►
Description
---
KCD Africa 2022 is the 2nd iteration of the Kubernetes Community Days Africa, a CNCF-powered free community event. Visit https://kcdafrica.com for more information.
A
Hi,
everyone
welcome
back
to
day
two
of
the
kubernetes
community,
this
africa
event.
We
had
a
great
day
yesterday.
Awesome
talks
and
great
conversations
that
happened
yesterday
and
today,
we're
going
to
be
having
more
yesterday
was
mainly
for
tutorials
and
more
deep
dive
kind
of
content.
While
today
is
going
to
be
more
about
talks,
people
sharing
use
cases,
sharing
experiences,
sharing
lessons
different
lengths,
building
different
things,
and
we
have
quite
a
lot
of
great
conversations
that
are
going
to
be
happening
today.
So
stay
tuned
and
join
us
throughout
the
rest
of
the
day.
A
You
can
view
the
link
the
video
for
yesterday
we
have
the
recording
for
the
whole
event
yesterday,
on
our
youtube
channel,
just
search
for
kcd
africa
we'll
be
sharing
the
link.
Subsequently,
then,
at
the
end
of
the
whole
event,
we
are
going
to
break
each
of
the
live
stream
into
individual
sessions,
so
you
can
watch
them
on
demand
on
the
kcd
africa
youtube
channel.
I
will
also
be
uploading
it
to
the
cncf
to
the
cncf
channel.
A
Also,
our
first
introductions-
I
am
abubakar
siddique
angel
developer,
evangelism
program
manager
at
gitlab
and
a
co-organizer
of
the
communities,
communities,
africa
and
co-hosting
with
me
is
anita.
B
A
A
Localhost
is
a
devops
sre
cloud
community,
previously
known
as
devops
nigeria
and
with
members
spread
across
lagos
up
with
nigeria,
germany,
london
and
basically
all
over
the
world
and
localhost
will
be
hosting
an
annual
conference
later
this
year.
I
think
our
november
in
lagos,
nigeria,
which
you
don't
want
to
miss
it
to
be
a
convergence
of
cloud
devops
and
sre
experts
from
across
the
globe.
So
if
you
want
more
details,
you
can
see
the
flyer
on
the
screen.
A
Bitly
slash
localhost
conference,
but
we'll
also
be
sharing
a
link
in
chat
for
the
for
the
conference,
so
make
sure
you
go
register
and
attend.
The
events
seem
to
be
awesome.
Definitely
do
I'll
be
missing
it
because
I'm
not
in
jail
so,
but
you
all
should
should
go,
participate
and
be
a
part
of
it
now.
Also,
we
let
me
share
my
screen.
A
A
Are
here
all
talking
about
cloud
talking
about
cloud,
native,
etc?
Digitalocean
is
one
of
the
providers
that
you
can
use
to
achieve
your
infrastructure
or
your
devops
or
sre
goals,
and
some
of
the
services
that
digitalocean
provides
are
droplets,
which
are
basically
your
computer
instances,
virtual
versions
that
you
can
use
to
run
any
type
of
workload.
I
use
digital
ocean
quite
often
and
I'm
also
a
digital
ocean
navigator.
It's
like
a
community
of
digital
ocean
and
enthusiasts
so
drop.
You
can
have
varying
type
of
droplets
in
different
locations.
A
I
know
they
have
a
data
center
in
london.
I
know
of
new
york.
I
know
of
india
forgotten
india,
so,
depending
on
where
you
want
to
host
your
content.
I
personally
use
amsterdam
often
because
I'm
close
to
amsterdam,
so
you
can
get
awesome
complete
instances
on
digitalocean
now,
there's
also
managed
databases
there's
spaces.
I
love
using
spaces
because
oftentimes
I
connect
it
to
my
droplets
like
using,
so
it
appears
like
a
volume,
and
I
can
backup
my
files
seamlessly
or
store
logs
archive
vlogs
there.
Also,
we
are
all
talking
about
communities.
A
Digitalocean
has
a
managed
community
service
where
it's
awesome
to
use
its
seamless,
and
you
can
run
your
workloads
now.
Other
things
that
are
provided
are
load,
balancers,
block
storage
and
one-click
apps.
