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From YouTube: CHAOSS Weekly Community Call 2-23-21
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B
Hello,
everybody
welcome
to
the
february
23rd.
I
always
have
to
look
at
my
computer.
What
day
it
is
23rd
edition
of
the
community
call
for
chaos,
we're
so
happy
to
see
everyone
look
at
all
these
people
here.
It's
amazing!
I
love
it.
Thank
you
for
joining
us.
B
We
have
a
few
things
to
talk
about.
I
think
matt
put
the
minutes
in
the
chat,
but
I
can
do
it
one
more
time,
just
in
case
there
we
go
and
like
matt
said,
if
you
want
to
add
your
name,
feel
free.
If
you
don't
that's
cool
too
we're
pretty
easygoing
here,
so,
let's
jump
into
it.
The
first
thing
on
the
agenda
is
to
mention
that
it
is
the
last
week
for
the
community
review
so
on
our
metrics
that
are
going
to
be
released
officially
in
march.
B
So
if
you
have
a
chance
to
go
through
and
look
at
some
of
those
that
would
be
amazing
and
give
your
feedback,
so
we
can
make
sure
that
what
we're
releasing
is
is
the
best
that
it
can
be
huge
shout
out
to
ray
since
he's
here
this
week
for
for
doing
such
a
great
job
and
all
of
the
metrics
and
offering
his
feedback.
We
really
appreciate
you
ray.
Thank
you
so
much
so.
C
D
C
E
E
I
think
we
can
clarify
it.
We
certainly
had
a
lot
of
discussion
and
it
was
hard
to
figure
out
exactly
which
words
to
use
and
how
to
describe
it.
So
I'll
take
a
look
at
the
comments
and.
B
There
is
also
a
link
in
the
minutes
to
the
metrics
page.
So
if
you
want
to
take
a
look
at
all
the
ones
that
are
under
review,
we'll
have
a
nice
little
red
tag
on
them
that
says
under
review.
So
if
you
see
anything
that
sparks
your
interest,
do
you
want
to
take
a
quick
read
at
it?
That
would
be
great.
B
Questions:
nope,
okay,
we
will
move
along,
so
the
next
one
is
I'm
gonna.
Let
sean
talk
about
this.
We're
we've
been
talking
about
how
we
engage
the
the
software
community
around
the
chaos
software
project,
specifically
so
sean
I'll.
Let
you
I'll
let
you
take
it
and
run
with
it
and
I'll
jump
in
if
you
need.
E
E
So
one
of
the
things
that
we're
aiming
to
do
is
really
three
things.
One
is
engage
working
group
members
as
sort
of
active
active
participants
in
the
development
of
metric
prototypes,
so
that
there's
more
of
a
full
circle
of
conceptualized
metric
and
what
it
ends
up
being
so
that
the
implemented
piece
of
software
more
closely
reflects
not
that
they
don't
closely
reflect
already.
E
But
as
we
get
into
some
of
these
more
advanced
metrics,
I
think
this
is
going
to
become
a
challenge
to
make
sure
that
the
software
implements
the
intended
metric
in
the
way
that
was
intended
and
and
so
we're
looking
for
ways
to
get
non-programmers
assistance,
not
necessarily
in
programming
but
in
participating
in
short
form
or
the
beginning
of
longer
form
hackathon
kind
of
events
where
we
talk
about
what
it's
going
to
be
and
there's
some
sample
data
ready
and
then
software
developers
can
work
on
it
and
so
to
increase
engagement
with
the
software
development.
E
That's
that's
one
sort
of
a
way
that
we're
approaching
that
aim.
The
second
is
a
lot
of
times
when
we
have
hackathons
or
we
talk
to
people
about
software
either
auger
other
hackathons.
I
do
in
my
community,
I
think
the
gremore
lab
folks
may
or
may
not
echo
some
of
the
same
experiences,
but
we
spend
a
lot
of
time
helping
newcomers
configure
their
local
environment.
E
There
are
as
many
variables
as
there
are
computers
in
the
room
usually,
and
so
we
conceptualize
these
separate
events
focused
on
building
new
newcomer
technical
capacity
so
that
when
a
person
gets
to
a
hackathon,
they
don't
spend
the
entire
time
figuring
out
why
the
version
of
gcc
on
their
particular
operating
system,
isn't
the
right
version
to
compile
wheel
for
some
python
library
that
they're,
using
and-
and
we
have
some
topics
that
we've
thought
of
for
these
and
we're
envisioning
them
as
sort
of
an
hour
and
in
the
evening
to
not
interfere
with
people's
work
time.
