►
From YouTube: Community Kubernetes Days — Salman Iqbal 1.1.4
Description
The Cloud Native technology landscape keeps evolving and expanding at a rapid pace. Some technologies that were considered must-have a few years or a few months ago are soon being considered obsolete. The race to learn, explore and adapt the latest technology is always on and could seem exhausting. The one thing that is always there is the community.
Whether you are new to your cloud native journey or very experienced, the way to grow is by learning from the community around you. In this talk we will look at how community is more important than technology and how you can start your own community or expand and grow your existing community.
A
And
we
have
our
next
speaker
lined
up
and
ready
to
go,
so
I'm
very
excited
to
be
able
to
introduce
simon,
iqbal
and
he'll
be
talking
about
community
kubernetes
days,
which
is
quite
interesting
because
I
read
the
title
and
I
was
like:
is
it
not
cuban
at
community
days
kubernetes
but
anyway?
Fantastic?
Thank
you
for
being
here,
sir
man
I'll
hand
over
to
you.
B
Thank
you
very
much.
Can
you
hear
me?
Okay,
is
everything
just
give
me
a
thumbs
up?
Everything's
good?
Well,
thank
you
all
very
much
for
having
me.
I
am
very
excited
to
be
part
of
kubernetes
community
days.
I
think
the
title
of
the
talk.
I
changed
the
slide
it's
community
over
technology-
and
you
know,
we've
heard
cheryl
talk
about
this
morning
about
how
important
the
community
has
been.
I
think
I
just
want
to
extend
a
couple
of
things.
B
B
Things
do
change,
but
the
only
thing
that's
constant
is
the
people
around.
You
is
a
community.
So
what
we
in
this
talk
I'll
take
a
few
minutes
to
talk
about
how
you
can
join
an
existing
community
or
how
you
can
build
the
one
that
you
have
or
how
you
can
start
your
own
I'll
just
quickly.
Introduce
myself
before
I
introduce
myself
I'd
just
like
to
give
a
big
thanks
to
all
of
the
kcd
uk
organizers.
B
You've
all
done
an
amazing
job,
good
job,
putting
this
together,
especially
paula,
chasing
me
up
for
all
this
stuff.
So
I
apologize
for
being
so
slow,
but
really
amazing.
B
It's
it's
a
great
conference
and
it's
not
an
easy
feat,
trying
to
put
an
event
like
this
together,
getting
all
the
speakers
together
and
putting
on
the
workshop-
and
you
know
growing
our
community,
which
is
what
this
talk
is
all
about.
So
thank
you
to
all
the
organizers
on
here.
My
name
is
salmanik
val.
I
work
as
an
amalops
engineer
for
a
company
called
appear.
We
are
a
cloud
consultancy
company
check
them
out
up
here.
B
I
also
work
as
a
kubernetes
instructor
for
learn
k-8s
and
the
thing
that
I'm
most
proud
of
probably
quite
a
few
things
that
we've
achieved,
but
one
of
the
things
that
I'm
most
proud
of
is
to
be
part
of
the
cloud
native
worlds,
the
cloud
native
community
that
we've
started
here
in
worlds
with
lewis,
denim
parry
and
a
lot
more
people
and
aled
as
well.
B
You
can
find
me
on
twitter
at
seoulmanic
management,
if
you
have
any
questions
about
anything
about
mlaps
or
kubernetes,
or
if
you
would
like
to
help
with
you.
If
you
like
help
with
the
community,
please
drop
me
a
message
on
at
twitter
on
soulmaniqval,
so
I
can
I'll.
I
can
start
with
this
comment
saying
tech
can
be
confusing
and
I'm
sure
you've
all
seen
this
a
landscape
for
cloud
native
technologies.
If
you
haven't,
you
can
head
over
to
l.c
ncf
dot
io
to
have
a
look.
B
It
shows
a
number
of
projects
and
cloud
native
solutions
for
all
sorts
of
areas,
like
databases,
orchestration
tools,
container
runtimes
registries
and
so
on
and
so
forth.
