►
From YouTube: GitHub Africa Community Powered Open Source
Description
The event will be hosted by GitHub’s own Martins Ewere and Community co-host and GitHub Star Ruth Ikegah, with special guest Bọ́lájí Ayọ̀dejì from https://twitter.com/oscafrica.
Join us for an evening of networking, exciting announcements and all the exclusive GitHub news.
Post event, we'll host a swag-giveaway trivia game and allow for networking informally.
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
C
Hello,
hello,
everyone,
hello,
welcome
to
2022.
This
is
the
first
african
meetup
for
the
year
hello,
it's
good
to
see
you
yeah.
B
A
B
So
many
lessons
I
was
telling
andrea
like
a
few
minutes
ago
that
so
many
persons
signed
up.
You
know
this
for
february
we
have
like
over
200
sign
ups
and
that's
like
really
interesting.
I'm
sure
everyone
has
this.
Oh
wow.
C
Yeah,
it
must
be
the
speakers
it's.
I
know
you
guys
are
trying
to
see
my
face.
B
A
B
C
So
martin's
here:
beware:
I'm
a
nigerian
I'm
an
american
I'm
currently
in
nigeria
right
now
and
I'm
also
a
get
up
account
executive,
real
estate
investor
on
the
crypto
enthusiast.
You
can
follow
me
on
twitter
and
also
on
linkedin
don
martin's.
So
over
to
you,
ruth.
B
Yeah,
I
think,
did
you
just
open
this
with
account
because
I've
not
seen
you,
but
I
think.
C
Yeah,
I'm
not
really!
I'm
not.
Twitter
is
not
really
my
big
strength,
one
of
my
big
strengths,
but
I'm
more
on
more
linkedin.
B
Yeah,
for
you
a
lot
of
times
on
twitter
and
I've
not
seen
so
that's
cool,
yeah
I'll
go,
follow
right
now,
like
after
the
presentation.
Okay.
For
me,
I
am
a
technical
content
manager
and
also
a
guitar
star.
You
can
see
the
the
shiny
star
there
up
there
above
my
very
kid's
profile
picture
yeah
and
I'm
also
an
open
source
advocate.
I
love
doing
everything
open
source
and
you
can
find
me
at
the
kgaruz
on
twitter
and
I'm
not
martin's,
I'm
very
active
once
with
them.
So
yeah
you.
B
Like
I
said,
we
have
like
a
whole
lot.
We
just
have
you
know
we
have
a
whole
lot
for
you
first,
but
you
know,
as
always,
github
always
releases
new
things
every
I
think
almost
every
week.
B
So
we
have
you
know
the
github
universe,
news
and
we're
going
to
run
tourists
and
also
have
our
amazing
speakers.
You
have
yoma
she's
going
to
be
talking
about.
B
You
know
the
github
campus
expert,
I'm
going
to
save
all
the
information
you
might
going
to
share
that
later
and
then
we
have
bolaji
from
oscar,
so
oscar
means
open
source
community
africa,
so
bolaji
is
going
to
be
taking
us
through
community
pad
open
source
of
in
africa
and
would
also
have
you
know
our
networking
session
where
we
play
kahoot's
games,
I'm
I'm
sure,
I'm
not
mistaken.
There
should
be
kahoots
games
because
I
always
look
forward
to
that.
So
we
have
like
the
networking
session.
B
You
know
at
the
end
of
last
talk
and
there's
something
exciting
as
well
that
I'm
not
going
to
share
so
you
know,
but
I
just
thought
so,
please
stay
tuned
and
yep.
That's
all
we
have
for
you
today
so
now
to
github
news,
so
our
we
now
have
mermaid
support.
I
know
mummy
sounds
interesting
like
I
I'm
I
I
think
I
was
wondering
you
know
when
it
came
out.
I
was
wondering
why
name
mermaid
right,
because
you
know
it's.
It's
really
interesting.
B
It
gives
me
that
cartoon
vibes,
so
mermaid
is
a
javascript
diagram
too,
and
chatting
too
so
you
know
sometimes
when
you
look
at
some
readme,
there's
a
whole
lot
of
like
information
on
it
and
then
you're
like
you're
confused.
You
know
what
what's?
What
do
I
do
here
so
marmalade
support
is
like
a
diagram
into
where
you
can
turn
mark
down
text.
You
can
turn
it
to
diagrams
right,
so
you
can
see
this
pretty
one
here.
You
know
it's.
It's
very
interactive.
B
You
know
you
could
you
can
know
the
information
by
just
looking
at
the
diagrams
and
having
like
a
bunch
of
text
all
there
so
yeah.
So
you
should
check
out
my
maid
to
for
your
project,
to
you
know,
represent
your
markdown
text
to
you,
know
beautiful
diagrams
and
there's
a
whole
lot.
You
can
do
they're
more
beautiful.
That
diagrams
you
can
make
so
this
is
just
like
an
example
so
yeah.
So
that's
what
we
have
and
next
I'll
allow
martin's
take
this
one.
C
All
right,
thank
you,
ruth.
I
like
the
mermaid
update
as
well.
So
one
thing
I
wanted
to
point
out
here
is
defend
the
bottle
arts
we've
had
this
before
now.
