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From YouTube: Keynote: Where Do We Go From Here? - Constance Caramanolis, Principal Software Engineer, Splunk
Description
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Keynote: Where Do We Go From Here? - Constance Caramanolis, Principal Software Engineer, Splunk
A
A
So
I've
been
a
part
of
the
cncf
community
for
about
five
years
now.
I
first
started
off
in
envoy
as
one
of
the
first
contributors
it
started
off
at
lyft
was
there
for
a
while.
I
joined
open,
telemetry
a
part
of
omniscient
I'm
on
the
open,
telemetry
governance
board.
I
was
listening
to
the
program
committee
for
2019,
and
this
is
actually
my
fifth
coupon
as
co-chair
or
known
to
some
as
my
reign
of
terror
or
observability.
A
I
say
this
because
I've
run
a
lot
of
cfps
and
this
has
given
me
a
holistic
global
view
of
the
cncf
ecosystem
and
what
we're
here
to
celebrate
one
thing
that
has
always
been
in
the
back
of
my
mind
since
accepting
this
role
is:
how
do
we
keep
kubecon
cloudnativecon,
relevant
or
fresh,
and
how
do
we
keep
cncf
relevant
right?
We've
heard
yesterday
from
katie
and
priyanka
the
next
generation
of
cloud
native
and
that's
been
the
back
of
the
mind,
and
so
where
do
we
go
from
here
and
that's
what
I'm
going
to
talk
about?
A
So
who
is
we?
What
is
here
we
everyone
in
this
room
right?
It
is
the
people
in
the
technology,
it's
all
of
our
cncf
projects
and
things
tangentially
tangentially
related
to
it-
everyone
watching
this
now
or
later
contributors
and
users,
consumers,
but
it's
so
much
more
than
that
too
right.
We
have
to
also
acknowledge
the
vendors
and
the
industries
built
around
it
right.
I
call
this
out
because
entire
industries
hinge
on
our
technologies,
everything
that
we
build.
That
means
that
personas
and
typical
roles
involved
in
our
projects
have
grown.
A
A
So
remember
this.
In
the
part,
there
is
no
scar
in
the
story.
Don't
worry,
we
won't
be
traumatized,
but
everything
you
see
is
in
our
realm
right.
Every
cncf
is
everywhere
and
it
touches
a
lot
of
things.
What
this
means
is
that
there
are
a
lot
of
opportunities,
so
we're
going
to
play
a
game
if
you're
attending
virtually
you
post
your
answer
in
I'm
not
going
to
read
that
out
loud
in
that
slack
channel
and
if
you're
here.
A
Okay,
anyone
else
want
to
yell.
Okay,
it's
fine,
so
right,
kubernetes
now
this
is
great
because
it
brings
people
to
conversation
and
we
can
drown
them
with
our
landscape.
But
I
want
to
change
how
we
think
about
this.
When
I
say
cloud
native
or
cncf,
I
want
people
in
organizations
to
think
of
a
complete,
offering
everything
needed
for
a
cloud
transformation,
because
we
are
so
much
more
than
kubernetes.
A
I've
been
asked
many
times
before.
Should
I
adopt
kubernetes
or
envoy
kubernetes
or
open
telemetry.
First
of
all,
you
should
not
be
asking
you
should
adopt
kubernetes,
and
it's
not
my
strengths,
but
this
question
actually
does
everyone
a
disservice
right?
There
are
numerous
projects
within
cncf
right.
This
is
taken
from
the
2020
cncf
annual
report
and
notice
at
the
end
of
2020.
If
you
sum
this
all
up,
there's
roughly
80
projects
as
priyanka
shared
yesterday.
There
are
a
hundred
and
over
130
projects.
A
A
This
is
an
indication
that
our
community
has
shifted
and
grown
and
our
needs
are
evolving.
Secondly,
is
that
how
we
shape
the
question
shapes
the
answer
right?
If
we
keep
on
saying,
should
I
adopt
this
you're
gonna
think
everything
can
be
solved
by
that
right?
Everything
will
look
like
a
nail.
