►
From YouTube: Brigade Community Meeting -- 2022-03-15
Description
A recording of the Brigade Community Meeting on 2022-03-15
A
Okay,
we
are
recording
now
so
welcome
everybody
to
the
march
15
2022
occurrence
of
the
brigade
community
meeting
it's
the
ides
of
march.
Funny
thing,
though
I
woke
up
this
morning,
thinking
it
was
st
patrick's
day
and
it
is
was
not
so.
My
son
went
to
school
wearing
green
today,
so
yeah
all
right.
I'm
gonna
share
my
screen
so
that
we
can
see
the
agenda
for
today.
B
A
Okay,
I'm
taking
usually
von
takes
notes,
but
I
believe
he
is
in
the
air
right
now,
so
I
will
take
notes,
but
I'm
doing
it
offline
because
it's
easier
and
I
will
put
them
up
on
the
the
document
later
all
right,
so
we
have
a
lot
of
new
contributors.
A
Although
nobody
here
is
new,
so
I
was
going
to
welcome
and
call
out
specific
people,
but
nobody
here
at
this
meeting
is
new
for
what
it's
worth
people
might
have
been
thrown
off
by
the
change
of
time
for
this
meeting.
So
for
those
who
may
not
be
aware
these
later
in
the
day,
occurrences
of
the
meeting
or
later
in
the
day,
if
you're
in
the
u.s,
I
guess
are
scheduled
for
the
the
benefit
of
international
community
members.
A
So
when
daylight
savings
went
into
effect
for
us
folks
in
the
us
a
couple
days
ago,
I
actually
moved
the
time
of
this
meeting,
so
it
moved
for
the
time
of
the
meeting
moved
for
people
who
were
in
the
u.s.
It
did
not
move
for
people
who
are
not
in
the
us
or
more
accurately,
if
you
don't
observe
daylight
savings
time,
so
I
don't
know
if
that
threw
people
off
or
or
what,
but
anyway
so
we've
had
a
lot
of
new
contributors.
A
Recently,
a
lot
of
them
seem
drawn
to
working
on
the
dashboard.
I
need
to
get
the
message
out
there
more
strongly
to
people
that
help
is
welcome
on
all
of
our
brigade
projects
and
not
just
on
the
dashboard.
A
I
think
it's
possible
that
there's,
maybe
just
a
surplus
of
people
who
like
to
hack
on
react
right
now,
which
is
fine
with
me,
because
I
don't
like
doing
front
end
stuff
but
yeah,
let's,
let's
all
of
us,
try
to
get
the
message
out
there
that
help
is
needed
across
all
of
our
projects
and
not
just
that
one
and
I'm
trying
to
do
my
best
to
make
sure
that
things
that
are
easy
low
hanging
fruit
for
brand
new
contributors
are
tagged
as
good
first
issue.
A
I'm
actually
pretty
sure
that
that's
how
a
number
of
our
new
contributors
have
found
us.
I
don't
remember
the
name
of
the
website.
Somebody
pointed
it
at
me.
A
Somebody
pointed
me
to
it
one
time
before,
but
there
is
a
website
that
aggregates
the
good
first
issues
across
like
all
of
github
and
says
you
know,
if
you're
looking
for
something
small
to
work
on
here,
you
go
so
I'm
trying
to
be
very
good
about
labeling
things
as
such,
and
in
most
cases
you
can
work
on
these
issues
without
having
any
significant
foreknowledge
of
of
brigade.
A
But
definitely
I
do
want
to
try
to
build
up
our
new
contributors
and
and
get
people
to
really
understand
brigade
so
that
they
can
help
out
with
issues
that
are
more
substantial
than
than
just
a
good
first
issue,
speaking
of
which
one
particular
area
where
we
could
use
help
is
getting
all
of
our
various
gateways
to
a
ga
state.
A
A
Episode
three
of
brigade
in
five
minutes
is,
I'm
sorry
still
not
recorded.
