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From YouTube: Ceph Docubetter Meeting 2021-04-14
Description
A
The
upstream
documentation
news
is
the
sep
idiom
rewrite
project,
which
is
the
project
whereby
I
rewrite
every
string
in
the
sep
adm
guide,
which
is
19
sections
and
much
much
longer
than
I
initially
thought
it
was
it's
behind
schedule,
but
it's
continuing
and
it's
going
well
good.
The
next
thing
go
ahead.
B
No,
I
was
just
saying
good
glad
to
hear
you
making
progress
go
on.
A
Yeah,
it's
it's
tedious,
because
sebastian
has
just
moved
from
suicide
red
hat
though
there
was
a
it
put
me
two
weeks
behind,
but
it's
it's
continuing
a
pace.
The
next
thing-
and
this
has
been
the
main
avocation
for
the
last
month
and
a
half-
is
the
google
season
of
docs.
A
A
Let
us
know
whether
our
proposal
for
a
season
of
docs
project
is
accepted
and
in
case
somebody's
watching
this
and
is
wondering
like
if
they're
joining
us
for
the
first
time
our
google
season
of
docs
a
project
proposal
is
a
comprehensive
user
contribution
guide,
so
something
that
explains
how
to
use
get
the
way
that
this
project
uses
get
and
then
what
to
do.
A
When
you
see
various
errors
or
error
messages,
so
we
have
six
applicants,
and
the
last
thing
that
I
have
on
the
agenda
is
that
last
week
I
think
yeah.
It
was
last
week
neha
sent
through
m
clock.
Documentation,
which
was
another
developer,
written
or
developer,
originated
chunk
of
text,
which
I
then
reworked
so
that
it
so
that
the
syntax
was
better
so
that
everything
went
where
it
was
supposed
to,
in
words,
were
doing
the
jobs
that
they
were
intended
to
do
and
that
works
really
well.
A
This
is
proof
yet
again.
I
think
the
third
project
of
this
kind
that
we've
done
in
january
neha
and
I
had
discussed
trying
to.
A
A
Not
go
back
and
forth
with
the
developer
on
questions
of
english
usage
that
they're
not
qualified
to
answer
and
that
are
just
a
source
of
terrible
stress
for
them,
and
this
is
the
third
time
that
we've
done
it
this
way.
I
think
it
works
really.
Well,
I
think
it's
great
it's
a
model
of
how
this
sort
of
thing
should
be
done.
A
So
m
clock
is
the
is
this
project,
and
that
is
that's
it.
For
me,
like
the
google
season
of
docs
is
the
main
thing
on
the
17th.
We
will
know
whether
we
are
accepted
or
not,
and
the
next
meeting
that
we
have
the
google
season
of
docs
will
probably
be
the
predominant
thing
in
that
meeting
and
that's
it.
It's
I'll
go
ahead.
Go
ahead!
Karen.
A
Oh,
it's
just
I'm
surprised
that
I
got
all
that
done
in
four
minutes.
It
usually
feels
like,
like
only
a
few
minutes
and
I've
spoken
for
20
minutes,
but
here
it's
only
four.
So
do
you
have
anything.
B
I'll
try
to
keep
it
to
just
four
minutes,
but
sorry
that
I
haven't
really
been
participating
very
much,
but
I've
had
my
head
down
in
the
downstream
stuff.
I
am
you
know,
supporting
three
releases
at
once,
and
all
of
them
are
a
number
one
priority.
So
I've
been
doing
a
lot
of
whack-a-mole
lately,
but
I
thought
I
would
let
you
know
that
I'm
attending
a
right-to-dock
session
for
the
first
time
at
the
end
of
the
month
and
that
might
be
another
place
to
find
volunteer
help
among
the
doc
professionals.
B
A
B
I'll
get
all
the
information
about
that
and
bring
it
back.
Oh
sorry,
are
you
physically.
B
Well,
it's
a
virtual
thing.
So
that's
a
yes
and
no
answer.