Sometimes
you
don't
want
to
go
through
the
stress
of
having
to
set
up
the
virtual
machine,
install
all
the
necessary
services
required
and
so
on.
Before
you
deploy
applications.
A
Digital
option
allows
use
to
just
click
a
button,
and
it's
deployed
everything
you
need
is
deployed
so,
like
I
said
they
have
data
centers
across
the
group.
San
francisco
toronto
new
york,
london,
amsterdam,
frankfurt,
yeah
bangalore
was
the
name
I
was
looking
for,
and
singapore,
so
you
can,
which
means
you
can
put
your
workload
in
regions
where.
A
Most
likely
closest
to
you,
I
think
london
and
amsterdam
are
kind
of
closer.
I
think
london
is
kind
of
closer
to
ngo
in
terms
of
undersea
cable
that
run
from
lagos,
so
you
can
definitely
check
it
out
and
one
of
the
good
things
of
hosting
your
droplets.
In
the
same
from
experience,
I'm
a
huge
user
of
digitalocean
of
hosting
your
instances
in
the
same
data
center
is.
You
can
enjoy
private
networking
and
transfer
workloads
between
your
instances
without
having
to
incur
bandwidth
costs
of
moving
data
across
different
data
centers.
A
So
you
definitely
check
digitization
out
and
why
do
customers
love
digital
ocean?
Implicitly,
it's
very
simple!
You
just
go
in
click.
A
few
things
you
have
your
droplets
yeah.
Other
cloud
providers
have
a
lot
of
services
that
they're
providing
that
sometimes
it
can
be
like
yeah
moving
through
a
miss
just
to
understand
what
is
going
on.
You
can,
but
with
digitalization.
Everything
is
very
simple,
very
clean
design
and
you
can
have
access
to
everything
you
need
within
very
few
clicks
now
for
these
events,
you
can
enjoy
hundred
dollars.
A
It's
not
small
money,
a
little
glass,
it's
like
60
000..
Now
black
market,
so
you
can
enjoy
a
60-day
free
trial
to
experiment
with
a
lot
of
things.
I
think
one
of
the
smallest
digital
ocean
droplets
is
five
dollars,
so
that's
like
you
can
have
20
droplets,
create
your
nodes
run
your
cluster
costing
clusters.
If
you
are
trying
to
do
something
the
hard
way,
so
you
can
scan
this
qr
code
or
use
this
url
I'll
be
dropping
the
url
in
chats.
So
you
can
try
digital
version
out.
A
So
the
doctor
added
messages
from
our
sponsors
and
shortly
we
will
be
starting
our
keynotes,
so
how's
your
day
yesterday,
well
we're
here
to
get
a
yesterday
anita.
So
I
basically.
A
I
I
didn't
because
in
the
middle
of
the
stream
most
the
users
actually
stay.
I
got
some
deliveries
from
ikea,
so
my
daughter
has
been
disturbing
me.
I
bought
a
blackboard
for
her
to
be
writing
and
bringing
other
things.
Even
while
I've
seen
was
ongoing.
She
was
busy
disturbing
me,
hey
daddy,
let's
fix
it.
I
want
to
write.
A
Yeah
exactly
so,
we
spent,
I
think,
like
an
hour
two
setting
the
things
up
and
making
sure
it's
she's
able
to
use
it,
and
also
I
she
has
a
tablet.
I
set
time
limit
on
our
tablet
from
12
noon
to
9
pm.
What's
this
9
p.m,
or
if
he
has
used
total
six
hours,
he
should
just
shut
off.
So
she
came
kept
disturbing
me.
Her
phone
is
not
working
half
when
it's
not
kind
of
like
you've
passed
your
limit.
It
will
not
work.
A
A
Yeah,
you
need
to
reduce
her
screen
time.
She
learns
a
lot,
but
if
it's
getting
too
much
it's
it's
it's
going
to
be
bad
yeah.
So
awesome,
I
think
that's
enough
of
we
catching
up.
A
B
Okay,
sure,
all
right,
so
today
we
have
aquino
speaker
who
is
going
to
be
a
did
young
and
if
you
don't
know
of
eddie
dung
already,
you
should
check
twitter
because
she's
really
popular
on
there.