E
So
you
know
authentic
newcomers.
We
could
do
them
at
any
time
and
I'm
really
interested
in
the
community's
feedback
on
this
part
of
it
like.
When
is
a
good
time
to
do
these,
like
two-ish
hour
workshops
and
the
topics
we
have.
If
you
look
under
here,
are
you
know
just
configuring
and
testing
python?
Like
I
I
mentioned,
I
think,
understanding,
github
or
get
lab
workflows
are
are
a
challenge
sometimes
for
people.
It's
not
always
immediately
clear.
Okay.
E
How
do
I
fork
a
repository
in
a
way
that
I
can
then
do
a
pull
request
or
merge
request
back
to
make
a
contribution?
Other
things
that
come
up
frequently
are
you
know?
Well,
how
do
I
write
a
restful
api
and
and
then
finally,
a
couple
of
jupiter
notebook
ones,
because
initially,
if
you're
new
to
python
new
to
developing
software
jupyter
notebooks
are
a
really
good
way
just
to
apply
the
code
without
having
to
understand
the
underlying
operating
environment?
E
D
And
so
what
I
mean
by
that
is
like
in
the
say
in
the
asia
pacific
call
right
yeah.
They
would
clearly
have
an
interest
in
say,
like
a
giddy
worker
right-
and
I
know-
and
I
know
you're
doing
that
so
like
trying
to
go
to
places
where
people
are
already
meeting
and
talk
about
auger
there
like
sometimes
it's.
D
To
it's
hard
to
draw
people
to
another
meeting
right,
and
so,
if,
if
they,
if
it's
in
an
organization
or
another
community,
are
already
having
kind
of
a
weekly
meeting,
we
reach
out
and
see
I'm
just
and
see
if
we
can't
participate
in
something
they
already
have
standing,
whoever
they
might
be.
I'm
just
thinking
of
different
ways.
E
Yeah,
no,
I
I
mean
I
hear
what
you're
saying,
and
the
first
thought
I
had
was
that
going
to
the
meetings
for
the
working
groups
and
talking
about
this
for
five
minutes
and
ex
explaining
it
and
finding
out
what
times
would
work
for
folks
in
that
working
group,
I
think,
is
a
good
idea.
I
think
the
challenge
with
the
50
minute
time
blocks
is
it's
just
not
enough
time
to
get.
People
started
on
a
technical
task,
that's
the
trick.
E
That's
that's
the
hard
part
and
and
the
technical,
the
software
development
people
are
generally
not
the
folks
who
are
coming
to
the
working
group
meetings
and
so
by
talking
to
the
working
groups,
I
think
we
could
perhaps
have
members
of
working
groups
identify
software
developers.
They
know
who
might
be
interested
in
pursuing
this
path,
but
those
are
just
the
first
thoughts
that
came
to
mind
that
the
constraint
is
definitely
that
an
hour
just
doesn't
give
us
enough
time.
D
D
These
mysterious
groups
that
I
can't
name
might
be
that
might
benefit
from
participating
in
in
this
type
of
engagement,
so
like
setting
up
another
two-hour
meeting
for
chaos
and
trying
to
draw
people
there
that
can
work.
I
think
yeah
I
mean
we're
it's
an
experiment
yep,
but
also
like
going
to
where
the
people
that
you're
trying
to
draw
in
already
are.
I.
E
But
I
I
don't
know
where
to
go
to
get
these
folks
other
than
the
start
with
where
we
are
in
the
chaos
community.
Certainly
there's
lots
of
organizations
that
do
hackathons
for
for
different
reasons,
and
I
believe
this
would
also
be
something
easier
to
execute
if
we
have
events
like
ossna
or
vosdem
that
that
we
could
use
as
as
a
face
to
face
some
sorts
of
places,
so
we're
trying
to
invent
something
in
a
sense.
H
E
That's,
I
think,
I
think
if
there
are
existing
events
that
we
could
satellite
we
should.
We
should
do
that
that
that's
a
really
good
idea,
especially
for
the
workshops,
because
I
think
that
those
would
draw
people
and
introduce
them
to
the
chaos
context.
E
H
I
think
it's
too
late
for
moz
fest,
because
they
also
have
a
program
that
has
workshop
sessions
as
well
as
discussion
and
presentation.
