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Description
The Power of Open Source Community - Jacqueline Salinas, Continuous Delivery Foundation; Tracy Ragan, DeployHub & Marky Jackson, OpsMX
The panel, "The Power of Open Source Community," will cover 2 unique stories of how community has impacted personal and professional lives for the better. This discussion will cover how you too can make an impact by contributing to open source communities. The panelists will tell us their personal DevOps journey, the people who helped them along the way, and how they continue to make a difference in the open source communities today. Join to learn how you can get involved in open source projects from Marky, Tracy, and Jacqueline's first hand experiences.
A
A
A
A
A
B
Well,
I
have
been
doing
devops
literally
all
of
my
professional
career.
B
You
know
when
I
started
coding
on
the
mainframe
and
devops
is
something
automated
on
the
mainframe
and
then,
when
I
jumped
over
to
a
platform
that
was
open
what
they
called
the
open
systems
platform
there
were,
there
was
no
devops,
and
so
I
started
being
the
one
that
had
to
write
the
make
files
and
worry
about
trying
to
get
a
build
done,
and
that's
that's
how
I
begun
my
journey
in
devops
and
over
the
course
of
time.
I
kind
of
you
know,
literally
I
force
gumped
my
way
into
a
software
company.
B
We
I
have
another
company
that
I
started
in
1995
called
make
software,
and
it
was
during
that
time
that
I
was
in.
I
was
introduced
to
open
source
and
it
sort
of
changed
my
way
of
seeing
how
software
can
be
developed.
I
was
very
skeptical
in
the
beginning.
I
was
like
you
know,
open
source
is
so
it's
just
not
gonna
really
ever
happen.
B
You
know
who's
gonna,
give
away
their
source
code
and
allow
other
companies
to
commercialize
their
code
and
then
ibm
did,
and
I
was
invited
to
be
the
token
woman
at
the
eclipse
foundation
and
I
sat
on
that
board
for
about
five
years,
and
I
learned
a
ton
about
open
source
governance,
the
importance
of
creating
a
community
that
can
start
having
discussions
about
serious
topics,
and
then
in
that
case
it
was
how
the
ide
is
needs
to
to
morph
and
change
for
supporting
different
compilers
different,
like
software
development
practices
and
that's
really
what
the
eclipse
foundation
begun,
as
is
a
place
to
really
talk
about
the
ide
and
how
to
build
it.
B
And
at
that
point
in
time
I
met
a
lot
of
folks.
I've
met
some
folks
that
are
now
at
the
linux
foundation.
I
met
some
of
the
folks
at
red
hat.
I
was
able
to
be
a
small
little
startup
sitting
in
a
room
with
giants,
and
I
was
the
only
woman,
so
it
made
it
a
very
interesting
experience
for
me,
but
it
created
a
community
that
I
had
not
understood
before
and
now,
as
we
begin
building
out
an
open
source
community
around
our
deploy
hub
product,
a
a
community
called.
B
I
am
beginning
to
really
understand
at
the
project
level,
how
important
open
source
is
on
so
many
levels
from
the
beginning
of
understanding
how
open
source
can
be
an
educator,
how
open
source
can
bring
together
people
from
all
over
the
world?
I've
been
talking
to
people
from
romania,
from
india,
from
south
africa,
from
the
united
states
from
germany
from
england,
and
we
all
get
together.
We
get
we
get
to
talk
about
core
problems
in
the
microservices
platform
and
then
we
also
talk
about
other
things.
B
You
know
our
personal
journeys
and
we
just
become
friends,
and
how
often
does
that
happen?
Really
an
open
source
community
is
goes
beyond
just
a
cool
technology.
It
is
all
about
handy
reaching
down
to
somebody
who
may
not
be
have
ever
coded
in
python
and
say
yeah.
We
can
give
you
some
python
code
to
work
on
and
we'll
help
you
learn
to
do
that.
To
you
know
we
have
a
person
who
has
always
been
in
qa.
She
wants
to
get
into
project
management.
She
wants
to
do
that
with
the
open
source
community.
B
What
better
way
to
build
out
your
resume
right?
It
is
an
amazing
way.
It's
an
amazing
platform.
