►
Description
Keynote: Welcome + Opening Remarks - Priyanka Sharma, Executive Director, Cloud Native Computing Foundation & Pratik Wadher, Senior Vice President, Product Development, Intuit
A
I
mean
that
was
a
little
lame,
so
like,
let's
one
one
more
time
good
morning,
argocon
yeah
yeah,
yes,
awesome,
fantastic.
How
many
folks
are
at
the
workshops
yesterday,
everyone,
that's
incredible.
It
was
great
to
meet
you
yesterday.
If,
for
some
reason,
I
haven't
met
you
yet
please
come
see.
Me
I'll
be
at
the
Intuit
Booth
later
today.
A
So
thank
you
for
joining
us.
Can
you
believe
that
we're
in
a
room
together
considering
last
year,
was
all
virtual
this?
This
is
really
exciting.
We
have
an
incredible
day
planned
for
everyone
here.
We
have
some
excellent
talks,
of
course,
all
about
Argo,
so
whether
you're
new
to
Argo
or
maybe
you're,
currently
using
Argo.
We
hope
that
you'll
leave
inspired
today.
A
A
A
Okay,
little
housekeeping,
so
one
you
should
know
we
are
in
a
very
cool
spot
who
has
been
to
the
Computer
History
Museum
before
way
less
hands
than
those
attended.
The
workshops
good
because
tonight
you'll
have
full
access,
so
walk
around
check
it
out
get
into
the
history.
It's
very
cool
and
also
very
important
know
that
there
is
an
event
code
of
conduct.
A
In
short,
everyone
should
feel
welcome,
included.
You
treat
everyone
with
respect,
professionalism,
you're
here
so
you've
already
checked
the
box
to
abide
by
that
code
of
conduct.
Thank
you
very
much
and
know
that
all
those
great
sponsors
that
we
thanked
earlier
will
be
in
the
Showcase,
so
stop
by
learn.
More
I
saw
some
swag
I
know,
there's
plushies
floating
around
limited
edition,
so
get
on
that.
A
B
Hello,
everybody
wow-
this
is
awesome.
I
am
so
excited
to
be
here.
Welcome
to
argocon
we've
established
we're
at
Arya
Khan.
Does
everyone
know
they're
at
argocon?
It's
such
a
cool
energy
over
here,
I'm,
so
thrilled
to
see
it
for
those
who
don't
know
much
about
me.
I
am
the
executive
director
of
the
cloud
native
Computing
Foundation,
which
is
the
home
for
the
arbor
projects.
B
So
we
are
the
home
for
the
Argo
projects,
but
generally
what
really
is
cncf?
How
many
folks
here
are
familiar
with
the
cloud
native
Computing
Foundation?
Oh
awesome,
that's
great!
So
I
can
just
skip
the
slide.
You
know
that
we
are
the
home
vendor
neutral
home
for
many
of
the
most
critical
and
fastest
growing
open
source
projects
such
as
kubernetes
Prometheus
envy
and,
of
course,
the
orgo
quadruplets
laughs.
B
So
with
all
the
technologies
that
are
in
cncf,
we
have
800
plus
members
that
support
the
foundation,
and
they
do
this
because
they
believe
in
our
mission.
They
want
to
support
the
rise
of
cloud
native,
and
you
see
some
examples
of
companies
here.
Many
of
you
work
for
folks
on
on
this
logo
wall
into
it,
for
example,
is
such
a
great
partner.
We
do
so
much
with
them,
led
by
pratik
and
his
team.
B
So
it's
kind
of
funny
right
you're,
like
we're
the
cloud
native
Computing
Foundation,
we're
making
Cloud
native
ubiquitous
it's
kind
of
tautological
like
we're
dancing
around
the
question.
What
is
cloud
native
well
we're
actually
not
dancing
around
the
question
just
need
maybe
better
marketing,
but
we
do
provide
a
specific
definition
of
what
is
cloud
native.
B
These
techniques
enable
Loosely
coupled
systems
that
are
resilient,
manageable
and
observable,
combined
with
robust
automation.