Yeah
she's,
a
developer
advocate
at
ambassador
labs
and
she
is
in
when
it
comes
to
advocacy
for
open
source
projects
and
most
cloud
native
technologies,
as
well.
So
over
to
you
edition.
C
C
All
right
cool
should
I
go
ahead
and
start
okay.
I
guess
these.
You
guys
are
off
hi
everyone.
My
name
is
eddie
dion
asibo.
When
people
call
me
diddy,
I
realized
that
djing
is
quite
hard
to
pronounce.
So
if
you
cannot
pronounce
it,
then
gd
is
like
the
next
best
option.
C
C
I
know
this
keynote
pizza
wasn't
last
for
15
minutes,
so
I
will
try
to
be
as
fast
as
possible,
but
that
also
include
all
of
the
all
of
the
details
there
and,
as
always,
if
you
have
any
questions,
you
can
just
drop
it
in
the
chat
and
I
will
respond
to
them
after
I'm
done
with
the
quick
story
about
my
cognitive
journey,
so
it
used
it
officially
started
when
I
used
to
work
at
this
company
called
interswitch.
C
Maybe
I
can't
remember
the
exact
same
thing
like
2018,
I
think,
or
2019
ish
kind
of
a
motion
of
the
exact
gear,
but
the
company
was
like
structured
into
different
sections.
Right
there
was
the
software
engineering
team,
there
was
a
devops
team,
there
was
like
the
marketing
team
and
all
of
the
stuff,
so
I
used
to
work
in
the
software
engineering
team
and
then
we
had
like
different
subsections
as
well,
so
each
like
software
engineering
department
so
to
speak,
had
like
a
devops
presence
right.
C
C
So
you'd
hear
him
often
talk
about
like
cuban
nexus
or
kibana
or
something
is
going
wrong
and
then
it
was
just
very
interesting
that
it
was
just
very
interesting
the
way
he
explained
it
right
and
the
way
people
would
always
come
up
to
him
and
say:
hey.
Can
you
help
me
fix
this
problem?
My
application
is
down.
I
cannot
access
it
anymore.
I
tried
to
do
this.
I
tried
to
do
that
and
then
just
watching
the
thought
process
he
usually
followed.
C
It's
like
implement
or
try
to
get
your
application
back
up
and
then
the
excitement
that
came
about
after
your
application
eventually
came
back
up,
so
it
just
seemed
like
a
very
exciting
thing
to
do
right,
but
I
was
like
okay,
this
is
cool
and
maybe
someday
in
life.
I
would
eventually
like
transition
into
like
learning
about
keeper
nets
and
all
of
those
things,
because
at
the
time
I
was
just
focused
on
web
development,
so
I
mean
it
didn't
happen
immediately.
I
went
and
I
joined
another
company
from
interstate.
C
C
C
C
Oh
okay,
he
seems
to
get
okay
now,
all
right
so,
like
I
was
saying
having
the
conversation
with
priyanka
was
very
like
inspiring
right
and
that
just
helped
me
to
think
about
that
initial
attraction
that
I
had
to
cubanet
when
I
first
heard
about
it
at
interswitch
and
again
it
just
made
me
feel
like
okay.
Maybe
I
should
actually
do
this
thing
someday,
but
you
know
the
fear
that
comes
with
moving
from
something
you
are
very
like
comfortable
with
right.
C
So
like
something
else,
it's
like
very,
very
scary,
so
imagine
maybe
building
yourself
and
being
good
to
a
certain
level
in
the
web
development
space,
and
then
you
don't
have
to
transition
to
like,
let's
see,
let's
say,
android
development
or
cognitive.
It's
it's
very
scary.
I
don't
know
if
any
of
you
think
it's
scary,
but
for
me
it
was
like
literally
going
to
start
somewhere
else
as
a
beginner
instead
of
continuing
in
the
field
that
you've
already
like,
maybe
build
up
to
like
learned
up
to
a
certain
level.
C
So
I
just
kept
like
maybe
whenever
I
came
up,
I
was
just
like
now
I'll
just
like
move
it
away
and
focus
on
what
I
was
currently
doing.
