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From YouTube: 2022 Board Election - Jeffrey Chilberto
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A
Hello
again,
I'm
Bill,
Wagner
and
I'm
interviewing
candidates
that
are
running
for
the.net
foundation,
board
the
2022
elections
I'm
here
with
Jeff
chilberto
Jeff
I'm,
going
to
let
you
introduce
yourself
and
then
we'll
get
started.
B
Great
hi,
my
name
is
Jeff
chilberto
I've
I'm,
calling
from
Auckland
New
Zealand
I,
originally
am
from
California
and
I've.
Just
been
traveling
a
bit
about
I've,
been
in
New
Zealand
since
2006..
My
my
background
is
as
a
software
developer,
I'm,
currently
an
architect
and
yeah.
It's
great
to
be
here.
A
All
right,
so
the
two
main
questions
we're
going
to
start
with.
So
if
you
do
get
on
the
board
in
this
election
and
have
a
two-year
term,
what
do
you
want
to
accomplish?
What
do
you
think
the
foundation
needs
to
do
over
the
next
two
years.
B
Well
really
I
mean
I,
think
the
the
foundation
is
already
doing
a
a
good
job.
So
as
far
as
going
in
and
you
know
shaking
the
tree
and
and
making
major
changes,
that's
not
what
I
would
really
be
doing.
B
The
first
thing,
though,
is
to
to
get
in
and
to
you
know,
evaluate
understand,
but
having
said
that,
I
think
right
now,
where
we
are
in
especially
after
the
last
couple
years,
we've
really
seen
a
transition
from
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
individuals
now
are
working
from
home
and
or
and
or
doing,
hybrid
lifestyle,
so
I
think
the.net
Foundation
really
has
an
even
more
important
role
to
play.
B
So
as
far
as
fostering
open
source
projects,
we
see
even
more
adoption
of
Open
Source
projects.
Many
Enterprises
are
using
open
source
projects
where
you
know
10
years
ago,
we
didn't
see
it
as
much
so
fostering
that
providing
those
services
that
allow
the
the
open
source
projects
to
Foster,
you
know
to
to
sorry
to
you
know,
to
develop
and
to
be
able
to
concentrate
on
the
the
goodness
of
the
open
source
project
as
opposed
to
licensing
and
the
other
distractions.
B
That's
an
area
that
I
would
like
to
invest
in
and
and
make
sure
that
that
process
is
as
seamless
and
painless
as
possible
for
those
individuals
on
it.
The
other
aspect
of
it,
of
course,
is
the
open
source
community
and
one
of
the
challenges
that
we
have
now
with
so
many
people
you
know
working
remotely
is
that
feeling
of
isolation?
And
that's
really
where
I
see
the
foundation
contributing
to?
B
You
know
that
almost
the
well-being
of
a
lot
of
the
people
in
the
community,
because
one
of
the
things
of
course
about
working
from
home
is
the
isolation
you
you
feel
and
that's
what's
great
about.
You
know
these
user
groups
and
you
know
the
different
meetups
that
we
see
that
it
brings
people
together.
It
gives
people
opportunity
to
speak.
B
You
know
present
ideas,
share
knowledge
and
also
just
to
just
to
be
in
a
virtual
room
or
physical
room
with
people
that
share
similar
interests,
so
so
I
see
both
of
those.
Obviously,
the
the
core
of.net
Foundation
as
being
critical
and
and
like
I
said
Foundation
has
been
doing
a
great
job
and
so
I'd
like
to
see
that
develop
and
build.
A
Okay,
interesting
thing:
you
know
you
mentioned
the
meetups
and
and
virtual
user
groups
and
so
on.
I,
do
you
think
there's
a
place?
You
know
if
we
think
about
you
know
if
we
can't
be
in
the
same
physical
room,
where
user
groups
can
have
a
wider
Geographic
audience,
you
know
kind
of
mix
being
in
the
same
room.
You
know:
do
you
think
that
can
cost
Community
or
any
ideas
there.
B
Definitely,
and
that's
probably,
that
that
would
be
you
know
a
focus
area
to
to
try
to
make
it
more
of
a
of
a
global.net
community.
B
I
mean
I
I,
see
lots
of
great
work
out
there,
but
but
I'm
at
the
moment,
I'm
I'm
discovering
it
I'm
going
and
I'm
finding
it
I'm
going
to
our
you
know
the
the
foundations
you
know,
Meetup
blog
and
and
seeing
all
the
different
recordings,
which
is
great
but
I
want
those
coming
to
me,
as
opposed
to
me
seeking
them
out,
and
so
looking
at
ways
that
we
can
improve.