They
allow
Engineers
to
make
high
impact
changes
frequently
and
predictably,
with
minimum
toil.
You
may
wonder
why
I
read
this
whole
thing
out.
It
will
make
sense
as
I
go
through
the
presentation.
You'll
see,
so
this
whole
journey
with
what
is
cloud
native?
How
do
we
Define
ourselves
started
from
the
cncf
perspective
in
2015
when
Google
donated
kubernetes
to
begin
this
New
Foundation?
That
was
Project
number
one
kubernetes
itself
was
part
of
a
long
history.
B
I
mean
just
as
recent
as
2000.
We
were
on
non-virtualized
Hardware,
then
VMware
and
VMS
became
a
thing.
Come
then
and
came
infrastructure
as
a
service.
Aws
really
put
it
out
there
for
everyone,
even
though
it
existed
a
little
before
Paz
with
Heroku
over
time,
keep
developing
and
then
Docker
really
made
containers
mainstream
kubernetes,
as
you
know,
really
sprung
to
fame
because
it
did
such
a
good
job
of
helping
dynamically
orchestrate
workloads
for
best
resource
utilization.
B
B
When
you
look
at
it
just
a
year
ago,
it
was
only
114
projects,
only
137,
000
contributors.
The
country
number-
has
not
changed
much
so,
as
I
said,
we're
hitting
and
we're
soon
hitting
the
maximum
limit.
So
I'm,
not
feeling
too
terribly
about
that.
Why
is
this
happening?
Well,
because
so
many
diverse
people
are
involved
at
this
point.
B
So
I
remember,
I
was
talking
about
the
definition
and
said
I
swear.
This
makes
sense
later.
This
is
because
here
I
want
to
highlight
to
you
how
the
Argo
projects
are
truly
part
of
the
cloud
native
story
and
definition
when
you're
trying
to
build
scale,
scalable
applications,
thinking
of
modern
dynamic
environments.
The
CD
story
is
critical.
The
immutable
infrastructure
again
about
CD
Argo
projects
themselves
have
declarative
apis
help
the
developers
use
them
easily.
Projects
are
resilient,
manageable
and
observable.
B
B
When
I
talk
about
velocity
It's,
a
combination,
number
of
number
of
PRS
and
issues
commits
and
authors
so
combine
those
three
and
you
get
the
top
three
number
one
is
kubernetes
which
started
so
long
ago
and
joined
in
2015.
number
two
is
otel
open,
telemetry,
technically
joint
2019,
but
like
I,
was
working
in
open
tracing
in
2015.
So
it's
like
you
know
what
was
the
true
real
beginning
anyway,
and
then
you
have
Argo
which
came
recently
and
burst
into
the
scene.
This
is
really
something
to
be
proud
of.
This
slide
deck
here.
B
It
links
to
the
velocity
report
that
we
generate.
You
can
look
at
it
anytime
to
see
what
all
the
product
where
all
the
projects
are
at
anywho
and
if
you
look
at
your
development
velocity
it's
up
and
to
the
right
just
the
way.
I,
like
my
graphs,
the
cncf,
the
growth
you've
had
violence.
Cncf
is
nothing
short
of
impressive
300
percent
plus
increase
in
contributions.
One
twenty
four
percent
plus
increase
in
companies,
579
companies
have
put
in
documentation,
commits
you've
close
to
9
000
contributors.
B
Today,
and
just
so,
you
know
when
you
started
you
had
about
in
cncf,
there
were
about
450
contributors.
There
were
four
425
companies
to
the
2
2
374
now,
so
it's
not
just
High
numbers
percentage-wise,
it's
just
High
numbers
period,
so
many
companies
into
it
code,
fresh
BlackRock,
Acuity,
Commonwealth,
computer
research,
who
I
just
found
out
about
Swiss
post
Alibaba.
B
B
B
B
It's
all
about
the
effort
and
there's
so
many
things
we
work
with
CNC
with
Argo
on.
We
provide
the
platform
and
the
team
to
support
for
exposure.