Really
open
source
is
an
amazing
platform
that
goes
beyond
just
you
know,
a
governing
body
of
where
the
open
source
should
be
stored,
and
if
you
look
at
tools
like
jenkins
jenkins,
is
an
amazing
community
of
developers
and
what
what
jenkins
did
for
cloudbees
is
an
amazing
story,
and
then
we
have
rancher
look.
B
What
rancher's
done
rancher
in
a
few
short
years
went
from
a
company
doing
support
for
30
a
30
million
dollar
company
to
something
like
600
million
dollars
with
susie.
So
open
sources
is
a
is
a
serious
contender
in
a
commercial
market,
but
at
the
core
of
it
it
has
heart.
It
is
really
the
heart
of
software
development.
A
C
Well,
I
had
a,
I
had
a
really
difficult
upbringing,
so
I
grew
up
in
a
boy's
home
and
I
didn't
think
I'd
amount
to
anything
was
the
statistic
if
you
will-
and
I
had
a
friend
I
went
over
to
his
house-
and
this
was
back
in
the
days
of
the
tandy
trs
80s
and
his
dad
was
playing
a
game
that
I
had
never
seen,
and
I
was
asking
about
the
game
and
he's
telling
me
about
it,
and
I
was
like:
where
did
you
buy
that
at
and
he
basically
explained
that
he'd
written
it
in
this
language
called
basic
and
I
was
like
okay
and
it
became
this
like
sort
of
mentorship
where
he
started
teaching
me
how
to
write
code
and
it
was
really
cool
and
it
was
fun
and
exciting
and
I
really
enjoy.
C
C
I
wound
up
finding
out
that
the
gentleman
that
had
to
give
me
this
introduction
and
mentorship
into
code
was
actually
the
nasa
scientist
and
he
built
the
actual
rockets
that
keep
the
space.
Then
the
space
shuttle
in
orbit,
which
was
really
cool,
and
I
had
a
lot
of
mentors
along
the
way.
C
I
worked
for
a
a
company
back
before
online
gaming
and
it
was
a
company
called
jasmine
multimedia
and
the
ceo
was
jay
samet,
and
this
guy
really
took
me
under
his
wing
and
showed
me
a
lot
of
really
awesome
things
and
I
went
on
to
yahoo
and
symantec,
and
I
worked
a
nine-to-five
job
as
a
software
back
then
we
were
called
software
programmers
for
a
very
long
time
and-
and
I,
when
I've
got
the
chance
to
sort
of
go
work
in
in
this
sort
of
startup
world
with
yahoo,
wasn't
really
a
startup.
C
They
were
a
large
company
at
the
time,
but
they
had
to
start
a
field
to
them.
It
really
turned
me
on
to
all
of
these
things
and
that's
how
I
got
into
projects
like
kubernetes
and
jenkins
and-
and
I
just
it's
opened
so
many
doors.
For
me,
I've
met
so
many
amazing
amazing
people
that
I
consider
like
dear
friends,
and
I
don't
think
you
could
get
that
anywhere.
C
A
That's
amazing,
thank
you,
marky
for
sharing
your
story
and
I
think
that's
really
the
heart
of
it.
It's
really
about
people,
and
this
is
also
why
I'm
so
passionate
about
my
role
and
why
I'm
so
passionate
about
getting
programs
off
the
ground
for
the
cdf
that
gets
the
community
involved
and
engaged
is
because
I
too
did
not
grow
up
in
a
traditional
home
where
it
a
lot
of
the
times
it
did
seem
like
having
a
career
was
not
the
path
that
was
going
to
be.
A
For
me,
being
a
statistic
seemed
a
lot
easier
because
that's
a
lot
of
the
time
what
society
has
assigned
to
you
and
it's
sometimes
really
challenging
to
break
away
from
that
mold.
But
I
have
found
individuals
like
tracy
who
have
mentored
me
from
a
very
young
age
through
college
through
personal
experiences
through
careers,
and
I
think
that's
really.
The
most
amazing
thing.
I've
gotten
out
of
open
source
has
been
also
the
powerful
connections
I've
made
with
other
individuals
how
I've
been
able
to
grow.
