►
From YouTube: CHAOSS Augur Meeting October 28, 2022
Description
Links to minutes from this meeting are on https://chaoss.community/participate.
A
A
A
A
A
So
this
is
the
this
is
one
design
for
auger.
That
was
fairly
well
thought
out
in
terms
of
what
people
want
to
see
at
one
stage
and
what
you
see
is.
First,
you
have
currently
stored
repo
groups,
so
this
is
for
the
United
States.
A
Right
so
an
org
is
like
just
a
grouping
like
this.
These
happen
to
all
be
GitHub
organizations.
This
is
for
the
medicated
Medicare
organizations
in
the
US
government
and
when
you
click
on
a
group,
you
see
all
of
the
different
repositories
their
commit
counts.
Their
issue
accounts
the
group
that
they're
in
and
if
I
were
to
click.
One
like
this
looks
like
it
might
be.
A
good
one.
A
I'm
gonna
see
license
coverage,
which
is
often
very
small,
the
lines
of
Code
by
the
top
10
authors,
which
I
need
to
make
these
GitHub
user
IDs
instead
of
emails.
A
So
that's
like
a
known
thing
that
needs
to
be
fixed,
and
so
you
can
see
who
the
top
10
contributors
are.
You
can
see
the
lines
of
code
added
by
them
in
each
year
and
if
you
click
a
year,
you
see
by
month
what
they
did
if
organizational
affiliations
are
entered
in
the
database,
which
they
are
not
for
this
one.
You
would
see
those
broken
out
and
if
you
scroll
down,
you
see
the
pull
requests
by
week.
How
many
are
open?
A
How
many
pull
requests
are
accepted
per
week?
The
pull
requests
declined
per
week,
then
some
issue
data
and
some
code
changes
commits
by
week
as
well
as
lines
of
code
added
by
week.
That's
the
primary
screen
that
one
sees
when
they
opened
this
interface.
A
A
A
A
And
in
fact
that
does
work,
perhaps
there's
an
issue
in
the
video
when
I
type
that
it
doesn't.
A
A
So
here,
you'll
see
a
slightly
different
view
where
you
say
the
see
the
code
Lane
changes
lines
for
commit
for
each
of
the
ones
that
I,
selected
and
ones
with
very
little
activity
barely
show
up
if
they
show
up
at
all
this
red
one,
which
is
the
10x
Falls
email
code,
changes
this
one
doesn't
begin
until
May
2020.
A
Here
you
have
the
Culper
project,
a
pretty
heavy
Spike
open
issues
per
week.
Here
you
have
mlas,
so
this
could
stand
to
be
improved,
so
perhaps
a
z-score
or
a
a
graph
that
doesn't
use
absolute
values
in
some
way,
so
that
you
can
see
everything,
and
so
you
can
compare
projects
in
this
way
as
well.
A
So
this
is
one
part
that
exists
today
and
then
there's
also
what
are
called
risk
metrics,
which
show
you,
which
licenses
are
declared
some
licenses
pose
risks
the
forks,
the
license
coverage
and
whether
or
not
the
licenses
are
approved
by
OSI.
We
have
one
approved,
license
and
two
not
approved,
license
C's
and
then
I
think
there's
a
separate
process
that
I
haven't
run
yet
that
gives
them
a
nspdx
download
like
a
basically
a
software
bill
of
materials.
A
A
Where,
okay,
here
you
see
some
some
things
are
that
are
very
similar,
commits
and
stuff.
This
might
not
be
entirely
counted,
but
if,
from
this
straight
up
beginning
screen,
we
select
auger,
you
get
a
series
of
graphs,
the
graphs
that
focus
on
contributor
reports,
so
these
contributor
reports
show
you,
for
example,
all
the
first
time
contributors
repeat:
contributors
drive
by
contributors,
second
time
Etc
and
each
graph
here
shows
a
variation
of
these
things.
This
one
is
the
same
as
the
first
one
that
I
showed,
but
it
identifies
the
kind
of
contribution.
