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From YouTube: AMA Kubernetes Community Days
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B
I
think
I
think
we
might
be.
I
see
a
little
live
thing
in
the
corner.
Hello,
everybody
welcome
to
another
fantastic
this
week
in
cloud
native
technical
difficulties
are
the
reason
for
our
lateness
in
this
current
predicament
in
this
climate.
You'd
think
we'd
have
this
dialed
in
after
covid
thanks
for
joining
everybody.
Hopefully
things
are
running
smoothly.
Please
comment
and
respond.
We
are
getting
those
in
the
live
chat
right
now,
so
we
thank
you
for
for
over
waiting
for
us.
This
is
exciting.
B
I
had
to
miss
one
of
the
last
sessions,
but
I'm
so
happy
to
be
back
on
air
and
hosting
this
week
in
cloud
native
and
there's
so
much
going
on
behind
the
scenes
right
now.
I
can't
really
talk
about
it.
We
have
so
many
exciting
things
coming
down
the
pipe
when
it
comes
to
content
from
cloud
native
television
or
whatever
we
plan
to
call
it,
and
so
I'm
really
happy
to
be
here
really
happy
to
be
part
of
this
team.
B
B
Who
is
my
my
confidant
in
the
cncf
who
I've
been
working
with
to
make
this
all
happen
and
who
is
leading
the
future
of
what
cloud
native
tv
looks
like
is
going
to
enlighten
me
as
to
what
kubernetes
community
days
are,
and
I'm
really
interested,
because
I
have
myself
formed
a
meet
up
in
my
my
locale
that
has
gotten
decent
decently,
big,
at
least
before
covid,
where
we've
done
a
lot
of
great
things
and
brought
a
lot
of
people
together.
B
I
think
and
connected
human
beings
on
a
different
level,
and
so
I'm
really
excited
about
this
discussion
today
to
learn
more
and
so
with
that
without
further
ado,
here's
bill
bill,
mulligan
and
I'll.
Let
him
introduce
himself
and
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
what
he
does.
A
Yeah
thanks
mario
for
that
introduction,
and
I'm
super
excited
to
be
here
chatting
with
you
today
about
kubernetes
community
days
too.
Before
we
get
started,
I
guess
if
anybody
has
any
questions
like
we're,
gonna
build
a
kubernetes
community
day
today
and
you
all
in
live
stream
are
like
part
of
the
audience
too.
So
if
you
have
any
questions,
please
feel
free
to
drop
them
in
the
chat
like
mario
and
I
will
be
monitoring
it.
We'd
love
to
have
your
comments
or
questions
and
we'll
like
try
to
answer
them
as
we
go
along.
A
So
if
you're
trying
to
plan
a
kubernetes
community
day,
this
is
the
perfect
stream
for
you
and
we'd
love
to
get
your
questions
answered
as
we
go
along
so
yeah.
I
guess
without
further
ado,
let's
just
like
dive
right
in
so
for
people
that
aren't
familiar
with
kubernetes
community
days.
I
think
a
lot
of
people
are
familiar
with
kubecon
cloud
nativecon,
which
is
coming
up.
A
The
one
in
europe
is,
may
4th
the
7th
and
you
can
register
at
the
link
below
but
say
you
can't
make
it
there
or
you
want
to
do
like
mario
and
be
a
community
organizer
bring
people
together
in
your
local
community,
like
how
can
you
do
that?
One
is
for
a
meet
up
but
say
kubecon
isn't
coming
to
your
hometown
tomorrow,
like
mario,
where,
where
exactly
are
you
from.
A
B
So
it's
okay,
it's
okay!
No!
I
I
think
I
agree.
I
think,
there's
like
areas
where,
like
a
cube,
con
or
other
events
are
not
going
to
come
to
you
and
it's
it's
really
on
you
to
create
these
events,
and
that's
why
I
think
kubernetes
community
days
and
all
the
other.
You
know
cloud
native
kitchen
and
all
these
other
pieces
are
like
other
ways
that
you
can
get.
People
in
your
locale
excited
that
didn't
know
that
you
don't
know
these
people
right.
These
there's
a
ton
of
people.
B
A
Yeah,
definitely
so
if
you
want
to,
as
I
was
saying,
be
a
community
organizer
like
mario
and
help
create
something
kind
of
like
let's
say,
like
a
mini
cube
con.
This
is
exactly
what
we
created
kubernetes
community
days
for
it's
for
self-service
community
events
that
really
emphasize
local
flair.
So,
if
you
want
to,
you
know
talk
about
the
big
house
and
like
throw
in
some
like
wolverine
flare
like
that's
totally
fine,
because
it's
it's
your
local
flare
and
that's
up
for
you
to
do,
and.
B
A
You,
if
you
want
to
talk
about
badgers
and
cheese
curds,
because
you're
in
madison
wisconsin,
you
can
also
do
that
too,
and
in
berlin
we're
just
partying,
so
there
won't
be
a
kubernetes
community
today
there
that's
not
true,
there
will
be
one,
but
that's
the
local
player
yeah.
B
Boston
boston,
massachusetts,
a
big
city,
but
it
doesn't
feel
quite
like
that.
It's
one
of
my
favorite
places
there's
a
lot
of
history
there
I
think
there's
a
lot
of
people
there
and
I
think
we
did
have
a
kubecon
in
boston.
B
So
maybe
it's
not
the
best
location,
but
I
think
it'd
be
unique
to
say:
okay,
well,
there's
this
big
city
that
I
live
in,
there's
probably
maybe
things
there,
and
maybe
there
isn't
right
and-
and
so
let's,
let's,
let's
just
use
that
as
a
or
wisconsin
I
mean
we
could
do
madison
or
stevens
point
or.
A
You
sure,
let's,
let's
do
madison,
so
I
guess,
like
the
first
thing
that
we're
going
to
do
is,
go
and
like
check
out
the
like,
kubernetes
or
like
the
kubernetes
community
home
page,
and
what
can
we
actually
find
on
the
website?
So
I
guess,
if
we
kind
of
jump
over
here,
we
can
see
some
like
cool
graphics,
like
people
at
conferences.
A
Man,
thank
you
like
you're,
getting
used
to
this
so
yeah.
I
guess
we
go
to
the
home
page
right
now:
kubernetes,
communitybay.org
and
scroll
down.
We
can
see,
there's
a
couple
ones
upcoming
and
there's
like
this
live
stream.
I
can
see
that
there's
one
being
planned
in
bengaluru.
The
cfp
is
open
for
that
right
now,
there's
also
one
in
africa
wow.
This
is
super
exciting.
You
know
it's
like
a
worldwide
program
right
now,
really
cool
graphic.
I
love
like
the
like
flavor
and
like
flair,.
B
Of
that
these,
who
is
doing
these
graphics
because
we
need
them,
because
these
are
like
they're,
better
than
monograms
and
other
crappy
ideas
that
I
have
they're
really
good,
and
this
is
like
this
all
comes
culminates
like
the
user
experience,
and
the
presentation
is
really
important
to
help
people
understand
like
this
is
a
serious
thing
as
well.
I
think
there's
so
many
events
that
people
are
just
bombarded
with
nowadays,
and
especially
with
some
of
these
being
online.
Now
in
virtual,
there
really
has
to
be
some
sort
of
draw
so
yeah.
