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From YouTube: Welcome & Opening Remarks - Tracy Miranda, Continuous Delivery Foundation with Emily Freeman
Description
Welcome & Opening Remarks - Tracy Miranda, Continuous Delivery Foundation with Emily Freeman
For more Continuous Delivery Foundation content, check out our blog: https://cd.foundation/blog/
A
All
the
new
folks
joining
us-
and
we
are
super
happy
to
be
co-locating
with
the
fifth
annual
spinnaker
summit
cdf,
set
out
to
explicitly
unite
folks
and
drive
collaboration,
and
we're
really
excited
to
see
this
cross-pollination
of
our
communities.
A
A
Okay,
so
let's
keep
going
folks
loud
and
clear.
Thank
you,
giovanni
okay.
I
want
to
give
a
shout
out
to
our
amazing
sponsors
for
this
event
and
you
can
connect
with
all
these
companies
at
our
expo
hall
today
and
tomorrow,
and
I
particularly
want
to
give
a
special
thank
you
to
our
diamond,
sponsor
sponsors,
cloudbees
and
huawei.
A
Now
the
continuous
delivery
foundation
is
an
open
source
community
that
seeks
to
improve
the
world's
capacity
to
deliver
software
with
security
and
speed
and
just
over
the
next
few
minutes.
I
want
to
take
a
little
while
just
to
share
some
of
the
highlights
of
what
we've
been
up
to
since
our
last
conference
in
2020.
A
So,
first
up
welcome
to
our
newest
project.
The
autelius
folks
otilius
is
an
open
source,
microservice
management
platform,
the
logo
showing
its
santa
fe
roots,
and
they
have
just
simply
a
very
warm
and
welcoming
community.
A
So
welcome
to
otilius.
We
are
glad
you
can
be
one
of
our
open
source
projects
and
communities
and
they
join
our
existing
projects,
and
I
want
to
highlight
that
you
can
get
to
know
all
of
our
projects
at
the
talks
today,
as
well
as
meet
leaders
in
the
community
at
our
birds
of
feather
sessions,
which
look
to
welcome
new
contributors
and
bring
you
in
to
contributing
to
open
source.
A
A
Now,
in
cdf,
we
want
to
welcome
everyone
to
the
conversation
and
to
be
part
of
our
technical
communities
and
to
do
so,
we
support
organizations
who
are
really
good
at
doing
this.
Last
year,
we
partnered
with
black
girls
code
and
women
who
code
and
made
a
total
contribution
of
five
thousand
dollars
to
their
efforts.
A
A
We
are
fundraising
through
our
registration
and
I'm
thrilled
to
say
that
so
far,
our
community
has
donated
over
two
thousand
dollars
through
registrations
and
additionally,
we
are
making
a
thousand
dollar
donation
for
every
keynote
session
today,
so
check
out
the
links.
If
you
want
to
help
us
with
these
efforts
and
to
support
these
amazing
communities.
A
Doing
some
exciting
stuff,
especially
with
arm
processors
and
welcome
to
diana
trace
dynatrace,
are
key
folks
behind
the
captain
project,
and
I
want
to
highlight
some
recent
work
with
tacton
and
captain
collaboration
and
a
move
towards
using
standardized
cd
events
from
the
cdf
event
special
interest
group.
If
you
haven't
heard
about
that
group
or
what
they're
trying
to
achieve
by
standardizing
the
vocabulary
and
the
events
around
the
cd
pipeline,
I
do
recommend
you
check
it
out.
This
will
be
a
very
exciting
space
to
watch
progress
over
the
next
few
months.
A
A
A
Is
jason
hall
who's
also
been
very
active
throughout
the
community
and
is
driving
a
new
project
proposal
to
the
technical
oversight
committee
for
shipwright
and
check
out
the
talk
introducing
shipwright
at
the
conference
today
and
finally,
we
also
have
another
brand
new
premier
member
joining
today,
and
for
that
I
want
to
cut
to
something
we
recorded
late
last
week:
roll
the
tape,
hey
everybody,
and
now
I'm
really
thrilled
to
share
some
very
exciting
news.
A
A
Hi,
emily
we're
so
happy
aws
is
joining
and
they've
been
doing
incredible
work
with
a
lot
of
our
open
source
projects.
I
know
aws
just
recently
joined
the
the
board
of
spinnaker
as
well,
as
you
know,
support
the
jenkins
project
and
done
some
work
with
tecton.
A
Maybe
you
can
tell
me
like
how
does
awsc
continuous
delivery?
Why
is
it
important.
B
Oh,
my
gosh,
I
mean
continuous
delivery
is
so
fundamental
to
a
devops
practice.