So
I
I'm
just
learning
about
a
lot
of
these
too,
because
I'm
relatively
new
to
the
space,
but
I
feel
like
there
probably
are
a
couple
more
that
we
could
pull
together.
But
that's
I
guess
the
the
question
then
is:
how
often
do
you
want
to
run
these
or
how
many
do
you
want
to
run,
or
is
this
sort
of
a
one-time
deal.
E
It
depends
on
success
if,
like
I,
when
I've
started
things
before
the
initial
engagement
is
low
and
if
we
make
sure
that
people
have
fun
the
participation
grows
in
in
the
face-to-face
universe
and
I
think
in
online
hackathon-like
things.
I've
seen
the
same
thing,
so
I
my
expectation
would
be
that
you
know
we're
gonna.
My
thought
is,
I'm
gonna
give
whatever
this
becomes.
E
You
know
a
solid
six
months
of
evolution
and
development
to
see
what
what
sticks
and
what
doesn't
you
know.
I
don't
expect
every
item
on
this
list
to
stick.
I
think
the
suggestion
of
looking
for
other
events
where
we
could
have
a
workshop
within
it
is
a
really
good
idea,
because
that's
a
way
of
introducing
software
folks
to
the
chaos
world.
B
My
only
comment
with
that
is
two
thoughts
I
think
the
one
one
thing
is.
We
would
have
to
look
at
timing
like
ossna
or
oss
eu-
I
guess
isn't
until
september
so
like
that
would
be
a
good
idea
if
it
was
happening
sooner.
B
I
think
so
I
don't
know
what's
happening
right
now,
but
that's
something
that
we
would
want
to
kind
of
look
at
is
because
we
want
to
do
these
sooner
than
later,
like
we
don't
want
to
wait
till
december
or
whatever
to
you
know,
be
have
a
community
that
can
actually
contribute
back
so
and
then
the
other
thing
is
I
don't.
I
don't
know
that
these
have
to
be
like
super
formal
tutorial
workshops
like
I
don't
know
what
you're
feeling
is
sean,
but
I
feel
like
they
can
be
pretty
pretty
easy.
B
You
know,
and
pretty
informal
and
fun,
like
you
said
and
so
like
I
think,
the
overhead,
and
if
we
have
two
people,
show
up
okay,
well,
that's
cool!
Then
we
have
two
really
engaged
people
that
might
be
really
quality
participants
later
on,
as
opposed
to,
I
think,
sometimes
at
a
conference.
B
B
If
that's
if
that's
something
that
we'll
get
from
that,
I
I
don't
know
I
mean
I
guess
we
can
see,
but
I
feel
like
if
someone's
coming
to
us,
then
they
already
kind
of
interested
in
what
we're
doing
and
want
to
learn.
So
I
don't
know,
maybe
maybe
it's
a
two-prong
approach.
Maybe
it's
both
of
those
things
that
we
try
and
see.
C
E
I
hear
that
correctly,
so
I
I've
kind
of
category
so
there's
like
three
types
of
events
and
the
middle
one
number
two
is
a
focused
on
building
basic
technical
capacity
so
where
they
would
be
more
like
workshop
tutorial
kinds
of
things
where
hey,
let's
get
your
your
python
operating
environment,
set
up
so
that
you
can
work
on
a
python
project
and
understand
how
to
change
your
virtual
environment
or
what
a
gcc
lib
version
issue
is
on
compile
what
you
know
a
lot
of
like,
I
would
say,
30
of
the
people
who
show
up
with
macbooks
have
not
installed
command
line
tools,
get
the
basic
basic
things
that
every
developer
stumbles
on
in
their
first
hackathon
out
of
the
way,
and
then
some
of
the
other
items
I
think
could
appear
to
could
appeal
to
a
broader
audience
who
just
wants
to
know
a
little
bit
more
about
each
thing.
C
I
mean,
rather
than
I
mean
just
latching
on
to
like
existing
big
events
is
a
good
idea,
but
I
mean
things
are
not
going
to
be
normal
for
for
a
long
time,
especially
in
terms
of
events
right
I
mean
you
know,
we
can
just
do
like
an
online
like
a
hackathon,
and
I
I
wouldn't
worry
too
much
about
like
how
many
people
actually
show
up
like
as
long
as
like
we
record
him
and
that's
available,
I
would
pay
more
because
I
I
believe
we
have
a
youtube
channel
in
chaos
right.
