Meeting Title: AI Service Standup Date: 2026-02-05 Meeting participants: Samuel Roberts, Gabriel Lam, Mustafa Raja, Casie Aviles, Amber Lin, Pranav Narahari
WEBVTT
1 00:01:03.380 ⇒ 00:01:03.860 Mustafa Raja: Hmm…
2 00:01:05.770 ⇒ 00:01:06.690 Gabriel Lam: Morning.
3 00:01:07.590 ⇒ 00:01:08.520 Mustafa Raja: How are you?
4 00:01:09.020 ⇒ 00:01:09.880 Samuel Roberts: Yay.
5 00:01:11.520 ⇒ 00:01:12.910 Gabriel Lam: I’m doing good.
6 00:01:14.870 ⇒ 00:01:15.700 Samuel Roberts: How are you?
7 00:01:18.870 ⇒ 00:01:20.199 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, good.
8 00:01:20.200 ⇒ 00:01:21.000 Samuel Roberts: Good, good.
9 00:01:21.980 ⇒ 00:01:23.050 Samuel Roberts: Good, good.
10 00:01:33.140 ⇒ 00:01:34.320 Samuel Roberts: Amazing platform.
11 00:01:38.730 ⇒ 00:01:41.629 Samuel Roberts: Trying to see how big the marketing assets repo is.
12 00:01:42.340 ⇒ 00:01:45.680 Mustafa Raja: Oh, it’s big. It’s… That’s right.
13 00:01:46.300 ⇒ 00:01:49.809 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, that’s what I was worried about. I don’t really want to be pulling that every time we need to…
14 00:01:49.810 ⇒ 00:01:50.250 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
15 00:01:50.250 ⇒ 00:01:51.350 Samuel Roberts: deploy something.
16 00:01:51.350 ⇒ 00:01:56.020 Mustafa Raja: And I think PDFs sometimes do mess up the repo also, no?
17 00:01:56.480 ⇒ 00:02:01.169 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, that I don’t know, I haven’t put a lot of PDFs in repos anyway, so I don’t know. Could be.
18 00:02:01.170 ⇒ 00:02:08.380 Gabriel Lam: We put, like, the copies as markdowns, and then, when needed, fetch those.
19 00:02:09.620 ⇒ 00:02:15.960 Samuel Roberts: That’s actually what I was sort of thinking. Do we have them in Markdown anywhere? Like, is there a… like, a Markdown version of those things?
20 00:02:15.960 ⇒ 00:02:19.519 Gabriel Lam: We have them in Supabase right now, right?
21 00:02:19.920 ⇒ 00:02:22.239 Gabriel Lam: Mustafa, from the case study assistant.
22 00:02:22.840 ⇒ 00:02:23.210 Samuel Roberts: Oh.
23 00:02:23.210 ⇒ 00:02:24.089 Mustafa Raja: When they’re generated.
24 00:02:24.090 ⇒ 00:02:26.109 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, but old ones we don’t have, right?
25 00:02:26.640 ⇒ 00:02:28.909 Gabriel Lam: No… yeah.
26 00:02:28.910 ⇒ 00:02:29.470 Samuel Roberts: Okay.
27 00:02:31.900 ⇒ 00:02:35.419 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, we’ll have to figure that out, because I think that is too big to put into the monorepo.
28 00:02:40.680 ⇒ 00:02:46.759 Samuel Roberts: And I… anyway, it’s not gonna be… it’s not gonna help the problem of, like, slow load times and stuff that we’re having with the URL sometimes.
29 00:02:51.780 ⇒ 00:02:52.279 Samuel Roberts: There is a.
30 00:02:52.280 ⇒ 00:02:53.100 Mustafa Raja: Oh, yeah.
31 00:02:55.450 ⇒ 00:02:58.339 Mustafa Raja: That’s… that’s really something that we need to look into.
32 00:02:58.840 ⇒ 00:03:03.689 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, that’s what I was thinking, like, we were already planning at some point to migrate all that to a bucket.
33 00:03:04.670 ⇒ 00:03:13.240 Samuel Roberts: And then manage it from the… marketing… Assets UI, And then…
34 00:03:13.240 ⇒ 00:03:13.680 Mustafa Raja: Hannah.
35 00:03:13.680 ⇒ 00:03:15.440 Samuel Roberts: Serving links from there.
36 00:03:17.240 ⇒ 00:03:33.549 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, I mean, initially, what we were doing was, we had it hosted over at Cloudflare, right? So Cloudflare managed all of the files, and the load times were very good. It’s just that it doesn’t push the file greater than what you expect.
37 00:03:34.000 ⇒ 00:03:36.800 Samuel Roberts: I think I remember that. Some, some limit was there.
38 00:03:37.250 ⇒ 00:03:38.769 Mustafa Raja: Yeah. So yeah, I mean, either…
39 00:03:38.800 ⇒ 00:03:41.610 Samuel Roberts: I think… I think, yeah, I think the solution is either, like, a bucket
40 00:03:41.930 ⇒ 00:03:44.890 Samuel Roberts: Even just a superbase bucket, and just see how the load times are.
41 00:03:45.590 ⇒ 00:03:49.410 Samuel Roberts: And then if we need to do some kind of CDN or something, we can do that too, but…
42 00:03:51.070 ⇒ 00:04:02.970 Samuel Roberts: I don’t think the repo’s a good solution. I think, yeah, if we can get, like, equivalent, like, the text of them into a Markdown equivalent, we could keep that in sync, but the other issue becomes…
43 00:04:04.430 ⇒ 00:04:06.850 Samuel Roberts: Keeping those two things in sync.
44 00:04:06.850 ⇒ 00:04:07.480 Mustafa Raja: Of course.
45 00:04:09.530 ⇒ 00:04:10.080 Samuel Roberts: What was that?
46 00:04:10.080 ⇒ 00:04:10.750 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
47 00:04:11.770 ⇒ 00:04:13.809 Samuel Roberts: Is that neat? Did you guys hear that?
48 00:04:14.050 ⇒ 00:04:14.550 Casie Aviles: Yeah.
49 00:04:14.550 ⇒ 00:04:15.320 Mustafa Raja: What?
50 00:04:15.720 ⇒ 00:04:17.200 Samuel Roberts: The boing sound?
51 00:04:17.730 ⇒ 00:04:19.250 Mustafa Raja: Oh, that’s me.
52 00:04:19.250 ⇒ 00:04:22.420 Samuel Roberts: Okay, okay. Sometimes I don’t know if it’s my computer making sounds that anyone else.
53 00:04:22.420 ⇒ 00:04:24.910 Mustafa Raja: Okay. That’s my Slack.
54 00:04:25.230 ⇒ 00:04:29.139 Samuel Roberts: Okay, okay, that’s all that’s your Slack notification, wonderful. Yeah, I.
55 00:04:29.140 ⇒ 00:04:36.560 Mustafa Raja: I just enabled the notifications on my laptop because my Mac was blocking them, I didn’t know that.
56 00:04:36.560 ⇒ 00:04:37.040 Samuel Roberts: Oh, really.
57 00:04:37.040 ⇒ 00:04:38.520 Mustafa Raja: I just enabled that.
58 00:04:38.870 ⇒ 00:04:40.620 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I had… I think because of…
59 00:04:40.770 ⇒ 00:04:44.900 Samuel Roberts: Whisper Flow, it turned on screen reader in cursor?
60 00:04:44.900 ⇒ 00:04:46.439 Mustafa Raja: Oh, yeah, I did.
61 00:04:46.440 ⇒ 00:04:46.760 Samuel Roberts: No gear.
62 00:04:46.760 ⇒ 00:04:47.410 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, it does.
63 00:04:47.410 ⇒ 00:04:50.749 Samuel Roberts: Gabe, the other day when I was like, what sound is that when we were working on something?
64 00:04:51.420 ⇒ 00:05:01.249 Samuel Roberts: I finally realized what it was. Yeah, it just… it does the, like, screen reader optimizations, and that includes sounds, apparently, that I had no idea had turned on.
65 00:05:01.850 ⇒ 00:05:04.429 Samuel Roberts: Because I kept doing it later that day, or the next day, and I was like.
66 00:05:04.430 ⇒ 00:05:09.430 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, okay, so it’s Whisper Flow, then… yeah, it happens to me.
67 00:05:09.960 ⇒ 00:05:10.840 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I think it…
68 00:05:10.840 ⇒ 00:05:11.880 Mustafa Raja: I have the ability to, like.
69 00:05:11.880 ⇒ 00:05:13.280 Samuel Roberts: Like, get the variable.
70 00:05:13.280 ⇒ 00:05:18.049 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, I just thought that it’s something built-in, Kersh, I didn’t know that it’s because…
71 00:05:18.690 ⇒ 00:05:21.690 Samuel Roberts: Well, it is built in a cursor, but I think it’s enabled because of Whisper Flow.
72 00:05:21.920 ⇒ 00:05:23.220 Mustafa Raja: Oh, okay, okay.
73 00:05:23.690 ⇒ 00:05:24.200 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
74 00:05:24.550 ⇒ 00:05:25.360 Samuel Roberts: Hey, Amber.
75 00:05:27.690 ⇒ 00:05:29.809 Mustafa Raja: Hello. I hope to… yeah.
76 00:05:30.650 ⇒ 00:05:31.999 Samuel Roberts: What’s up? When you’re asking?
77 00:05:32.000 ⇒ 00:05:35.930 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, I also read your note, on… what’s it called?
78 00:05:36.630 ⇒ 00:05:38.860 Mustafa Raja: Codecs environment…
79 00:05:39.280 ⇒ 00:05:39.670 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I’.