A
Yeah-
and
actually
I
just
saw
like
the
the
tweet
here
like
the
kubernetes
community-
is
I'm
actually
gonna
jump
over
to
that
and
see
what
I
can
find
there.
So
let
me
take
off
my
screen,
share
and
switch
to
the
other
tab,
let's
actually
dive
into
like
the
first
blog
post,
and
so
here
we
are
at
io.
We
can
see
the
blog
post
and
okay.
We're
excited
announced
that
we're
reopening
applications
for
kubernetes
community
days
so
that'll.
A
B
B
Zoom
your
screen
a
little
bit
as
well
just
to
make
sure
I'm
seeing
this
right
yeah.
I
think
that
looks
a
lot
better.
Thank
you.
Okay,
cool.
A
Good
thanks-
and
so
I
read
through,
I
think,
there's
two
kind
of
like
exciting.
Like
main
points
here.
The
first
one
we
can
see
is
going
vir
virtual,
like
it
was
in-person
events
only
before
so,
mario
kind
of
what
you're
doing
with
your
meetup,
but
now
we're
going
to
have
imper
virtual
events
too.
So
that's
pretty
cool,
so
obviously
with
covid
right
now.
We
can't
do
everything
in
person
or
you
know,
if
you're
organizing
one
across
the
whole
of
africa,
it's
maybe
a
little
bit
difficult
to
bring
everyone
all
together.
A
So
you
can
organize
a
virtual
one
and
it
provides
a
lot
more
accessibility
to
a
lot
of
people,
but
hopefully
in
the
future.
You
know
we
can
go
meet
each
other
again
and
we're
also
going
to
have
hybrid
and
in-person
events
too,
and
the
second
part
is
the
cloud
native
community
groups.
So
mario
as
like
a
meetup
organizer
has
you
have
you
switched
over
to
cloud
native
community
groups.
B
For
the
time
period,
people
were
getting
zoom
fatigue
and
all
that,
and
so
we
decided
to
stop
and
so
we're
on
indefinite
hiatus
right
now,
but
I
think,
as
we
move
forward
when
we
get
back
into
in-person
meetups,
that's
one
of
the
first
things
that
we
want
to
do
is
make
sure
we're
tapped
into
the
the
proper
cloud-native
system
so
that
other
people
can
find
us
through
the
cncf
and
other
other
means
other
threads.
Things
like
that.
I
do
want
to
there's
a
question.
That's
kind
of
interesting
here.
B
What
kind
of
criteria
do
you
take
into
consideration
when
you
decide
the
size
of
the
event?
What
are
your
thoughts
they're
built?
Because
maybe
you
don't
know
what
the
size
will
be
when
you
go
into
this
and
do
you
set
a
max?
Do
you
say
like
let's
guess,
15
people
or,
let's
guess,
50
people
or
you
know?
What
does
that
look
like.
A
Yeah,
so
I
think
kind
of
so
thank
you,
juan
pablo
oops,
oh.
B
Wait,
no,
the
one
question
yeah.
A
Struggling
today,
so
we
really
encourage
people
to
start
small
and
like
have
a
really
solid
event
and
grow
from
there,
and
so
I
think,
probably
like
for
your
first
event,
you
should
think
of
somewhere,
probably
like
maybe
like
100
to
200
people,
and
I
think
the
key
thing
is
like
you
know,
really
see
this
as
like
a
long-term
sustainable
thing,
and
if
people
have
a
really
good
experience
one
year
they're
going
to
want
to
come
back
to
the
next
year
and
so
really
see
this
as
a
way
to
like
build
your
local
community
and
build
connections
with
the
people
around
you.
A
You
know
that's
what
we
all
are
as
humans.
We
like
to
you,
know,
connect
and
communicate
with
one
another,
and
so
I
think
if
we
take
it
like
a
long-term
sustainable
thing,
don't
don't
go
out
and
say:
like
the
first
year,
I'm
gonna
have
a
thousand
people
show
up,
and
it's
gonna
be
this
massive
thing.
Well,
it's
really
amazing.
If
you
pull
it
off,
it
might
be
a
lot
of
stress.
So
I
really
encourage
people
to
you,
know
kind
of
start,
small
and
then
really
grow.
B
I
want
to
reiterate
that
is
super
great
advice.
I
think
everyone
tries
to
say
like
we're
going
to
do
this.
150
person
thing
to
start
and
as
you
grow
I'd
say
every
time
you
add
50
people
even
25
people,
the
dynamic
changes
in
the
amount
of
work
just
keeps
going
up
exponentially
as
an
organizer
right,
so
do
not
check
yourself
out,
especially
for
the
first
time
around,
get
a
feel
for
what
what
is
going
on,
what
people
want
and
don't
just
yell
like.
B
There
are
things
that
I
will
get
there's
value
I
will
get
from
certain
presentations
or
networking
with
other
people,
or
maybe
there's
even
you
know,
the
food
sounds
really
exciting
or
there's
prizes,
or
you
know,
there's
caricatures
or
whatever
it
might
be
like
in
an
in-person
realm
like
make
sure
that
people
feel
like
they
are
spending
their
time
wisely.
By
coming
to
this
this
event,
and
they
they
feel
like
they'll,
actually
get
something
out
of
it.
A
Yeah
definitely
and
mario,
when
you
first
launch
your
meet
up
like
how
many
people
was
there
and
how
many
people
are
there
now.
B
Yeah,
that's
a
really
good
question.
I
think
the
first
one-
and
I
remember
freaking
out
about
everyone
having
enough
space
and
chairs
and
with
the
tv
work
and
I
need
an
hdmi
cable
and
like
it
was
the
worst
thing
ever,
but
I'm
so
glad
I
did.
I
gave
the
first
presentation
right
because
I
mean
I'm
just
starting
this
thing
from
scratch.
I
think
we
had
almost
15
people,
maybe
12
or
13
people,
but
what's
unique,
is
somehow
most
of
you
know
mr
bobby
tables
bob
killen
who's
massive
in
the
kubernetes
community.
B
Most
of
you
know
jeffrey
sika,
who's,
huge
who's,
who's
done,
amazing
things
as
well
in
the
community,
with
a
release
team
or
any
other
piece
of
the
puzzle.
Of
course,
most
of
us
know,
george
castro
as
well
who
heptio
vmware
I
mean
in
terms
of
community.
He
is
the
guy
those
people
I
met
through
my
meetup.
I
actually
connected
those
people
and
I
I
think
the
big
thing-
and
I
don't-
I
don't
want
to
trail
on
too
long,
but
it's
all
about
taking
it
slow
and
nothing
was
perfect.
B
The
pizza
was
like
tasted
like
cardboard
like,
I
think,
but
but
I
think
everyone
figured
out
where
to
sit
or
stand.
They
figured
out
how
to
get
there.
They
figured
out
where
to
park
right,
like
don't
worry
about
those
little
problems
worry
about
making
it
when
they
get
there
when
they
walk
in
they,
they
are
able
to
interact
with
people
and
there's
there
aren't.
You
know
guardrails
amongst
communication
right.
I
think
that
was
really
important.
So.