Everything
can
be
solved
by
one
project,
so
this
actually
leads
us
to
a
problem
we,
and
so
I
will
give
us
all
kudos,
we're
getting
really
good
at
acknowledging
our
blind
spots
and
we're
acknowledging
that
there's
a
cost
to
adopting
our
new
technic
new
technology.
A
A
I'm
going
to
thank
cornelia
for
this,
but
the
saying
right,
remember
when
you're
in
college,
high
school
learning
and
textbooks
would
demonstrate
a
concept
with
an
easy
example
and
leave
every
all
the
rest
of
the
questions
as
an
exercise
to
the
reader.
Were
those
questions
easy
anyone?
No
right.
A
A
A
A
A
A
So
what
is
the
biggest
issue
right
to
refraining
the
question?
What
is
the
biggest
issue
you're
faced
with
now
right?
What
will
be
your
biggest
issue
coming
soon?
You
should
be
asking
this
question
when
someone's
asking,
if
they
want
to
adopt
a
project,
because
it
forces
you
to
think
about
the
present
and
the
future
right
well
like
when
you're
mapping.
A
A
Another
question
is:
how
does
it
fit
into
the
big
picture?
Is
it
actually
worth
your
time
right?
Is
this?
Actually,
you
know
sometimes
it'd
be
great
to
fix
everything,
but
if
it's
only
maybe
costing
you
one
or
two
seconds
and
there's
something
else
that
has
huge
impact
that
might
not
be
worth
it
right,
because
we
also
have
finite
resources
and
so
how
much
resources
do
you
have
to
throw
this
problem?
A
So
why
does
this
matter
to
everyone
here,
so
a
show
of
hands
for
folks
will
be
written,
significant
parts
of
a
stack,
I'm
asking
for
your
participation
yeah.
I
don't
know
it's
okay,
it's
not
a
bad
thing
yeah,
who
is
now
working
on
an
open
source
version
of
something
that
they
worked
on
that
was
closed
source
in
the
past.
A
A
A
What
is
great
about
right,
everyone's
having
a
great
time
at
coupon,
and
this
is
more
than
just
a
gathering
of
great
minds-
it's
actually
it's
a
celebration
right.
This
is
validation
that
we're
doing
good
work
and
impactful
work,
we're
solving
real
problems,
and
that
feels
really
good
and
another
thing
that's
minus
matters
to
us
to
you
is
calling
out
the
we
need
to
identify
the
vendors
and
industries
right.
They
have
pivoted
industries
and
vendors
have
pivoted
their
entire
model
to
leverage
open
source
projects.
A
It
is
now
central
to
how
they
operate
their
day-to-day
they're,
also
new
industries
that
are
popping
up
right.
There's.
I
think
I
saw
a
joke.
It
was
like.
Oh,
what
are
the
new
startups
this
like
this
round
of
months
at
kubecon,
right
entire
things
are
being
built
around
our
projects
now
this
is
all
to
say
that
the
scope
and
the
impact
of
our
projects
is
huge,
and
we
all
have
an
opportunity
to
leverage
this
momentum
now
to
make
sure
we
can
grow
into
simba
right
overlooking
the
planes.
A
Let's,
let's
talk
about
a
mindset
now
we
normally
talk
about
success.
A
success
is
adoption
right
now.
This
is
great.
We
can
easily
say
to
safely
say
that
cncf
is
widely
adopted
right.
Look
around
we're
here,
as
I've
just
showed
the
attendance
at
kubecon,
but
does
this
mean
we'll
always
be
relevant
cool
hip,
like
the
cool
kids
right,
and
so
I
want
us
to
change
this.
To
success?
Is
adoption
and
sustainability
right
sustainability,
being
ease
of
long-term
use?
Does
upgrading
break
everything?
Do
you
enjoy
using
these
projects
right?
Is
it?
Are
there
good
dogs?
A
Does
it
continue
to
solve
relevant
problems?
As
a
domain
involved,
does
it
also
reduce
the
mental
load
on
our
developers
right?
A
lot
of
you
know.
You
probably
heard
a
lot
of
stories
that
some
companies
or
your
organization's
success
is
tied
to
that
one
person.