A
Notably
auger
includes
issue
comments
in
the
opening
and
closing
of
issues.
His
contributions
commits
pull,
request,
comments
and
opening
of
pull
requests,
and
this
then,
basically
the
colors
show
you
how
much
of
each
type
of
activity
repeat
contributors.
Second
time,
contributors
Etc
show
you
any
any
questions
so
far.
B
C
B
A
B
A
B
A
B
A
And
then
so,
I
fill
in
some
information
and
I'm
able
to
create
a
create,
an
account
and
I'll.
Add
it
to
my
password
manager.
Now,
when
I
create
an
account
now,
I
don't
see
any
of
the
default
repositories
so
or
I
should
say
any
of
the
repositories
that
we've
already
gathered
data
on
what
this
allows
a
person
to
do,
though,
and
and
could
allow
will
will
we
intend,
from
a
design
perspective,
for
people
to
create
their
own
groups
of
repositories
or
repository,
could
even
be
in
more
than
one
group
and
the
way
it
works
technically.
A
Is
you
go
to
a
profile
page
where,
of
course
you
can
change
your
password,
but
here's
where
you
would
add
repos.
So
in
this
case
let
me
just
add
chaos,
because
it's
obviously
a
good
one
to
add
and
when
I
add
chaos,
now
we're
going
to
put
like
a
waiting
bar
here
because
there's
actually,
if
you
look
at
this
x
up
here,
it's
actually
going
and
adding
all
of
those
repos
to
a
user
repo
cable
so
that
they
show
up
as
the
list
of
user
repos
and
we'll
enrich
this
with
the
names.
I.
B
B
A
Yet
but
we'd
have
the
ability,
we'd
show
the
actual
names
of
the
repositories
and
we'd
have
a
sort
of
a
profile
screen
where
users
could
put
ideally
through,
like
a
drag
and
drop,
but
that's
open
to
the
designers,
the
repositories
into
the
groups
that
the
users
want
to
see
them
in.
So
if
I
want
to
see
two
five,
six,
four
one
whatever
that
is
in
in
a
group
with
five
other
repositories,
but
I
also
want
to
see
it
in
another
group
with
11
other
repositories.
A
Yes,
so
any
repo
that
you
poke
I,
think
you're,
asking
any
repo
that
you
pose
to
put
in
would
be
add.
You
could
add
it
is
that
what
you're
asking.
B
No
you're
saying
that
this
repos
can
be
grouped
yes,
yes,
okay,
so
I'm,
asking
particular
categories
this
group
should
follow
now
or
because
they
use
that
I
can
just
create
as
much
as
I
want
as.
A
B
A
And
I'm
trying
to
think
of
a
GitHub
I'm
trying
to
leave
a
GitHub
organization.
I
have
not
added
here
yet
I,
don't
think
I've
added
VMware,
so
I'll
add
VMware,
so
the
auger
repos
are
I'm.
Sorry,
the
chaos
repos
already
exist
in
the
database.
The
VMware
repos
do
not.
We
need
some
kind
of
again
spinner
here
to
show
you
that
this
little
X
is
still
executing.
A
Essentially,
the
API
is
going
out
to
GitHub
and
Gathering
a
list
of
all
of
those
repositories
and
we're
just
letting
that
that
just
takes
takes
a
minute
because
there's
like
I,
think
about
200
repositories
in
the
VMware
organization,
and
so
it's
adding
them
into
the
data.
Well,
there
you
go
bad
gateway.
A
There
is
an
API
call,
so
when
I
put
in
a
GitHub
organization,
the
intention
of
the
API
call
is
that
it
will
go
out
and
get
all
of
the
repos
that
are
in
that
GitHub
organization.
B
A
So
now
one
of
the
one
of
the
defects
we
see,
you
know
that
we
haven't
finished
yet
is
until
we
actually
run
collection.
The
name
of
the
repo
isn't
all
I
think
that
we
can
fix
that
using
a
substring
of
the
get
URL
like
we
do
in
the
other
interface.