80 00:05:39.670 ⇒ 00:05:43.459 Mustafa Raja: I’m wondering when is a good time to, you know, talk about that.
81 00:05:44.020 ⇒ 00:05:49.520 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, maybe, end of this, we could do that, because that’ll be part of, like, internal stuff anyway, so we can…
82 00:05:49.520 ⇒ 00:05:50.090 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, yeah, yeah.
83 00:05:50.090 ⇒ 00:05:50.670 Samuel Roberts: could.
84 00:05:50.930 ⇒ 00:05:54.129 Samuel Roberts: We’ll save that to the end here, but I guess if we’ve got…
85 00:05:54.740 ⇒ 00:05:58.320 Samuel Roberts: Most people here for ABC, we might as well get started there.
86 00:06:01.350 ⇒ 00:06:02.150 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
87 00:06:02.770 ⇒ 00:06:04.210 Samuel Roberts: We had,
88 00:06:04.860 ⇒ 00:06:09.109 Samuel Roberts: Good working session yesterday, got that all sorted out in the Gantt. Did linear tickets get put in?
89 00:06:11.150 ⇒ 00:06:14.339 Amber Lin: Nope, I am doing that right now, and I.
90 00:06:14.340 ⇒ 00:06:19.000 Samuel Roberts: I would like some updates on a few of them, if you’ll ever happen.
91 00:06:19.000 ⇒ 00:06:20.639 Amber Lin: Updated on that yet.
92 00:06:21.220 ⇒ 00:06:24.789 Samuel Roberts: Okay, yeah, I was pulling that up, so this is… let’s go to my creations real quick.
93 00:06:25.960 ⇒ 00:06:27.830 Samuel Roberts: Okay, so what do we have? Let me…
94 00:06:29.270 ⇒ 00:06:31.829 Samuel Roberts: Let me share this with the sway…
95 00:06:32.880 ⇒ 00:06:36.829 Samuel Roberts: Okay, so this is the migration, I’m gonna make this a little bit better, I’m gonna close the page
96 00:06:37.220 ⇒ 00:06:37.970 Samuel Roberts: Nope, this one.
97 00:06:41.660 ⇒ 00:06:46.429 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I guess we can just jump in. What here needs updating?
98 00:06:47.420 ⇒ 00:06:50.990 Samuel Roberts: Did this get… Done.
99 00:06:52.160 ⇒ 00:06:53.010 Samuel Roberts: The.
100 00:06:53.010 ⇒ 00:07:00.079 Mustafa Raja: This, this we have to go through, all of the workflows in N8N first and update, and then…
101 00:07:00.560 ⇒ 00:07:01.290 Mustafa Raja: Retire.
102 00:07:01.290 ⇒ 00:07:05.699 Samuel Roberts: Oh, okay. Did we switch it from Mastra, at least?
103 00:07:06.110 ⇒ 00:07:11.689 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, Master 1, is working with the, backfill.
104 00:07:11.900 ⇒ 00:07:16.879 Samuel Roberts: Okay, I see what you’re doing. Okay, okay, good. I’m gonna maybe make a…
105 00:07:17.660 ⇒ 00:07:18.180 Mustafa Raja: Subtas?
106 00:07:19.250 ⇒ 00:07:20.280 Samuel Roberts: Yeah…
107 00:07:20.960 ⇒ 00:07:26.200 Samuel Roberts: I’m just saving. Here’s the thing, if we’re gonna be moving up any den, it might not be worth all that work.
108 00:07:28.130 ⇒ 00:07:30.990 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, that’s true, actually.
109 00:07:31.480 ⇒ 00:07:32.210 Samuel Roberts: I’m thinking, like…
110 00:07:32.210 ⇒ 00:07:33.570 Mustafa Raja: Hmm.
111 00:07:34.600 ⇒ 00:07:38.280 Samuel Roberts: Alright, let’s forget about that one for now, then. Eval logging.
112 00:07:38.280 ⇒ 00:07:39.970 Mustafa Raja: I think that’s… that’s good.
113 00:07:40.330 ⇒ 00:07:41.909 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, so, news…
114 00:07:41.910 ⇒ 00:07:43.340 Samuel Roberts: Update here before we close it?
115 00:07:44.010 ⇒ 00:07:47.260 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, yeah, I’ll, I’ll put an update and I’ll tag you then.
116 00:07:47.670 ⇒ 00:07:48.829 Samuel Roberts: Okay, cool, thank you.
117 00:07:49.590 ⇒ 00:07:52.369 Samuel Roberts: Set up Cloud SQL, this is…
118 00:07:54.600 ⇒ 00:07:57.769 Mustafa Raja: 1573 should be good, no?
119 00:07:59.390 ⇒ 00:08:00.820 Samuel Roberts: Yes, that is good.
120 00:08:01.950 ⇒ 00:08:08.930 Mustafa Raja: The spike is also good, and then this ticket should also be good, because we ended up, hooking up… what’s it called? Yeah.
121 00:08:09.220 ⇒ 00:08:10.429 Mustafa Raja: Oh, no snack.
122 00:08:11.420 ⇒ 00:08:15.379 Samuel Roberts: slacking where this will be…
123 00:08:18.430 ⇒ 00:08:20.270 Mustafa Raja: Assist…
124 00:08:25.000 ⇒ 00:08:27.440 Samuel Roberts: We’ll do that.
125 00:08:28.810 ⇒ 00:08:29.520 Samuel Roberts: Good.
126 00:08:29.650 ⇒ 00:08:30.910 Samuel Roberts: Okay, I’m just getting through there.
127 00:08:33.710 ⇒ 00:08:38.640 Mustafa Raja: And then maybe, let’s just cancel or backfill this 1560.
128 00:08:39.130 ⇒ 00:08:39.789 Mustafa Raja: Oh, sorry.
129 00:08:39.799 ⇒ 00:08:40.159 Samuel Roberts: golden.
130 00:08:40.629 ⇒ 00:08:41.379 Mustafa Raja: What’s it called?
131 00:08:41.380 ⇒ 00:08:41.720 Samuel Roberts: This one?
132 00:08:41.720 ⇒ 00:08:44.369 Mustafa Raja: Backlog. Yeah, let’s backlog it or something.
133 00:08:44.550 ⇒ 00:08:47.279 Samuel Roberts: Perfect, okay, so we got this, this one…
134 00:08:49.370 ⇒ 00:08:56.670 Mustafa Raja: This is, let’s keep it open, since we need to send out an email, right?
135 00:08:56.670 ⇒ 00:08:58.270 Samuel Roberts: Oh, okay, we’re still waiting. Okay, got it, okay.
136 00:09:00.370 ⇒ 00:09:01.640 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
137 00:09:02.390 ⇒ 00:09:04.370 Samuel Roberts: I remember to mention that I…
138 00:09:08.670 ⇒ 00:09:14.200 Samuel Roberts: What else? Alright, that’s pretty much these guys, and Casey, how are we doing up here?
139 00:09:15.260 ⇒ 00:09:20.069 Casie Aviles: The tickets that I have are… Probably not under the migration.
140 00:09:20.070 ⇒ 00:09:23.990 Samuel Roberts: Oh, right, right, thank you, I forgot we have a different view. Okay, so these are the main, like.
141 00:09:24.540 ⇒ 00:09:25.490 Samuel Roberts: tech zips.
142 00:09:26.410 ⇒ 00:09:30.820 Casie Aviles: Yeah, okay. So yeah, this one, I’ve added this, and I also showed, like.
143 00:09:31.630 ⇒ 00:09:34.210 Samuel Roberts: Oh, right, I’ve got columns, I remember seeing this yesterday.
144 00:09:34.800 ⇒ 00:09:37.360 Casie Aviles: Yeah, so I also sent, like.
145 00:09:37.900 ⇒ 00:09:46.409 Casie Aviles: what I had on Slack. I should all… yeah, let me… I’m going to attach it here as well, but… Perfect. Basically, I’ve… I’ve crossed… I’ve checked, you know…
146 00:09:46.520 ⇒ 00:09:47.180 Casie Aviles: Huh.
147 00:09:47.560 ⇒ 00:09:50.490 Casie Aviles: the source to the Supabase upload, so…
148 00:09:50.770 ⇒ 00:09:51.440 Samuel Roberts: Okay.
149 00:09:52.720 ⇒ 00:09:57.650 Samuel Roberts: Okay, so yeah, I saw your message there, so yeah, if you can just, like, either tag that here, or update it here.
150 00:09:58.360 ⇒ 00:09:59.080 Casie Aviles: Sure.
151 00:09:59.630 ⇒ 00:10:06.289 Samuel Roberts: Was that technician to zip code database, or was the mechanical text is the last one? Is that what we just talked about? Yeah, okay.
152 00:10:06.440 ⇒ 00:10:08.240 Samuel Roberts: Just getting through that, alright.
153 00:10:10.130 ⇒ 00:10:11.650 Samuel Roberts: The sound is great.
154 00:10:12.350 ⇒ 00:10:13.530 Samuel Roberts: Okay.
155 00:10:14.220 ⇒ 00:10:16.990 Casie Aviles: Yeah, this one is in progress, and I’m going to…
156 00:10:18.000 ⇒ 00:10:21.239 Casie Aviles: Yeah, I’ll close… I’ll try to close this out today.
157 00:10:21.740 ⇒ 00:10:22.540 Samuel Roberts: Okay, yeah.
158 00:10:22.820 ⇒ 00:10:24.670 Casie Aviles: And then, is this just a big one?
159 00:10:25.330 ⇒ 00:10:26.120 Samuel Roberts: For… okay.