That
knows
where
all
the
berries
the
bodies
are
buried
and
if
they
leave
everything
falls
apart.
A
A
Now
this
challenge
us
to
think
about
how
we
build
things
and
what
we're
achieving
if
you're
a
maintainer
a
few
times
a
year,
you'll
get
an
email
asking
for
project
updates
and
one
question
is
about
the
impact
of
the
end
user.
This
question
is
asked
because
it
paints
a
story.
These
stories
contextualize
what
is
built?
A
It
is
how
everything
fits
them
together,
now
great
news
that
there's
new
faces
at
kubecon,
and
this
is
where
I
encourage
you
to
leverage
the
business
value
tracks.
Especially
people
are
attending
there
they're
used
to
thinking
about
what
you
know
say:
a
yaml
file
impacts,
a
mobile
application
or
something
else
right.
This
is
how
they
are
used
to
think
about
the
whole
picture,
and
so
I
encourage
you
to
leverage
these.
You
know
highly
these
newly
highlighted
people
to
think
learn
how
to
think
what
they
do.
Also
bonus
points.
A
If
you
recognize
that
phone
now
I
have
a
dream.
I
have
a
dream
that
we
have
a
cncf
stack
now.
I
don't
know
if
this
is
actually
what
is
needed,
but
I'm
throwing
this
out
there
because
it
might.
It
highlights
two
big
gaps.
Two
that
I
mentioned
before
one
is
that
we
need
better
integrations
across
projects
right,
I'm
I
work
very
tightly
in
the
observability
space
right
now
and
I
am
amazed
to
see
how
much
cross-project
collaboration
this
is
within
observability
right.
A
You
saw
yesterday
during
the
project
updates
with
prometheus
that
has
integration
with
open,
metrics,
open
telemetry.
These
are
projects
that
are
working
together.
I
want
to
see
bigger
I'll
get
to
that
and
the
next
part
is
gaps
in
our
offerings.
We
need
to
identify
these
gaps
and
assess.
Are
we
targeting
these
personas
correctly?
Should
we
even
be
targeting
those
personas
and
so
kind
of
to
like
highlight
again
the
gaps
that
I
found
earlier
granted?
These
are
the
tiny
samples
that
bare
metals,
some
l4
l4
l7
requests-
I
am
I
am-
is
really
interesting.
A
I
am
because
im's
been
built
before
cloud
was
a
real
keyword
right
before
I
saw
there's
a
kubecon
bingo
right
before
cloud
was
one
of
those
were
like
words:
you'd
find
there.
A
There
are
technologies
and
concepts
that
are
built
before
a
cloud
is
a
thing
and
we
are
probably
leaving
those
adopters
and
users
behind,
and
so
we
need
to
start
thinking
about
how
we
can
bring
them
in
now.
This
is
where,
as
a
community,
we
need
to
hear
how
we're
leaving
you
behind
and
how
we've
burned
you
right.
We
don't
want
that
to
happen
and
we
need
that
honest
feedback,
so
you
know
pinking
in
the
brain
taking
over
the
world.
A
A
A
One
wild
idea,
a
cross
tag,
project
group
that
is
focused
purely
on
integration
across
networking
observability.
All
these
things
there
another
one
is
in
the
questions
that
we
ask
our
consumers
or
end
users
adopters.
When
did
our
technology
fail
you?
What
were
the
things
that
you
had
to
internally
manipulate
in
a
really
weird
way,
so
things
could
fit
properly
with
our
things,
would
you
keep
on
using
it
asking
people
a
year,
maybe
after
they
dropped
our
technologies,
why
they
stopped
using
it
and
are
they
happier
with
their
new
offerings?
A
A
So
where
do
you
fit
into
this?
Well,
one
thing
that
I
love
about.
Kubecon
cloudnativecon
is
that
this
is
a
place
where
I
can
meet
people
who
are
working
on
a
wide
variety
of
problems.
I
often
learn
I'm
not
alone
in
trying
to
solve
for
something.
So
my
ask
of
you
is
when
you
find
that
problem
that
keeps
on
coming
up
strongly
consider
creating
an
open
source
project.