C
C
Even
if
two
or
three
people
show
up
but
50
people
view
the
recording
later
on,
then
I
think
that's
definitely
a
win
and
you
can
break
that
out
into
like
you
know
two
or
three
like
an
hour
chunks
of
like
you
know,
live
stream
talks
or
you
could
it
could
just
be
a
zoom
talk
that
people
can
dial
in,
but
it's
recorded
and
posted
somewhere.
C
You
know,
I
think
that
just
requires
a
lot
less
overhead.
Like
you,
you
know
you're
in
fully
in
control
of
the
of
the
event
versus
relying
on
some
some
other
organizers.
But
I
mean
that's
just
my
thought,
but.
E
I
appreciate
I
appreciate
that
right,
yeah,
it's,
it
is
pretty.
I
do
this
with
my
class
all
the
time,
these
kinds
of
rights,
so
these
are
look
the
event
focused
building
capacity.
Ones
are
low-hanging
fruit
for
me
and
I
think,
having
events
folk
having
the
hackathons
themselves
focused
more
around
working
groups
and
less
around
auger,
I
think,
is
a
positive
because
it
invites
gremore
lab
in
as
well.
E
B
And
back
to
the
original
question,
super
quick,
because
we
do
have
a
lot
of
other
stuff
to
talk
about,
but
the
the
evening
hours.
How
did
people
feel
about
that.
E
E
Be
every
week
or
every
night,
but
often-
and
you
know
I
am
with
the
current
covid
situation-
I
do.
I
have
an
online
class
and
I
do
unofficial
not
required
on
live
lectures
in
the
evenings
one
day
a
week.
Okay,
just
if
students
want
to
come
and
participate
and
ask
questions,
usually
a
handful
do
and
makes
the
recording
a
little
bit
more
useful
for
everyone
else.
So
yeah.
I
have
no
problem
like
one
night
every
week
or
two.
D
For
two
hours,
listening
to
you,
talk
and
all
the
feedback
from
everybody,
it
did
just
make
me
think
and
I'll
be
brief.
Elizabeth
that,
like
these
sessions,
sound
a
little
bit
kind
of
one-off
technically
like
would
we
ever
wanna?
This
doesn't
have
to
happen
now
but
like
in
the
future,
run
a
hackathon
where
there's
like
a
series
of
events
and
there's
a
prize
and
we're
actually
trying
to
onboard
people,
and
you
know
we.
E
Want
to
do
that
in
fact,
mizzou
mike,
my
college
is
holding
an
online
hackathon
for
the
first
time
this
weekend.
E
That's
a
really
good
idea.
I
think,
if,
for
my
own,
not
having
run
something
like
that
before,
I
think
getting
our
feet
wet,
doing
these
kinds
of
things
and
is
going
to
be
lower
hanging
fruit.
I
think
if
there's
anyone
in
the
community
who's
run
an
event
like
that
before
I
would
love
to.
Let
me.
D
B
And
see?
Okay,
so
thank
you,
everyone
for
your
feedback
and
your
input
on
that.
We
really
appreciate
that
very
much.
If
you
have
any
other
thoughts,
you
can
email
me
or
sean
later
on,
okay,
so
the
next
one
is
the
dni
self-reflection
and
that
is
gonna,
probably
be
a
matt
g
thing.
If
you
would
like
to
talk
about
that,
matt
g
yeah,
you.
D
Can
also
comment,
I
mean
you
know,
so
we
so
just
so.
You
all
know
right
we're
we're
in
the
midst
of
kind
of
doing
starting
a
chaos
self-reflection
around
our
own
dna
practices
or
dei
practices,
and
so
the
goal
here
is
to
help.
You
know
the
project
be
more
inclusive
as
we
move
forward
and
share
what
we
learn
with
other
projects
and
also
maybe
even
assist
those
projects
in
their
own
efforts.
B
Okay,
awesome
any
questions
on
that
from
anyone.
D
I
will
say
I
think
this
is
going
to
be
a
fairly
you
know
long
process.
So
this
isn't
something
that's
going
to
resolve,
be
resolved
quickly
or
be
done
quickly.
I
should
say
so.
I
think
we're
looking
at
you
know
six
to
nine
months
kind
of
process,
so
it's
a
slow
reflective
process
on
our
own.
