Getting started with IPFS, Python, and Jupyter Notebooks And because we’re working in Python, we can take advantage of some of the nice features these bindings afford us, such as helpers functions for adding strings and dicts directly to IPFS: metadata = {"data": "about data"}cid = api.add_json(metadata)# You can also check the public gateway:print(" }".format(cid)) https://ipfs.io/ipfs/{ and then check that our data is actually available via our local peer: import jsonjson.loads(api.cat(cid)) And that’s it for now! At , we use a whole range of IPFS tools to interact with our own data, as well as the growing infrastructure we’re developing to enable secure photo backup and sharing on the distributed web. Come , and jump on the to request early access to a whole new way to control your photos. Textile check us out Textile Photos waitlist Resources A Notebook for the above code, hosted in IPFS, added with Python! The IPFS API Python module(ipfsapi)on GitHub IPFS API reference Another getting started guide A Python Notebook with all sorts of useful code snippets The corresponding blog post to go with the above Notebook