A
Yeah,
so
it
sounds
like
you
know,
this
kind
of,
like
local
aspect,
has
been
important,
really
important
for
you
for
kind
of
growing
and
building
in
the
cloud
native
community,
and
it
was
kind
of
like
your
first
floor
in
it
sounds
like
you
got
a
great
experience
too,
and
so
meetups
are
one
ways
and
kubernetes
communities
are
another
way
to
do
that
too,
and
also
there's
a
comment
from
pop
to
brendan
the
sticker
man.
Mario,
do
you
do
you
know
this.
B
I
don't
know
what's
going
on
right
now.
I
think
dan
is
just
trolling
because
he
can
dan.
How
does
my
dan
literally
gave
me
feedback
last
time
he
said:
hey,
listen
like
like
heart
to
heart,
your
video,
like
I'm,
seeing
up
your
nose
right
now
and
you
need
to
fix
it,
and
so
I
fixed
it,
and
I
hope
this
looks
good.
So
dan
tell
me.
Constructive
criticism
is
really
important
and
hopefully
no
one
can
see
up
my
nose.
B
That's
that's
pretty
gross,
but
but
I'm
I'm
really
like
I'm
happy
that
that
dan
is
here
for
those
that
don't
know
dan
pop
the
dan
pop
podcast.
I
listened
to
it
this
morning.
Just
just
check
it
out.
Dan
is
another
one
and
you'll
you'll
meet
more
of
dan.
I
think
he
was
in
one
of
the
last
episodes
that
I
was
hosting.
You
know
there
are
so
many
people
that
make
this
happen
and
I
we
we
are
trying
to
call
out
all
of
them.
I'll
shut
up
now
bill
continue.
A
Yeah,
so
it
really
does
start
at
your
local
community.
So
going
back
to
our
announcement
here,
I
can
see
that
there's
already
pl
ones
planned
for
africa
and
bangalore,
so
we're
already
across
two
continents.
I
think
we'll
probably
get
to
six.
You
know
like
possibly
seven.
If
mario
will
you
know
kind
of
buck
up
and
put
one
on
antarctica,
but
we'll
see.
A
I
can
see
that
the
cfps
are
both
currently
open
and
I
can
also
sponsor
that
so
there's
I
guess,
there's
like
multiple
ways
for
me
to
get
involved.
So
actually,
maybe
maybe
we
start
a
little
bit
smaller
and
check
out
like
the
cfp
page
first,
so.
B
A
Yeah
definitely
so
maybe
we
go
there
first,
so
I
need.
B
A
A
Okay,
so
mario
as
you're
saying
like,
I
think
this
isn't
this
as
actually
is
kind
of
like
built
on
a
lot
of
experience.
I
think
we'd
especially
like
to
thank
the
people
who
put
a
lot
of
work
and
effort
into
devops
days
and
all
those
openstack
days
for
providing
a
lot
of
the
like.
You
know
core
ideas,
the
frameworks,
the
templates
of
how
to
run
a
successful
community
event.
So
this
is
actually
built
on
years
of
experience
and
there's
a
lot
of
great
people
who
set
up
and
like
organize
this.
A
B
A
Yeah,
it's
on
the
oh
go
ahead.
B
I
was
just
gonna
say
so:
a
you're
not
sharing
your
screen
if
you
were
meaning
to
and
b
we
have
another
question
from
eve.
Thank
you
eve.
What
do
you
think
about
having
the
audience
in
physical
but
the
talk
from
remote,
so
that's
kind
of
my
other
question
too,
is
like
if
there
was
like
a
hybrid
approach
like
what
like
is
there
a
standard
that
you
should
be
following
to
to
have
a
successful.
You
know
community
day
that
cncf
really
would
prefer,
or
is
it
kind
of
what
works
for
you
and
your
locale.
A
Yeah,
I
think
I
think,
there's
kind
of
multiple
ways
to
look
at
it
like
one
of
it
is
definitely
like
what
works
best
for
you
and
your
locale,
like
one
of
the
things
about
I'm
working
quite
closely
with
the
organizers
of
kcd
africa
and
the
biggest
problem
there
is
it's
really
difficult
actually
to
travel
between
all
the
different
countries
and
so
bringing
people
all
together
is
super
hard,
so
that's
actually
why
they
wanted
to
do
a
virtual
event
in
the
first
place,
but
I
think,
like
the
biggest
aspect
about
kcds,
is
this
interaction
you
know
connecting
with
one
another
on
like
the
human
level,
and
so
I
think,
if
you
want
to
have
the
audiences
physical,
but
the
talk
come
from
somewhere
remote.
A
I'd
say:
if
that
increases
accessibility
helps
us
grow,
the
community
helps
us.
You
know,
provide
more
avenues
for
people
to
get
involved
and
access
one
another.
I
think
that's
great.
It's
just
making
sure
that
you
have
a
way
for
the
audience
to
interact
with
the
speaker
and
the
speaker
to
interact
with
the
audience,
because
I
think
that's
really
the
key
part
about
these,
like
kcd
events
and
what
really
set
like
your
part
event
apart.
You
know
because
there's
always
a
question
like.
A
Oh,
I
could
go
watch
a
video
on
youtube,
but
why
is
it
more
important
for
me
to
go
to
this
kcd
and
I
think
what
people
will
go
to
your
event
for
is
to
really
have
this
in
person.
This,
like
you,
know
like
really
visceral
like
connection
to
other
people.
I
think
that's
kind
of
what
we're
all
missing
the
pandemic
right
now.
B
Yeah,
I
absolutely
agree-
I
couldn't
have
put
it
better
myself,
it's
all
about.
You
know.
I
hate
the
idea
that
the
videos
get
uploaded
to
youtube
like
a
couple
days
after
because
then
it
erodes
the
the
fact
that
I
was
maybe
there
that
I
put
the
effort
in
to
go
to
the
event,
because
I
can
just
watch
all
the
content.
But
the
thing
is
people
do
not
go
to
conferences
for
the
content.
B
They
go
to
conferences
for
the
networking,
the
human
interaction
meeting,
other
groups
meeting
other
people
seeing
their
favorite
george
castro
saw
a
bungee
employee
at
the
cube
con
san,
diego
and
him,
and
myself
and
others
are
huge
destiny
fans
and
we
literally
like
he
was
giddy
with
excitement.
I
will
tell
you
that
it
was
super
fun
like
it
is
about
the
the
the
networking
more
so
than
anything
else,
and
the
free
food's
actually
pretty
good.
B
I
have
to,
I
have
to
say
it's
you're
going
to
get
a
little
fat
that
week
your
workout
is
going
to
get
it's
going
to
get
messed
up
for
sure.
I
love
on
the
on
the
top
here
on
the
page
you're
at
actually
toward
the
top
there
it
talks
about.
You
know
we'd
like
to
think
devops
days
and
openstack
days
for
some
of
the
core
ideas
and
content
for
this
document.
I
was
actually
a
co-organizer
for
devops
days,
detroit,
which.
A
B
Really
really
cool,
but
I
think
that's
a
good
model,
because
that's
a
good
way
for
it
to
help
me
understand.
Kubernetes
communities
as
there
is
a
kind
of
maybe
central
focus,
central
set
of
ideas
and
standards
of
what
we
want
this
to
be
in
the
representation
side.
And
then
each
locale
can
mold
that
for
what
they're
trying
to
do,
and
really
in
the
us,
it's
kind
of
like
applebee's.