B
The
communication
would
be
would
be
important
because
that,
again,
as
as
you
you
brought
up
have
building
that
Global
Community
is,
would
be
sort
of
like
the
The
Next
Step,
feeling
that
we're
connected
feeling
that
that
yes
I
you
know,
there's
no
reason
why
I
couldn't
attend
the
user
group
in
in
Belgium
or
Canada,
or
you
know
wherever
so
so.
Yes,
definitely.
B
Definitely
that
that
sense
of
a
global
community
and
and
and
I
see
it
now
with
a
lot
of
the
the
colleagues
that
I'm
interacting
on
a
day-to-day
basis.
They're
they're
spread
around
the
globe,
and
it's
it's
great.
It's
it's
wonderful.
Having
that
that
diverse
collection
of
of
you
know,
thought
leaders
and
yeah
being
able
to
learn
from
people
and
share
ideas
and,
and
the
the
other
thing
that's
probably
important
about
that
is.
B
Is
that
reassurance
that
the
struggles
that
I'm
having
here
in
New
Zealand
are
the
same
ones
that
are
they're
having
over
in
you
know
California
or
New
York,
or
where
have
you
so
that's
as
a
developer,
that
that's
a
good
feeling
that
I'm
not
alone.
A
And
it's
interesting,
especially,
you
know
you
being
in
in
New
Zealand.
You
know,
I
think
sun's
coming
up
there
and
or
will
be
coming
up
there
soon
and
it's
starting
to
go
down
here
on
the
east
coast
of
the
U.S.
You
know,
how
do
you
see
that
play
in
with
a
global
community?
In
terms
of
you
know,
humans,
usually
sleep
in
the
dark
yeah.
B
And
and
that
that
is
where
it's
hard,
that
is
where
it's
hard,
and
so
that's
where
you
know,
building
up
that
that
you
know,
recording
as
the
the
foundation's
doing
is,
is
is
one
way
to
to
help
tackle
that
but
yeah.
That
is,
that
is
a
challenge
and
unfortunately
it's
a
it's
a
physical
one.
So,
as
far
as
having
live
meetups
yeah,
it's
so
hard
to
find
a.
B
Know
the
the
right
the
right
time
in
the
day,
yeah,
okay,
so
so,
but
maybe
along
those
lines,
the
the
preparation
towards
an
event
would
be
would
be
key
to
that
being
able
to.
You
know
either
record
the
questions
ahead
of
time
and
or
somehow
promoting
the
material
early
so
that
you
know
those
that
are
in
you
know
the
the
4
a.m
or
the
3am.
A
Okay,
but
I
like
that
idea,
that's
that's
an
interesting
idea
that
that
you
can
help
Champion,
so
I
get
and
and
now
you
know,
kind
of
moving
into
our
our
next
question.
You
know
what
experience
and
skills
do
you
bring
to
to
be
able
to
accomplish
those
goals
over
the
next
two
years,
yeah.
B
So
so
so
one
of
the
one
of
the
interesting
things
about
the
board
is
that
it's
it
it's
unusual
in
its
makeup,
in
the
sense
that
it's
it's
it's
actually,
you
know
it's
board
of
directors,
it's
providing
guidance
and
and
leadership,
but
it's
actually
running
the
the
board
so
that
that
makes
it.
You
know
unusual
compared
to
other
non-profits
and,
and
that
actually
suits
me.
B
Well
because
my
you
know
my
my
roles
are
Hands-On
architect
or
Hands-On
developer,
and
so
the
the
concept
of
actually
being
a
a
strategist
and
a
thought
leader
and
actually
contributing
is
is,
is
natural,
and
so
you
know,
as
far
as
my
my
background
goes,
that
would
be
the
contribution.
B
Of
course,
my
where
I
am
in
my
my
career.
You
know
having
been
developed
developing
since
the
early
90s
and
you
know
working
in.net
since
2002.
there's
a
lot
of
history.
There
there's
a
lot
of
different
industries
that
I've
been
involved
in
I.
You
know
from
I
I've,
primarily
been
a
a
generalist,
so
I've
been
in
education.
I've
been
in
you
know,
Financial
software,
you
know
pharmaceutical
software,
you
know
Healthcare
and-
and
you
know,
coincidentally,
game
development
also.
B
So
it's
a
it's
quite
a
a
broad
palette,
so
to
speak
and
having
that
device
diverse
background
would
help
me
in
being
able
to
evaluate
and
being
able
to
support
these
different
projects
that
we
would
see
coming
through.
So
so
really
as
far
as
that
goes,
my
my
background
would
be
the
key
part
there.