I
will
try
to
prioritize
that
in
the
coming
weeks.
A
We'll
talk
in
a
minute
about
why
I
didn't
get
to
that
lots
of
progress
has
been
made
on
the
hindi
translation
of
the
docs.
I
don't
know
if
I'm
saying
this
correctly.
A
trey
has
worked
quite
a
bit
on
that
and
she
is
currently
a
student
and
she
has
exams
right
now.
So
the
work,
the
getting
it
across
the
finish
line
is
going
to
be
delayed
a
little
bit,
but
she
has
put
a
substantial
amount
of
effort
into
that.
So
that's
great
and
shubham
has
been
helping
to
review
those
translations.
A
He
I'm
not
sure
what
part
of
microsoft
he
works
in,
but
he
he
is
a
softie.
We
have
the
kron
event.
Source
went
ga
since
we
last
met
so
big.
Thank
you
to
george,
who
did
most
of
the
work
on
on
that
one,
and
we
don't
have
a
blog
post
about
it
yet,
but
george
has
agreed
to
write
that,
but
there's
no
rush,
we're
gonna,
let
george
bounce
back
from
kovid
before
we
start
cracking
the
whip
on
him
right.
A
Let's
see
we
had,
as
I
mentioned,
a
big
influx
of
new
contributors.
A
lot
of
them
have
been
having
difficulty
with
git,
probably
because
a
lot
of
them
seem
to
be
students.
A
lot
of
new
contributors
seem
to
seem
to
be
early
in
career
so
to
to
give
them
the
the
help
that
they
need
getting
started.
We
put
together
a
get
basics
for
brigade
contributors,
video.
A
A
A
Some
external
pressures
have
prompted
a
little
well,
I
should
say
external
to
the
project
pressures
have
prompted
a
new
focus
on
software
supply
chain
security
for
the
project.
You
know
I
I
there's
not
much
that
I'm
at
liberty
to
say,
but
you
know,
let's
just
say
that
microsoft
is
very
concerned
about
software
supply,
chain
security
and
rightfully
so,
and
so
many
of
us
who
do
work
for
microsoft
have
recently
undergone
a
lot
of
training
and
I'm
trying
to
apply
that
to
this
project.
Ralph.
You
have.
B
A
question
so
much
a
question,
but
I
definitely
wanna
speaking
as
a
representative
of
microsoft
and
the
pm
side.
I
can
easily
sort
of
just
sketch
out
the
general.
You
know
issues
involved
really
quickly.
Yeah.
B
It's
it's
it's
pretty
straightforward,
and
that
is
that
you
know
lots
of
people
will
understand.
They
may
have
heard
about
the
executive
order
and
the
by
the
united
states,
government
and
so
forth.
That's
obviously
one
thing
that
a
big
business
like
ours
might
take
might
pay
attention
to,
but
more
systematically.
B
The
real
truth
is
that
we
all
need
to
share
our
artifacts
with
everybody
right.
Open
source
artifacts
are
driving
so
many
of
the
the
things
that
are
going
on
and
we
want
brigade
to
be
able
to
do
that.
What
will
happen
is
you
know
like
it's
really
easy
to
sign
something
and
so
forth,
but
some
of
the
supply
chain
work.
That's
coming
down
the
pipe
helps
people
really
trust
that
a
certain
entity
did
scan
and
does
vouch
for
the
code
and
that
the
code
hasn't
changed.
B
The
image
hasn't
changed
since
you,
since
you
published
it,
no
matter
where
it
resides
so,
whether
that's
on
ghcr
or
docker
hub
or
in
some
other
public
repo.
B
So
this
work
is
something
that
really
probably
everybody
will
end
up
touching
at
some
point
and
especially
in
open
source,
and
we
just
want
to
make
sure
that
we're
supporting
investigations
in
that
that
kind
of
work.
So
that's
why,
like
you
know,
kent
had
a
great
session
the
other
day
and
basically
all
the
tooling
and
so
forth.
