►
From YouTube: Closing Remarks - Steve Wong, VMware
Description
Closing Remarks - Steve Wong, VMware
A
A
So
I'm
a
little
early
with
these
closing
remarks,
but
I'm
just
going
to
go
for
it
anyway.
A
So
in
terms
of
upcoming
events,
the
linux
foundation
has
open
source
summit
north
america
coming
up
in
late
june
in
austin
texas,
and
there
will
be
a
kubernetes
on
edge
day,
north
america
coming
soon,
but
the
linux
foundation
hasn't
surfaced
the
cfp
site
or
registration.
Yet
I
believe
that
that's
destined
to
go
to
detroit,
either
before
or
during
kubecon,
which
I
think
is
in
october.
A
Embedded
system
conferences
held
by
the
linux
foundation,
the
one
I'm
aware
of
for
sure,
is
embedded
the
open
source
summit
with
automotive
linux,
which
is
in
december
in
tokyo,
and
I
think
they
have
one
of
those
before
that
in
south
america,
and
perhaps
one
in
europe
that,
if
I'm
not
mistaken,
was
in
ireland.
But
the
linux
foundation
site
should
have
references
to
those
things.
A
Topic
there
has
been
a
kubernetes
iot
edge
working
group
operating
for
years
over
under
the
kubernetes
project,
so
it
has
a
slack
channel.
It
has
zoom
meetings
that
have
been
every
two
weeks.
Although
half
the
meetings
are
for
asia,
so
they're
in
uncomfortable
time
zones,
potentially
unless
you're
in
asia
and
half
for
north
america,
this
group
is
in
transition.
A
So
what
happened
was
that
a
lot
of
the
discussions
coming
up
in
this
working
group
went
beyond
kubernetes?
I
mean
there
were.
Even
you
know,
the
heresy
talks
of
his
kubernetes
really
suited
for
edge,
and
the
kubernetes
project
decided
that
maybe
this
is
a
better
fit
for
being
under
the
cncf,
because
we've
got
a
lot
of
cncf
projects
like
cubeedge
came
and
talked
to
us.
A
You
know:
we've
had
recently
demos
of
tools
like
portainer,
the
red
hat
version
of
red
hat
has
that
micro
shift
and
we
had
a
presentation
on
that
and
we're
open.
If
anybody
in
the
audience
works
on
these
projects,
our
rule
is
that
we
don't
want.
We
don't
want
presentations
that
are
just
commercial
sales
pitch.
You
know
if
you've
got
some
product,
that's
closed
source
and
you're
trying
to
sell
it.
Don't
come
to
this
meeting.
A
To
expect
us
to
you
know,
be
a
platform
where
you'll
put
on
your
sales
pitch,
but
it
certainly
if
it's
open
source
and
it's
okay,
if
it's
open
source
under
a
cncf
approved
license
and
you
sell
a
commercial
version
with
support.
Besides,
that's
fine,
you
know
something
like
portainer,
for
example,
has
given
presentations
at
the
group,
so
if
you're
either
associated
with
an
open
source
project
or
even
a
vendor
that
has
a
free
community
edition,
that's
open
source
you're.
Welcome
to
just
put
yourself
on
the
agenda
for
a
presentation
at
the
list.
A
A
So
that's
how
that
works,
and
you
might
be
interested
in
joining
the
group
so
to
wrap
this
up.
I
just
want
to
make
a
comment
that
in
tech
things
are
rarely
these
overnight:
successes
that
go
from
inception
to
universal
adoption
like
instantly
like
the
drop
of
water
captured
in
a
high-speed
camera
or
even
within
24
hours.
A
The
process
involved
here
is
kind
of
more
along
the
lines
of
pursuing
a
college
degree
when
you
get
down
to
it.
These
open
source
projects
get
built,
but
it
might
take
up
to
four
years
before
they
build
up
enough
momentum.
Stability.
Things
like
this
to
get
adoption
and
along
the
way
during
that
four-year
process.
A
The
ones
that
turn
out
healthy
and
get
adoption
are
ones
that
get
exposed
in
venues
like
this,
where
users
hear
about
them,
but
freely
exchange
information,
give
feedback
as
to
gee.
I
have
this
use
case.
It's
not
quite
right,
but
what
could
I
do
to
accomplish
this,
and
maybe
the
people
behind
the
project
learn
to
adapt
it
like
the
speaker
before
me.
A
Talking
about
web
assembly
is
an
example
of
that,
where
that's
really
a
rapidly
moving
thing
that
people
it
was
originally
done
for
web
browser,
but
the
act
of
moving
that
kind
of
stuff
over
to
be
suitable
for
being
something
docker-like
with
for
edge
but
docker-like
in
the,
in
the
context
that
it's
packaged
up,
not
docker-like
in
the
sense
that
gee
the
web
assembly
might
be
smaller,
have
much
reduced.
Startup
latency
maybe
be
more
portable,
but
these
kinds
of
new
things
are
the
kind
of
subject
matter
both
for
that
group.
A
I
talked
about
conferences
like
this
and
what
I'd
like
to
encourage
is
that
we're
about
to
break
for
a
happy
hour,
and
I
know
it's
been
a
long
day.