If
you
will
like
they
have
a
core
menu
and
a
core
look.
But
some.
A
B
Elements
of
your
dining
experience
are
tuned
based
on
the
locale,
maybe
just
a
little
bit
more
locale
focus,
but
I
really
like
that
model
because
it
helps
you
get
further
than
just
starting
something
completely
from
scratch,
and
it
gives
you
a
lot
of
support.
I
think,
is
a
big
part
of
this
too.
So
all
right.
So
what
is
this
next
question
from
for
prettyo
tools
that
help
virtual
user
interactions
go
ahead
bill.
A
Yeah
definitely
so
we
do
provide
the
cloud
native
community
groups
platform
and
we'll
hopefully
like
get
to
that
platform
at
the
end,
so
we
can
kind
of
see
like
what
kind
of
tools
we
actually
do
have
for
helping
virtual
user
interactions.
So
yes
definitely
want
to
get
to
that
question.
There
is
a
way
to
do
it
and
we
also
have
a
question
from.
A
Where
can
I
check
if
there's
a
kcd
going
on
my
city
or
if
I
can
organize
one
yeah?
So
let
me
just
switch
my
screen
really
quick
to
the
actual
community
days
repo.
So,
let's
see
right
so.
B
There
it
is
there,
it
is
every
time
you
say,
you're,
switching
your
screen,
I
get
a
little
bit
nervous
and
then
all
right,
yeah.
A
All
right,
so
we
got
a
couple
different
things
here,
so
we
can
see
there's
a
couple
issues
open,
so
this
is
kubernetes
community
days,
repo
in
github.
So
there's
two
sections
where
people
can
open
them
is
either
in
the
discussion
sections
where
we
don't
have
any
yet,
if
they're
still
trying
to
find
their
team
or
do
other
things
like
that,
the
other
one
is
under
like
this
issues
section,
and
so
we
can
actually
see.
We
have
the
issues
open
right
now
for
bengaluru
africa,
washington
dc
and
brazil.
A
So
if
you
don't
see
your
city
here
definitely
consider
opening
up
an
issue
or
discussion
to
help
like
bring
people
together.
I
actually
just
had
to
go
through
and
like
close
a
ton
of
issues,
because
this
is
all
the
people
that
wanted
to
do
stuff
before
and
so
there's
a
ton
of
people
that
were
doing
things
that
wanted
to
organize
ones
before.
A
But
this
is,
you
know
about
kind
of
like
pre-pandemic,
so
if
you're
thinking
about
organizing
one
I'd
also
suggest
to
go
through
like
the
closed
issued
twos
and
see
if
there
is
a
team
that
was
already
kind
of
coming
together
into
your
city.
So
let's
see
we
have
ottawa,
I
saw
there
was
one
for
japan,
tunisia,
manchester
pune,
portland,
naples,
brazil
austin,
you
know,
there's
a
munich
like
lots
of
ones
around
the
world
and
so,
if
you're
interested.
A
A
So
there
isn't
one
right
now
and
there
isn't
there
wasn't
one
being
planned
before,
but
if
roone,
if
you're
interested
in
doing
that,
like,
I
really
encourage
you
to
think
about
like
joining
a
team
or
like
putting
a
team
together
and
if
you
want,
I
can
totally
happy
to
help
you
out
like
finding
other
people
too,
because
I
I
know,
there's
definitely
a
lot
of
interest
in
the
middle
east,
four
cloud
native
tech
too,
and
then
we
also
have
a
question
from
matt
jarvis.
A
So,
given
that
these
are
going
to
be
virtual
events,
are
you
recommending
community
groups
within
a
region
to
collaborate
on
events
yeah?
So
this
is
a
great
question,
so
I
guess
the
first
part
is
like
there'll,
be
virtual
events
for
now,
but
we
don't
see
them
as
being
virtual
events
forever.
We
really
want
to
see
people
get
back
in
person.
A
You
know,
as
mario
was
saying
at
the
beginning,
that's
where
he
met
like
a
kind
of
a
lot
of
great,
like
cloud-native
people
along
the
way,
so
in
terms
of
recommending
community
groups
within
a
region
to
collaborate
on
events.
We're
actually
already
seeing
this
right
now.
So
you
can
see
like
kcd.
A
Africa
is
obviously
like
a
whole
continent
and
they
kind
of
see
that
as
a
jumping
off
point
to
start
kind
of
like
more
local
groups,
we
saw
the
one
for
brazil
before
there
was,
I
think,
like
four
or
five
in
different
cities
around
brazil,
but
now
there's
kind
of
gonna
kind
of
be
one
overarching
one
for
brazil
and
actually
one
of
our
co-hosts.
Paulo
who
switches
off
with
mario
is
gonna,
be
kind
of
involved
in
pushing
that
forwards.
I
know
he's
super
excited
about
building
cloud
native.
B
Literally,
I
think
my
spirit,
animal
really
cool
guy
and
he
is
going
to
make
a
lot
happen
for
the
people
of
brazil
when
it
comes
to
tapping
into
cloud
native
and
kubernetes.
I
just
wanted
to
mention
eve.
Just
came
with
a
really
interesting
comment
to
me.
We
were
trying
to
avoid
collision
with
other
big
cloud
events.
We
realized
google
cloud
next
in
cubecon.
North
america
is
the
same
date.
B
Okay,
this
isn't
even
a
negative
though
like
in
the
virtual
realm,
at
least
like
y'all,
should
still
get
an
event
going,
because
in
during
that
event,
everyone
can
then
just
talk
about
all
the
announcements
at
q
con.
What's
going
on
their
favorite
stuff,
you
get
a
big
screens
monitors,
showing
certain
talks.
Certain
tracks,
like
I
think,
a
lot
of
it
depends
on
like,
if
you're
doing
something
local,
if
you
are
doing
it
in
person
in
some
way-
and
there
is
an
event
going
on-
that
is
the
core
of
what
you
your
event
is
right.
B
This
is
kubernetes.
This
is
cloud
native
like
this
is
what
people
are
discussing
anyway.
There's
no
problem
with
that
or
move
it
just
to
just
right
after
when
everything
is
fresh,
everyone's
still
got
all
these
ideas.
They're
talking
about
it,
they're
interested
like
that
was
some
of
the
best
meetups
that
we
ever
had
were
meetups.
That
would
just
happen
after
aws
re
invent
a
cubecon
or
any
number
of
events
that
happened.
So
don't
use
that
as
a
to
turn
as
much
find
it
find
the
opportunity
in
that.
A
Yeah
definitely-
and
you
know,
there's
always
a
ton
of
things
happening,
so
you
can
try
to
always
pick
the
perfect
date
like
we
thought
we
did
with
kubecon
and
then
all
of
a
sudden
google
contacts
is
right
on
top
and
sometimes
there's
not
anything
you
can
do
about
that.
But
I
obviously
would
encourage
you
not
to
schedule
is
the
same
time
as
kubecon,
because
that
might
not
be
the
most
successful
community
event.
A
Then,
because
most
your
community
might
be
wanting
to
go
to
kubecon
yeah
and
I
guess
just
to
go
back
to
like
math's
question,
really
quick
like
yeah.
Definitely
when
you're
talking
about
like
region,
I
know
like
the
cloud
native
nordics
is
like
interested
like
putting
together
like
one
as
a
region.