That's
available,
is
you
know
what
these
steps
actually
represent
is?
Is
kent
sitting
there
going
hey?
B
Let's
look
at
this
see
what
we
can
do,
what
we
can
make
better,
and
so
it's
a
general
software
process.
It's
actually
not
specifically
microsoft.
Everybody
in
all
the
cloud
companies
that
I
know
of
will
be
focusing
on
this
quite
extensively.
So
it's
just
part
of
that
larger
movement.
A
A
Now
that
I
have
the
tools
we'll
see
what
we
can
do
with
them,
so
I'm
also
slowly
working
on
getting
our
google
analytics
in
order.
We
really
want
to
develop
a
clearer
picture
of
how
users
are
engaging
with
all
of
our
static
content,
how
they
move
through
the
landing
page
to
the
documentation
to
the
blog,
and
you
know
we
we
want
to
see
kind
of
what
path
they
take
when
they're
traversing
those
things
we
want
to
find,
for
instance,
where
the
dead
ends
are.
A
You
know
what
what
was
somebody
looking
at
at
the
moment
they
decided
to
give
up.
You
know,
so
what
we
want
out
of
this
is
actionable
intelligence.
That
will
tell
us
you
know
where,
where
we
need
to
focus
and
what
we
need
to
do
to
make
things
better
for
people.
A
It
looks
like
I
think
karen
must
have
added
this
item
karen.
Do
you
want
to
talk
about
that.
D
Yeah,
so
for
a
coupon
in
cloudnativecon.
First
me,
sorry
to
put
the
year
yeah.
I
just
wanted
to
update
you
and
say
that
we
have,
for
we
have
one
virtual
office
hour
session,
so
I
tried
to
get
one
that
someone
in
the
us
could
do
given
it's
an
eu
time
zone.
So
it's
going
to
be
from
3
30
to
4
15
central
european
time,
which
is
9
30
eastern
time,
so
that
is
on
the
table.
D
Let
me
know
if
you
need
me
to
make
adjustments,
but
basically
we're
trying
to
work
with
eu
time
zones.
So
it's
a
little
bit
tricky
and
that
will
be
held
on
bevy,
which
is
like
the
community
platform
that
cncf
uses.
That's
basically,
google
meet
under
the
covers
and
yeah,
so
that
will
be
happening
in
may.
So
that's
that's
that
topic.
Any
questions.
D
Yep
and
then
the
next
one
was
also
me
as
well.
I
was
talking
to
david
justice
earlier
this
morning
and
we
were
trying
to
figure
out
if
we
have
a
good
understanding
of,
like
top
use
cases
for
brigade
b2
and
whether
or
not
it's
worth
kind
of
doing,
like
a
survey
to
kind
of
just
get
a
sense
of
what
people
are
doing
with
brigade.
I
don't
know
if
we
have
ever
captured
that
data.
That's
there.
A
Okay,
yeah
yeah.
I
think
that
would
be
great.
My
my
guess
is
at
probably
at
this
point
we're
not
going
to
get
a
lot
of
responses.
Yeah.
D
A
But
yeah,
I
see
no
reason
that
we
that
we
shouldn't
get
more
clarity
on
how
it
is
used
among
those
who
are
yeah
yeah.
D
Because
I
think
it
would
still
be
helpful
to
see
like
of
the
people
who
do
respond.
What
they're,
like
what
ways
they're
using
it
and
like
breath,
might
be
useful
as
well.
If
we
can't
necessarily
get
death
yeah.
A
And,
and
also
interesting
thing
today
is
the
first
time
that
I've
seen
somebody
pop
into
the
the
slack
channel
and
say
hey,
I'm
using
brigade1,
and
I
know
that's
reaching
the
end
of
its
life
soon,
so
I'm
starting
my
transition
over
to
brigade2.
A
So
I
think
that
as
the
eol
for
brigade,
one
approaches
we're
going
to
have
more
people
who
who
make
the
jump.
So
that's
that's
a
good
thing.