I
think
your
ability
to
consistently
be
moving
and
delivering
ideally
high
quality
working
software.
B
You
know
but
yeah,
it's
absolutely
fundamental
to
our
sort
of
approach
to
devops
and
we're
thrilled
to
be
supporting
open
source
and
a
part
of
the
cdf.
A
B
Yes,
I
think
that's
fantastic.
I,
it
has
evolved
incredible
amounts.
In
my
opinion,
it's
been
about
12
years
since
devops
was
created
and
I
think
the
ecosystem
in
which
we
are
now
is
radically
different
from
the
ecosystem
in
which
devops
was
created
right.
So
when
devops
came
about,
servers
were
still
in
office.
Closets
aws
was
a
toddler
like
two
years
old.
Maybe
azure
and
gcp
didn't
exist,
and
so
you
know
now
we
have
this.
B
The
defaults
being
microservice
architecture
distributed
systems,
a
reliance
on
apis
globally
distributed
infrastructure,
usually
on
the
cloud,
at
least
for
you
know,
new
greenfield
type
of
applications.
So
it's
it's
just
a
totally
different
mindset.
I
think,
and
the
the
thing
that
I'm
really
focused
on
right
now
is
how
do
we
apply
the
devops
fundamentals
to
this
distributed
ecosystem
that
we're
currently
in.
B
Yeah,
absolutely,
I
think,
unfortunately,
because
devops
has
become
this
sort
of
catch-all
term.
It's.
It's
lost
some
of
its
weightiness
and
we've
seen
a
bunch
of
derivatives
right.
We
we
started
with
devstack
ops,
bless
the
security
folks
and
then
we've
continued
on.
You
know
we
have
like
data,
ops
and
git
ops
and
mlaps
and
ai
ops,
and
it's
just
a
lot
of
blank
ops,
so
we
need
to
get
more
creative
with
naming
number
one.
Secondly,
I
think
it's
just
it
showcases
this
need
to.
B
While
we
need
to
discuss
the
sort
of
global
approach
and
think
about
things
holistically,
there's
also
this
deep
desire
to
to
sort
of
specialize
and
to
be
able
to
sort
periscope
into
something
and
actually
focus
on
a
very
specific
part
of
the
software
development
life
cycle
and
not
in
a
linear
fashion.
Right,
we
always
think
of
the
sclc
as
this
just
this
linear
process.
Well,
it's
you
design
it
and
then
you
develop
it
and
then
you
ship
it
and
it's
like
nope.
B
It's
always
chaos,
you're,
always
looping
back
to
other
phases,
and
even
when
you
release
software,
you
know
this.
Isn't
the
70s
we're
we're?
Not
writing
software
for
nasa
most
of
us,
and
so
we
have
to
then
loop
it
back
right.
We
have
to
go
and
and
innovate
and
receive
feedback
and
reinvent
whatever
and
then
improve.
So
I
go
again
going
back
to
your
continuous
delivery.
A
Yeah,
no,
I
think
this
conference
is
going
to
be
guilty
of
having
lots
of
those
talk
terms
talked
about
in
the
next
well,
but
I
I
love
that
idea
of
kind
of
looping
it
back
and
just
constantly
reiterating,
and
how?
How
do
you
see
things
kind
of
shaping
out?
Do
you
think
over
the
next,
maybe
not
not
long
term?
No
one's
going
to
look
long
term
right
now,
I
know
but
yeah
with
with
all
the
kind
of
changes,
remote
work
distributed,
work
and
what's
happening
in
in
the
devops
space
yeah.
B
Yeah,
I
think
you
know
I
obviously
I
don't
have
a
crystal
ball-
I'm
not
a
futurist.
I
hate
that
term,
but
when
I
think
about
the
next,
you
know
two
years
or
so,
I'm
really
excited
and
hopeful
for
what
was
happening.
I
think
people
feel
you
know.
The
situation
we've
been
in
over
the
last
year
has
been
stressful
and
now
that
things
are
coming
back,
I
think
we
we
have
this
lift
we're
not
there
yet
right.
B
Some
of
us
are
still
tired,
it's
totally
okay,
but
there's
this
sort
of
like
reinvigoration
and
I'm
excited
to
what
what
kind
of
invention
and
innovation
comes
out
of
that.
I
think
people
are
excited,
there's
a
lot
of
movement
in
the
marketplace
as
far
as
people
shifting
roles,
so
it's
I
think
we're
gonna
be
in
an
exciting
time.
I'm
curious
what
comes
out
of
it.
We're.
A
You
are
live
so.