So
like.
Definitely,
if
you
like,
you
can
totally
consider
doing
one
like
as
a
region,
especially
as
things
are
virtual
and
there's
like
a
wider
net,
it's
easier
to
pull
from
like
a
wider
nut
too
so
yeah.
A
So
here
we
are
in
the
issues,
and
I
guess
maybe
like
the
next
step
on
like
kind
of
getting
started,
is
like
finding
out
okay.
So
we
have
some
like
issues
like
how
do
we,
if
I
want
to
like
jump
in
how
do
I
do
that,
and
what
do
I
actually
need
to
set
up
a
kubernetes
community
day?
So
if
I
go
to
this
new
issues
here,
I
can
either
submit
a
blog.
Well,
it's
not
what
we're
doing
today
or
organizing
an
event,
and
this
is
actually
what
we're
gonna
start
out
doing
today.
A
So
if
we
jump
in
here
so
what
do
we
say?
Kcd
madison,
wisconsin
2021.
So
first
one
is
okay.
Please
fill
in
information
organizers
as
you
sponsor
them.
Make
new
comments
when
it's
ready
to
review
so
location,
madison,
wisconsin,
usa,
event.
Date,
let's
go
yeah,
let's
go,
oh
may
is
kubecon,
so
maybe
not
the
best
time.
What
do
you
think,
mario,
like
july,
like
like
fourth
of
july,
like
really
great
time,
you
know.
B
A
Okay,
so
the
event
type,
obviously
so
this
is
july
4th.
You
know
they're
rolling
out
the
vaccines,
but
I'm
going
to
go
with
virtual,
because
I'm
not
you
know
never
can
be
too
sure.
Now
we're
like
jumping
into
the
submission
checklist,
and
so
we
can
look
at
kind
of
the
the
things
that
we
have
to
do
here.
A
So
no
other
community
kcds
happening
in
an
event
in
this
same
region,
like
obviously
like
there's
going
back
to
math
question
like
make
sure
that
you
kind
of
work,
we
want
people
to
work
together
as
a
region.
We
don't
want
to
have
like
competing
communities.
You
know,
I
think,
in
cloud
native,
we
really
see
it
as
a
really
collaborative
place
so
making
sure
that
you
organize
with
other
people
in
your
region
too,
minimum
of
three
organizers
from
three
different
organizations.
A
I
think
this
is
similar
to
a
lot
of
how
our
projects
are
governed
in
cloud
native,
where
we
want
to
see
you
know,
people
from
a
lot
of
different
organizations
collaborating
together,
so
this
isn't
seen
kind
of
as
driven
by
one
company.
Every
organizer
has
an
account
on
the
slack
just
so
that
you
know
like
me,
is
trying
to
help
like
organize
this.
I
can
get
in
contact
with
you
and
we
can
get
in
contact
with
you
with
you.
A
It's
just
you
know,
ease
on
the
logistics
and
stuff
each
organizer
lives
in
or
just
outside
the
kc
location.
Like
I,
I
think
this
one's
about.
You
know
it's.
It's
meant
to
be
the
local
community.
We
don't
want
to
have
you
know
kind
of
like
the
the
team
from
germany,
organizing
events
all
across
the
us,
because
I
think
we'd
miss
a
little
bit
out
on
like
the
local
flair
there
too,
and
so
making
sure
that
it
really
is
like
a
local
event.
A
At
least
one
organizer
is
a
cncf
member
ambassador
or
project
maintainer
member
employee
cncf
membership
is
so
large.
Now
I
think
this
is
probably
a
pretty
low
hurdle
to
cross
or
if
you
are
looking
for
and
there
we
have
member
companies
all
around
the
world
ambassadors
all
around
the
world.
So
if
you're
not
sure
how
to
do
it,
please
feel
free
to
reach
out
to
me
right.
B
B
We
want
to
help,
make
it
happen
and
these
things
don't
think
of
them
as
guardrails,
think
of
them
as
vessels
for
making
the
event
even
better,
but
I
I
do
think
this
looks
like
you
know
any
other,
let's
say
job
description
for
an
application
that
you're
trying
to
put
on
where
you're.
Like.
Oh,
I
mean
those
five
bullet
points,
but
those
last
two.
B
A
No
definitely
not
like
this,
isn't
I
think
you
nailed
it
exactly.
Mario,
like
this
is
kind
of
like
the
framework,
but
we
want
to
work
with
you.
You
know
this.
Isn't
we
want
to
be
helpful
for
the
community
and
that's
my
role
is
to
like
help
make
your
events
successful
help
make
the
community
successful,
and
so,
if
you
need
help
on
any
of
these
bullet
points,
I'm
super
happy
to
help
out
at
any
point
along
the
process.
You
can
either
reach
out
to
me
at
my
twitter
handle,
which
is
on
the
screen.
A
B
A
So
I
actually
used
to
be
a
bike
racer.
So
in
bike,
races,
there's
like
the
main
group,
which
is
called
the
peloton
and
then,
if,
like
some
people,
can
like
break
away,
there's
like
a
breakaway
and
my
style
of
racing
was
either
off
the
front
or
out
the
back.
So
I
was
either
in
the
breakaway
as
breakaway
billy
or
I'd
get
caught,
and
then
I'd
pretty
much
implode
and
go
straight
out
way.
Back,
wait,
hold.
B
On
is
is
peloton
where
the
name
of
the
company
is
that
like
where
they
got
the
name
from
re.
I
didn't
even
know
that.
Okay,
let's
move
on
apparently
I
didn't
go
through.
You
know
school
high
school
college
at
all.
I
don't
know,
that's
really
cool
okay,
awesome!
Well
with
that.
I
think,
like
a
lot
of
this,
makes
a
lot
of
sense
as
well.
You
know
it
looks
like
a
lot
of
things
to
check
off,
but
I
think
at
the
end
of
the
day,
getting
these
things
done
up
front.
B
A
Yeah
definitely
code
of
contact.
I
know
like
cncf
is
super
welcoming,
and
this
is
we
want
to
ensure
we
have
like
a
safe
community,
safe
events,
three
sponsors
once
again
making
sure
we
have
like
kind
of
sustainability
around
the
event,
a
fiscal
sponsor
that
can
accept
payments
and
kind
of
like
manage
that,
so
you
can
do
kind
of
self-serve
process.
A
A
You've
chosen
the
event
date
and
time
so
obviously
kind
of
like
all
this
doesn't
have
to
be
filled
out
like
right
when
you're
submitting
the
issue
so
say
it's
like
mario
and
I
are
doing
one
of
madison
like
the
only
thing
we
have
right
now
is
that
no
other
ones
are
scheduled
in
in
the
region
region
for
right
now
and
I'm
gonna
say
the
organizer
one
is
mario,
your
what's
your
company
again.
B
Let
me
let
me
know
if
you're
interested
yeah
just
carter
and
then
what
else
do
you
need
title?
I
don't
know
professional.
B
Infrastructure,
archaeologist,
I
don't
know,
and
then
you
know,
email
is
just
at
cooldude
msn.com
and
the
rest
of
this
is
not
really
important
it.
Just
mario
is
my
username
in
most
places.
A
B
But
that's.
B
B
A
Sponsor
one
let's
say
cncf
is
in
like
mario's
company
is
also
really
cool,
so
card
is
going
to
be
doing
it
too.