So
the
opportunity
came
to
work
at
ambassador
labs,
which
is
my
current
company
and
again
it
just
felt
like.
C
Maybe
it
was,
you
know,
I
don't
know
if
anybody
believes
in
fit,
but
it
just
felt
like
he
was.
He
was
maybe
fate.
I
think,
because
everything
was
just
kind
of
aligning
towards
me
moving
to
this
field
so
like
the
first
packet
in
task
switch
to
like
hosting
the
amaz
session
with
priyanka,
quesadilla
africa
and
then
a
job
opportunity
to
like
join
the
kubernetes
space
right
and
then
it
was
just
like
okay.
C
Maybe
I
should
actually
try
out
this
like
field
and
see
how
it
goes,
and
the
company
was
willing
to
give
me
like
the
first
like
first
month
to
just
focus
on
learning.
So,
even
when
I
joined
ambassador
labs,
I
didn't
go
straight
up
into
like
working
immediately
was
just
focus
on
learning
about
kubernetes
and
other
cognitive
technologies
to
get
like
a
certain,
a
certain
level
of
understanding
pretty
much
and
then
eventually
transitioned
into
working
as
a
developer
advocates
in
the
cloud
native
space.
C
So
that's
a
quick
summary
of
how
I
got
into
cloud
native
from
the
spark
to
another
spark
I
think
and
then
actually
making
the
decision.
So
I'm
going
to
share
my
learning
journey
and
how
it
has
been
so
far
so
next
week,
tuesday
is
actually
going
to
make
it
officially
one
year
since
I
joined
the
bachelor
labs
as
soon
as
I
transitioned
into
cloud
native.
So
I'm
going
to
talk
to
like
my
learning
journey
and
like
how
it
has
been
so
funny
things.
C
I've
been
able
to
achieve
the
things
I'm
looking
forward
to
achieving
and
the
struggles
I've
faced
so
far
pretty
much
so
in
terms
of
learning
journey,
like
I
mentioned
the
first
month
at
the
company,
was
just
focused
on
learning.
So
I
had
I
was.
I
was
added
into
like
the
more
like
I
was
merged,
with
an
engineering
manager
in
the
support
team,
where
he
like
pretty
much
like
helped
me
understand
things
I
wasn't
comfortable
with
and
then
how
it
worked
was.
C
When
I
set
some
courses
I
needed
I
needed
to
go
through
certain
things.
I
needed
to
learn
right
and
then,
after
I
learned
those
things,
I
would
go
back
to
him
and
say
hey.
This
is
what
I
know
now.
This
is
what
I'm
struggling
with,
and
it
was
just
more
like
a
conversation
to
get
me
out
to
a
certain
point
where
I
was
more
comfortable,
but
in
regards
to
learning,
I
think
for
me.
C
What
I
did
was
try
to
be
very
specific
with
the
things
I
wanted
to
learn
it's
more
like
having
a
roadmap
of
like
what
do.
I
need
to
know
to
know
this
right.
So
in
order
to
fully
understand
kubernetes,
you
need
to
understand
containers.
You
need
to
understand
micro
services.
You
need
to
understand
docker
before
you
fully
understand
how
kubernetes
works
for
other
people.
Maybe
they'll
just
jump
straight
into
learning
hibernates
without
all
of
these
other
things,
but
the
way
my
brain
works.
I
usually
like
to
take
things
in
step,
so
it's
like.
C
I
need
to
know
this
first
and
then
move
to
the
next
thing,
because
that
would
help
me
have
like
a
better
flow
of
of
that
concept
or
that
technology.
I
was
trying
to
learn.
So
what
I
did
was
try
to
like
understand.
I
mean
I
did
have
some
fair
knowledge
of
containers,
but
I
just
had
to
like
go
deeper
into
understanding
what
containers
meant
diving
into
like
micro
services,
they're
doing
a
couple
of
stuffs
with
darker
and
then
eventually
transitioning
to
keep
analysis
and
then
on
the
cube
and
that's
this
phase.