We
do
online
programs,
content
creation,
research,
all
kinds
of
things,
I
I,
don't
have
time
to
go
into
the
link
that
I
have
under
prolific.
But
if
you
click
on
it,
you
see
almost
every
week.
No
definitely
every
week
there
is
some
cool
effort.
Someone
did
an
online
program,
a
webinar,
a
report
that
Argo
is
doing.
B
The
case
studies
are
for
everyone
to
look
at.
They
are
detailed
and
actually
show
impact.
88
mean
time
to
resolution.
Improvement
is
nothing
to
be
sneezed
at,
but
it's
not
just
marketing.
We
work
together
to
improve
the
project
and
be
safety
first,
so
Argo
took
advantage
of
the
relationship.
Cncf
has
with
the
ostev
or
the
open
source
technology
Improvement
fund,
and
we
did
a
security
audit.
We
identified
26
issues
in
different
projects
of
Argo
and
everything
is
being
worked
on
some
scpes,
some
as
non-cvs,
but
the
effort
is
on
because
Security
First.
B
B
B
C
C
C
I
was
actually
feeling
pretty
humbled
as
I
walked
through
today,
and
I
saw
these
big
banners
and
never
in
my
life
would
have
imagined
this
project
that
we
started
five
years
ago
would
be
where
we
are
today,
and
it's
a
testament
to
all
of
you
to
all
of
you
that
actually
contribute
on
a
daily
basis,
whether
it's
on
the
project,
whether
it's
in
the
companies
that
you
work
for,
whether
it's
improving
the
lives
of
the
developers
that
you
work
for.
C
C
C
I
distinctly
remember
talking
about
Argo
at
a
kubecon,
so
the
kubecon
2017
on
the
way
back,
you
know,
mukulika
is
sitting
right
here
we
were
all
pumped
about
rolling
out
Argo.
We
actually
had
our
first
user.
We
had
someone
from
Nvidia
of
all
the
companies,
we
met
someone
and
they
were
texting
us
on
the
plane
and
at
the
airport
about
using
Argo
right.
C
So
imagine
that
Journey
when
we
started
and
where
we
are
today,
it's
a
very
important,
Milestone
and
again
having
been
part
of
this
journey
since
the
Inception
I'm,
just
always
humbled
and
proud
of
what
this
community
achieves
on
a
daily
basis.
So
again,
thank
you
very
much
to
all
of
you.
This
is
going
to
be
an
exciting
day.
I
was
actually
very,
very
happy
to
see
some
of
you
at
the
workshop
yesterday.
So
I
hope
you
actually
had
a
great
time
and
I
look
forward
to
talking
with
all
of
you
today.
C
So
this
is
Argo
Khan.
This
is
actually
our
second
official
argocon.
We
had
our
first
virtual
argocon
last
year.
We
were
very
surprised
at
the
number
of
people
that
showed
up
and,
and
it
continues,
our
journey
continues
today,
I'm
actually
very
happy
and
thankful
that
argocon
actually
comes
under
the
cncf's
wings,
so
you
may
have
seen
cncf
is
actually
hosting
participating
and
driving
and
supporting
this
community.
So
again,
thank
you.
A
lot
to
the
cncf
community.
Please,
a
lot
of
applause.
C
It's
very
clear
that
our
goal
as
a
community
is
thriving
within
the
cncf
and
the
community
that
forms
it
right
and
we're
all
rallying
to
actually
invest
and
make
it
grow.
C
The
the
main
things
that
I
want
to
focus
on,
though,
is
our
growth.
So
last
year
I
actually
showed
this
picture.
It
doesn't
include
all
the
companies
by
the
way,
the
way
we
track
this
in
case,
you
don't
know,
is
I,
don't
just
come
up
with
these
names,
but
we
do
have
in
our
git
repo
a
way
for
any
company
to
actually
formally
associate
themselves
with
the
Argo
project
and
that's
how
we
track
it.
So
these
are
referenceable
names
that
are
actually
in
the
git
repo
of
companies
that
are
using
Argo.