A
So
like
here,
you
can
see
instead
of
a
repo
name.
We
just
provide
the
full
repo
URL
and
then,
if
we
did
that
over
here,
you
would
at
least
see
the
names
of
the
repos
that
are
already
in
your
in
your
list
and
before
we
enable
before
we
finish
the
creation
of
One's
Own
groups.
A
Everything
goes
into
this
default
repo
Group,
which
again
that
would
be
fixed
in
the
long
run,
and
so
then
that's
that's
an
important
new
feature
in
this
particular
auger
interface
does.
Does
that
make
sense.
A
Yeah
once
again,
don't
look
at
these
interfaces
as
design
constraints
more
as
these
are
the
pieces
of
information
and
flows
that
we
have
learned
are
useful
over
time,
but
you
can
see
already.
There
are
two
different
interfaces
that
prevent
present.
Two
different
sets
of
information
and
putting
them
together
in
a
single
user
interface
would
be,
of
course,
more
optimal
and
there's
one
final
interface.
That's
actually
a
separate
project
called
San,
Diego,
Dash
RH,
and
that
project
are
you
still.
There
I
saw
you
flash
to
different
machines.
A
So
this
is
a
project
that
red
hat
and
others
are
putting
together.
Obviously,
this
is
a
not
that
it
matters
from
a
design
perspective.
This
is
a
dash
plotly
framework,
but
it
does
have
both
that
all
the
interfaces
have
the
ability
to
use
HTML
and
stuff
in
terms
of
set
aside
the
technology
for
the
design,
work,
I.
Think
what's
important.
Is
the
design
work
right
now?
A
A
I
can
widen
the
window
to
look
at
longer
time
frames
and
that
that
characteristic
exists
and
these
two
as
these
two
here,
because
the
data
is
so
dense
that
it's
it's
necessary
here
for
contributor
growth
by
engagement.
So
how
active
are
they?
Are
they
drifting
away
or
are
they
away?
This
is
essentially
looking
at
a
cumulative
contributor
community
over
time
and
giving
you
a
sense
of
the
number
of
whom
are
active
compared
to
the
number
who
are
getting
less
active
and
the
number
who
have
simply
faded
away.
A
I
guess
120:
okay,
120
is
the
max
that
this
puts
into
place
and
so
I
can
I
can
do
some
changing
so
that
things
aren't
stale
for
60
days
and
or
they're,
not
stealing,
which
is
red
for
60
days
and
not
stale
for
120
days,
and
you
can
just
see
a
number
of
issues
same
same
feature
for
the
number
of
pull
requests
exists
here.
A
I
think
I
think
these
kinds
of
graphs
are
better
how
they're
presented.
Obviously
there
is
no
design
to
speak
of
here
right
now.
I,
certainly
like
these
graphs
better
than
the
graphs
on
the
other
two
auger
interfaces,
because
they
are
manipulable,
they're
they're,
active
they're
live.
Does
that
make
sense.
B
A
That's
that's
it
in
terms
of
what
it
what
exists
today,
I
think
I
think
what
we're
looking
for
or
from
a
design
perspective
is
how,
to
you
know,
one
of
the
limitations
here
is
that
there
are.
There
are
11
000
repositories
in
this
particular,
so
I
can
start
typing.
A
Operate
first
and
I
can
do
the
operate
first
organization
and
do
a
search.
This
is
sub-optimal
in
my
opinion,
way
of
indicating
that
they
are
loading
data,
so
the
graphs
will
eventually
show
up.
However,
you
get
those
those
are
just
really
weird
graphs
for
showing
data
in
my
opinion,
but
for
now
essentially
you're
seeing
the
same
data,
but
for
a
completely
different
and
much
younger
project.
A
So
obviously
the
scaling
of
the
bars
is
is
different
here
and
if
I
go
up
to
overview,
I
see
the
same
kind
of
bizarre
and
confusing
loading
functions
which
again
these
are.
