. It’s just the transcript, you know.
556 00:46:41.370 ⇒ 00:46:44.490 Uttam Kumaran: But this one is not like super high priority.
557 00:46:45.341 ⇒ 00:46:49.910 Uttam Kumaran: I guess, like, I wanna start to think about like having some more
558 00:46:50.010 ⇒ 00:46:54.649 Uttam Kumaran: focus in the week, so that we get like one big chunk done
559 00:46:54.900 ⇒ 00:46:58.270 Uttam Kumaran: versus like working a little bit all over the place.
560 00:46:58.540 ⇒ 00:47:04.659 Uttam Kumaran: So I’m kind of content with like this. And then I mean.
561 00:47:04.810 ⇒ 00:47:11.260 Uttam Kumaran: I think one thing that we can move in Casey is the transcript search implementation.
562 00:47:12.200 ⇒ 00:47:12.760 Casie Aviles: Okay.
563 00:47:13.550 ⇒ 00:47:19.409 Uttam Kumaran: But I’m kind of like I feel like we should call it quits after that.
564 00:47:21.610 ⇒ 00:47:38.859 Sam Roberts: Yeah, I I think I I agree. I I especially as I’m wrapping my head around the the platform in general like this might be a good focus of the week to like. Get some of the new client hubs in under for me to understand, especially like how the new client hubs get created in general with that sop. And then I can
565 00:47:39.550 ⇒ 00:47:42.483 Sam Roberts: understand a little bit more about how we might streamline that
566 00:47:42.750 ⇒ 00:47:43.420 Uttam Kumaran: Okay.
567 00:47:44.490 ⇒ 00:47:48.879 Uttam Kumaran: So then I’m gonna put you on this sop, it’s mostly done, I think, what I would.
568 00:47:48.880 ⇒ 00:47:49.300 Sam Roberts: Yeah.
569 00:47:49.300 ⇒ 00:47:52.540 Uttam Kumaran: Is just like what the newer version is gonna be
570 00:47:53.247 ⇒ 00:48:01.329 Uttam Kumaran: and then, yeah, as a squad, if you guys can work on, how do we create these new client hubs more programmatically?
571 00:48:01.440 ⇒ 00:48:03.250 Uttam Kumaran: That would be really helpful.
572 00:48:03.894 ⇒ 00:48:09.519 Uttam Kumaran: In the short term, Casey, do you want to take just like making these available.
573 00:48:09.980 ⇒ 00:48:10.630 Casie Aviles: Sure
574 00:48:11.890 ⇒ 00:48:16.450 Uttam Kumaran: Because there’s meetings happening today, and some people are gonna be blocked by.
575 00:48:17.590 ⇒ 00:48:20.780 Uttam Kumaran: They’re gonna ask me soon where where these are.
576 00:48:21.291 ⇒ 00:48:27.400 Uttam Kumaran: But I would like us as a group to work on this one.
577 00:48:27.620 ⇒ 00:48:34.570 Uttam Kumaran: I I’m not. This is where I’m not too sure, like I would like some help like filling out this ticket. I’m not too sure, like what needs to happen to do this.
578 00:48:34.930 ⇒ 00:48:37.209 Uttam Kumaran: But ideally, these 2 are are linked.
579 00:48:37.920 ⇒ 00:48:38.926 Sam Roberts: Yeah, definitely,
580 00:48:39.960 ⇒ 00:48:48.630 Sam Roberts: And and Casey, when we chat later about the platform architecture document, maybe we can dig into that a little bit. And I can. You can help me understand
581 00:48:49.020 ⇒ 00:48:52.010 Sam Roberts: how it goes right now. That might help me understand.
582 00:48:52.010 ⇒ 00:48:54.070 Sam Roberts: and how we can systematize it a bit.
583 00:48:55.500 ⇒ 00:48:56.440 Casie Aviles: Sure, sure.
584 00:48:57.830 ⇒ 00:49:02.839 Uttam Kumaran: And then for the platform architecture, I guess, like, how do we want to
585 00:49:02.950 ⇒ 00:49:08.949 Uttam Kumaran: do? We want to try to do a meeting on like Wednesday, and, like all, go through it as a team. I haven’t checked on it since
586 00:49:09.440 ⇒ 00:49:10.919 Uttam Kumaran: like late last week.
587 00:49:11.550 ⇒ 00:49:23.045 Sam Roberts: Yeah, no, there’s nothing’s really changed there yet. I’m meeting with Casey later to to talk through some stuff and understand a little bit more, and then I’ll probably get some. So I mean, Wednesday might be an okay time. So I’ll definitely make changes by then. But
588 00:49:24.210 ⇒ 00:49:25.020 Sam Roberts: yeah.