160 00:10:27.770 ⇒ 00:10:29.130 Casie Aviles: So the rest are…
161 00:10:29.240 ⇒ 00:10:35.270 Casie Aviles: I mean, I just put two as an estimate, but the others would have, like, less…
162 00:10:35.930 ⇒ 00:10:36.370 Samuel Roberts: Okay.
163 00:10:36.370 ⇒ 00:10:38.950 Casie Aviles: Percentages, right? Missing percentages, so…
164 00:10:38.950 ⇒ 00:10:43.789 Samuel Roberts: Yep, yep, okay. Alright, good. And then additional fields, this is that…
165 00:10:45.060 ⇒ 00:10:52.210 Casie Aviles: This… Yeah, okay, so this is actually kind of in the admin UI.
166 00:10:52.660 ⇒ 00:10:54.830 Casie Aviles: Maintenance ticket, but…
167 00:10:54.830 ⇒ 00:11:00.449 Samuel Roberts: Right. It’s okay. It’s a duplicate. I was gonna say, 17… this one’s a complete duplicate of that other one?
168 00:11:02.150 ⇒ 00:11:02.740 Casie Aviles: Yeah.
169 00:11:02.740 ⇒ 00:11:07.369 Samuel Roberts: Okay, yeah, I think I… That was this one…
170 00:11:11.070 ⇒ 00:11:11.920 Casie Aviles: Yeah.
171 00:11:12.800 ⇒ 00:11:14.410 Samuel Roberts: Okay, so I’ll get rid of that other one then.
172 00:11:15.560 ⇒ 00:11:17.339 Samuel Roberts: We don’t need… we don’t need this, then?
173 00:11:19.630 ⇒ 00:11:25.959 Samuel Roberts: Mmm… If you would also like to update their status to duplicates?
174 00:11:28.110 ⇒ 00:11:36.009 Samuel Roberts: And then… On that, there was something else here that I wanted to ask about. The updated ad?
175 00:11:36.170 ⇒ 00:11:37.249 Samuel Roberts: Did we do this?
176 00:11:37.960 ⇒ 00:11:40.579 Casie Aviles: Oh, yeah, I haven’t really done this one.
177 00:11:40.580 ⇒ 00:11:44.849 Samuel Roberts: Okay, that’s fine, I saw it there, and I realized we haven’t talked about it in a minute, so… okay.
178 00:11:45.550 ⇒ 00:11:47.189 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, if you’re in there,
179 00:11:48.740 ⇒ 00:11:50.269 Samuel Roberts: At least take a look at this.
180 00:11:50.820 ⇒ 00:11:52.320 Casie Aviles: Yeah, I think we talked about…
181 00:11:52.320 ⇒ 00:11:56.889 Samuel Roberts: the… the audit wasn’t worth it or something?
182 00:11:57.150 ⇒ 00:11:58.220 Samuel Roberts: PG Audit.
183 00:11:59.940 ⇒ 00:12:01.509 Casie Aviles: Yeah, yeah, I remember.
184 00:12:01.640 ⇒ 00:12:06.810 Casie Aviles: Yeah, it should just be, like, a change to the table, so…
185 00:12:06.970 ⇒ 00:12:08.900 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, we just want the… yeah, exactly, okay.
186 00:12:09.070 ⇒ 00:12:15.509 Samuel Roberts: Cool. Any other updates here that we should talk about?
187 00:12:16.360 ⇒ 00:12:18.329 Casie Aviles: I think these are getting bumped to next site.
188 00:12:18.330 ⇒ 00:12:18.889 Samuel Roberts: They are arguing.
189 00:12:18.890 ⇒ 00:12:19.520 Casie Aviles: I’ll do that.
190 00:12:19.520 ⇒ 00:12:22.780 Samuel Roberts: Okay, yeah. Okay, yeah, if you can clean that up, that’d be fine. Okay, great.
191 00:12:23.050 ⇒ 00:12:27.960 Samuel Roberts: Amber, any other, thoughts there?
192 00:12:30.640 ⇒ 00:12:32.770 Samuel Roberts: I don’t have a good view here, I need a better view.
193 00:12:33.010 ⇒ 00:12:38.230 Amber Lin: Sorry, taking a look right now. I’m adding… I’ve added the tickets for…
194 00:12:38.630 ⇒ 00:12:42.599 Amber Lin: The central dots, I’m gonna add them to the cycle right now.
195 00:12:42.960 ⇒ 00:12:44.570 Samuel Roberts: Okay. So…
196 00:12:49.620 ⇒ 00:12:51.499 Samuel Roberts: to see this book without… I don’t want that.
197 00:12:55.960 ⇒ 00:12:57.889 Samuel Roberts: I just don’t see the triage hearing.
198 00:12:59.680 ⇒ 00:13:00.350 Samuel Roberts: Work.
199 00:13:03.440 ⇒ 00:13:06.959 Samuel Roberts: Oh, the status is not triage, I want the title does not contain triage, right?
200 00:13:07.790 ⇒ 00:13:08.710 Samuel Roberts: Close, though.
201 00:13:16.320 ⇒ 00:13:21.180 Amber Lin: I think for the Central Doc stuff, I’ll just also included in the…
202 00:13:21.500 ⇒ 00:13:26.569 Amber Lin: Migration view, so we can just look at both of them there.
203 00:13:27.380 ⇒ 00:13:27.980 Samuel Roberts: Okay.
204 00:13:29.850 ⇒ 00:13:30.540 Samuel Roberts: Perfect.
205 00:13:32.140 ⇒ 00:13:37.990 Samuel Roberts: Okay, yeah, I think, based on some of the stuff in the Gantt, I might go in and break them down into, like, subtasks a little bit.
206 00:13:38.240 ⇒ 00:13:39.000 Amber Lin: Okay.
207 00:13:39.510 ⇒ 00:13:45.440 Samuel Roberts: Just because I like the idea of the Gantt being slightly higher level than the granularity of the linear tickets.
208 00:13:45.470 ⇒ 00:13:49.380 Amber Lin: I think we did a good job with that yesterday, but there’s a few things that might need to…
209 00:13:49.530 ⇒ 00:13:52.649 Samuel Roberts: be broke. Like, there was something that was, like, 8 hours that I want to break down a little bit.
210 00:13:52.650 ⇒ 00:13:52.964 Amber Lin: C.
211 00:13:53.400 ⇒ 00:13:54.480 Amber Lin: Cool. Hmm.
212 00:13:54.750 ⇒ 00:14:04.210 Amber Lin: Let me add due dates for the ones I just added. So, I think we’re in the… we’re in the same field, great, so…
213 00:14:09.610 ⇒ 00:14:18.440 Amber Lin: This is… End of next… End of next week… This one, also.
214 00:14:18.960 ⇒ 00:14:22.740 Amber Lin: Do we say end of next week? Okay, yes, end of next week.
215 00:14:24.020 ⇒ 00:14:33.330 Amber Lin: And then Utam said he was able to take on one or two tickets. Is there any specific one that he is more suited to take on?
216 00:14:34.000 ⇒ 00:14:38.259 Samuel Roberts: I… Not sure offhand, let me…
217 00:14:38.260 ⇒ 00:14:38.810 Amber Lin: Okay.
218 00:14:39.100 ⇒ 00:14:40.169 Samuel Roberts: These were the ends.
219 00:14:54.400 ⇒ 00:14:57.309 Samuel Roberts: I’ll have to think about that a little bit more.
220 00:14:58.360 ⇒ 00:14:59.229 Samuel Roberts: Spread this out.
221 00:15:03.710 ⇒ 00:15:10.910 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I don’t know, do you guys have any thoughts on which ones you feel like you guys have a better handle on versus what would be good to pass to Utam?
222 00:15:12.300 ⇒ 00:15:15.269 Samuel Roberts: I don’t want to give them something that you guys have more context on, or something.
223 00:15:25.050 ⇒ 00:15:27.300 Samuel Roberts: Alright, yeah, I’ll think about that, I’ll get back to you, Amber.
224 00:15:27.870 ⇒ 00:15:28.500 Amber Lin: Okay.
225 00:15:28.910 ⇒ 00:15:33.199 Amber Lin: Let me see… whose zip code TV?
226 00:15:37.950 ⇒ 00:15:44.309 Amber Lin: Is it better if I also add the zip code DB stuff to the migration view? Would that be helpful?
227 00:15:46.110 ⇒ 00:15:47.750 Samuel Roberts: Oops.
228 00:15:49.120 ⇒ 00:15:52.150 Samuel Roberts: No, let’s keep those separate for now, I think.
229 00:15:52.690 ⇒ 00:15:54.150 Amber Lin: Okay.
230 00:15:54.150 ⇒ 00:15:56.750 Samuel Roberts: That’s a different prog… oh, it’s just projects inside, isn’t it?
231 00:15:56.750 ⇒ 00:15:58.170 Amber Lin: Yeah, yeah.
232 00:15:58.170 ⇒ 00:15:58.560 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
233 00:15:58.560 ⇒ 00:16:03.899 Amber Lin: Sorry, the additional fields, I saw we said it was duplicate, where’s the other tickets?
234 00:16:04.200 ⇒ 00:16:05.390 Samuel Roberts: the other ticket…
235 00:16:06.680 ⇒ 00:16:08.439 Casie Aviles: Oh, it was in the migration.
236 00:16:08.860 ⇒ 00:16:11.319 Samuel Roberts: And, admin UI improvements.
237 00:16:12.070 ⇒ 00:16:13.160 Amber Lin: Commercial inspector options.
238 00:16:13.160 ⇒ 00:16:14.429 Samuel Roberts: Spanish speaker column.