These
are
pretty
new.
A
Yeah
it
should
work.
I
can
send
you
yeah
I'll,
send
them
to
you
in
slack,
though,
so
that.
A
My
experience
is
I'm
sure
your
experience
is
that
if
I,
if
you
share
a
link
in
a
zoom
call,
it
isn't
forever
and
it
gets
harder
to
find.
A
And
so
here
are
here
are
the
three
interfaces
that
I
showed
you
I
just
share
them
with
you,
I
guess,
I
guess
in
our
in
the
auger
Labs
Channel
instead
of
the
chaos
Channel
somewhat
by
accident.
So
that's
that's
kind
of
that's!
That's
what
we
have
and-
and
you
can.
A
Slack
so
you
don't
have
to
go
to
like
11
places
like
I.
Do
I
just
have
to
have
been
in
the
auger
slap
slack,
and
you
happen
to
exist
there
now
I'm
sharing
them
in
the
chaos
Slack
as
well,
so
that
you
don't
need
to.
B
A
Go
forth
and
no
do
those
things.
A
No,
but
anybody
can
show
to
anybody,
can
use
these
sites
that
I
shared
with
you
is
that
your
question.
A
So
you
can
share
the
links
with
anyone.
Anyone
can
go
look
at
them.
They
can
create
an
account
on
the
one
where
you
can
create
an
account.
Okay
and
I.
Don't
know
what
would
what
I
mean
would
would
when
it
comes
to
talking
with
designers.
What
would
be
the
in
terms
of
the
way
the
designers
that
you're
working
with
work?
Obviously
these
examples
have
have
some
utility,
but
what
what
are
the
best
ways
to,
or
is
there
a
process
that
they've
employed
so
far
or
are
they
just
sort
of
ironing
that
out.
B
I
haven't
actually
worked
with
them.
I
think
Google
is
going
to
be
the
first
time
workout
without
together,
so
I'm,
not
sure
of
the
process
they're
eating
they
could
ask,
but
they
mostly
just
want
to
understand
what
over
does
and
like
how
the
software
up
so
then
should
be
able
to
come
up
with
potential
designs
and
disabilities
to
help
out
with
a
good
design.
A
If
they
want
to
know
that
so
auger
produces
a
lot
of
other
data
and
I
don't
have
a
Goods
I,
don't
have
a
good
single
place
where
a
summary
of
that
data
is
provided.
Probably
the
best
place
to
maybe
look
and
get
a
sense
of
all
of
the
data.
That's
available
is
the
auger
documentation.
A
You
can
see
a
list
of
the
regularly
used
tables
in
awkward.
This
is
probably
the
place
to
start
where
I
I
simply
list
things
like
commits,
contributor,
affiliations,
contributor,
repos,
contributor,
aliases,
discourse,
insights
is
a
machine
learning
worker
and
I.
A
That's
a
that's
a
case
where
I
think
I'd
have
to
sketch
out
or
explain
to
them
how
a
visualization
for
that
would
work
same
with
labels,
there's
also
a
machine
learning
worker
that
looks
at
messages,
one
that
does
clustering
of
repos
in
a
repository
there's,
obviously
a
series
of
analyzes
of
pull
requests,
so
all
of
that
we
could
maybe
do
some
collaborative
sketching
around
and
I
could
produce
if
it's
helpful
sample
data
sets
if
they
want
to
play
with
actual
tooling
of
some
kind,
that's
that
would
be
kind
of
up
to
their
process.
A
So
I've
shown
you
what's
visible
in
the
auger
front
end.
Today,
it
is
probably
about
10
of
what's
available
from
the
auger
back
end.
C
B
So
is
this
something
that
you
need
to
design
and
social
work
on
like?
Is
this
something
you
think
they
can
contribute
to
somehow
make
it
better.
C
C
A
For
the
things
that
we've
already
visualized
and
those
three
different
front
ends,
I
think
they
they
could
contribute
and
design
that
you
know
addresses
those
things
for
the
other.