C
These
are
just
some
of
the
names,
but
in
2021
we
had
about
200
companies
in
that
list.
Okay,
well
guess
what
we're
in
2022,
we
have
380
companies,
okay,.
C
And
these
are
official
public
references,
it's
almost
double
since
we
started
right
and,
as
you
can
see,
it's
everywhere,
I
look
at
all
these
companies
and
it's
amazing
to
see
you
know
all
of
you
and
it's
all
of
you
actually,
by
the
way
that
make
it
useful
right,
I
call
it.
This
is
our
widening
our
orbit
of
Argonauts
everywhere
love
to
see
this
I'd
love
to
see
more
of
it
by
the
way.
Look
at
this.
This
is
since
December
of
last
year
at
Argo
on
2021,
we
had
about
17
000
Stars.
C
Today
we
have
over
25
000,
okay
for
those
of
you
that
don't
care
about
stars.
I
do
care
about
stars,
that's
a
way
of
keeping
score
right.
But
if
you
look
at
the
number
of
contributors
right
on
average,
we
are
adding
six
new
contributors.
Every
day,
okay,
our
community
has
grown
by
2
000
people
in
a
mere
nine
months.
Okay,
it's
amazing
and
foundational
growth
of
the
platform
right
and
all
of
this
growth
and
success.
C
C
C
Is
we
measure
NPS,
okay,
and
we
do
that
through
our
yearly
survey,
to
look
at
what
our
users
are
saying,
what
they're
like
what
they
don't
like,
and
how
do
we
improve
the
product?
Okay,
now,
for
those
of
you
don't
know
about
NPS
course,
that
72
is
an
awesome,
NPS
core
for
Argo
CD
and
an
impressive
score
for
Argo
workflows.
So
again,
huge
round
of
applause
for
all
of
you
for
that,
okay,.
C
And
we
can
see
the
growth
we
can
see
the
explosive
growth
in
the
number
of
contributors,
I
personally,
love
that
I
love
to
see
that
sea
of
blue,
which
was
into
it
when
we
started
and
Athletics
when
we
started
going
down.
This
is
fundamental
to
the
success
of
an
open
source
project.
It
means
the
community
is
growing.
The
community
continues
to
invest
in
the
project
and
it's
not
just
one
company
driving
it
right.
C
C
C
Same
goes
for
approvers.
That
list
is
growing
and
our
leaves
okay,
I'm
excited
about
seeing
this.
This
is
you
know
the
growth
of
not
just
the
community,
but
people
that
actually
contribute
and
Lead
You
know
this
project
right.
So
please
again
continue
doing
what
you're
doing
and
make
it
successful.
Now,
where
do
we
go
from
here?
We've
talked
about
Argo
CD.
We've
talked
about
Argo,
workflows,
events,
roll
outs
right.
C
C
Three
major
themes
started
popping
up
as
we
started
talking
to
these
folks.
The
first
one
was
security
is
Paramount,
as
these
tools,
like
Argo,
are
used
across
the
ecosystem
of
developers
in
a
company,
so
making
sure
that
the
products
are
secure
to
use,
and
you
know
available
internally
or
externally
over
the
cloud
is
important.
Now
we
have
set
ourselves
a
very
high
bar
by
the
way
I
come
from
into
it.
As
you
know,
security
is
Paramount.
C
We
actually
store
over
70
million
customers,
personal
data
taxes,
businesses,
so
security
is
extremely
important
for
us,
and
this
is
something
that
we
have
been
focused
on
from
day
one,
but
it
was
still
gratifying
to
see
the
partnership
that
we
did
to
actually
make
our
go.
Even
more
robust
and
solid
operational
excellence
is
another
one
right,
as
I
talked
to
a
lot
of
leaders
across
the
Spectrum.
C
What
they
told
me
is
like
hey.
It
was
very
easy
to
start
using
Argo.
It
was
very
easy
to
use
start
using
kubernetes,
but
as
we
scaled
and
as
we
grew,
how
do
you
manage
these
environments?