A
A
B
B
This
one,
the
other
thing
is
that
someday,
I
might
actually
have
enough
breathing
space
to
help
you
with
editorial
stuff.
So
please
keep
me
on
your
hot
list.
I
only
know
when
you're
having
meetings
when
ken
hartso
forwards
it
from
the
the
program
meeting.
So
that's
that's.
Why
I'm
here
today,
just
because
I
just
found
out
you
were
meaning.
A
So
I
I
guess
that
that
might
be
a
useful
thing.
I
send
the
notice
of
the
meeting,
usually
within
24
hours,
of
the
time
of
the
meeting
to
the
ceph
users
list,
which
is
seth
hyphen
users
at
ceph.io.
A
B
Well,
yeah
our
doc
program,
content
strategist.
He
attends
the
program
meetings
on
the
red
hat
side
and
also
the
when
he
doesn't
have
a
conflict.
He
attends
the
orchestration
team
meetings
as
well.
A
I
see
I
sometimes
I
go
to
the
orchestration
team
meetings.
I
always
go
to
the
leadership
team
meeting,
which
is
an
hour
before
this,
and
I
I
would
say
I
probably
attend-
maybe
60
percent
of
the
orchestrator
meetings,
but
there's
almost
never
anything
for
me
to
do
so.
I
just
sit
there
quietly
and
do
a
bug
or
something
during
it,
but
it's
good
to
know
that
he's
there.
So
that's
like
that
that
helps
me
understand.
B
A
Oh
it
is,
you
will
have
to
create
a
filter
for
it.
I
I
tried
in
the
first
four
or
five
months
that
I
was
the
upstream
docs
guy
to
read
all
of
the
all
the
mail
and
it
was
it
just
it.
A
A
Generally
speaking
it
if
I
engage
with
the
mailing
list
very
much
like
if
I
try
to
how
do
I
say
this-
my
job
is
to
get
to
the
bottom
of
things
and
to
write
them
as
clearly
and
concisely
as
possible.
The
mailing
list
is
very
good
for
staying
on
top
of
things,
which
is
the
opposite
of
the
thing
that
I
want
to
do
so
it's
like
I.
I
was
trying
to
do
both
for
the
first
half
a
year
that
I
worked
on
seth
and
it
was
killing
me.
B
A
A
A
Yeah,
I
would
figure,
so
that's
all
right
anything
else.
B
No,
that's
really
about
it.
I
was
just
glad
to
join
you
and
hear
things
you're
going
on
when.
B
For
you
I'll
share
it,
but
I
will.
A
A
I
I
want
to
have
personally
read
with
my
own
brain,
every
upstream
sentence
that
has
been
written
on
docs.com
and,
if
necessary,
rewrite
it.
Of
course,
I'm
not
going
to
rewrite
things
that
don't
need
to
be
rewritten,
but
sometimes
there
are
syntactic
problems.
A
A
A
So
I
don't
yet
know
if
this
is
absolutely
if
this
is
possible,
but
I
want
to
write
I
I
want
to
write
an
overview
document
that
is
similar
to
the
first
chapter
that
you
would
get
in
a
commodore,
64
or
apple
2e
manual,
which
I
know
is
not
the
ecosystem
that
we
live
in
40
years
later.
A
B
No,
but
that's
a
that's
a
brilliant
goal
and
I
have
to
applaud
it.
A
year
ago
I
would
have
paid
big
bucks
for
it.
A
A
And
and
then
the
the
google
season
of
docs
thing
I
have,
I
have
a
big
stack
of
of
ideas
or
they're,
not
just
ideas.
They're
they're,
practically
ready
to
be
made
into
pull
requests
for
beefing
up
the
the
developer's
guide
is
what
it
is
right
now,
but
it's
going
to
be
the
contributor's
guide,
just
anybody
who
wants
to
contribute,
but
I
have
had
to
hold
off
making
any
of
those
pull
requests,
because
I
want
to
save
them
for
our
intern,
whoever
it
is
and
yeah
that's
it.