A
Ninety
percent
of
data
I
think
the
process
would
probably
look
different
where
I
would
need
to
put
together,
for
example,
looking
at
this
discourse,
insights
and
the
messages
analysis
or
the
clustering
analysis,
I
would
need
to
give
them
ideas
of
what
can
be
visualized
and
perhaps
its
utility
and
where
it
might
go,
or
they
could
say
where
it
might
go,
but
I
I
could
sketch
out
a
series
of
additional
visualizations.
A
So
there
could
be
significantly
more
like
that.
90
could
also
be
displayed,
perhaps
on
a
page
like
this,
where
by
category
you
know
and
again,
I'm
not
they
can
design.
However,
they
want
I,
think
you
know
yeah
they
could
design.
However,
however,
they
want
to.
B
B
So
I
think
what
we'll
do
is
I'll
go
invite
to
remove
some
Kinsley
and
I
think
on
Monday
yeah
and
then
I'll.
Let
you
know
what
you
come
up
with:
I
need
you
yeah
I,
think
you
should
be
happy
even
like
or
I
would
definitely
brief
you
on
what
happens
on
Monday.
Then
you
let
us
leave
you
something
bad.
Let's
just
continue
me.
So,
if
you
have
to
make
then
you
definitely
you
know
is
that
okay.
A
Yeah,
that
sounds
odd.
That
sounds
awesome
I'm,
just
looking
at
when
you're
just
do
you
would
it
be
helpful
if
I
showed
up
at
this
I
don't
see
the
design
meeting
on
my
calendar?
Is
it
on
the
chaos
calendar.
A
I
think
you
should
you
should
be
able
to
just
click
on
it:
okay,
yeah,
there's,
there's
some
issues
all
right
with
that.
So
it
looks
like
you
need
to
start
from
gov
dot
chaos
TV,
it's
not
it's
not
extending
the
URL
links
that
are
shared
I
have
to
figure
out
on
this
particular
server.
What
I
don't
have
configured.
A
So
if
you,
if
you
wanted
to
see
what
I
showed
you
you
would
have
to,
let
me
share
again.
A
You
would
click
through
and
then
you
know
select
some
kind.
You
know
select
a
repo
to
see
that
that
page
and
again,
I
I,
don't
know
why
my
links
are
not
flowing
through
right.
C
A
C
A
B
A
It's
inside
my
home
network,
so
sometimes
I
don't
get
all
of
the
help.
Some
sometimes
it
looks
different
in
my
house
than
it
does
in
the
world,
which
is
a
byproduct
of
how
I'm
quote
unquote
hosting
it
all
right
now,
I
do
have
gigabit
fiber
and
a
series
of
backups.
You
know
power
backups
in
place,
so
it
it's
not
as
though
any
of
it
is
going
away.
B
A
Yeah
and
I
I
think
you
know
anything
that
they
are
able
to
do
to
make
it
more
beautiful,
to
recommend
information
architecture
to
recommend
maybe
what
the
left
nabs
are.
As
we
get
into
conversation,
you
know
how
any
contribution
you
can
see
that
none
of
these
designs
are
anything
that's
going
to
blow
you
away.
You
know
you're
not
going
to
look
at
any
of
these
pages
and
think
wow.
This
is
awesome.
A
A
And
and
if
you
want
me
to
participate
in
a
design
meeting
when
you
share
this
or
if
you
want
to
share
this
video
once
it's
posted,
you
know
just
feel
free
to
invite
me
meeting.
If
you
put
it
if
it
goes
on
the
chaos
calendar
I'll
see
it
if
it
goes
somewhere
else,
then
maybe
just
message
me.
B
B
A
I
I'm
in
Missouri,
the
current
temperature
is
42
degrees,
Fahrenheit,
which
is
probably
like
15
degrees
Celsius.
So
it's
a
little
yeah,
it's
a
little
chilly.
A
B
A
He
and
I
look
forward
to
talking
with
you
soon.