►
Description
Join us for short interviews with .NET Foundation Board of Director Candidates. Ask live Q&A.
Hosted by: Heather Downing
Candidates: Layla Porter, Rainer Stropek, Shawn Wildermuth, Mitchel Sellers
View candidates - https://dotnetfoundation.org/about/election/candidates
Election Details - https://dotnetfoundation.org/about/election/campaign
B
A
B
And
so
that's
part
of
sort
of
my
passion
around
open-source
is
not
just
sharing
code
and
so
that
people
can
have
better
code
by
people
looking
at
it,
but
also
trying
to
do
as
much
out
in
the
open
of
being
people
being
able
to
see
what
I
think
good
code
looks
like,
or
at
least
not
allowing
me
to
take
shortcuts,
because
I
know
someone
might
actually
read
my
code.
It's.
B
This
fall
I'll
be
coming
out
with
a
film
on
diversity
and
inclusion
in
software
development.
It's
a
feature-length
documentary
and
it
should
be
on
a
number
of
platforms,
Amazon
Apple,
TV,
etc.
This
fall
we'll
have
announcements
about
when
that
comes
out,
but
we
actually
did
a
preview
at
a
conference
when
we
went
to
Antarctica
and
I'm
really
excited
about
it
than
four
long
years
of
my
life
talking
to
people
about
software
development
in
general.
So.
A
B
Don't
have
a
lot
of
experience
working
with
large
groups,
so
I
at
first
blush.
It
might
not
seem
like
I'm
the
natural
fit
for
the
board,
but
because
I've
been
working
in
the
dotnet
community
so
long
and
by
that
I
mean
working
with
customers,
teaching
people
over
the
years.
I
think
I
want
to
bring
to
the
board
my
experience,
seeing
something
outside
of
just
the
fortune.
B
500
companies
I
think
it
becomes
very
easy
for
us
to
get
drawn
into
what
is
important
to
big
enterprises,
which
is
where
I
think
that
has
a
lot
of
traction
and
try
to
expand
that.
In
addition,
I
talked
to
a
lot
of
developers
and
a
lot
of
developers
that
are
just
starting
through
my
teaching,
whether
that's
the
Pluralsight
courses
I
do
or
the
one
of
the
training
ID
through
will
durman's.
B
This
there's
some
real
pain
points
that
they
trying
to
adopt
and
understand
the
libraries
and
being
able
to
support
open
source
projects
that
can
make
that
better
I
think
it's
a
huge
benefit
and
I
really
want
to
encourage
us
to
think
outside
of
North
America
and
traditional.
You
know
white
guys
and
cargo.
Pants
is
the
only
ones
that
can
write
open-source
software
I
really
encourage.
You
know
not
just
the
next
generation,
but
this
generation
that
maybe
doesn't
fit
into
what
we
think
is
our
normative
view
of
what
developers
look
like.
B
A
B
I'm
hoping
that
the
dotnet
foundation
can
can
look
at
more
than
just
functionality.
I
want
to
I
want
the
projects
that
are
supported
by
the
government
foundation
to
be
exemplars
to
the
kind
of
code
that
will
help
the
community
on
the
whole.
That's
not
again,
not
just
the
enterprise
developers
in
New
York
City,
but
the
brand-new
developers
in
the
emerging
world.
You
know
when
I
did
a
trip
around
the
world
and
met
developers
from
a
number
of
continents,
and
it's
interesting
how
different
and
how
isolated
some
of
some
people
feel.
B
A
B
Could
no
I
I've
built
a
business
based
on
helping
people
find
movies
and
TVs
called
how
to
watch
and
I
built
it
in
net,
and
it
was
really
a
lot
of
fun
built
it
in
an
early
version
of
core
and
got
it
out
there
and
the
programming,
as
with
most
of
these
cases,
is
never
the
hard
part.
The
hard
part
is
actually
yeah.
You
know
it
really
came
down
to
when
our
app
got
denied
by
Apple.
Yes,.
B
Was
over
so
I'm
passionate
about
people
trying
to
start
and
come
up
with
new
ideas,
whether
they're,
brilliant
tiny
ideas
or
whether
you
know
some
people
are
trying
to
change
the
world
with
it?
One
of
the
things
that
I'm
really
happy
to
have
contributed
to
is
humanitarian
tool
box,
because
I
feel
like
they're
doing,
is
really
important
and
because
it's
net
I
feel
like
I
could
really
contribute
when
I
was
more
active
with
the
project.
Absolutely.
B
B
This
is
an
interesting
question:
I've
been
thinking
a
lot
about
it.
I'm
gonna
not
use
one
of
those
two
superpowers
because
I
was
I
was
asked
recently
what
superpower
I
would
like
if
I
could
choose
and
I
would
use
the
USSR
during
the
Cold
War.
That's
my
favorite
superpower,
I'm,
not
sure.
That's
what
you
know
not.
A
A
B
A
We'll
be
right
back
with
Shawn
oops
Mitchell.