239 00:16:16.970 ⇒ 00:16:21.240 Casie Aviles: Hmm… I mean, yeah, this was already ticketed, but…
240 00:16:21.240 ⇒ 00:16:21.830 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
241 00:16:22.050 ⇒ 00:16:25.270 Casie Aviles: Let me know if you want the other one instead.
242 00:16:25.650 ⇒ 00:16:28.360 Casie Aviles: If we can move this to the other project.
243 00:16:28.790 ⇒ 00:16:31.530 Amber Lin: Yeah, let’s just move this to the…
244 00:16:31.700 ⇒ 00:16:34.859 Amber Lin: To the… make the zip code project?
245 00:16:35.690 ⇒ 00:16:36.510 Amber Lin: Yeah, about one.
246 00:16:36.880 ⇒ 00:16:37.680 Samuel Roberts: Following up.
247 00:16:37.940 ⇒ 00:16:38.870 Amber Lin: Cool.
248 00:16:39.140 ⇒ 00:16:40.190 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, recall.
249 00:16:41.930 ⇒ 00:16:42.550 Samuel Roberts: Alright.
250 00:16:42.970 ⇒ 00:16:45.060 Samuel Roberts: Anything else, then, on ABC?
251 00:16:49.850 ⇒ 00:16:51.110 Casie Aviles: I, I don’t know.
252 00:16:53.780 ⇒ 00:16:54.350 Samuel Roberts: Remember?
253 00:17:00.570 ⇒ 00:17:01.270 Samuel Roberts: Hello?
254 00:17:02.910 ⇒ 00:17:08.779 Samuel Roberts: Sorry, I clicked something, I went… I lost you guys for a second, I thought. There was a call yesterday, right, ABC?
255 00:17:09.530 ⇒ 00:17:18.420 Amber Lin: Yeah, that was for Discovery. So today, oh, I wanted to ask about the transcript. Is there anything there I can show them today?
256 00:17:19.079 ⇒ 00:17:25.639 Samuel Roberts: I can talk about it, maybe. There’s not much to show.
257 00:17:25.980 ⇒ 00:17:32.060 Samuel Roberts: I’m waiting on Tim to let me know about, like, rate limits and stuff, because I don’t want to just run it and…
258 00:17:32.320 ⇒ 00:17:35.160 Samuel Roberts: Mess up, like, anything they have accessing it?
259 00:17:35.320 ⇒ 00:17:40.249 Samuel Roberts: But I’m getting to a point where I can extract transcripts. I can maybe show that off a little.
260 00:17:40.580 ⇒ 00:17:42.269 Amber Lin: Okay, cool, that sounds cool.
261 00:17:42.270 ⇒ 00:17:43.829 Samuel Roberts: I’ll try to be there today, then.
262 00:17:46.270 ⇒ 00:17:47.780 Amber Lin: Cool. That’s good.
263 00:17:47.780 ⇒ 00:17:48.550 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I kinda…
264 00:17:48.550 ⇒ 00:17:49.010 Amber Lin: kind of stuff.
265 00:17:49.010 ⇒ 00:17:52.529 Samuel Roberts: go into those, because I wasn’t as, like, actively involved, but I will… I will be there, helpful, so…
266 00:17:52.530 ⇒ 00:17:53.380 Amber Lin: Makes sense.
267 00:17:53.580 ⇒ 00:18:02.650 Amber Lin: They just drop by, and then, like, if they start… it’s 30 minutes, so, like, if they start talking about other stuff, you can always just do other things.
268 00:18:02.850 ⇒ 00:18:03.649 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, no worries.
269 00:18:03.880 ⇒ 00:18:06.069 Amber Lin: Okay.
270 00:18:10.090 ⇒ 00:18:11.420 Samuel Roberts: Anything else, ABC?
271 00:18:13.170 ⇒ 00:18:21.859 Amber Lin: Oh, Casey, could you send me some screenshots for validation of the new zip codes you added? I also want to show the client stat.
272 00:18:24.480 ⇒ 00:18:25.480 Casie Aviles: Sure.
273 00:18:25.760 ⇒ 00:18:28.499 Casie Aviles: What kind of screenshots do you need?
274 00:18:28.750 ⇒ 00:18:44.380 Amber Lin: I guess, like, questions that was answered, or that wasn’t able to answer before, or, like, ask me about specific fields of… because for dispatch, we do have, like, multiple fields, right? Maybe, like, a…
275 00:18:45.210 ⇒ 00:18:51.060 Amber Lin: Tech size question, or maybe, like, a tech level question.
276 00:18:51.830 ⇒ 00:18:53.750 Casie Aviles: Okay, okay, yeah, I can do that.
277 00:18:53.930 ⇒ 00:18:56.850 Amber Lin: Cool. Alright, yeah, that’s all.
278 00:18:56.850 ⇒ 00:18:57.470 Samuel Roberts: Great.
279 00:18:59.510 ⇒ 00:19:03.440 Samuel Roberts: If that’s all for ABC, let’s jump to Lilo…
280 00:19:07.750 ⇒ 00:19:10.920 Samuel Roberts: We kind of chatted late yesterday, because there were some…
281 00:19:12.180 ⇒ 00:19:12.720 Casie Aviles: Hmm, so…
282 00:19:12.720 ⇒ 00:19:16.320 Samuel Roberts: It didn’t work, so we’re kind of… we kind of had a little check-in, didn’t we? But…
283 00:19:17.100 ⇒ 00:19:19.290 Samuel Roberts: Anything changed since then, Casey?
284 00:19:19.960 ⇒ 00:19:24.260 Casie Aviles: Yeah, we were just, we just groomed the tickets a little bit, and…
285 00:19:24.260 ⇒ 00:19:24.840 Samuel Roberts: Okay.
286 00:19:25.220 ⇒ 00:19:29.089 Casie Aviles: We just, moved, you know, moved the statuses, so…
287 00:19:29.520 ⇒ 00:19:38.160 Casie Aviles: I think, yeah, for Pranav, he just moved the forecast POC62 to internal review, so I think.
288 00:19:38.370 ⇒ 00:19:39.600 Samuel Roberts: Okay.
289 00:19:39.780 ⇒ 00:19:43.829 Casie Aviles: There’s… he has something to, you know, show there.
290 00:19:43.830 ⇒ 00:19:45.399 Samuel Roberts: Cool. Alright, perfect.
291 00:19:45.810 ⇒ 00:19:49.350 Casie Aviles: And yeah, that’s the query that he managed to get working, so…
292 00:19:49.350 ⇒ 00:19:50.280 Samuel Roberts: Nice.
293 00:19:52.350 ⇒ 00:20:01.539 Casie Aviles: Right. Okay. And I think, yeah, so for that, I think we’re… I think we’re pretty good for the POC,
294 00:20:01.860 ⇒ 00:20:06.990 Casie Aviles: I think the only ones that we haven’t really closed out are the ad hoc ones.
295 00:20:07.600 ⇒ 00:20:11.770 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I think that’s… I think he mentioned the Klaviyo one.
296 00:20:12.790 ⇒ 00:20:14.509 Samuel Roberts: he would take a look at… I don’t…
297 00:20:16.360 ⇒ 00:20:17.180 Casie Aviles: Yeah.
298 00:20:18.320 ⇒ 00:20:21.050 Samuel Roberts: I’m less worried about those than the…
299 00:20:23.260 ⇒ 00:20:24.800 Casie Aviles: More than the actual… okay.
300 00:20:24.800 ⇒ 00:20:33.700 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, but I just want to make sure we’re, like, talking with them about it more than, like, implementing it right now, at least. You know, like, at the very minimum, so I think we’re good there. I’ll…
301 00:20:33.700 ⇒ 00:20:34.380 Casie Aviles: Bring me.
302 00:20:34.380 ⇒ 00:20:35.540 Samuel Roberts: Talk to Pranav later.
303 00:20:35.960 ⇒ 00:20:37.630 Samuel Roberts: Make sure we’re on the same page there.
304 00:20:38.610 ⇒ 00:20:40.510 Samuel Roberts: And then.
305 00:20:42.660 ⇒ 00:20:48.910 Casie Aviles: So, yeah, I think he also spoke a bit with Bobby, and those are just some of the things we…
306 00:20:49.860 ⇒ 00:20:54.759 Casie Aviles: proposed, you know, like, the looms. I think we were talking about that as well, the call.
307 00:20:54.760 ⇒ 00:20:55.410 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
308 00:20:55.910 ⇒ 00:20:57.720 Casie Aviles: Yeah, exactly what I was thinking.
309 00:20:58.980 ⇒ 00:21:00.390 Samuel Roberts: Okay. So yeah, I think that…
310 00:21:01.030 ⇒ 00:21:04.690 Casie Aviles: That’s… that’s what Branov has at the moment there.
311 00:21:04.690 ⇒ 00:21:05.270 Samuel Roberts: Alright.
312 00:21:05.770 ⇒ 00:21:06.810 Samuel Roberts: Sounds good.
313 00:21:07.230 ⇒ 00:21:10.030 Casie Aviles: I think, yeah, for this ETL tool…
314 00:21:10.790 ⇒ 00:21:20.640 Casie Aviles: I think… well, it’s just for the POC, so I think… We can… Yeah, I think… Move this.
315 00:21:20.750 ⇒ 00:21:21.540 Casie Aviles: Yeah.
316 00:21:22.640 ⇒ 00:21:25.999 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I might even call this… I’ll call it.
317 00:21:28.340 ⇒ 00:21:31.640 Samuel Roberts: an internal review, because I might want to break these out into separate tickets eventually.
318 00:21:32.570 ⇒ 00:21:33.540 Casie Aviles: Okay, great.
319 00:21:33.710 ⇒ 00:21:34.350 Casie Aviles: Nice.