This
is
intended
to
show
a
well-traveled
path
of
technologies
that
can
be
used
when
implementing
your
solution.
However,
it
is
quite
confusing
if
you
look
at
it.
B
How
do
you
know
which
solution
to
pick
for
the
thing
you
that
you're
solving
problem
for,
for
example,
if
you
have
to
pick
a
storage
solution
to
implement
free
project
which
one
would
you
choose,
the
one
that's
got
the
most
stars
on
github
or
the
one
that
has
the
most
funding?
How
do
you
know
which
solution
to
pick
narrow
down
based
on
the
requirements
that
you
have?
Maybe
there's
a
handful
of
solutions
that
you
know
you
can
do
you
can
implement
yourself
and
trial
them
out?
B
What,
if
the
solution
that
you
picked
today
becomes
obsolete
in
a
few
months
or
years?
What
do
you
do
then?
Do
you
start
again
on
your
own
to
try
and
figure
out?
What's
the
best
thing
to
do,
solution
to
pick
again,
technology
keeps
changing,
as
we
all
know
keeps
changing
all
the
time
we
get
new
projects.
We
get
new
frameworks,
we
get.
We
have
to
look
at
new
products
that
keep
getting
announced
at
a
rapid
pace.
B
This
can
all
be
very
daunting,
wouldn't
be
good
if
we
can
talk
to
the
people
around
us
and
I'm
sure
a
lot
of
people
are
ready
to
do
that,
see
how
they're
trying
to
solve
a
challenge.
You'd
be
surprised
at
how
many
people
in
different
organizations,
different
walk-up
walks
of
life,
different
backgrounds
of
are
facing
similar
challenges.
B
As
you
are,
or
as
your
organizations.
You
can
talk
to
people
around
you
in
your
own
company,
in
your
own
city,
in
the
meetups
and
learn
from
them.
You
can
reach
out
to
them
in
any
channels
that
are
available
to
you,
because
the
people
are
in
your
community,
as
I
said,
are
constant
and
the
technology
will
keep
changing,
but
I
know
that
I
can
always
go
back
to
the
community
that
I
have
people
and
reach
out
to
them
and
ask
any
questions.
B
If
I
have
any
challenges
I
reach
out
to
the
people
we've
created
together,
we've
got.
We
got
together
in
cloud
native
worlds,
community
a
lot
of
people
on
this
call,
matt
and
paula
and
in
in
other
communities
as
long
as
the
community
is
there,
and
it
is
inclusive
and
welcoming
to
everyone
where
everyone
can
feel
safe
being
part
of
it,
and
everyone
adheres
to
a
code
of
conduct.
B
That's
been
set
out
and
you
know
they
feel
they
can
ask
for
help
without
any
hesitation.
You'll
see
that
individuals
in
their
community
will
learn
not
just
about
the
technology,
but
also
about
themselves
and
the
people
around
them
and
grow
as
people
as
person
anytime.
I
have
a
problem.
They
have
to
stop.
I
reach
out
to
the
people.
I've
met
through
various
communities
and
ask
them
for
help
and
guidance.
B
So
how
should
you
go
around
looking
for
a
community
to
join?
Of
course,
you
can
always
head
over
to
meetup.com
and
search
for
community
of
that
you're
interested
in
maybe
in
your
local
area.
Maybe
the
maybe
the
area
that
you
are
interested
in.
You
can
even
search
internationally.
Most
events
currently
are
happening
remotely,
so
we'll
be
great
to
be
a
part
of
them.
B
If
you
like
any
specific
open
source
projects,
they
most
likely
have
some
slack
or
discord
channels.
Kubernetes
is
the
number
of
these
communities
that
you
can
join
in
and
introduce
yourself.
You
can
go
and
help
people
out
and
you
can
ask
for
help
as
long
as
you're
kind,
and
you
can
also
follow
people
on
twitter.
I
follow
a
lot
of
people.
I
look
up
to
on
twitter
and
they're,
always
mentioning
some
of
the
some
of
the
some
of
the
the
events
that
are
happening,
that
I
can.