Our
own
work.
B
D
Me
too,
so
we
had
talked
about
the
possibility
of
applying
to
outreachy
without
having
the
sixty
five
hundred
dollars.
I
don't
think
we
can.
So
if
you
click
on
that
link,
they
have
what's
called
a
general
fund
and
the
general
fund,
I'm
pretty
sure,
is
like
funds
that
are
at
outreachy,
and
you
have
to
be
a
humanitarian
project
to
apply
for
dollars
from
the
general
fund
and,
if
you're,
a
non-humanitarian
open
source
project
which
we
are.
B
D
D
E
K
B
A
K
Yeah
I
I
agree
that
we
probably
can't
do
this
this
time,
but
elizabeth
does
bring
up
a
good
point
about
funding.
Do
we
have
kind
of
reoccurring
ways
that
chaos
fundraises
and
gets
money
or
just
or
does
it
just
kind
of
appear?
Every
now
and
again.
K
I
guess
maybe
that's
something
something
to
think
about
moving
forward.
D
D
D
B
I've
done
like
merch
sales
for
php
women
and
stuff,
like
that,
when
we
were
trying
to
raise
some
money,
but
it
was
mostly
like
t-shirts
and
things
with
the
logo
on
it.
So
I
mean
that's
always
an
idea,
but
I
don't
think
we
ever
made
a
ton
of
money
on
that.
I
think
it
was
barely
anything
so
did.
B
F
L
I
think
the
main
way
that
I've
always
broken
even
or
made
money
is
on
events
and
doing
the
sponsorship
for
the
events
and,
since
you
are
doing
all
of
these
other
different
ones
doing
sponsorship
for
those
is
good,
because
I
don't
know
how
that
works
with
the
linux
foundation,
but
with
hyperledger.
L
You
know
it
was
pretty
easy
to.
You
know,
give
away
a
certain
amount
of
branding
to
each
of
those
different
ones,
and
then
people
are
always
they
want.
You
know
it's
all
about
finding
those
pre-existing
corporate
pathways
for
giving
money
to
things
and
when
they
can
sit
there
and
say,
oh
if
you
donate
x,
amount
to
this
event.
We'll
put
you
here,
we'll
put
you
here,
we'll
put
you
here
and
that's
an
easy
thing
for
them
to
cost
justify.
So
if
you
were
that,
that
would
probably
be
my
biggest
recommendation.
L
Is
that
because
I
found
that
the
pockets
are
deeper
for
that
and
that
they
do
expect
something
it
to
be
in
the
5
to
10k
realm
or
more
depending
on
the
type
of
event,
but
for
something
that
y'all
are
doing?
They
do
expect
it
to
be
smaller
and
doing
things
of
that
nature.
L
L
I
Listening
to
this
conversation,
the
idea
is
like
we
can
use
the
corporate
sponsorship
as
a
like
outreachy
intern,
like
taking
a
corporate
sponsorship
and
putting
it
on
the
website,
like
this,
internship
is
sponsored
by
a
particular
so-and-so
company.
In
this
way,
we
can
market.
D
It
seems
a
little
bit
different.
Like
I
don't
know,
I
don't
have
a
good
sense
on
support
from
organizations
around
something
like
outreachy
for
mentorship.
To
me,
though,
the
support
for
things
like
conferences
is
much
more
apparent,
so
I'm
not
sure
what
a
request
for
mentorship
would
look
like
or
how
it
would
be
received
within
an
organization.
K
Ask
that's
not
good!
That's
a
good
question
elizabeth
yeah,
if
you,
if
we
wanted
to
tie
outreachy
or
google
of
summer
code
funds
directly
to
these
conferences,
I
think
the
way
we
would
do
it
is
by
having
the
the
intern
do
a
presentation
at
the
conference.
So
then,
when,
when
you're
collecting
money
for
the
conference,
you
can
say
part
of
this
money
goes
to
fund
an
outreachy
intern
to
come
and
present
at
the
conference
based
on
their
work
right.
E
J
For
conferences
that
I've
done
in
the
past,
one
of
the
things
that
we
did
is
we
had
like
a
special
registration
code
where
you
actually
paid
more
money
and
the
money
was
donated
to
to
something
like
in
a
lot
of
cases.
We
used
to
do
it
for
diversity,
tickets.
So
we'd
basically
say
you
know,
pay
this
buy
this
one
and
it
costs
more
money,
but
you
somebody
else,
gets
to
come
to
the
conference.