How
do
you
make
it
easier
for
our
users
to
actually
use
this
without
learning
all
the
interfaces
off
Cloud
native
and
we've
made
it
very
simple.
C
C
What
we
focus
on,
because
we
need
to
build
smarter
platforms
right,
make
the
experience
extremely
simple,
okay-
and
there
are
two
themes
that
I'm
going
to
highlight
here
today
and
you're,
going
to
hear
about
it
in
this
in
the
set
of
speakers
that
come
next
today,
but
using
Ai
and
ML,
and
that's
a
very
widely
used
term
in
the
industry
today,
everyone
that
I
know
of
is
doing
something
with
AI
and
ml.
Okay.
C
So,
for
example,
when
you
start
thinking
about
operational
excellence-
and
you
start
thinking
about
what
developers
worry
about,
what's
the
mean
time
to
detect
when
something's
going
wrong.
What's
the
mean
time
to
restore
when
something
has
gone
wrong
right,
how
do
you
find
these
things
very
quickly?
Is
it
important
thing
right?
We
talk
about
observability
well,
observability
in
its
natural
form,
consists
of
logging
and
monitoring
and
tracing.
C
Well
guess
what,
when
you
start
employing
Ai,
and
you
actually
have
models
that
can
actually
do
anomaly
detection,
then
you
actually
bring
a
whole
new
environment
and
dimension
to
operational
excellence,
and
that
is
what
you
know.
This
area
is
going
to
focus
on
for
us
and
Argo
actually
stands
at
the
threshold
of
making
it
very
easy
for
companies
and
for
our
users
to
adopt
this
right.
C
The
second
area
is
around
application.
Abstraction
I
talked
about
making
it
easy
for
Developers
developers
at
any
stage
of
development.
Whether
it's
a
front-end
developer,
whether
it's
a
mid
middle
layer,
developer
or
someone
that's
working
on
on
the
back
end
or
someone
is
actually
developing
and
supporting
the
actual
infrastructure,
not
everyone
needs
to
understand
all
the
inter
cases
of
kubernetes
or
Argo
right.
C
C
So
these
are
two
themes
that
you're
going
to
hear
about
today
and
please
one
of
the
things
that
I
want
to
hear
today
is
how
do
we
make
it
easy,
because
I
know
that
you
use
this
on
a
daily
basis
and
you
probably
have
a
lot
of
feedback
that
you're
giving
already,
but
you
may
not
be
thinking
about
all
the
developers
in
your
ecosystem
and
how
do
we
make
it
easy
for
all
of
them?
So
it's
very
important
for
us
as
a
community
to
really
start
thinking
about
this
and
focusing
on
it
right.
C
C
So
let's
talk
about
smart
platforms
and
AI
Ops
right.
The
next
generation
of
platforms,
right
as
I've
mentioned,
will
automatically
be
required
to
detect
and
isolate
problems
with
data,
real-time
Analytics
right
machine
learning.
You
know
artificial
intelligence
using
similar
models
and
with
containers
and
Cloud
native
Technologies.
You
know
we
see
infrastructure
creation,
app
development
is
happening
faster
for
sure
it's
improved
dramatically
right,
adjusted
into
it.
We
have
seen
a
6X
increase
in
velocity.
C
C
So
when
I
series
see
this,
we
have
seen
a
six
second
increase
in
the
number
of
releases
that
we
have
done
to
our
customers
right,
but
collectively,
as
an
industry,
we
have
a
long
way
to
go
to
isolate
issues
in
production
to
improve
security,
operational
excellence.
All
of
these
things
need
to
be
tied
into
an
overall
platform.
C
For
example,
why
should
developers
have
to
configure
Auto
scaling
should
just
happen
in
the
majority
of
cases?
It
should
just
happen
right.
Why
do
we
have
to
configure
hpas
and
vpas?
And
you
know
yes
for
some
of
you
that
have
very
complex
environments
great,
but
for
the
majority
of
developers
they
don't
need
to
do
this
from
the
majority
of
capabilities.