Probably
one
of
the
one
trait
that
I
think
has
has
really
helped
me
in
in
my
my
career.
Is
my
my
ability
to
establish
and
establish
new
relationships
and
build
existing
relationships.
B
That
would
probably
be
one
of
the
the
biggest
assets
I
could
bring.
As
far
as
being
able
to
you
know,
not
not
just
the
the
large
corporates
in
in
getting
getting
their
support
for
the
foundation,
but
also
making
connections
out
to
to
many
of
the
other
organizations
that
might
not
know
how
to
how
to
support
the.net
Foundation,
but
I
would
imagine
getting
different.
You
know,
even
even
small,
you
know
maybe
small
game
studios.
B
You
know,
obviously
we're
making
the
connection
out
to
the
user
groups,
but
also
connections
out
to
different
education
providers
would
be
a
great
way
to
start.
You
know,
building
up
the
foundation
and
building
up
the
the
support
and
and
in
the
visibility
of
the
dot
dot
net
Foundation.
A
B
Yeah
and
and
that's
what
that's,
what
I
think
is
actually
interesting.
Is
that
the
you
know
you
know,
of
course
you
always
have
your
different
personalities
and
you
have
your
different.
You
know
ways
of
doing
things,
but
but
one
of
the
you
know
one
of
the
beauties
of
the
language
that
we're
working
in
is
that
it
there
is
a
lot
of
commonality.
B
You
know
going
from.
You
know
the
you
know.
Maybe
you
know,
of
course,
there's
going
to
be
differences
like
the
banking
is
going
to
have
really
high
regulations.
It's
going
to
have
a
different
Focus,
the
the
the
the
amount
of
risk
it's
willing
to
take
is
going
to
be
a
lot
different
than
a
game
Studio
who
wants
to
really
Challenge
and
be
a
spark
and
and
and
ignite
passion,
and
you
have
to
take
risk
if
you're,
if
you're
wanting
to
do
that.
B
So
so
those
fundamental
drivers
are
different,
but
at
its
core
dot
net,
it's
it's
fabulous.
You
know.
Take
I
can
take
my
my
technical
skills
from
one
to
the
other
and
apply
it.
The
a
lot
of
the
concerns
in
building
up,
especially
in
you
know,
back
end
services
are
the
same.
B
You
know
sometimes
I
I
can
I
can
forget
which
one
I'm
I'm
I'm
dealing
with,
because
you
know
they're
both
using
event
driven
architecture
they're,
both
using
a
lot
of
the
The
Familiar
services
that
we
would
have
in
in
Azure.
So
so
going
back
to
your
original
question,
I
think,
there's
there's
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
commonality.
I
think
you
know
when
you
boil
down
to
the
individual.
They
have
a
lot
of
the
same
needs.
They
you
know
for
the
the
consumer
of
an
open
source
project.
B
They
they
want
something
reliable,
something
that
they
they
know
is
going
to
be
there.
You
know
tomorrow
that
it's
it
has
a
community
behind
it
that
you
know
people
are
active
and
and
most
important
that
it.
You
know
that
the
Baton
is
going
to
be
passed.
B
If,
if
that,
if
those
key
individuals
leave
you're
going
to
get
that
continuity,
so
making
that
visible,
showing
that
that
history
would
be,
you
know
an
important
thing
of
the
foundation
and-
and
we
have
it
to
a
degree
with
GitHub
and
things,
but
it'd
be
interesting
to
explore
the
concept
of
how
do
we
by
by
making
it
more
visible
by
making
it
more.
You
know
clear
that
that
these
these
projects
are
are
stable
and
that
they
have.
B
A
Awesome,
you
know
those
were
the
main
questions.
I
wanted
to
cover.
Is
there
anything
you
want
to
add
right
now.
B
B
In
my
career,
where
I
do
want
to
find
ways
of
giving
back
to
the
community-
and
you
know
I've
I've
written
a
couple
books
I
do
presentations,
you
know
a
Blog
being
on
the
on
the
foundation
would
be
a
great
a
great
way
for
me
to
feel
it.
You
know
to
be
engaged
to
be
part
of
that
that
Global,
community
and
yeah
I
really
love
the
opportunity.
So
please
vote
for
me.
A
As
with
everyone,
wish
you
good
luck,
thank
you.
I
think.
We've
got
a
lot
of
great
candidates
once
again.
Jeff
chavardo
running
for
the.net
foundation
board
in
our
2022
elections
and
I
want
to
thank
you
for
your
time
and
I
want
to
wish
everyone
well
in
the
election.
Great.