C
I
don't
know
like
I'm
sure
most
of
you
here
you
know,
kiwanis
is
actually
very
I
mean
I
would
say
it's
actually,
maybe
one
of
the
most
complicated
things
I
have
learned
in
a
sense
that
there
is
just
so
many
things
to
learn
right.
So
today
I
could
probably
start,
and
then
I
know
what
kubernetes
is.
I
start
learning
about
pores
and
then
I've
been
able
to
like
expose
the
pot
and
assess
it
externally
and
then
all
of
a
sudden,
I'm
happy
I'm
like
yeah.
C
I
now
know
this
and
then
you
realize
you
know
it's
also
not
about
services,
because
pods
are
not
very
efficient
since
they
die
like
since
the
their
id
changes
when
they
die.
So
you
know,
learn
about
services,
you're
excited
that
you
know
about
service
and
how
to
make
it
work.
And
then
you
realize
that
no,
you
also
need
to
learn
about
deployment.
So
it
was
just
a
constant
journey
of
being
happy
that
I
feel
this
and
then
feeling
that
I
don't
know
enough
and
then
wanting
to
learn
more.
C
I
don't
know
if
anybody
here
has
ever
had
an
experience
where
you,
let's
say
you've,
always
wanted
to
understand
something
or
you
want
to
reach
a
certain
level.
But
when
you
reach
that
level,
you
now
feel.
Like
I
mean
you,
don't
you
don't
focus
on
the
the
the
the
positive
part
of
reaching
that
level
you're
not
like?
Oh
hey,
I
need
to
read
the
next
step
or
I
need
I
need
like.
I
have
so
much
more
to
do
so.
C
C
It's
always
very
important
to
like
appreciate
or
think
about,
like
the
great
things
you've
done
to
reach
a
certain
level
like
think
about
those
awesome
way
and
how
you've
been
able
to
learn
this
and
how
you've
been
able
to
learn
that,
instead
of
just
focusing
on
like
moving
straight
up
to
the
next
thing,
of
course,
it's
good
to
have
a
balance
and
like
move
on
to
reach
a
point
where
you're
overly
like
comfortable
with
the
technology.
But
I
guess
what
I'm
trying
to
say
there
is
tailor
your
learning
to
what
steps
right.
C
Think
of
where
you
want
to
think
of
what
you
want
to
achieve,
and
then
right
now
bring
that
breaking
down
steps
that
will
help
you
achieve
that
thing.
So,
instead
of
saying,
let's,
let's
use
web
development
for
an
instance
right
so
instead
of
saying
hey,
I
want
to
be,
I
want
to
be
a
web
developer
in
like
one
month.
C
C
First,
do
I
want
to
be
able
to
like
maybe
know
how
to
use
css,
to
do
this
pretty
much
tailoring
your
learning
process
just
helps
you
feel
better,
because
when
you
can,
when
you
can
like
tie
down
the
little
bins
so
instead
of
saying
I
want
to
be
an
expert
in
keeper,
and
I
said
I
want
to
know
every
single
thing
in
kubernetes
it
starts
with,
I
just
want.
C
I
want
to
be
able
to
just
deploy
an
application
to
kubernetes
right
and
then,
when
you
eventually
reach
that
point
you're
like
okay,
hey,
I
can't
do
this.
There
was
a
time
in
your
life
where
you
literally
didn't
know
what
kubernetes
was
or
how
to
even
do
any
of
those
things.
So
you
can
then
focus
on
that
like
win,
that
you
have,
and
it
will
just
pretty
much
make
it
better
for
you.
C
So,
in
addition
to
breaking
down
the
things
I
needed
to
learn,
another
thing
I
tried
to
do
was
like
share
my
learning
journey
or
process
in
public.
I
mean
I
didn't
do
I
didn't
do
it
as
much
as
I
wanted
to
I
actually
wanted
to
like
maybe
tweeted
about
it,
every
time.
Writing
so
many
articles
about
it
right,
but
then
I
didn't
do
as
much
as
I
wanted
to
be
honest,
but
I
tried
to
subset
the
level.
C
I
believe
that
writing,
like
sharing
knowledge,
is
always
a
great
way
to
reinforce
your
learning,
even
though
people
think
of
it
as
hey,
I'm
writing
to
teach
this
person
or
I'm
tweeting,
to
teach
this
person.