I
can
join
it.
B
For
example,
case
of
the
uk.
That's
happening,
that's
how
fun
how
from
the
people
already
know
so
there's
many
ways
that
you
can
find
a
community
that
you
can
join
and
be
a
part
of
how
about
if
you'd
like.
If
you
want
to
start
a
community
that
you
thought
didn't
exist,
how
would
you
go
around
doing
that?
It
can
be
in
person
or
it
can
be
virtual.
B
You
know
I'll
speak
from
experience,
lewis,
dan
and
parry
and
myself.
We
started
cloud
native
wales
in
january,
2018.,
we've
done
over
25
meetups
in
person
and
virtually,
and
I
think
I
can
handle
my
heart.
The
best
thing
that
could
happen
to
any
of
us
was
cloud
native
worlds.
Community
I've
been
working
in
technology
for
about
nine
years
now,
but
I
can
say
that's
the
best
thing:
that's
happened
because
the
amount
of
people
I've
met
and
I
worked
with
there's
so
many
people.
B
I
look
up
to
have
worked
with
in
in
in
the
past,
and
currently
it
would
never
have
happened
if
it
wasn't
for
the
community
that
are
joined
and
we
grew.
We
get
so
much
support
from
other
cloud
native
communities
when
we
started
and
the
cloud
native
computing
foundation
there's
so
many
people
who
helped
us.
Like
you
know,
we
can't
really
thank
many
people.
All
the
people
is
cheryl
who
helped
us
when
we
started
matt
and
so
many
more.
B
B
These
are
all,
and
that's
the
ones
that
I'm
putting
up-
and
these
are
the
people
there's
quite
a
few
people
in
here
that
we
used
to
look
up
to
and
we
got
to
meet
them
and
learn
from
them
and
grow
our
knowledge
and
learn
from
the
best
basically,
and
that
would
have
never
been
possible
if
we
never
did
cloud
native
wales.
So
what
I'm
trying
to
say
is
join
a
community
if
there,
if
one
doesn't
exist,
start
your
own.
B
How
would
you
start
your
own
community
if
you,
if
you
wanted
to-
and
I
think
it
boils
down
to
a
very
simple
thing
which
is
helping
others?
If
you
help
others,
others
will
definitely
help
you.
You
can
join
other
similar
communities
and
help
out
there.
You
know
anything
that
need.
Maybe
you
can
help
in
organizing
events.
Maybe
you
can
help
solve
someone's
problem.
If
they
have
a
question,
maybe
you
can?
Maybe
you
can
answer
them?
Maybe
you
can
create
your
own
content
and
put
it
out
there.
B
You
can
write
a
blog
or
or
video
or
a
podcast
whatever
it
might
be.
You
know
people
will
reach
out
to
you
and
ask
questions
and
you
can
help
them
out.
If
there's
someone
you
like
you'd
like
to
speak
at
your,
you
can
do
a
live
stream.
If
you
wanted
to
on
youtube
or
you
can
do
it
in
person,
you
can
reach
out
to
them
and
politely
request.
If
they
can
speak
at
your
event,
you
can
do
the
event
remotely
as
well
or
if
you
want
to
do
it
in
person.
B
Hopefully
we
will
get
to
the
in-person
stuff.
Quite
soon
you
can
reach
out
to
companies
in
your
cities
and
that's
what
we
did
and
ask
if
they
can
sponsor
for
you
to
hire
a
venue
or
pay
for
food.
Sometimes
people
learn
best,
and
this
is
what
we
found
is
by
doing
things.
Some
things
hands-on.
You
can
host
your
own
hackathons
and
do
your
own
workshops,
something
that
you
might
know
very
well
is
going
to
be
new
to
somebody
else.
B
If
you
think
oh
docker
is
you
know
it's
quite
basic,
everybody
knows
docker,
but
it
might
not.
It
is
new
to
a
lot
of
people,
so
you
can
hold
your
own
workshop
and
others
can
join
in.