They
don't
need
to
do
this
right.
C
C
So
when
we
start
thinking
about
Progressive
delivery,
for
example,
we
have
Argo
rollouts
that
actually
allows
you
to
do
real-time
analysis
based
on
signals,
but
when
you
actually
combine
this
with
AI
models
and
training-
and
you
do
an
automated
analysis
of
thousands
of
metrics,
you
know
to
guide
the
road
forward
and
back
that's
the
true
power
of
making
it
simple
right-
and
this
is
the
approach
you
know
that
into
it
has
taken,
but
I
also
know
you
have
adobe's
here
in
the
house
today.
C
Please
welcome
Adobe,
okay
and
you
may
hear
from
Adobe
they're
taking
also
a
similar
approach
in
building
their
smart
platforms
right,
but
as
an
as
a
guide,
for
example,
and
at
Intuit.
Our
long-term
goal
is
to
be
under
five
minutes
to
detect
any
issue
and
under
40
minutes
to
resolve
any
issue
for
any
issue.
Now
you
may
say
40
minutes,
that's
a
long
time
well
for
a
company
that
is
40
years
old
and
has
pretty
much
every
imaginable
technology.
That's
you
can
imagine
being
used.
40
minutes
is
actually
still
a
tremendous
Improvement
right.
C
Similarly,
when
you
talk
about
application,
abstraction
and
velocity,
you
know,
while
kubernetes
powered
infrastructure
has
increased
development
velocity,
it
is
still
hard
for
app
developers.
You
know
these
developers
want
their
app
needs
to
be
met.
They
don't
want
to
configure
infrastructure,
even
though
it's
simple,
they
don't
right.
C
Developers
should
just
be
able
to
Define,
for
example,
their
Ingress
standpoint
needs,
but
that
should
be
internally
accessible
or
externally.
It
doesn't
matter
they
shouldn't
have
to
configure
service
mesh
in
an
API
Gateway
or
an
albs,
even
though
it's
available
as
a
service,
and
it's
easy
to
do.
But
why
right
a
great
platform
experience
translates
app
needs
into
infrastructure
configurations
automatically
Define
what
your
app
needs
and
the
infrastructure
should
behave
in
the
right
manner.
Right
there
are
Technologies,
you
know,
and
standards
like
the
open
application
model
that
was
created
by
Alibaba
Dapper.
C
C
C
C
More
we've
been
revealed
throughout
the
day
about
this
new
chapter
of
the
Argonauts,
but
we
do
have
some
spaceships
actually
yeah
and
today,
I
guess
you're
going
to
see
why
Argo
is
moving
at
light.
Speed
right,
so
I
really
really
want
to
again.
Thank
all
of
you
to
continue
the
momentum.
We
need
your
expertise.
We
need
your
help
and
with
that
I'd
like
to
invite
Priyanka
back
on
stage
to
kick
off
the
day.
B
B
I
can't
imagine
what
we'll
be
talking
about
next
year,
we'll
already
be
on
the
other
planets,
if
you
don't
mind
putting
the
next
so
now
that
we've
talked
about
all
the
awesome
things
happening
here
with
I'd
love
for
us
to
continue
this
conversation
today
tomorrow
and
then
next
month,
at
kubecon,
cloudnativecon,
North
America,
that's
happening
in
Detroit
from
October
24
to
28..
We
would
love
for
you
all
to
attend.
There'll,
be
lots
of
Argo
talks.
B
There'll,
be
lots
of
folks
as
many
in
this
room
for
further
new
people
to
meet
who
are
interested
in
the
the
quadruplets
as
I've
started,
calling
them
in
my
head
and
it's
a
chance
to
expand
your
community.
Welcome
more
people
in
so
I
really
hope
to
see
you
all
there
at
kubecon,
cloudnativecon
in
Motown
and.
C
So,
as
I
mentioned
by
the
way,
we
do
have
a
new
format
or
a
summit
that
we
have
started
thanks
to
Priyanka
for
actually.