We're
looking
for
some
other
sponsors,
and
I
can
submit
this
issue
okay.
So
now
we
have
our
issue,
we
can
see.
One
of
our
things
are
checked
off.
Oh
mario's
also
an
ambassador,
so
we
can
check
that
one
off
too,
and
I
guess
we
have
it
our
event
date
and
time
chosen
and
so
right.
A
So
this
is
kind
of
like
the
checklist
to
kind
of
as
we
go
through
and
as
we're
organizing
the
event
we
can
see
like
our
progress
against
kind
of
all
of
these,
and
then
this
will
be
actually
on
our
project
board,
so
we're
going
here
into
event
formation.
A
I
can
see
like
different
ones
here
so
kcd,
brazil
is
looking
for
organizers
and
sponsors,
and
bengaluru
and
africa
are
an
execution
and
there's
a
whole
bunch
of
closed
ones.
Right
now,
and
so
that's
kind
of
like
the
interaction
on
github
with
kcds
and
yeah.
B
I
love
this
by
the
way
I
love
how
we're
using
github
to
manage
this
you'll
see
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
this
happening
with
a
lot
of
different
projects
out
there.
I
actually
did
this
with
my
own
meetup,
where
we
had
a
issue
that
tracked
the
planning
and
discussion
around
getting
a
workshop,
a
summer
workshop
plan,
and
so
we
had
bullet
points
for
all
the
pieces
they
those
those
were
assigned
to
people
as
well.
B
So
if
you
have
multiple
organizers,
you
could
also
assign,
if
one
organizer
needs
to
complete
something
like
you
could
do
like
you
could
do
a
lot
more,
but
you
could
use
this
as
kind
of
your
authoritative
place
where
all
kind
of
discussion
and
whatnot
around
doing
this,
you
know
with
the
cncf
is
going
to
happen
and-
and
it's
really,
your
reporting
place
for
what's
going
on
with
the
project,
so
the
cncf
can
also
see
okay,
there's
progress
being
made
where
you
know
these
things
are
checkbox,
here's
what's
left!
B
Where
can
we
help
things
like
that?
I
think
that's
important
for
ensuring
that
you
know
someone
doesn't
get
this
crazy
idea
to
do
this
and
then
get
a
couple
months
down
the
road
and
it
kind
of
loses
the
steam
or
something
happens.
I
think
it
gives
some
visibility
as
well
and
helps
kind
of
break
down
the
barriers
to
communication
and
it's
you
know
github.
Everyone
has
one,
you
know
at
least
most
of
us
do.
We
know
how
it
works,
etc
and
markdown
makes
it
really
easy
to
do
so.
B
Definitely
highly
recommend
that,
and
even
for
your
own
projects
as
well,
since
most
of
your
team
probably
has
or
most
of
your
your
attendees
and
members
probably
have
a
github
like
it's
a
great
place,
and
I
think
that
the
projects
board
here
is
is
really
nice.
I
love
the
integration,
so
cool
continue
bill.
B
This
is
fantastic,
don't
forget,
leave
your
questions,
comments,
concerns
thoughts,
queries
in
the
respective
field
of
of
the
platform
you're
using
and,
of
course,
as
always,
please
subscribe
for
more
great
content,
like
I
said,
there's
a
lot
more
coming,
maybe
some
other
shows
maybe
some
other
personalities,
maybe
some
different
design
and
art
ideas.
I
I
don't
know,
but
it's
going
to
get
real
real,
hot
and
heavy
in
here
over
the
next
few
months,
and
the
excitement
is
going
to
be
through
the
roof.
B
Trust
us
there's
a
lot
coming
and
a
lot
more.
That
will
be
announced
very
very
shortly
so
subscribe
now
at
cloudnative.tv
we're
on
twitch
youtube
linkedin
and
we
plan
to
keep
it
that
way.
So
much
more
content
that
you
can
hopefully
glean
a
lot
of
learnings
from
you
can
meet
a
lot
of
new
people,
and
you
know
it's
always
always
getting
better
with
time
like
a
fine
wine
all
right
bill.
Take
it
away.
A
A
So
I
can
see
there's
applications
right,
open
right
now
for
kcd
africa
and
kcd
bangalore,
and
so,
if
I
go
into
this
kcd
africa,
let's
say
I
want
to
apply
to
be
a
speaker
there.
So
I
can
log
in
and
yeah
so
I
was
in
admin
before
I
can
see.
There's
the
cfp
for
this
right
now
and
you
know
first
name
last
name
location,
you
know
kind
of
the
classic
stuff
and
then
I
think
for
the
people
that
are
oops.
Let's
see.
A
A
And
then
the
next
page
right
so
is
the
the
track
you
want
to
be
on.
So
it
looks
like
they're
having
community
and
an
enterprise.
One
say
I
want
to
submit
to
like
the
community
one
submission
format,
so
solo,
dual
dual
presentation
or
panel
title
abstract
benefits
the
ecosystem
and
other
things
that
you
want
to
do
and
agreeing
to
the
code
of
construct
and
then
submitting.
The
application
so
looks
like
their
cfp
is
a
pretty
easy
process
to
kind
of
go
through,
looks
like
we
have
a
question
from
eve
too.
A
So
what
is
your
advice
for
choosing
sponsors
most
of
the
times
large
cloud
providers,
but
would
the
event
be
a
bit
opinionated
yeah?
So
I
think
the
great
thing
about
kind
of
like
these
local
events
is
there
there's
a
lot
of
local
companies
that
are
looking
to
kind
of
like
build
their
brand
in
the
region
like
mario,
I
guess
do
you
have
any
sponsors
for
your
meetup
group
or.
B
Yeah,
absolutely
actually,
I'm
wearing
one
of
my
previous
companies
stockx,
which
is
based
in
downtown
detroit
near
ann
arbor,
where
a
meetup
is
had
sponsored
for
a
number
of
years,
our
our
meetup
and
and
events
that
we
were
doing
as
well,
and
I
think
this
is
super
important
because
you
should
look
at
the
organizers.
You
know
who
are
the
companies
that
they're
working
for
and
then
people
that
you
know
that
are
at
your
meet
up
and
see
if
their
companies
would
support
the
effort.
B
Most
of
the
time
we
had
people
coming
to
the
meetup
to
love
what
we
were
doing
and
said:
hey,
I'm
working
with
my
hr
department
to
figure
out.
Do
we
have
a
budget
for
spending
on
these
sorts
of
things
and
trying
to
help
out,
and
I
had
a
lot
of
different
people
doing
that
and
that
is
going
to
be
some
of
the
best
kind
of
word
of
mouth
one-on-one
case
by
case
to
get
local
companies.
B
That
can
you
know,
can
see
the
value
in
this,
and,
and
it's
it's
so
you
know
sometimes
obviously
they
want
to
get
their
name
out
there,
but
also,
I
think
they
do
want
to
tap
into
more
of
the
the
culture
more
of
the
people
in
that
locale
and
learn
about
what's
going
on
and
the
latest
in
technology
as
they
start
to
adopt
it
themselves.
That's
what
we've
seen
a
lot.
So
thanks
for
asking
bill,
yeah,
absolutely.
A
Yeah
definitely
so
I
I
actually
I
focus
on
the
local
companies
in
your
region.