So
you
could
do
something
like
that.
With
the
conferences
too,
you
could
charge
a
little
more.
D
D
K
I've
I've
always
liked
that
model.
So
you
also.
K
See
it
with
the
conference
is
completely
free
for
everyone.
However,
if
you
want
to
pay
for
a
ticket,
it
goes
towards
fundraising
for
the.
L
Great
stuff,
so
I
don't
want
to
speak
too
out
of
turn
for
emily,
but
she's
on
the
call
too,
and
right
now
we're
gearing
up
to
do
one
of
our
workshops
in
april
and
one
of
the
things
that
the
mag
is
doing
for
the
community
as
a
whole
is
we're
going
to
be
creating
sponsorship
templates,
so
that
might
be
something
fun
to
use
and
crib
off
of.
If
you
are
interested,
so
you
know
because
of
the
fact
that
we
are
trying
to
like
create
all
of
these
best
practices
and
things
like
that
and
marketing.
L
It
might
be
something
that
you
know
y'all
might
want
to
play
with,
but
it's
it's
just
now
getting
started.
It's
not
done.
L
D
G
Yeah,
I
can
put
my
email
in
the
notes
and
then
that
way
as
we
develop
them,
if
we
have
anything
that
you
guys
can
use,
then
we
can.
You
guys,
can
email
me
or
I
can
send
you
the
stuff.
B
D
B
K
Think
four,
I
think
we
did
four
months
for
one,
but
I
think
that
was
kind
of
we
were
kind
of
pressing.
F
B
E
B
Okay,
so
let's
go
ahead
and
move
on
we
have
badging
is
next
and
I'm
guessing.
That's
also
a
matt
g.
What
do.
M
Ahead,
what
is
this
just
the
update
for
the
day
I
just
got
here:
oh.
D
Well,
yeah,
so
I'll
I
that's
okay,
you
can
now
I'll
talk
and
you
can
just
kind
of
fill
things
up
so
matt.
Actually
this
is
good,
so
we're
gonna
with
respect
to
the
people
who
are
serving
as
reviewers
we're
gonna
provide
little
like
care
package
envelopes
to
say
thank
you
to
them
like
what
we
do
with
chaos
cast
people
who
participate
and
matt.
We
can
just
use
sticker
mule
here.
D
So
if
you
wanted
to
design
a
sticker
using
the
chaos
logo
or
something
along
those
lines
and
and
see
how
it
looks
in
sticker
mule,
we
can
you
and
I
can
coordinate
and
we
can
just
get
those
sent.
You
know
like
to
me
or
to
you.
D
We
have
so
the
linux
foundation
has
been
really
great
in
terms
of
submitting
event
requests.
I
think
our
most
recent
is
what
is
it
open
change,
hyperledger.
M
M
D
So
this
this
this
is
really.
This
is
really
going
well.
From
my
perspective,
one
of
my
concerns
is
that
we
don't
ask
reviewers
to
do
too
many
reviews
that
we're
not
burning
people
out
on
doing
the
reviews.
I
know
it's
not
a
ton
of
time,
but
it
certainly
is
thoughtful
effort
that
people
are
putting
in
to
these
reviews.
So
I
think
one
of
our
goals
right
now
is
to
really
do
reviewer
recruitment
to
help
events
move
through
the
process
of
dna
badging.
D
B
I
I,
when
I
put
it
out
in
the
newsletter
and
on
twitter,
I
have
them
come
to
me
just
so
I
can
kind
of
give,
because
a
lot
of
people
are
like
what's
this
about.
So
I'm
just
trying
to
be
like
that
first
line
of
defense
for
matt
snell,
so
he
doesn't
get
bombarded
so,
but
then
I
think
they
go
well.
Then
I
send
them
to
matt
when
I
you
know
to
to
kind
of
get
them
on
boarded
and
things
so.
M
Kevin,
we
also
have
a
google
form
and
I
get
notified
of
anytime,
that
somebody
submits
something
to
that.
If
we
need,
if
we
need
a
form
to
go
with,
I've
got
a
google
form
for
that.
B
D
So,
thank
you
thanks
everybody,
and
thanks
for
all
of
that,
all
the
effort.
This
is
going
really
really
well
and
the
feedback
has
been
super
positive
so
far
from
I
think
the
reviewers
and
the
people
going
through
the
process.