You
can
do
it
remotely
or
you
can
do
it
in
person,
and
this
is
a
bit
that
we
thought
works
out
quite
well.
We
could
do
giveaways,
you
could
do
giveaways
by
asking
for
tickets
from
other
conferences,
and
this
is
what
we've
done
in
the
past.
B
If
I've
spoken
at
a
conference,
while
lewis
has
spoken
at
a
conference,
we
asked
for
tickets
to
give
away
to
our
attendees,
because
tickets
for
conferences
are
quite
expensive.
You
can
ask
for
swag
to
be
given
away
like
we
usually
used
to
go
to
the
conferences
and
get
swag
from
from
the
stands
and
give
away
at
the
meetups,
and
people
do
usually
like
that.
I
think
the
best
thing
you
can
do
is
have
joint
meetups
as
well.
B
There
are
going
to
be
meetups
in
your
in
your
area
or
within
your
country
or
within
your
continent,
that
you
can.
You
can
do
joint
meetups
with,
for
example,
kcd.
Uk
a
lot
of
communities
came
together
to
do
this
conference,
not
so
I've
just
written
down
a
few
birmingham.
Edinburgh,
london
manchester
wales,
a
lot
of
cloud
native
communities
and
people
came
together
to
put
on
a
great
conference,
so
community
you
know
is
it
is
at
the
heart
of
what
we're
trying
to
achieve
and
there
are
benefits
you
might
say.
Okay,
it's
all
good.
B
I
can
help
others
out
what
is
in
it
for
me
and
there's
tons
of
benefits,
and
I
can
only
speak
speak
from
my
experiences
in
terms
of
career
progression.
I
never
thought
I'll
be
able
to
do
the
jobs
that
I'm
doing
nowadays
or
meet
the
people
that
I
am
meeting
nowadays
or
learn
things
that
I'm
learning
nowadays
or
you
know.
I've
worked
at
a
number
of
places.
Now
I've
worked
at
appvia,
learn
k-8s
and
I
that
would
never
never
have
happened.
B
So
there
are
benefits
to
yourself
too,
and
I
think
one
thing
I've
reminded
of
other
organizers
or,
if
you're
joining
committee,
a
starting
committee.
This
one
simple
thing
that
we've
found
is
that
it
makes
it
very
successful.
It's
just
to
be
kind.
The
people
around
you,
the
people
who
are
joining
wherever
it
is
just
to
be
kind
treat
people
like
you
like
you
wanted
to
be
treated,
but
I'm
going
to
end
up
and
on
one
last
bit
is
you
know
this?
B
This
quote
from
benjamin
franklin,
but
building
a
community
and
culture
of
respect
and
working
collaboratory
collaboratively
is
the
way
forward.
Continue.
Learning
always
ensures
that
you
know
we're
growing
together
and
listening
and
hearing
and
being
empathetic
to
the
people
around.
You
is
the
way
you
deliver.
B
And
with
that
I
thank
you.
If
you
have
any
questions
about
anything,
if
you'd
like
any,
if
you
like
any
help
with
your
community,
please
reach
out
to
me:
that's
all
manicbar
we
are.
We
would
like
to
help
you
out
in
any
way
possible.
We
run
cloud-native
worlds
as
well,
and
you
know
kcd,
uk,
but
I'd
just
like
to
thank
you
all
for
listening,
and
hopefully
that
was
useful.
A
Fantastic,
thank
you
so
much
simon.
I
honestly
feel
like
you
were
just
reading
my
mind,
some
of
those
things
you
said
I
just
wholeheartedly
agree
with,
and
I
know
it's
not
to
be
underestimated.
The
amount
of
work
to
put
on
a
meet-up
or
to
put
on
an
event,
but
everything
you
talked
about
how
rewarding
it
is,
is
just
it
rings.
So
true
for
me,
I
just
wondered
if
you
had
any
funny
stories
or
things
that
have
ever
gone
wrong
with
a
meetup.
I
know.