It
also
helps
you
understand
something,
a
lot
better
right,
because
in
order
for
you
to
fully
explain
something
for
someone
else
to
understand,
it
means
you
need
to
understand
it
very
well.
C
C
I
didn't
reach
the
level
I
wanted
to
in
terms
of
like
being
very
open
with
like
my
learning
journey,
but
I
mean
I
tried
and
that's
all
that
matters
better
than
doing
nothing,
and
the
final
thing
I
did
in
terms
of
learning
was
be
very
keen
in
asking
questions.
I
understood
that
this
was
a
field
that
I
was
new
in
right.
C
I
mean
with
the
impostor
syndrome
of
leaving
web
development
and
coming
here
it
was
like.
I
was
starting
tech
collaboration.
I
was
just
starting
tech
for
the
first
time.
You
know
how
that
feeling,
where
you
feel
very
clueless
about
so
many
things,
so
that's
pretty
much.
C
What
how
I
felt-
and
I
knew
that
one
way
to
overcome
that
was
to
like
ask
people
questions,
and
thankfully
I
had
like
a
lot
of
people
in
my
support
system
who
are
willing
to
answer
questions
from
like
my
friends,
my
manager
at
work,
the
manager
I
worked
with
in
the
support
team,
my
demo
manager
danielle.
There
were
like
a
lot
of
people
that
I
could
always
ask
questions
to.
C
I've
been
reached
out
to
people
on
twitter
as
well,
including
siam,
like
so
many
of
them,
and
then
I
just
knew
that
it
was
okay
to
ask
questions.
I
was
comfortable
with
looking
dumb
to
somebody
just
to
understand
what
I
needed
to
understand
and
I
think
that's
a
very
important
thing
for
us
to
note,
because
you
can't
always
know
everything
really
and
you
need
to
be
very
open
or
willing
enough
to
like
ask
people
questions
be
open
to
like
saying
hey.
I
don't
know
this
thing,
but
I
want
to
know
this
thing.
C
Can
you
help
me
with
a
certain
point
and
I
think
those
three
things
were
generally,
what
helped
me
reach
a
certain
level
of
understanding
like
kubernetes
and
cognitive
technologies?
Of
course,
I
still
have
so
much
more
to
learn,
but
three
things
breaking
down
my
learning
journey.
What
I
needed
to
do
to
get
to
a
certain
point,
learning
in
public
and
also
asking
questions
really
helped
me
reach
a
very
comfortable
point
in
my
my
cognitive
journey
and,
of
course,
I'm
still
looking
at
learning,
learning
more
yeah.
C
So
that's
all
for
learning
journey
and
then,
like
I
mentioned
next
week's
tv
is
going
to
make
it
one
year.
So
I
just
I
just
want
to.
Let
me
look
back
on
like
some
things
that
I
have
been
able
to
do
and
then
I
think
the
reason
why
I'm
saying
this.
The
reason
why
I'm
saying
this
is
because
I
want
you
to
know
that
it's
it's
okay
to
transition
to
a
new
field,
it's
okay
to
come
into
the
cloud
native
ecosystem.
C
Trust
me
there
are
like
so
many
people
who
are
like
willing
to
help
you
get
to
that
point
that
you
want
to
be
that
people
sharing
knowledge
on
twitter
on
linkedin,
on
on,
like
youtube,
there's
like
the
the
kubernetes
slack
channel
as
well,
which
would
pretty
much
help
you
like
get
up
to
speed
in
your
cognitive
journey.
So
some
of
the
key
highlights,
or
some
of
the
things
that
I've
done
in
like
one
year
is-
I
think
the
coolest
one
for
me
is
speaking
at
kubecon.
C
Like
you
just
concluded
kubecon,
it
was
absolutely
fantastic
because
emma
I
joined,
I
joined
the
qualitative
ecosystem,
let's
say
three
or
four
months
before
the
like.
I
experienced
the
first
keep
con
and
it
was
just
exciting
to
see
people
speak
at
the
event
and
just
like
share
knowledge,
and
for
me
who
is
someone
who
has
always
loved
to
share
knowledge.