A
Also,
okay,
so
that
brings
us
to
the
end
of
the
agenda
that
we
have
written
down.
So
if
anybody
else
has
anything
that
they
want
to
discuss,
the
the
floor
is
open.
Now.
E
They
kent,
hey
george
yeah
great,
to
be
back.
I
think
someone
in
brazil,
I
think
is
lucas-
is
going
to
record
some
like
git
instructions
as
well
in
portuguese,
I'm
going
to
give
your
your
video
for
him
to
try
to
do
something
similar.
E
Then
yeah
he
was
working
on
that
already
and
then
that's
nice
that
you
have
done
something
keep
in
mind
that
there's
a
few
people
coming
from
the
infrasight.
They
are
not
developers.
Lucas
is
a
developer,
but
there's
more
like
frontiers
and
yes,
sometimes
they
want
to
help,
but
they
it's
not
that
they
don't
know.
Git
is
more,
they
flow,
they
understand.
You
know
how
to
get
started.
A
Yeah
and
and
and
I
notice
yeah-
that's
that's
an
interesting
point-
it's
not
so
much
that
people
don't
know
get,
but
but
sometimes
we,
you
know
I'll,
take
the
the
cryptographic
signatures
as
an
example.
A
lot
of
people
don't
know
how
to
set
that
up,
and
we
require
that
thanks
to
ralph,
because
I
mean
the
history
behind
that
is.
It
was
probably
six
months
ago
or
more
that
that
you
know
we
started.
A
You
know
really
talking
about
software
supply
chain,
security
and
ralph,
and
I
agreed
that
it
was
a
good
first
step
to
require
signed
commits
because
it
is
a
step
towards
being
more
certain
of
the
progeny
of
of
every
commit.
It's
it's
not.
You
know
it's
not
a
slam
dunk,
but
it's
it's.
It
was
a
good
first
step
and
I
agreed
to
be
the
guinea
pig
on
that
and
it's
been
interesting
because
I
think
a
lot
of
people
don't
don't
actually
know
how
to
set
that
up.
A
If
you
make
a
commit
through
the
github
web
interface
automatically,
it's
just
taken
care
of
for
you,
but
if
you're
making
any
sizeable
contributions
to
a
project
and
you're
using
the
you
know
the
cli
in
order
to
make
your
commits
and
and
push
them,
you
know
that
requires
some
extra
setup
and
it
it
does
seem
to
be
a
stumbling
block
for
people.
So
that
was
part
of
the
reason
for
for
that
video.
A
So,
if
whatever
lucas
is
doing,
can
you
know
be
sure
to
touch
on
on
setting
up
the
the
cryptographic
signatures?
That's
very
important.
A
George,
do
you
happen
to
know
anything
about
how
or
if
the
portuguese
translation
of
the
docs
is
progressing.
E
To
be
honest,
not
philip,
you
know
anything
about
the
translation
by
the
way,
congratulations,
philippe
for
your
first
request
that
was
matched
a
few
days
ago.
Yes,.
C
E
E
E
I
saw
that
you
create
like
a
repo
for
the
translations
like
a
new
repo
yep
and,
to
be
honest,
I
was
completely
offline
last
nine
days
or
ten
days
and
that's
all
right.
You
gotta
prioritize
your
health
man.
That's
my
first
meeting
back.
A
Yeah
and-
and
I
mean
there's-
there's
no
rush.
I
was
just
curious
because
you
know
I've
seen
the
the
progress
on
the
hindi
translation
and
you
know
if
you,
if
you
do
talk
to
anybody
who
is
working
on
the
the
translation,
remind
them
that
that
we're
prioritizing
the
all
of
the
docs
in
the
intro
section,
first
they're
kind
of
the
most
valuable
ones.
A
E
A
A
All
right
well,
thank
you,
everybody
and
just
a
reminder.
The
next
occurrence
of
this
is
one
of
the
earlier
occurrences
that
is
meant
for
us
time
zone.
Folks,
all
right.