B
A
I
mean
we've
had
some
technical
issues
this
morning
here
with
our
events
and
youtube
links,
and
it's
funny
how,
even
when
you
plan
every
single
thing,
something
always
happens.
Something
goes
wrong.
I
just
wondered
if
you
could
share
any
any
little
mix-up.
That's
ever
happened
to
you
or,
like
you
know,
the
worst
crazy
thing
that
happened.
B
B
I
can't
remember
I
think
yeah
it
was
a
google
meet
yeah,
it
was
a
google
meet,
so
we
put
out
a
google
me,
so
anybody
could
join
in
and
start
typing
whatever
they
like
to
type.
So
somebody
just
got
the
link
from
somewhere,
I'm
not
sure
where,
because
I
think
it
was
on
twitter
and
they
started
just
spamming.
The
tweet
yeah,
the.
B
So
we
just
had
to
like
block
them
and
try
and
sort
that
out.
I
do
know
you.
Luckily
it's
never
happened.
The
cloud
native
wales,
but
at
other
meet
up
that
you're
doing
a
joint
one.
A
heckler
turned
up
because
they
didn't
agree
with
some
cryptocurrency
stuff.
So
but
you
know
that
that
got
dealt
with
quite
quite
swiftly.
So
you
know
these
things
do
happen,
but
yeah.
I
think
you
just
have
to
improvise
and
react.
A
I
think
I
mean,
like
you,
said
many
many
things
could
go
wrong.
I
think
the
the
most
challenging
story
that
happened
to
me
was
running
an
event
where,
on
stage
one
of
our
speakers
collapsed
and
he
was
fine.
He
was
completely
fine,
but
it
was
just
a
reaction
to
stress
somebody
heckled
him
and
he
wasn't
quite
ready
for
it.
So
he
collapsed
on
the
floor
and
people
thought
it
was
funny
and
they
were
laughing.
They
thought
he
was
joking,
but
no,
he
was
out
cold.
B
A
It
was
like
it
was
quite
a
quite
a
stressful
moment,
but
he
was
fine
and
he
got.
B
A
C
Yeah,
thank
you.
As
someone
said,
I
think
we
all
come
from
different
backgrounds.
I
I
look
after
I
live
just
outside
birmingham.
I
run
a
couple
of
meetups
in
birmingham,
including
recently
getting
involved
with
the
cloud
native
birmingham
crew,
and
it's
just
been
up.
You
know
just
to
re
repeat
what
some
of
the
things
we
said
before.
It's
been
a
pleasure
working
with
paul,
josh
and
matt
the
whole
team.
Really,
I
want
to
list
off
everyone.
C
Yeah-
and
I
guess
that
to
some
of
the
points
we're
just
talking
about
there-
I
think
sometimes
the
hecklers
at
the
at
the
meetups
don't
realize
that
we
don't
get
paid
to
do
this.
You
know
we're
not
there
as
there
are
sponsors,
but
we
don't
most
of
us
don't
work
for
the
sponsors.
We
usually
look
to
separate
ourselves
from
this
and
I
think
the
hecklers
think
we're
there
for
some
sort
of
commercial
or
financial
benefit,
but
actually
we'd
love,
meeting
people.
C
You
know
we
love
helping
other
people
out
some
of
the
best
things
for
me
running.
The
meet
ups
is
seeing
that
dawn
of
kind
of
understanding.
When
you
explain
something
and
people
like
oh
yeah.
Now
I
get
that
and
it's
just
brilliant
and
seeing
people
again
seeing
people
get
jobs
and
networking.
Through
these
events,
it's
fantastic,
seeing
people
kind
of
grow
in
part
because
of
the
communities.
A
Absolutely
so
folks,
we
are
at
coffee
break
time.
Thank
goodness.
I
don't
know
about
you,
but
I
am
definitely
ready
for
coffee,
so
we
will
take
a
quick
break
and
then
we'll
be
starting
back
again
at
11
40..
This
is
where
we
split
into
two
tracks,
so
we
have
posted
the
links
onto
twitter,
but
there
was
a.