589 00:49:25.910 ⇒ 00:49:27.950 Uttam Kumaran: I think it would be a good thing to like
590 00:49:28.120 ⇒ 00:49:35.720 Uttam Kumaran: find out. So once we finish this, I think one again, like there may be some work that comes out of this. But roughly, this is like
591 00:49:35.940 ⇒ 00:49:38.850 Uttam Kumaran: just the overview of the whole platform right.
592 00:49:38.850 ⇒ 00:49:39.700 Sam Roberts: So.
593 00:49:39.700 ⇒ 00:49:53.652 Uttam Kumaran: What what I’ll be kind of looking for is just like density of like information, and like clarity on like how things are working from the technical side. This is something that I would like to get notes from bosh, dev! And and
594 00:49:55.750 ⇒ 00:50:02.880 Uttam Kumaran: you know. But then also, I would like to. This would just be like a living document that we we have. So as soon as we reach some critical mass.
595 00:50:03.210 ⇒ 00:50:08.710 Uttam Kumaran: we can call this done, and I think it’ll just be based on for me.
596 00:50:09.140 ⇒ 00:50:17.849 Uttam Kumaran: Once I look through it, I can. I’ll also be able to tell you what’s missing like. Given that we have as much there. I’ll start to try to remember if there’s anything missing. So.
597 00:50:18.600 ⇒ 00:50:19.530 Sam Roberts: Okay, perfect.
598 00:50:19.793 ⇒ 00:50:21.110 Uttam Kumaran: Is still fine for this.
599 00:50:22.170 ⇒ 00:50:22.950 Sam Roberts: Okay. Cool.
600 00:50:24.160 ⇒ 00:50:27.470 Uttam Kumaran: Okay, okay, perfect.
601 00:50:28.738 ⇒ 00:50:42.141 Uttam Kumaran: I feel good about this. I think I’ll let you guys. I’ll I’ll work on some of the stuff for ABC as well. I would have to talk through that. And then, yeah, just hit me in slack today and like, let me know what out outcomes are for for different meetings. And then,
602 00:50:42.500 ⇒ 00:50:45.919 Uttam Kumaran: yeah, Mustafa feel free to just ping me on client stuff whatever you need.
603 00:50:47.110 ⇒ 00:50:47.470 Mustafa Raja: Okay.
604 00:50:47.470 ⇒ 00:50:50.710 Uttam Kumaran: For the co-pilot kit demo. I’m gonna put Friday as well.
605 00:50:50.880 ⇒ 00:50:51.580 Uttam Kumaran: Oh.
606 00:50:52.170 ⇒ 00:50:59.740 Uttam Kumaran: or maybe I’ll put Thursday that way because we have our Friday team meeting. It would be cool to demo this
607 00:51:00.650 ⇒ 00:51:02.559 Sam Roberts: Yeah, okay, I can plan for that.
608 00:51:02.560 ⇒ 00:51:07.730 Uttam Kumaran: So if we aim for Thursday, then I can. We can provide some feedback, and then Friday, you can share it to the team.
609 00:51:08.430 ⇒ 00:51:11.720 Sam Roberts: And then for that, like Demo like I, if I just plan a
610 00:51:11.880 ⇒ 00:51:18.150 Sam Roberts: get it working into the the platform as that chat, I think we talked about like, drop that into.
611 00:51:18.150 ⇒ 00:51:25.780 Uttam Kumaran: Yeah, that’s perfect. I mean, we had demo, like, I don’t want to put too much pressure on Demos like we’ve had Demos where it’s like local. But yeah.
612 00:51:25.780 ⇒ 00:51:26.150 Sam Roberts: Okay.
613 00:51:26.150 ⇒ 00:51:31.650 Uttam Kumaran: If we can, if we can already start working on the implementation.
614 00:51:31.820 ⇒ 00:51:43.829 Uttam Kumaran: And that’s that’s like more. The demo that’d be great like, I have a good feeling. We’re gonna go with them, I think what would be helpful for the demo is just like a demo of the different, like as much functionality as possible.
615 00:51:44.507 ⇒ 00:51:51.130 Uttam Kumaran: And then, yeah, basically, the implementation will be starting to adapt all of our chat experiences to this.
616 00:51:51.770 ⇒ 00:51:53.190 Sam Roberts: Got it? Okay, yeah.
617 00:51:54.490 ⇒ 00:51:55.030 Uttam Kumaran: Okay.
618 00:51:56.000 ⇒ 00:51:56.500 Sam Roberts: Sweet.
619 00:51:57.900 ⇒ 00:52:03.189 Uttam Kumaran: Okay, perfect. Well, thanks, guys. Yeah, let’s chat slack. If you need anything.
620 00:52:04.270 ⇒ 00:52:05.759 Mustafa Raja: Thank you. Thank you.
621 00:52:06.300 ⇒ 00:52:07.250 Uttam Kumaran: Thank you.
622 00:52:07.250 ⇒ 00:52:07.719 Mustafa Raja: Have a good day.
623 00:52:08.230 ⇒ 00:52:08.670 Mustafa Raja: Bye.