320 00:21:34.350 ⇒ 00:21:39.299 Samuel Roberts: Spike is probably… Good to close out at this point, right?
321 00:21:40.320 ⇒ 00:21:42.240 Casie Aviles: Well, yeah, I think, I think he shall.
322 00:21:42.690 ⇒ 00:21:43.360 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, okay.
323 00:21:49.860 ⇒ 00:21:50.410 Samuel Roberts: Cool.
324 00:21:50.410 ⇒ 00:21:52.069 Casie Aviles: If these are just the back look.
325 00:21:52.070 ⇒ 00:21:55.209 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I was just trying to see if any of these even make sense anymore. Like, I don’t think this one really makes…
326 00:21:55.890 ⇒ 00:21:59.239 Samuel Roberts: But we’ll leave it for now, not gonna worry about the backlog. Okay, great.
327 00:21:59.490 ⇒ 00:22:04.799 Samuel Roberts: I’m feeling pretty good about tomorrow. I’ll get with Pranav and make sure we’re on track for those.
328 00:22:05.030 ⇒ 00:22:06.639 Samuel Roberts: But we are.
329 00:22:08.690 ⇒ 00:22:13.669 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, alright, I think that’s all out there. Let’s jump to… Internal platform stuff.
330 00:22:15.870 ⇒ 00:22:29.220 Gabriel Lam: Yeah, general share-out is… Sam made a huge lift and got the workspace MCP on a railway server, and that’s been uploaded to GitHub, so I think anyone who has
331 00:22:29.440 ⇒ 00:22:30.630 Gabriel Lam: the playbook.
332 00:22:30.850 ⇒ 00:22:34.790 Gabriel Lam: On their cursor will automatically haven’t installed.
333 00:22:35.160 ⇒ 00:22:40.689 Gabriel Lam: And so this should be including Google Docs, Slides, Sheets, Gmail.
334 00:22:41.170 ⇒ 00:22:51.400 Gabriel Lam: and Google Cal. I think next thing we can be looking into is… I know Utom had mentioned something about connecting it to Clockify. I’m looking at that right now,
335 00:22:51.780 ⇒ 00:23:01.979 Gabriel Lam: And then I think this is a question of, like, now that we’ve got this railway server up, do we want to do something similar for other non-standard repos, or non-standard MTPs?
336 00:23:02.650 ⇒ 00:23:05.469 Gabriel Lam: That don’t automatic… aren’t, like, pre-built.
337 00:23:05.610 ⇒ 00:23:16.220 Gabriel Lam: For cursor… And then… Yeah, preparing that for the big… monorepo… consolidation tomorrow.
338 00:23:16.620 ⇒ 00:23:17.290 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
339 00:23:17.290 ⇒ 00:23:21.639 Gabriel Lam: I think it might be… we should warrant maybe, like, a working session while that’s happening.
340 00:23:21.920 ⇒ 00:23:28.329 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I’m not… crazy worried about it. The only, like, hiccups will be, like, pointing…
341 00:23:28.520 ⇒ 00:23:29.010 Gabriel Lam: Good.
342 00:23:29.010 ⇒ 00:23:35.229 Samuel Roberts: Deployment thing, like, as we move… the app… into another folder.
343 00:23:35.620 ⇒ 00:23:42.249 Samuel Roberts: Or, like, the other ones that have been deployed from there. We just gotta make sure that the deployments are still pointing to the right folders and stuff, but…
344 00:23:42.650 ⇒ 00:23:46.120 Samuel Roberts: A working session tomorrow would be good.
345 00:23:46.850 ⇒ 00:23:51.320 Samuel Roberts: Let’s say… Yeah, we want to do that, like, end of the day, don’t we?
346 00:23:52.670 ⇒ 00:24:01.100 Samuel Roberts: Yeah. Or I committed at least end of the day. So, maybe I’ll try to get some work done on it early, and then we can, like, coordinate and make sure everything’s good before I, like, push anything.
347 00:24:02.090 ⇒ 00:24:02.670 Gabriel Lam: Okay.
348 00:24:04.110 ⇒ 00:24:09.589 Gabriel Lam: Yeah, I… We’ll try to reach out to Utam and see, like, what he did with his…
349 00:24:09.910 ⇒ 00:24:15.450 Gabriel Lam: Clockify thing, just to… That was something we discussed yesterday, so… Okay.
350 00:24:15.450 ⇒ 00:24:16.780 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, the clock would be very cool.
351 00:24:17.850 ⇒ 00:24:21.459 Gabriel Lam: Yeah, it’s just, like, wondering whether to put that on railway as well, pretty much.
352 00:24:21.460 ⇒ 00:24:31.350 Samuel Roberts: I think… I think that would… yes, exactly, on railway. I’m… I think with the platform as well, he was talking about moving to railway, and I think…
353 00:24:31.460 ⇒ 00:24:34.169 Samuel Roberts: It’s something he can probably do?
354 00:24:35.080 ⇒ 00:24:37.649 Samuel Roberts: It’s really just the keys that matter there.
355 00:24:37.850 ⇒ 00:24:38.430 Samuel Roberts: Nothing’s.
356 00:24:38.430 ⇒ 00:24:38.750 Gabriel Lam: Okay.
357 00:24:38.750 ⇒ 00:24:45.119 Samuel Roberts: anything else, but I think… That might even be part of the… monorepo move, maybe?
358 00:24:45.620 ⇒ 00:24:47.019 Samuel Roberts: I mean, I’m crazy.
359 00:24:47.840 ⇒ 00:24:51.120 Samuel Roberts: We wanna be… on a Friday. Yeah.
360 00:24:51.480 ⇒ 00:24:57.240 Samuel Roberts: So, we can at least maybe get it onto Railway and not move the domain yet, maybe just as testing.
361 00:24:57.830 ⇒ 00:24:58.590 Gabriel Lam: Hmm.
362 00:24:59.310 ⇒ 00:25:00.560 Samuel Roberts: It’s probably a bad idea.
363 00:25:02.820 ⇒ 00:25:07.789 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, any other, other things?
364 00:25:08.190 ⇒ 00:25:12.289 Samuel Roberts: I got some PRs merged yesterday. I saw… yeah, what else?
365 00:25:12.950 ⇒ 00:25:19.589 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, for me, I looked into the, transcript to Vault repo.
366 00:25:19.590 ⇒ 00:25:35.679 Mustafa Raja: sorry, not the repo, the PR. I saw your comment, and I worked on it, and I saw that the build was failing. It was because of a script that I fixed, so the PR should be good now. I haven’t merged it. I wanted you to take the final look.
367 00:25:35.840 ⇒ 00:25:50.800 Mustafa Raja: And then there was another issue, with how we were doing the initial filtering, right? So I created a PR for that, too. It should be good, too. And then there was another request from Hannah.
368 00:25:50.810 ⇒ 00:26:08.350 Mustafa Raja: So she’s been… what she’s been doing is she’s manually, noting… noting down hits for some of these, files each week that I think we are posting on LinkedIn. So what she wanted is, another column.
369 00:26:08.350 ⇒ 00:26:13.549 Mustafa Raja: of weekly hits, so she doesn’t have to manually do that, so I added that.
370 00:26:13.870 ⇒ 00:26:18.889 Mustafa Raja: With a… with a filter, where she can actually select the week, too.
371 00:26:18.940 ⇒ 00:26:33.900 Mustafa Raja: You know, because, she would sometimes want to, look into the previous weeks also. So, that’s… that’s another PR, and the review app for that, I’ve sent it over to Hannah, to make sure that she… all her needs are met in there or not.
372 00:26:34.550 ⇒ 00:26:38.019 Mustafa Raja: Okay. So yeah, those are the three things from me.
373 00:26:38.470 ⇒ 00:26:44.419 Samuel Roberts: Great, yeah, I saw the first two. For that one… What is the…
374 00:26:45.400 ⇒ 00:26:49.179 Samuel Roberts: How did you go about… so, like, it’s counting every week and just keeping another…
375 00:26:49.180 ⇒ 00:26:55.579 Mustafa Raja: No, no, no, so, so we have the dates in the, what’s it called? Hits table, right? Files, hits table.
376 00:26:55.580 ⇒ 00:26:59.270 Samuel Roberts: Oh, it’s recording all the hits by date, that’s right, okay, I forgot how that was working.
377 00:26:59.330 ⇒ 00:27:00.440 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, so we don’.
378 00:27:00.440 ⇒ 00:27:02.530 Samuel Roberts: To do anything different, it’s just another column to view it.
379 00:27:02.900 ⇒ 00:27:09.029 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, no, no, yeah, the database already supported it, I just… Imported it.
380 00:27:09.290 ⇒ 00:27:14.229 Samuel Roberts: Okay, I thought we were maybe just counting total hits, and we just needed… that makes sense. If that’s good, then that’s even easier. Perfect.
381 00:27:14.340 ⇒ 00:27:15.220 Samuel Roberts: I hate for now.
382 00:27:20.340 ⇒ 00:27:23.870 Samuel Roberts: Alright, yeah. I…
383 00:27:23.870 ⇒ 00:27:29.829 Mustafa Raja: So, can we talk about the, what’s it called, the codex thing? The environment thing?
384 00:27:29.830 ⇒ 00:27:31.380 Samuel Roberts: Yes, exactly, yes, let’s do that.
385 00:27:32.220 ⇒ 00:27:48.520 Mustafa Raja: So, I saw that, yeah, so I also ran into the issue that you’re talking about over in the Slack, right? So, yeah, at the setup time, they do have, the variables, but not at the time an agent is doing its thing, right? So, I’m thinking…
386 00:27:48.520 ⇒ 00:27:53.650 Samuel Roberts: Not to be pedantic, but the secrets are… yeah, secrets are different variables in their case, is the only reason I want to point that out.