You
know
a
lot
of
them
need
to
hire
people
or
they're.
Looking
to
you
know,
kind
of
like
build
the
name
for
their
services,
so
I'd
actually
start
like
in
your
local
region,
for
the
companies
to
sponsor
too-
and
I
think
mario's
experience
kind
of
proves
it
out
too,
and
also
in
terms
of
like,
would
it
be
a
bit
opinionated
like
right,
we'd
like
to
have
you
know,
organizers
from
multiple
different
companies
sponsors
from
multiple
different
companies?
A
B
Yeah
I
want
to
mention,
like
I
think
everybody
like
I
love,
google.
I
love
red
hat.
I
love
the
slew
of
other
big
names
that
are
in
our
space,
but
I
think,
like
you,
shouldn't,
have
to
feel
like
you
need
to
go
email,
google
and
see
if
they'll
sponsor
your
event,
like
that's
that's
kind
of
the
wrong
way
to
think
about
it.
I
think
so
I
just
like
don't
get
caught
up
in
that
the
other
part.
B
Is
you
don't
need
a
ton
of
money
to
put
these
events
on
the
money
definitely
makes
things
a
little
bit
easier
and
will
help
out
on
a
multitude
of
ways,
but
you
should
also
not
be
just
spending
money
left
and
right
on
the
most
expensive
item
as
well.
Because
again
you
don't
need
that.
You
need
very
little
to
really
provide
value
to
your
to
the
the
attendees
of
the
event
and
a
good
example.
This
is
food
like
you,
don't
need
the
absolute
best
food.
B
You
don't
want
cardboard
pizza,
of
course,
as
well
right,
so
you
want
somewhere
in
the
middle,
and
I
think,
there's
kind
of
a
benefit
to
thinking
about
your
costs
and
making
sure
that
you're
spending
as
wisely
as
possible.
So
while
I'm
talking
it
looks
like
fabrizio,
has
brought
another
question
bill,
you
know:
do
you
suggest
you
define
tier
for
sponsors,
especially
for
virtual
events?
How
can
I
convince
merkin
team
and
companies
to
sponsor
my
kcd
now?
This
is
something
where
I
feel
like.
B
I
would
defer
to
the
cncf
and
some
of
the
guidelines
and
and
what
they
have
here,
which
looks
like
bill
is
going
to
show
us
here
in
a
moment
how
I
did
my
meet
up
myself
was,
I
actually
did
build
tiers
and
I
built
kind
of
what
you
would
get
at
each
tier.
What
really
ended
up
happening
in
the
real
world
is
that
it
was
kind
of
just
this
loose
discussion
of
you
know.
What
are
they
looking
for?
What
what
can
we
provide
them
and
what
do
they
feel
comfortable
with
spending?
B
And
so
we
had
some
that
came
at
the
high
tier
some
that
came
somewhere
in
the
middle.
You
know
not
many
that
came
with
the
low
tier,
but
maybe
some
individuals
here
and
there
and
like
it
was
it
was
tunable.
It
wasn't
like
you
have
to
do
this
amount
to
get
these
exact
things.
It
was
really
really
case-by-case
basis
and
really
a
personal
like
back
and
forth
that
that
happened.
I
think
that
is
how
it
should
be
right.
B
These
are
people
that
you
know
well,
they
live
near
you
they're
they're,
in
the
same
communities
as
you
are,
it
should
not
be
a
very,
very
thick,
you
know
strict
or
you
know,
a
massively
well-defined
thing.
It
should
be
loose.
It
should
be
conversational,
so
hopefully
that
that
helps
you
and
and
I'll
give
it
to
bill
to
talk
a
lot
more
about
like
how
the
cncf
thinks
about
that
sort
of
problem.
A
Yeah,
definitely
so
in
terms
of
organizing
there's
a
lot
of
different
resources
under
kubernetes
community,
slash
content
and
the
one
we're
actually
gonna
dive
into
right
now
is
sponsors,
so
finding
sponsors
here.
This
is
the
recommendations
that
we
have
right.
So
it's
important
to
have
kind
of
like
a
lead
for
that.
To
identify
sponsors-
and
you
know,
guidelines
and
rules
like
sponsorship
should
be
the
main
thing.
A
This
is
kind
of
like
a
community
event,
but
when
you
are
kind
of
like
leveraging
thing,
I
think
mario,
like
nailed
it
exactly,
is
it
should
be
decided
on,
like
the
local
organizing
team,
we
have
some
like
templates
of,
like
kind
of
like
what
we
can
suggest
and
other
like
promotional
opportunities,
but
I
I
think
you
should
also
think
about
like
tuning
it
for
like
each
company's
individual
things.
Maybe
some
are
more
focused
on
like
promoting
their
brands.
A
Some
are
more
focused
on
recruiting
and
kind
of
giving
some
flexibility
into
what
they're
able
to
kind
of
like
get
as
a
benefit
out
of
it
and,
like
mario
said,
it's
good
to
have
like
a
conversation
with
those
people
yeah
and
so
there's
a
lot
of
resources
in
the
github
repo.
If
you
want
to
dive
more
into
each
of
these
things,
and
so
this
doesn't
just
cover
sponsorship,
but
this
actually
covers
kind
of
like
the
whole
gamut
of
running
a
successful
event
from
our
code
of
conduct.
A
You
know
what
to
do
for
the
cfp:
how
to
manage
your
budget
budget,
creating
the
website
some
different
faqs
that
we
have
managing
speakers.
Marketing
and
promotion
like
diving
into
the
actual
bevy
platform
managing
registration,
like
all
these
different
resources
are
available
in
the
github
repo.
B
A
A
So
that's
one
done
by
mario,
but
if
we
dive
into
this
community
days
region,
we
can
see
the
two
different
ones
that
are
live
right
now,
and
so,
if
we
go
into
kcd
africa,
we
can
see
a
lot
of
cool
stuff
and
yes,
my
account
is
in
german
in
case
anybody
was
wondering
sorry
for
those,
those
that
don't
speak
groomer,
but
we
can
actually
see
the
event
right
now
if
we
dive
into
this
a
little
bit
more.
I'm
actually
super
excited
about
this
because
they
have
a
lot
of
really
cool
speakers.
A
A
You
can
actually
see
what
they're
looking
for
sponsorships
right
now
and
since
cfcncf
is
doing
a
lot
of
this
stuff
around
the
platform
and
stuff
they're.
Actually,
looking
to
you,
know
kind
of
encourage
people
to
get
into
the
ecosystem.
So
looking
for
kubecon
tickets
for
giving
people
cloud,
engineering,
bootcamp,
sponsorships,
internet
data
plan
subscriptions
event,
planning
and
logistics,
you
know,
and
if
you
want
to
dive
more
into
that,
you
can
go
to
their
open
collective
page,
and
so
this
is
kind
of
the
like
background
around
it.
A
A
So
here
we
can
see,
you
know
title
the
link
to
the
actual
event,
the
short
like
the
description,
the
actual
event
description.
You
know
the
the
cover
image
that
they
have
here,
the
event
thumbnail.
I,
like
you,
were
saying,
mario
before
I
think
they
have
a
lot
of
really
cool
graphics
stuff
going
on,
so
I'm
super
excited
for
the
kcd
africa.