The
events
going
through
the
process.
So
that's
great,
there
was
elizabeth.
Do
you
have
that
blog
post,
the
cd?
D
M
Yes,
I'm
still
getting
used
to
the
laptop,
but
so
the
automation
I
have
so
right
now,
the
reviewer
system.
The
way
we
set
it
up
originally
because
we
weren't
focused
on
getting
a
lot
of
review
requests
at
once
is
that
we
have
a
random
assignment
of
reviewers
from
the
pool
of
reviewers
that
we
have
so
we
need.
We
realize,
there's
a
lot
more
reviews
coming
in
or
review
requests
that
we
needed.
We
need
to
make
something
a
little
more
structured
than
random
assignment,
so
I'm
working.
M
Actually,
I
should
get
it
done,
we're
migrating
to
a
new
cloud
platform
for
the
bot,
and
then
we
are
going
to
be
focusing
on
getting
that
a
little
more
stable
and
make
a
lot
more
sense
for
how
it
works.
But,
right
now
the
ba
the
badging
bot
will
function
the
same
on
the
outside,
but
on
the
inside
it's
going
to
have
some
upgrades
in
the
next
couple
days.
D
I
H
D
So
the
last
one
was,
I
was
thinking
about
the
community
reports,
so
we
haven't
gotten
a
I'm
like
badging,
we
haven't
gotten
a
ton
of
traction
on
the
community
reports
and
I
was
just
thinking
trying
to
think
through
the
best
way
to
kind
of
do
this,
and
part
of
me
was
just
thinking,
maybe
just
on
the
website.
We
just
point
people
to
cauldron
and
we
point
people
to
auger's
automated
tooling.
D
I'm
just
thinking
out
loud,
like
the
community
reports
were
really
meant
to
be
a
way
to
to
show
a
couple,
different
metrics
kind
of
composite
metrics
to
people,
so
they
would
submit
a
one
repository
url.
We
would
do
a
little
bit
of
work
on
the
back
end
and
then
a
report,
a
pdf
report,
would
be
generated
and
returned
to
the
person.
There
was
some
human
work
on
the
back
end,
and
so
I'm
just
wondering
how
do
we
generate
interest
and
part
of
me
was
thinking?
E
Report
request
for
auger,
I'm
just
yeah,
I
think
the
the
so
I
don't
wanna
I
would
say
I
don't
wanna
give
up
on
the
committee
reports
yet
for
two
reasons:
one
I
I
think
we
haven't
had
the
opportunity
to
promote
them
at
public
events
and
two
we've
got
a
google
summer
of
code
request
in
for
automating
them
and
I
think,
if
I
think
of
that
person,
if
we
get
that
person
and
they
were
successful,
then
this
would
get
a
lot
easier.
I
Okay,
I've
even
developed
a
micro
task
for
like
the
student
for
doing
this
automation
or.
D
B
Tweet,
if,
if
we
want
to
like
because
I
know
we're
kind
of
looking
for
projects
that
would
be
willing
to
be
our
samples
so
that
we
can
kind
of
get
the
ball
going
and
show
what
what
they
look
like
in
the
public,
so
I
could
put
out
some
tweets-
I
can
put
it
in
the
newsletter
again.
I
can
do
a
little
bit
more
just
broad
promotion.
I
know
we've
targeted
certain
people
here
and
there
and
have
gotten
not
a
great
response
to
it.
So
we
can
try
that
if
you
want.
K
That'd
be
great,
we
might,
we
might
experiment
with
some
different
metrics
as
well
for
community
reports
and
then
and
then
additionally,
I
think
the
the
part
that's
kind
of
missing
for
the
user
is
like
so
here's
the
metrics.
But
how
can
we?
How
can
we
understand
them
in
context?
So
maybe
maybe
a
blog
article
or
some
discussions?
What
these?
What
this
report
means
for
my
community
or
you
know
kind
of
showing
the
metrics
in.
C
I
K
I
think
we
would
we
would
try
to
do
it
as
a
maybe
as
a
partnership
with
the
community
that
we're
looking
at
you
know
to
kind
of
to
help
understand
how
they
are
understanding
these
metrics
and
what
these
metrics
mean
to
them.
So
I
think
both
us
and
them
together-
maybe
a
partnership
between
the
community
and
us
to
write
to
write
a
a
blog
or
kind
of
a
just,
a
post
about
what
this
means.