387 00:27:53.650 ⇒ 00:27:57.290 Mustafa Raja: Yeah. So, so, I’m wondering,
388 00:27:57.620 ⇒ 00:28:10.679 Mustafa Raja: Are we trying to secure the environment variables from codecs itself, or are we thinking that, a prompt injection might mess it up?
389 00:28:11.520 ⇒ 00:28:18.790 Samuel Roberts: I mean, I think that’s something we should discuss as a team. Like, I don’t love the idea of exposing tokens.
390 00:28:19.410 ⇒ 00:28:22.379 Samuel Roberts: Or keys, or whatever it is.
391 00:28:23.600 ⇒ 00:28:28.820 Samuel Roberts: that need to be secret, especially, like, we haven’t really locked down the Superbase very well.
392 00:28:28.960 ⇒ 00:28:31.540 Samuel Roberts: in terms of RLS rules, so we’re kind of just…
393 00:28:32.160 ⇒ 00:28:38.809 Samuel Roberts: Which is mostly fine for the way we’re using it, but if something like that got out, it would be, you know, easy to change anything.
394 00:28:43.160 ⇒ 00:28:52.899 Samuel Roberts: I… I don’t… I’m gonna try to do something… I think I said… the only thing I could think of that would be, like, the, like, potentially safe way is start the app.
395 00:28:53.480 ⇒ 00:28:55.109 Samuel Roberts: As part of the setup script.
396 00:28:56.460 ⇒ 00:29:01.570 Samuel Roberts: and background it. The problem with that is, I don’t think it could see logs?
397 00:29:03.430 ⇒ 00:29:08.100 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, and I’m also wondering, and that isn’t…
398 00:29:08.410 ⇒ 00:29:19.159 Mustafa Raja: Because, the keys we have, are making requests on the runtime, right? So, if the EMV isn’t there after it’s set up.
399 00:29:19.700 ⇒ 00:29:21.909 Mustafa Raja: I don’t know if, you know, the souvenir.
400 00:29:21.910 ⇒ 00:29:27.690 Samuel Roberts: No, I think it’ll load them all at setup time. You know, like, when it does its,
401 00:29:29.350 ⇒ 00:29:32.659 Samuel Roberts: You know, it needs the environment variables at runtime.
402 00:29:32.780 ⇒ 00:29:39.479 Samuel Roberts: Because… but once it’s running, I don’t think it’s checking them. That’s why, like, it restarts whenever you change the end file.
403 00:29:41.340 ⇒ 00:29:41.820 Mustafa Raja: Oh, yeah.
404 00:29:41.820 ⇒ 00:29:43.669 Samuel Roberts: I think if we… if we just start the app.
405 00:29:43.920 ⇒ 00:29:46.570 Samuel Roberts: It could maybe run tests, and it will refresh.
406 00:29:48.710 ⇒ 00:29:49.580 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, that’s a good test.
407 00:29:49.580 ⇒ 00:29:53.389 Samuel Roberts: work. I just… I wanna see if… I’m gonna try that today and see if that works, because…
408 00:29:53.740 ⇒ 00:30:01.850 Samuel Roberts: The other thing is maybe I can just, like, write the logs to a temp file and point the LLM to that or something. I don’t know. I gotta test it out a little bit, it’s a little, you know, unclear.
409 00:30:02.800 ⇒ 00:30:03.670 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
410 00:30:03.670 ⇒ 00:30:07.610 Samuel Roberts: But if we feel comfortable putting them in variables, like, we could do that, I just don’t love it.
411 00:30:08.270 ⇒ 00:30:15.789 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, the other thing that I was wondering was, maybe we could also restrict the internet to certain domains only, you know?
412 00:30:17.800 ⇒ 00:30:19.690 Samuel Roberts: Restrict to domains?
413 00:30:19.980 ⇒ 00:30:26.139 Mustafa Raja: So, so we can, we can restrict the agent to look into only, some allowed domains.
414 00:30:26.460 ⇒ 00:30:28.359 Samuel Roberts: Oh, yeah, in terms of its internet access.
415 00:30:28.360 ⇒ 00:30:29.319 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, internet access.
416 00:30:29.320 ⇒ 00:30:29.910 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
417 00:30:30.470 ⇒ 00:30:35.450 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I don’t know, that I’m not crazy worried about.
418 00:30:38.110 ⇒ 00:30:44.949 Samuel Roberts: I don’t… I… yeah, I… if that’s… if we have to, we could do that, but I’m gonna try the startup thing first and see what happens, and we can make a decision from there.
419 00:30:45.710 ⇒ 00:30:46.390 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
420 00:30:46.390 ⇒ 00:30:52.329 Samuel Roberts: The other thing we could do, which I think I mentioned, is just, like, mock… Some of these services?
421 00:30:53.280 ⇒ 00:30:53.830 Samuel Roberts: Which…
422 00:30:53.830 ⇒ 00:30:54.530 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
423 00:30:55.020 ⇒ 00:31:00.359 Samuel Roberts: Is more complicated, probably the right way, Quote, unquote.
424 00:31:00.590 ⇒ 00:31:01.500 Samuel Roberts: But…
425 00:31:01.990 ⇒ 00:31:07.130 Samuel Roberts: You know, it’s also… that would make testing potentially easier anyway, so that might be something we want to think about as we…
426 00:31:07.800 ⇒ 00:31:12.270 Samuel Roberts: maybe need to add more testing as more people get into the repo anyway.
427 00:31:14.340 ⇒ 00:31:15.110 Samuel Roberts: But…
428 00:31:15.750 ⇒ 00:31:22.160 Samuel Roberts: I’m gonna… I want to get this up and running so we can at least be using it before we… you know, that would take a minute, probably, to get some of those mocked out.
429 00:31:23.670 ⇒ 00:31:29.520 Samuel Roberts: And then it also introduces, like, keeping that in sync with Superbase and everything, so there’s a whole other host of reasons to not do that, but…
430 00:31:30.420 ⇒ 00:31:31.150 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
431 00:31:32.460 ⇒ 00:31:32.840 Mustafa Raja: I will give you.
432 00:31:32.840 ⇒ 00:31:36.460 Samuel Roberts: to try and keep you guys updated if I can get that running, and then…
433 00:31:36.680 ⇒ 00:31:40.950 Samuel Roberts: We can have another discussion if it doesn’t work, or if it works partially or something, so…
434 00:31:42.700 ⇒ 00:31:43.560 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
435 00:31:46.700 ⇒ 00:31:49.060 Mustafa Raja: Any other questions, thoughts?
436 00:31:51.460 ⇒ 00:31:52.140 Samuel Roberts: Sorry?
437 00:31:52.580 ⇒ 00:32:02.050 Mustafa Raja: For the Hannah’s request, I just created a linear ticket and pointed that ticket to cursor, and then, when I took a look at it, it was just done, you know.
438 00:32:02.050 ⇒ 00:32:04.010 Samuel Roberts: Oh, nice.
439 00:32:04.310 ⇒ 00:32:05.600 Samuel Roberts: Kersa did that online?
440 00:32:06.510 ⇒ 00:32:10.640 Mustafa Raja: No, no, so I used cursor, linear MCP.
441 00:32:10.640 ⇒ 00:32:13.470 Samuel Roberts: Oh, you pointed your local cursor, okay, okay, I see what you’re saying, yeah.
442 00:32:13.470 ⇒ 00:32:23.080 Mustafa Raja: I built the… I built the ticket using CursorMCP, but then, in linear, I assigned it to Codex.
443 00:32:25.220 ⇒ 00:32:26.990 Mustafa Raja: And Codex worked on it.
444 00:32:27.190 ⇒ 00:32:29.939 Mustafa Raja: It’s pretty good. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
445 00:32:29.940 ⇒ 00:32:34.640 Samuel Roberts: Okay, yeah, that’s the thing, sometimes it doesn’t need to start the server to do stuff, but it would be nice to have a full…
446 00:32:35.610 ⇒ 00:32:37.040 Samuel Roberts: either beyond that, so, okay.
447 00:32:37.040 ⇒ 00:32:37.710 Mustafa Raja: Yeah.
448 00:32:39.360 ⇒ 00:32:41.710 Samuel Roberts: Cool, that’s good news, that’s exciting that it worked.
449 00:32:42.040 ⇒ 00:32:44.570 Samuel Roberts: Getting a bit and better at that sort of stuff. Good.
450 00:32:46.570 ⇒ 00:32:47.280 Samuel Roberts: Alright.
451 00:32:51.070 ⇒ 00:32:52.340 Mustafa Raja: Yeah, that’s pretty much it for myself.
452 00:32:52.340 ⇒ 00:32:53.849 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, anyone got anything else?
453 00:32:54.460 ⇒ 00:32:57.070 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, Sam, I can give a quick update if we have a little.
454 00:32:57.070 ⇒ 00:32:59.169 Samuel Roberts: Okay, yeah, I was gonna, I was gonna ask, I just did, yeah, I was gonna…
455 00:32:59.170 ⇒ 00:33:03.029 Pranav Narahari: Perfect, yeah. So, when you said hi before, I was on mute. Yeah.
456 00:33:04.020 ⇒ 00:33:21.630 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, so for Stitch, so look, maybe I can start off with what I messaged in the channel this morning. So, I was asking for the login because, for Polytomic to, get the data into Mother Duck, just, just, creating that connection is what I was,
457 00:33:22.510 ⇒ 00:33:31.480 Pranav Narahari: trying to get the login for. So… Got it. Yeah, maybe, Sam, we could probably just hop in a huddle, since I just read,
458 00:33:31.600 ⇒ 00:33:37.050 Pranav Narahari: what you said that you did for, creating that connection before,
459 00:33:37.150 ⇒ 00:33:40.940 Pranav Narahari: adding yourself, I guess, as a user, or you said you had.