A
My
network
mentor
other
individuals
engage
and
welcome
new
contributors
to
the
community
and
I
think
that's
the
really
exciting
part
about
open
source,
and
I
and
I'm
really
excited
that
you
are
contributors
and
you
are
helping
shape
the
culture
of
open
source
within
the
cdf
community,
because
it's
it's
so
important
to
to
have
a
space
to
welcome
everybody,
especially
in
times
during
our
history,
where
we
are
being
purposely
divided.
A
I
think
this
is
the
perfect
time
for
us
and
the
perfect
space
to
really
bring
unity,
and
you
know
we
spend
so
much
time
working
that
we
spend
more
time
with
our
families.
Excuse
me:
we
spend
more
time
with
our
working
families
than
we
do
with
our
our
own
families,
and
I
think
kobet's
changed
that.
So
I
think
that's
really
an
interesting
segue
into
how
has
open
source
and
covet
kind
of
like
what's
happened
there.
A
What's
how?
How
yeah?
How
has
that?
How
has
covid,
yeah
impacted
open
source
or
how
has
that
impacted?
The
community?
What's
been
your
perspective,.
C
I
think,
during
the
initial
days
of
the
shelter
in
place,
I
at
the
time
I
lived
in
the
bay
area,
and
it
was
scary
because
you
didn't
know
what
was
going
on
and
but
what
was?
There
was
open
source
community,
so
people
would
get
on
zooms,
they
would
have
happy
hours
and
it
was
those
little
things
like
I'm
just
going
to
speak
from
my
own
experience.
C
I
was
afraid
I
was
super
scared.
I
didn't
know
what
the
world
was
going
to
happen
if
it
was
going
to
end
the
next
day,
but
there
was
this
little
community
that
got
on
and
they'd
get
on.
Zoom
and
they'd
talk
or
they'd,
hang
out
after
a
conference
and
have
a
happy
hour
and
laugh
together,
and
that
really
made
a
lot.
C
It
really
meant
a
lot
to.
I
think
people
that
may
have
just
been
you
know,
would
sit
alone,
and
this
was
their
outlet
that
to
me
was
awesome
and
some
of
these
people,
I've
known
I've,
met
in
public
and
they're.
You
know
great,
but
some
of
these
people
never
even
met
and
now
they're,
like
the
closest
friends
that
I
have
so.
I
think
you
know
well,
kovit
is
a
it's
a
horrible
thing.
There
were
some
silver
linings
to
it.
C
B
Yeah,
so
you
know
we
have
kind
of
thought
about
bringing
our
the
core
of
deploy
hub
to
an
open
source
community
for
a
while.
In
fact,
it's
been
an
open
source
product
now
for
about
two
years
is
when
we
actually
license
it
out
as
an
open
source
product
in
github,
but
it
wasn't
until
covered
where
I
said
to
myself.
B
We
in
particular,
I'm
I'm
looking
for
women
to
to
join
the
ortillius,
open
source
project
and
I've
reached
out
to
several
of
them,
and
some
of
them
never
ever
thought
that
they
had
the
coding
skills
to
be
part
of
an
open
source
project
and
there's
a
myth
that
you
have
to
be
some.
B
I've
had
women
tell
me
that
they've
tried
before
they've
created
a
pull
request,
so
nobody's
ever
responded,
or
they
just
didn't
think
that
they
had
the
right
skill
set
and
we're
bringing
them
all
in
we're,
bringing
them
all
in
and
saying
go
for
it.
Let's,
let's
see
what
you
want,
how
you
want
to
contribute
and
how
we
can
help
you
contribute,
and
I
don't
think
we
would
be
doing
that
if
everybody
was
out
going
out
to
restaurants
or
to
having
a
normal
life.
A
Yeah
absolutely
now
this
this
kind
of
takes
me
back
to
I
want
to.
I
want
a
little
bit
of
a
flashback
from
your
guys's
perspective.
When
was
the
first
time
you
contributed
to
an
open
source
community
marquis
I'll
start
off
with
you,
wow.
C
I
think
the
first
open
source
community
I
contributed
to
was
jenkins,
and
that
was
a
long
time
ago,
like
back
when
if
anybody
knows
who
kk
is
back
when
he
was
still
active,
actively
writing
code.