A
That
sounds
good
to
me.
I
was
I
was
napping
on
the
couch
and
now
I'm
up
and
now
I'm
gonna
send
two
more
emails
and
then
check
on
one
pull
request
and
then
I'm
going
to
bed
by
three.
A
Well,
I
I
don't
have
kids,
so
I
can
I
and
I've
done
this
like
throughout
my
30s.
This
was
the
schedule
that
I
was
on.
B
B
Well,
I
don't
actually
mind
staying
up
really
late
either.
Oh,
you
know
anything.
B
Anything
late
on
my
time
is
important
enough
that
you
need
my
attendance,
I'm
a
night
owl
and
I
have
enough
trouble
getting
up
early
in
my
own
morning,
but
oh
I'll
I'll,
make
myself
available
for
when
you
set
up
a
meeting.
A
All
right:
well,
if
I
mean
I
I
don't,
I
don't
want
you
to
I.
I
will
never
ask
you
to
be
an
australian
time.
It's
absurd.
A
B
A
Well,
let's
see
my
my
actual
day
like
if
I
today
I
did
some,
I
did
some
writing
and
yesterday
I
did
some
writing,
but
I
was
doing
this
google
admin
stuff
earlier
in
the
week,
but
on
an
average
day
for
me,
if
I'm
gonna
do
writing
I'll
wake
up
sometime
between
nine
and
noon,
and
I
will
read
material
that
I
will
then
be
rewriting
later
in
the
day
and
usually
while
the
sun
is
up
I'll,
be
I'll
just
be
loading,
my
brain
with
stuff
and
then
I'll
go
grocery
shopping
in
the
afternoon
or
the
other
day.
A
I
mowed
the
lawn
and
it's
important
that
I
do
the
reading
earlier
in
the
day,
because
when
I'm
doing
this
other
stuff,
I'm
thinking
about
the
stuff
that
I've
read-
and
I
found
over
time
that
this
wasn't
the
case
when
I
started
in
in
this
profession,
but
now
more
often
than
not.
If
I
just
give
it
one
more
day
of
thought
inside
my
brain
one
more
day
to
stew,
I
don't
have
to
ask
the
developer
what
they
meant
by
something
I
can
get
it
right,
and
that
saves
everybody
a
lot
of
effort.
A
So
so
it's
important
that
I
do
the
reading
early
and
then
I
I
analyze
it
all
day
in
the
back
of
my
head,
like
working
on
a
math
problem
and
then
usually
between
six
and
eight
at
night,
I'll,
sit
down
and
start
writing
and
the
writing
usually
goes
pretty
quickly.
A
A
Yeah,
it's
and-
and
I
don't
think
I
don't
think
working
at
least
for
me-
I
don't
think
working
like
at
a
desk
like
a
at
a
nine
to
five
type
situation
it.
I
don't
think
that
it
would
work
as
well
as
this,
because
I
have
the
ability
to
continually
make
notes
on
on
things
or
just
to
continually
think
about
it,
whereas
if
I
were
starting
at
a
particular
time
of
the
day
and
then
stopping
at
a
particular
time,
it
wouldn't
give
me
the
freedom
to
think
about
it
all
the
time
now.
B
I
get
it
it's
it's
a
continual
process.
I
get
my
best
ideas
in
the
shower,
while
I'm
driving.
A
Yeah
yeah
driving
is
that's
where
polymerase
chain
reaction
was
thought
of
by
what's
his
name
carrie
mullis,
who
invented
pcr
in
in
the
early
80s.
He
was
driving
back
from
a
cabin
or
surfing.
He
there's
two
different
stories
and
it
just
occurred
to
him
that
he
could
initiate
polymory's
chain
reaction
and
it
could
be
used
to
speed
up
cultures.
B
Oh
hey,
I
love
trivia,
especially
science,
trivia,
but
you
know
this
is
fun
but
go
to
bed.