460 00:33:40.940 ⇒ 00:33:41.540 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I can…
461 00:33:41.540 ⇒ 00:33:42.680 Pranav Narahari: personal account.
462 00:33:42.680 ⇒ 00:33:49.729 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, so Facebook kind of locked… like, you can have, like, organizations and stuff, but individual accounts, when you… if you go to try to make one, that might have been what happened with that.
463 00:33:50.340 ⇒ 00:34:01.230 Samuel Roberts: stitch one, is I might have gone to make an account, and then got to the point when it’s like, tell us who you are, so we can verify you’re a real person kind of thing. Because Facebook is different to that way.
464 00:34:01.850 ⇒ 00:34:06.970 Samuel Roberts: And so what we ended up doing was they gave the Brainforge access, and then I have access through that.
465 00:34:07.290 ⇒ 00:34:14.550 Samuel Roberts: for the app, to… That we’re using for the MCPs. I don’t…
466 00:34:15.710 ⇒ 00:34:20.479 Samuel Roberts: No, so, like, are we able to use those same… that same authentication for Polytomic, you think? Or is it…
467 00:34:20.480 ⇒ 00:34:24.980 Pranav Narahari: So that’s what I tried. There’s a ID and a secret, right, that is in there.
468 00:34:24.989 ⇒ 00:34:25.319 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
469 00:34:25.570 ⇒ 00:34:29.279 Pranav Narahari: Like, those ENV variables. And so, yeah, if…
470 00:34:29.550 ⇒ 00:34:34.169 Pranav Narahari: We could even… I could share my screen right now and just kind of dive into it, if that works, or…
471 00:34:34.179 ⇒ 00:34:34.979 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, sure.
472 00:34:34.980 ⇒ 00:34:35.630 Pranav Narahari: Okay.
473 00:34:35.639 ⇒ 00:34:37.599 Samuel Roberts: Okay, yeah, Gabe, you’re probably good to hop if you need.
474 00:34:39.089 ⇒ 00:34:41.449 Samuel Roberts: Feel free to stay, I don’t care. Alright. I just didn’t want to, you know…
475 00:34:41.449 ⇒ 00:34:44.119 Gabriel Lam: No, you’re good. Thanks, guys, appreciate it. Catch you later.
476 00:34:44.540 ⇒ 00:34:45.159 Samuel Roberts: Alright.
477 00:34:53.389 ⇒ 00:34:55.199 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, yeah, sorry, I’m just.
478 00:34:55.199 ⇒ 00:34:57.379 Samuel Roberts: Oh, okay, no, I just, I didn’t know if we lost a second.
479 00:34:57.380 ⇒ 00:35:06.359 Pranav Narahari: All good, yeah. Yeah, so here for Facebook ads, there’s an option for authenticated method to be the token, and then there’s OAuth.
480 00:35:06.470 ⇒ 00:35:09.319 Pranav Narahari: Do you know which one that you used?
481 00:35:11.320 ⇒ 00:35:13.850 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I’m pretty sure it’s… we… it’s OAuth, so, like, it…
482 00:35:14.000 ⇒ 00:35:17.900 Samuel Roberts: we have the secret so that you can OAuth to…
483 00:35:19.620 ⇒ 00:35:24.029 Samuel Roberts: our app. I think this is gonna owe off to, like, Polytomic’s app, if you know what I mean. Like…
484 00:35:25.770 ⇒ 00:35:29.960 Samuel Roberts: So the way it’s set up is that we created the Meta Ads app.
485 00:35:31.920 ⇒ 00:35:40.209 Samuel Roberts: that’s what the client secret and token is. Then users authenticate to that app, and then that gives us access to the ad accounts they have access to.
486 00:35:40.740 ⇒ 00:35:45.000 Samuel Roberts: So, if you go into Meta Ads and Polytomic.
487 00:35:49.690 ⇒ 00:35:53.559 Samuel Roberts: And then, yeah, so, like, this is their OAuth flow, right?
488 00:35:53.990 ⇒ 00:35:54.380 Pranav Narahari: is there.
489 00:35:54.810 ⇒ 00:36:00.720 Samuel Roberts: Not ours. So, like, We might just have to have them authenticate this way?
490 00:36:02.420 ⇒ 00:36:06.170 Samuel Roberts: Or whoever… whatever user authenticated into our app, if that makes sense.
491 00:36:08.630 ⇒ 00:36:11.850 Pranav Narahari: Okay, gotcha. So… what.
492 00:36:11.850 ⇒ 00:36:15.759 Samuel Roberts: This is what I was kind of wondering before, where, like, is there a way for us to…
493 00:36:16.140 ⇒ 00:36:21.780 Samuel Roberts: programmatically use our Facebook app to get the data to Polytomic somehow.
494 00:36:23.990 ⇒ 00:36:26.839 Pranav Narahari: Gotcha, but what I was noticing with,
495 00:36:27.020 ⇒ 00:36:29.470 Pranav Narahari: What we have currently is that…
496 00:36:29.780 ⇒ 00:36:40.219 Pranav Narahari: Basically, it just required, like, one, connection to be made, like, in our integrations page, and then all of the brands were able to just, just, like, select which.
497 00:36:40.220 ⇒ 00:36:46.370 Samuel Roberts: That’s what I’m saying, there was a specific employee that they had connected, that they wanted to connect, that had access to all the accounts.
498 00:36:46.800 ⇒ 00:36:49.070 Samuel Roberts: Oh, okay. So that’s probably who has to log in here.
499 00:36:49.390 ⇒ 00:36:53.980 Pranav Narahari: Okay, and… They did that? You… you didn’t do that?
500 00:36:54.500 ⇒ 00:36:57.819 Samuel Roberts: No, I just set it up so that they could authenticate into our app.
501 00:36:58.070 ⇒ 00:37:00.049 Samuel Roberts: And then our app would pull all that stuff.
502 00:37:01.320 ⇒ 00:37:10.330 Samuel Roberts: That’s exactly what’s gonna happen here, is Polytomic would do the same thing, so it’s technically a different app. That’s kind of why I was… can you go back to the other screen real quick? What was the token option again?
503 00:37:11.570 ⇒ 00:37:13.430 Samuel Roberts: This is probably, like, a per…
504 00:37:13.660 ⇒ 00:37:15.449 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, it’s just for one account.
505 00:37:18.680 ⇒ 00:37:25.070 Samuel Roberts: So… We gotta think this through a little bit more. Either…
506 00:37:25.320 ⇒ 00:37:30.430 Pranav Narahari: So what I could do, I’m thinking, is, like, I can just get in a huddle with Bobby, and he can just sign in here.
507 00:37:33.960 ⇒ 00:37:35.939 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I’m not sure if it was Bobby’s account or not.
508 00:37:38.350 ⇒ 00:37:55.760 Pranav Narahari: Or, yeah, whoever has that, I can maybe just hop into the… or I can, mention in the external chat, like, hey, we… whatever user you guys signed in with in the Stitch platform, if you guys can sign in on Polytomic, so we can set up the data warehouse for meta ads, like…
509 00:37:55.940 ⇒ 00:37:57.970 Pranav Narahari: That would be great. It would just be a one-time thing.
510 00:37:57.970 ⇒ 00:38:01.869 Samuel Roberts: Yeah. Yeah, I would do that. I’d also… let’s… I mean, I…
511 00:38:02.530 ⇒ 00:38:05.710 Samuel Roberts: again, I want to be able to do some of this programmatically, eventually.
512 00:38:06.020 ⇒ 00:38:07.770 Samuel Roberts: I wonder if there’s a way to…
513 00:38:09.120 ⇒ 00:38:12.399 Samuel Roberts: use our credentials at all with the API.
514 00:38:15.120 ⇒ 00:38:15.910 Pranav Narahari: Gotcha.
515 00:38:16.300 ⇒ 00:38:19.979 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, we can… we can look into that, too.
516 00:38:19.980 ⇒ 00:38:21.959 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, you definitely gotta get this set up, by the way.
517 00:38:21.960 ⇒ 00:38:27.500 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, just for today, and it seems like this could actually just be a long-term solution, too, since it’s…
518 00:38:27.500 ⇒ 00:38:29.810 Samuel Roberts: I think it… yeah, I just don’t know if anything, you know…
519 00:38:30.690 ⇒ 00:38:33.259 Samuel Roberts: You know, we have less control over it is my only concern, though.
520 00:38:35.920 ⇒ 00:38:45.049 Samuel Roberts: To integrate the Polyatomic API with a Facebook app, you need to configure a Facebook app in the Meta for Developers Console, then link it within your Polytomic setup.
521 00:38:46.820 ⇒ 00:38:47.570 Samuel Roberts: Hold on.
522 00:38:49.740 ⇒ 00:38:55.870 Samuel Roberts: Create an app, blah blah blah blah blah, yeah, got it. Set the valid OAuth redirect URLs to Polytomon.
523 00:38:57.050 ⇒ 00:38:58.770 Samuel Roberts: Okay, I don’t think this is quite what we want.
524 00:38:59.320 ⇒ 00:39:03.759 Samuel Roberts: Casey, you know… you’ve interacted with a polyatomic guy on Slack?
525 00:39:05.440 ⇒ 00:39:08.219 Casie Aviles: Which one? Polytonic, the bot?
526 00:39:09.460 ⇒ 00:39:11.439 Casie Aviles: What, what do you mean, sorry. Which, which…
527 00:39:11.440 ⇒ 00:39:12.050 Samuel Roberts: That’s right.