So
that
was
a
long
time
ago
and
then
the
second
was
kubernetes
at
the
very
beginning
of
kubernetes,
but
pre
1.0.
B
The
eclipse
foundation
it
was
1997
when
I
joined
the
eclipse
foundation.
I
have
personally
never
worked
on
a
open
source
project,
which
is
weird.
I've
always
been
at
the
governance
board
level.
A
B
And
you
know
been
involved
in
licensing
open
source
licenses
for
the
eclipse
foundation
that
was
almost
a
year
project
to
figure
out.
You
know
what
what
proper
open
source
license
we
should
be
running
under,
so
I've
never
actually
been
in
at
a
project
level.
B
But
at
the
governing
board
level
you
there
are
bigger
challenges
to
think
about.
Like
outreach
adoption,
you
know
who
to
bring
in
how
to
fund
the
project.
B
A
Yeah
yeah,
I
mean
I
get
to
see
both
sides
of
it
because
I
get
to
collaborate
with
the
governing
board
and
I
get
to
collaborate
with
the
community.
But
yes,
the
problems
that
you
get
to
tackle
in
the
community
are
so
much
more
fun
to
solve
than
the
problems
that
the
governing
board
has
so
yeah.
But
thank
you
so
much
for
for
sharing.
I
just
wanted
to
wrap
up
really
quickly
with
our
last
question
and
it's:
why
do
you
keep
coming
back?
Why
do
you
keep
contributing
to
open
source
communities.
B
Well
I'll
go
first.
For
me,
it
certainly
has
been
a
pretty
core
part
of
my
career
since
those
early
days
at
the
eclipse
foundation.
B
I
have
left
open
source
for
a
while,
because
the
eclipse
foundation
got
really
kind
of
big
and
I
was
trying
to
run
my
own
company
and
it
was
hard
to
to
to
do
both.
But
I
came
back
to
the
cd
foundation,
mainly
because
I
was
asked
by
this
amazing
woman
by
the
name
of
tracy
miranda,
who
also
had
been
on
the
eclipse
foundation
and
the
way
she
she
pitched
it
made
me
realize
that
I
had
something
to
give
and
so
feeling
the
feeling
of
being
in
service
to
others.
B
Is
it's
I'm
sort
of
a
I
love
to
volunteer.
I
have,
I
have
done
volunteer
work
in
all
kinds
of
different
areas,
from
rebuilding
a
historic
ballpark
in
our
local
community
to
being
on
open
source
projects,
so
to
be
of
service
to
somebody
else
is
what
it's
a
gift
really,
and
I
really
do
believe
that
it's
a
gift
to
serve
other
people
and
open
source
always
brings
me
back
to
that
kind
of
core
part
of
myself.
That
is
a
you
know,
a
serial
volunteer
and
that's
what
does
it?
B
C
Legacy
legacy
is,
is
a
big
thing
for
me.
I
recently
got
sick
and
you
know
you,
you
kind
of
think
you
may
die.
That's
scary
and
you
kind
of
think
to
yourself.
What
am
I
leaving
behind?
Do
I
feel?
Okay
do
I
did
I
do.
Was
I
a
good
enough
citizen
to
the
world
that
I
left
some
impression
and
I
keep
coming
back
because
maybe
it's
a
selfish
reason
is
legacy.
C
If
I
can
give
somebody
that
feeling
that
I
got
when
that
nasa
scientist
showed
me
how
to
write
a
code,
if
I
can
give
that
to
somebody
else,
and
they
can
give
that
to
somebody
else
and
give
that
to
somebody
else,
that's
a
legacy,
and
that
makes
me
feel
good
about
myself
that
I'm
actually
I'm
not
being,
I
said,
selfish,
but
I'm
not
being
selfish,
I'm
giving
something
to
people
and
it's
making
them
happy
and
it's
showing
them
that
they
they're,
not
a
statistic.
C
A
Thank
you
so
much
marky.
That
means
so
much
as
well.
For
me,
tracy,
we
keep
coming
back
because
we
believe
people
matter
and
that's
something
that
we
hope
everybody
from
the
cdf
community
takes
away
and
we
are
so
excited
to
be
wrapping
up
the
power
of
open
source
community,
which
has
really
helped
us
spread
the
word
about
the
cd
foundation.