It
was
really
nice
to
be
given
that
opportunity
to
speak
at
one
of
the.
I
think
it's
the
biggest
kubernetes
and
cloud
native
conference
in
the
world.
C
It
was
like
literally
one
of
the
best
things
that
happened,
and
then
I
also
passed
my
secret
exams.
So
she
got
examples.
The
certification
by
the
linux
foundation
and
cncf
pretty
much
helps
you
like,
reinforce
your
learnings
or
just
look
through
things
that
you've
not
really
understood.
It
was
like
a
great
learning
process
for
me
as
well.
It
helped
me
learn
a
lot
of
things
that
I
did
not
know
prior
to
like
practicing
or
preparing
for
the
exams
and
just
having
this
education
was
also
a
good
feeling
to
have.
C
C
So
that
was
really
nice
for
me
and
then
at
the
company
that
I
worked
with
hosted
a
couple
of
kibernetes
workshops
written
a
couple
of
articles
that
are
centered
around
cloud
native
and
kubernetes,
and
we've
just
been
at
the
points
where
we're
like
sharing
knowledge
about
different
things,
and
I
have
participated
in
all
of
those
things.
Of
course,
sharing
knowledge
is
great
to
teach
other
people,
but
again
it
also
helps
you
become
a
better
person
at
the
thing,
you're
learning
or
just
become
a
better
communicator
in
terms
of
passing
knowledge,
and
all
of
that.
C
So
that's
a
quick
summary.
I
don't
even
have
past
15
minutes
or
I'm
close
to
15
minutes,
but
in
summary,
I
joined
the
cognitive
ecosystem
last
year
and
it's
almost
going
to
be
a
year
and
it's
been
a
fantastic
journey.
I
have
had
so
much
to
learn.
C
It
is
absolutely
possible
for
you
to
do
that
and
in
order
for
you
to
do
that,
I
recommend
that
you
try
to
learn
in
public
because
it
helps
people
know
that
you're.
Now,
in
that
space
like
prior
to
kubernetes
and
cloud
native
and
devops,
I
used
to
talk
about
like
web
development
and
technical
writing
a
lot.
And
if
I
wasn't
very
intentional
about
like
sharing
my
my
learning
experiences
on
twitter
or
something
you
probably
still
think
I
am
still
doing
web
development
and
I'll
most
likely
not
be
giving
this
keynote
speech
today.
C
But
I
love
to
use
this
analogy
that
imagine
if
you've
been
in
a
certain
tech
space
for
one
month
right,
there
are
people
who
have
been
in
that
same
space
for
two
weeks
or
maybe
just
one
week,
and
the
information
you
have
is
someone
who
has
been
there
for
one
month
would
be
very
beneficial
to
someone
who
who
who
has
just
joined,
let's
say
like
one
day
ago
one
week
ago,
and
your
information
can
be
very
useful
to
that
person
other
than
that
as
a
beginner
in
a
certain
field.
C
There
are
certain
contexts
that
you
have
that
an
expert
might
not
have
so
you
most
likely
should
be
able
to
explain
things
in
a
way
that
other
people
can
easily
relate
to,
as
opposed
to
an
expert
who
assumes
that
people
may
already
know
that
thing.
So
I'm
very
keen
on
like
sharing
your
knowledge
in
public.
It's
absolutely
fantastic
great,
gives
you
great
opportunity
and
also
helps
people
in
the
ecosystem.
C
Know
that
you're
not
part
of
the
like
you're,
not
part
of
like
cloud
native
or
doing
like
things
around
cloud
native
technologies,
so
yeah.
Thank
you.
I
hope
that
maybe
you've
realized
that
it's
absolutely
okay
for
you
to
join
the
clarity
space,
it's
fantastic
has
lots
of
opportunities,
and
it's
literally
just
waiting
for
you
to
join
and
help
in
spreading
the
word
as
well.
B
Oh,
that
was
a
great
story,
didi
yeah
and
it's
always
inspiring
to
actually
hear
your
journey,
because
I
think
we
started
this
journey
like
about
the
same
year
and
you
have
done
really
really
amazing
things.