I
don't
know
I
like
can't
wait
to
see
this
happen
and
I
know
actually
abu
bakr
who's.
You
know
kind
of
the
main
organizer
before
around.
A
It
is
actually
also
going
to
be
at
kubecon
talking
about
how
to
encourage
diversity
in
the
open
source
ecosystem
out
of
africa
too.
So
don't
miss
that
talk
at
cubecon.
B
Yeah
so
really
quickly.
I
know
we
just
have
a
few
more
minutes
and
I
think
bevy
is
really
changing
the
game,
because
you
know
after
using
meetup.com,
which
has
its
pros
and
cons,
I
think
there's
a
lot
to
be
desired.
I
think
bevy
covers
a
lot
more
of
that,
and
so
the
the
cncgs
definitely
provide
more
of
a
a
way
to
connect
all
these
pieces
together
and
connect
everything
in
cloud
native
together.
B
I
would
I
just
want
to
read:
there's
actually
a
blog
post
on
the
cncf
blog
when
community
kcds
were
announced,
and
I
think
this
does
a
good
job
of
breaking
down
what
they
are
and
kind
of
the
the
what
they
cover
and
what
you
cover
versus.
You
know
how
you
put
on
this
event,
so
the
cncf
supports
kcds
by
providing
guidance
and
tools
covering
all
the
aspects
of
holding
a
success
event.
These
events
are
decentralized
and
focused
on
community
engagement.
B
We
hope
they
will
be
a
lot
of
fun
and
be
a
great
way
to
meet
new
people,
while
also
building
a
community
local
event.
Organizators
handle
their
own
sponsorships
registration
and
all
other
logistics
and
and
of
course,
each
event
brings
some
local
flair,
culture,
diversity
and
authenticity
logos,
shirts
things
like
that,
which
is
really
really
exciting,
to
hear.
Also
my
earbuds
just
canceled
out.
So
I
can't
hear
anything
so
I'm
gonna
hop
over
to
those
I'm
gonna
give
it
back
to
you
bill.
Why
will
I
do
that.
A
Okay,
cool
yeah,
so
we
can
dive
into
like
the
virtual
event
platform,
we're
using
bevy
virtual
there's
lots
of
different
things
that
you
can
customize
here.
So
we
can
see
the
speakers
that
we're
adding
here,
sponsors
and
partner.
We
see
that
they
have
git
labs
cncf.
I
think
this
is
open
source
africa
in
chico,
africa
and
then
the
different
types
of
tickets,
and
then
what
mario
was
saying
before
about
you
know
kind
of
the
different
types,
the
different
features
of
like
bevy
and
what
it
provides.
A
One
thing
it
can
provide
like
a
lot
of
analytics,
but
it
also
provides
you
an
easy
way
to
email
people.
So
we
can
see
that
we
have
a
lot
of
different
like
emails
scheduled
here
and
so,
like
things
like
reminders
to
attendees
and
things
like
that
are
really
to
or
easy
to
organize
in
bevy.
And
so,
if
you
have
any
questions
about
that,
also
super
happy
to
chat
about
bevy.
And
then,
if
we
go
back
to
like
the
content,
page
there's
also
a
whole
like
faq
session
on
it.
There
too,
so
yeah.
B
That's
awesome
to
see-
and
I
think
the
big
thing
when
I
think
about
setting
up
an
event
even
like
a
workshop
or
a
one-off
like
that,
might
be
a
little
bit
bigger
than
the
standard
meetup
is.
How
do
I
get
the
inflow
of
people
that
want
to
talk?
B
How
do
I
get
that
coming
in
somewhere
and
how
do
I
communicate
as
well
as
possible
asynchronously
with
everybody
and
and
meet
up
that
was
more
of
a
manual
process,
and
so
we
felt
like
it
was
the
standard
like
three
days
before:
let's
send
an
email,
and
I
think
in
in
most
cases
you
want
to
be
a
little
bit
more
conversational
with
your
audience.
You
know
don't
overwhelm
them
with
emails
every
day,
but
also
make
sure
that
they
they
understand.
B
You
know
how
you're
feeling
about
events
or
what's
going
to
be
happening
and
where
they
can
contribute,
etc.
So
you
don't
want
people
asking
four
minutes
before
the
event.
What
do
I?
What
door
do
I
enter
into
to
get
to
this
thing
so.
A
Yeah
definitely
and
then
also
another
like
cool
things.
That
baby
has
is
things
like
setting
the
agenda
and
manage
it
on
there.
People
can
build
their
own
agendas
in
the
bevy
platform,
forms
for
like
pre-order
and
like
post
event.
You
can
have
that
if
you
want
to
have
discounts
on
certain
tickets,
emails
wait
waitlists
and
different
emails
that
you're
sending
out.
So
it's
a
really
helpful
platform
to
help
make
it
easier
for
you
as
an
event
organizer
to
build
and
manage
your
community
too.
A
B
Awesome
yeah
and
we're
coming
up
on
just
a
couple
more
minutes.
If
there's
any
final
questions,
please
feel
free
to
file
those
in
I.
I
personally
think
this
is
an
amazing
initiative.
I
wish
I
would
have
known
more
about
it
before
covid
and
being
able
to
do
a
little
bit
more
with
it,
maybe
even
in
my
region
or
region
tangentially
located
to
me
that
I
would
enjoy
maybe
somewhere
in
ohio
or
some
somewhere
else.
Where
I
have
friends,
this
is
really
cool.
B
I
think
the
cncf
is
doing
really
good
work
here,
to
try
to
get
this
kind
of
outward
expression
of
community
and
and
to
find
something
where
people
have
the
the
kind
of
wherewithal
and
the
flexibility
themselves
to
be
able
to
run
these
things
and
and
the
tool
set.
Is
there
for
them
right?
You
you're,
helping
get
us
so
far.
B
You
know,
especially
with
bevy
and
with
the
support
and
like
like
bill,
said,
and
especially
his
email
that
he
very
meticulously
wrote
out
earlier,
like
you
can
contact
the
cncf
about
any
of
this.
Their
goal
in
life
is
to
help
out
and
and
help
projects
grow
and
thrive
and
beyond
projects.
We
see
here
events
and
I
think,
that's
really
important
to
the
further
nurturing
of
cloud
native
kubernetes
and
all
those
other
amazing
projects
that
are
moving
through
the
flow
of
getting
graduated,
so
email
bill
there.
B
There
is
his
email
and
see
I'm
not
important
in
these
things.
I'm
just
kind
of
a
messenger
bill
is
the
one
that
really
makes
things
happen.
So
with
that
I'm
gonna,
I'm
gonna
show
out
bill
anything
else
that
you
want
to
talk
about.
B
Totally,
okay!
Well,
awesome!
Thank
you
so
much
everybody
for
tuning
in
this
has
been
a
really
fun
session.
I
think
there's
only
one
or
two
more
that
I
will
be
doing
we'll
see
I
might
come
in
different
capacities
throughout
the
year,
depending
on
what
else
is
happening,
but
I'm
having
a
lot
of
fun.
I
hope
all
of
you
are
as
well.
Next
week
will
be
paulo.
We
don't
know
what
he's
talking
about
yet
I
think
that
will
be
announced
very
shortly.
So
thank
you
for
tuning
in
take
care.