It's
tempting
to
go
back
to
your
hotel
room,
but
I've
seen
some
pretty
interesting
conversations
break
out
in
the
so-called
hallway
track.
So
I'd
encourage
people
to
just
hang
around
and
have
these
conversations
about
the
cool
new
technology.
You
saw
today
or
even
cool
new
technology
that
you're
aware
of
that.
You
didn't
see
today
and
let's
get
these
conversations
going
and
learn
from
each
other.
A
So
please
stick
around
for
that
happy
hour.
It's
I've
been
told
that
you
go
out
the
door
turn
right
and
it's
going
to
be
near
the
front
door
somewhere.
You've
got
one
of
these
green
cards.
That
gets
you
a
cocktail
and
you
might
as
well
at
least
hang
around
long
enough
to
burn
your
green
card
before
you
head
back
to
the
hotel.
A
A
You
know
people
rehearse
them,
they
don't
get
paid
for
this,
and
I
want
to
shout
out
some
appreciation
for
the
act
of
doing
this.
You
know
it's
a
lot
like
the
act
these
days
of
writing
a
book
in
the
computer
industry.
You
might
think
you
know
that
that's
glamorous
and
lucrative,
but
nobody
makes
any
money
at
that,
and
I
don't
think
anybody
makes
money
at
speaking
at
these
conferences.
They
just
do
it
to
share
their
ideas,
and
I
want
to
thank
these.
These
speakers.
A
And
then,
finally,
this
event
had
a
program
committee,
and
these
are
the
people
who
review
the
cfps
I'm
on
this
list,
but
there's
a
number
of
other
people.
This
is
also
a
fair
amount
of
work.
Yeah
we
get
over
a
hundred
submissions
and
go
through
these
and
pick
the
best
candidates.
Try
to
avoid
duplications.
A
One
of
the
odd
things
about
this-
and
I
I
already
talked
to
somebody
in
the
audience
on
a
break
about
this
who
was
interested
in
speaking.
So
definitely
at
that
happy
hour
if
you're
interested
in
speaking,
come
and
chat
with
me
is.
I
can
give
you
some
advice,
having
reviewed
these
both
for
this
edge
day,
but
I
also
am
a
reviewer
for
the
kubecon
conference
itself
and
have
been
reviewing
for
kubecon
for
three
years.
A
Often,
what
happens?
Is
people
put
in
a
really
good
proposal,
but
it
turns
out
six
people
put
in
a
proposal
on
exactly
that
same
topic,
so
there
are
certain
things
that
are
competitive.
It's
hard
to
really
predict
how
that
is
going
to
turn
out
if
you
did
put
them
in
in
the
past.
If
you're.
In
that
scenario,
where
you
were
one
of
six
and
very
close,
you
shouldn't
get
discouraged,
don't
you
might
be
able
to
just
submit
it
to
the
next
one
that
comes
along
and
do
just
fine?
A
The
other
thing
is
with
the
cncf
and
linux
foundation.
I
don't
know
the
people
are
aware
of
it
because
they
rarely
do
this,
but
if
you
get
rejected
you
can
just
email
the
people
and
ask
them
why
and
the
people
on
these
review
committees
normally
give
reviews
in
writing,
and
I
know
for
myself-
I
don't.
I
never
write
up
a
review
that
I'm
not
willing
to
share
with
the
author,
but
you
won't
automatically
get
that.
A
But
if
you
ask
for
it,
you
will-
and
you
know
you
might
learn
if
you
were
in
one
of
these
scenarios,
where
it
was
just
a
lot
of
competition
and
you
could
maybe
leave
it
almost
unchanged
and
just
try
again
and
just
get
it
in
at
a
different
location
or
in
other
cases.
If
this
is
the
first
time
you're
doing
it,
maybe
you're
just
not
aware
of
the
sorts
of
things
that
would
get
your
speaking
proposal
accepted.
A
You
know
a
lot
of
this
is
just
clear,
clear
explanations
of
where
you
intend
to
go
with
this,
but
once
again
I'd
be
happy
to
chat
about
this
and
give
people
tips
for
getting
those
accepted,
or
even
you
know,
a
lot
of
times.
There's
different
tracks
at
these
things
too,
and
you're
going
to
be
far
more
likely
to
get
accepted
in
one
track
versus
another,
there's
sometimes
crossovers,
where
at
edge
you
could
have
it
submitted
under
edge,
or
maybe
it
has
networking
aspects
and
you'd
be
better
off
to
submit
it
to
a
networking
track.
A
So
moving
on
the
final
thank
yous
are
to
our
sponsors,
who
helped
pay
for
the
event.
The
food
and
that's
it
thank
you
for
coming
but,
like
I
said,
please
take
advantage
of
the
opportunity
to
continue
the
conversation
at
the
reception
which
is
supposed
to
start
in
seven
minutes.
So
maybe
by
the
time
you
gather
your
stuff
walk
down
to
the
entrance,
they
should
be
pouring
drinks
so
hope
to
see
you
there.
Thank
you.