528 00:39:12.050 ⇒ 00:39:12.880 Casie Aviles: referring to.
529 00:39:13.380 ⇒ 00:39:17.170 Samuel Roberts: Polytomic, I don’t know, I just remember you saying something about asking someone there something.
530 00:39:18.120 ⇒ 00:39:21.929 Casie Aviles: Oh, yeah, they do have a Slack channel, yeah.
531 00:39:21.930 ⇒ 00:39:27.520 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I haven’t chatted with anyone there. I’m wondering if we could just ask them this question, and they could explain to us if it’s possible or not.
532 00:39:28.550 ⇒ 00:39:30.989 Casie Aviles: Yes, yes, sure. Okay.
533 00:39:31.110 ⇒ 00:39:31.800 Casie Aviles: 15.
534 00:39:34.590 ⇒ 00:39:36.920 Casie Aviles: Oh, yeah, you guys, you should be there.
535 00:39:37.060 ⇒ 00:39:41.259 Samuel Roberts: Am I in there? Yeah, I can actually get… I think I got added.
536 00:39:42.040 ⇒ 00:39:44.679 Casie Aviles: Yeah, the vendor polyatomic channel.
537 00:39:50.050 ⇒ 00:39:51.780 Samuel Roberts: I know I got added, where did it go?
538 00:39:53.180 ⇒ 00:39:55.669 Casie Aviles: Oh, there you go.
539 00:39:55.670 ⇒ 00:39:57.030 Samuel Roberts: I got it, I got it, we’re here. Okay.
540 00:40:00.050 ⇒ 00:40:07.019 Samuel Roberts: Oh, boy, they’re changing… Yesterday, they just posted something about… API depreciation stuff. Okay, interesting.
541 00:40:07.430 ⇒ 00:40:10.680 Samuel Roberts: Oh, good, really? Okay.
542 00:40:14.410 ⇒ 00:40:17.830 Samuel Roberts: Okay, yeah, I think we’re gonna wanna ask… like…
543 00:40:18.790 ⇒ 00:40:23.909 Samuel Roberts: Does what I’m saying make sense to you guys? Like, is this even worth it? I think it, long-term, might be.
544 00:40:24.390 ⇒ 00:40:28.200 Pranav Narahari: It might be, I don’t think it’s worth it just for tomorrow, though.
545 00:40:28.370 ⇒ 00:40:30.109 Samuel Roberts: Not at all, but I want to understand that.
546 00:40:30.690 ⇒ 00:40:45.339 Pranav Narahari: Okay, perfect. Yeah, so I like, though, like, going into… maybe looking into this. I think in the meantime, I’ll just reach out to Bobby and Zach, like, immediately, and then, get them to sign in, because I think that’s all we need for tomorrow, at the very least.
547 00:40:45.340 ⇒ 00:40:46.000 Samuel Roberts: Okay.
548 00:40:46.210 ⇒ 00:40:57.700 Pranav Narahari: So, okay, I’ll do that. And then also, the forecasting dashboard is looking pretty good. I updated the SQL query to use, the polyatomic schema.
549 00:40:58.180 ⇒ 00:41:00.010 Samuel Roberts: And the data’s still good?
550 00:41:00.080 ⇒ 00:41:03.129 Pranav Narahari: And, yeah, it looks… looks great. Okay.
551 00:41:03.280 ⇒ 00:41:07.050 Pranav Narahari: And… yeah, so I pushed that all to…
552 00:41:07.490 ⇒ 00:41:20.079 Pranav Narahari: actually, it’s not pushed to dev yet, it’s in, like, my Forecast UI POC branch, so I’ll push that to dev soon, because it’s been a minute since that’s been synced with the dev branch, so there’s.
553 00:41:20.080 ⇒ 00:41:22.139 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I was gonna say, we might wanna pull…
554 00:41:22.550 ⇒ 00:41:26.349 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, yeah, get the dev branch up, I’m trying to think, we might need to update the database.
555 00:41:28.940 ⇒ 00:41:30.789 Samuel Roberts: From staging or something, too.
556 00:41:31.070 ⇒ 00:41:31.930 Pranav Narahari: Oh, okay.
557 00:41:33.780 ⇒ 00:41:38.359 Pranav Narahari: Yeah. Maybe let’s, I will push that first, I’ll do that.
558 00:41:39.310 ⇒ 00:41:52.259 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, since we’re gonna demo this, like, later today, and also, I actually have a hard stop today at 4, Central, so I guess that would be, 5, y’all, so… Yeah.
559 00:41:53.100 ⇒ 00:42:08.490 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, so if… maybe I’ll set up some time earlier so, like, we can patch any, like, conflicts and make sure it successfully deploys to dev, since we’ll be, you know, we’re gonna wanna demo this tomorrow. I’ll set up some time later today.
560 00:42:09.360 ⇒ 00:42:12.899 Samuel Roberts: Okay, yeah, the only thing I got is ABC from 3 to 4 Eastern.
561 00:42:13.410 ⇒ 00:42:14.180 Pranav Narahari: Okay, perfect.
562 00:42:14.180 ⇒ 00:42:15.539 Samuel Roberts: That, or before that, even.
563 00:42:17.000 ⇒ 00:42:18.100 Pranav Narahari: Perfect, perfect.
564 00:42:19.720 ⇒ 00:42:20.390 Samuel Roberts: Okay.
565 00:42:20.820 ⇒ 00:42:26.579 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, and then, Casey, for the Klaviyo tool, is there anything that we need to sync on?
566 00:42:27.830 ⇒ 00:42:35.320 Casie Aviles: No, I haven’t dived into it since we last talked, but I will… Look at it today, yeah.
567 00:42:35.640 ⇒ 00:42:36.540 Pranav Narahari: Okay, perfect.
568 00:42:36.540 ⇒ 00:42:38.639 Casie Aviles: I’m done with the ABC stuff.
569 00:42:39.310 ⇒ 00:42:44.139 Pranav Narahari: Cool. Yeah, earlier the better, since I will be out of office.
570 00:42:44.260 ⇒ 00:42:46.860 Pranav Narahari: A little bit earlier today.
571 00:42:46.860 ⇒ 00:42:47.880 Casie Aviles: Okay, okay.
572 00:42:48.070 ⇒ 00:42:48.770 Pranav Narahari: Yeah.
573 00:42:53.820 ⇒ 00:42:57.140 Samuel Roberts: Cool. Yeah, get that Facebook synced, that would be good.
574 00:43:01.820 ⇒ 00:43:05.549 Samuel Roberts: Did you guys see the Gmail? Or then it’s the email, the Google…
575 00:43:05.700 ⇒ 00:43:06.090 Pranav Narahari: Yeah.
576 00:43:06.110 ⇒ 00:43:09.630 Samuel Roberts: App came through, so we should probably check, see if that works and stuff.
577 00:43:10.150 ⇒ 00:43:12.489 Samuel Roberts: Maybe I’ll just take a quick look at that.
578 00:43:12.780 ⇒ 00:43:16.370 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, okay, do you mind, like, taking a stab at that?
579 00:43:16.610 ⇒ 00:43:17.360 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
580 00:43:18.250 ⇒ 00:43:22.029 Pranav Narahari: Okay, perfect. Do you want to just, like, respond to that channel real quick?
581 00:43:22.030 ⇒ 00:43:23.199 Samuel Roberts: That’s exactly what I was gonna do.
582 00:43:23.390 ⇒ 00:43:24.600 Pranav Narahari: Perfect, thank you so much.
583 00:43:25.200 ⇒ 00:43:30.400 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I’ll take care of that, and then… yeah, I think we’re good… On the… okay.
584 00:43:34.920 ⇒ 00:43:37.280 Samuel Roberts: There it is! Okay.
585 00:43:38.820 ⇒ 00:43:40.209 Samuel Roberts: Alright, yeah, I’ll respond there.
586 00:43:40.430 ⇒ 00:43:44.269 Samuel Roberts: And then, yeah, get the Facebook sorted, and yeah, we should be good to go.
587 00:43:45.100 ⇒ 00:43:48.850 Samuel Roberts: Great. And yeah, let me know when it’s up on dev, if it’s, like.
588 00:43:49.120 ⇒ 00:43:53.469 Samuel Roberts: Sooner rather than later, and we need to get anything, like, moved over before we can start playing around.
589 00:43:53.740 ⇒ 00:43:55.459 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, definitely,
590 00:43:56.290 ⇒ 00:44:03.910 Pranav Narahari: I may even, yeah, I might just push that… now. I just… I’ll create a PR now, and then fix any conflicts. Okay.
591 00:44:04.410 ⇒ 00:44:10.440 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, and then it’s… yeah, and then I’ll probably create a new branch to wire up the meta dashboard.
592 00:44:11.610 ⇒ 00:44:14.770 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, and then… okay, sounds good.
593 00:44:14.880 ⇒ 00:44:16.979 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, so I’ll get that out pretty soon, then.
594 00:44:18.100 ⇒ 00:44:18.840 Samuel Roberts: Alright, cool.
595 00:44:19.200 ⇒ 00:44:19.810 Pranav Narahari: Cool.
596 00:44:20.300 ⇒ 00:44:21.340 Pranav Narahari: Alright, guys.
597 00:44:22.390 ⇒ 00:44:23.590 Samuel Roberts: Have a good one, y’all.
598 00:44:23.590 ⇒ 00:44:24.410 Pranav Narahari: Yep, thanks.
599 00:44:24.410 ⇒ 00:44:25.010 Casie Aviles: U.
600 00:44:25.570 ⇒ 00:44:26.390 Samuel Roberts: Bye.