C
I
think
the
only
difference
now
is
that
before
now,
yeah
like
you
needed
to
go
into
your
repository
to
find
all
the
alerts
that
you
have
for
that
specific
repository,
but
right
now
there's
a
new
updates
for
you
know
if
you,
if
you
have
github
advanced
security,
turned
on
for
your
open,
open
source
project
within
the
organization
view,
you
can
now
see
all
your
locks
within
your
security
overview,
so
security
overview
like
a
let's
just,
say,
single
pane
of
glass.
C
Where
you
can
see
the
health
of
your
over
organization,
like
you
know,
have
you
do
you
have
a
lot
of
like
vulnerabilities?
C
Do
you
have
secrets
in
your
in
your
code
base,
which
is
you
shouldn't,
be
pushing
secrets
to
your
code
and
having
it
on
get
up
you
should
you
would
also
be
able
to
see
all
your
code
scanning
alerts
and
also.
D
C
Upon
a
lot
is
not
part
of
that
whole
view,
and
this
is
just
a
screenshot
of
what
that
looks
like,
but
you
can
definitely
check
this
out
on
github.com
and
if
you
have,
if
you've
subscribed
to
the
github
advanced
security,
a
product
within
the
open
source
tool.
So
that's
pretty
much.
B
Yeah,
so
we
had,
we
had
just
you
know
two
interesting
universe:
news
this
year,
don't
worry
next
next
month.
I'm
sure
you'll
have
a
whole
lot
of
them.
B
Sure
all
right,
so
I
think
I
think
we've
come
to
you
know
the
interesting
moment.
So
we
are
going
to
be
introducing
yoma
is
going
to
be
talking
about
campus
expats
and
yuma
is
a
community
educational
manager
of
github
and
I'll.
Let
you
mark
it
from
here
and
tell
us
everything
about
you,
know,
campus
expert
and
how
you
can
apply.
B
Yeah,
let's
wait
a
little
bit!
Sorry
for
you
must
come
up.
C
B
B
So
next
up
we
have
bolaji,
iotg
and
bolaji
is
going
to
be
sharing.
Talking
about
you
know,
coming
see,
community
powered
open
source
africa
is
going
to
be
sharing
a
lot
about
the
open
source
community
here
in
africa
and
a
whole
lot
of
interesting
details
and
apology
is
a
developer
advocate
at
thomas
leah
and
he's
also
an
open
source
advocate
and
an
open
source
fan
and
paladi
has
an
amazing
newsletter
that
I
am
subscribed
to
that.
B
D
Communities
kind
of
ship,
I
think
what
opens
up
hello,
everyone.
My
name
is
volaji
ayodeji,
and
today
we
will
be
talking
about
community
powered
open
source
in
africa,
using
open
source
community
africa
as
a
case
study
right.
All
we'll
be
doing.
Basically,
today
is
just
looking
at
how
communities
kind
of
shape
what
opens
us
is
and
how
communities
help
open
source
strive
in
a
continent
like
africa,
as
I
mentioned
earlier,
my
name
is
bolaji
ayodeji
and
I
am
a
software
engineer
and
content
creator.
D
All
right
I
mean
if
you're
watching
this,
it
means
you
most
likely
have
an
idea
of
what
open
source
means.
Right
I
mean
at
the
base
level.
It
just
means
the
source
code
of
an
application.
That
is,
you
know,
open
for
everyone
to
use
and
contribute
to
right,
and
this
is
opposed
to
some
other
applications
that
you
most
likely
might
be
using.
Where
you,
you
only
have
the
opportunity
to
use
it,
but
you
actually
do
not
have
access
to
the
source
code.
D
Behind
that
application,
so
that's
kind
of
the
idea
behind
open
source
and
all
that
revolves
around
it
and
open
source
is
an
initiative
that
has
been
on
for
quite
some
time
now,
and
you
know
over
time
this
has
been
recommended
to
you
know
to
software
engineers
and
and
different
technical
experts
in
different
levels,
be
it
beginners,
intermediates
and
even
the
expats.
You
know
people
have
been
encouraged
to
contribute
to
open
source.
For
so
many
reasons
right
and
some
of
those
reasons
can
include
building
personnel
and
communication
skills.
D
But
then
the
this
the
saw
on
the
sole
aim
behind
each
of
those
benefits
is,
is
good
right
by
contributing
to
open
source
you're
trying
to
grow
something,
be
it
your
personal
skills
or
be
it's
the
project
itself,
and
you
know
this
brings
us
to
open
source
community
africa
right
so
yeah
apostles
community
africa
is,
is
a
community
of
open
source
lovers.
Enthusiasts
advocates
expats,
you
know
all
of
that
within
and
across
africa,
and
the
sole
aim
is
to
increase
the
rates
of
credible
contributions
by
african
software
developers.
D
Designers,
writers,
you
know
everyone
involved
in
the
sphere
of
technology
to
open
source
projects
both
locally
and
globally,
and
the
idea
is
for
us
to
change
the
perception
of
africans
from
just
being
the
billion
users
to
be
in
the
next
billion
creators.
So
there
is
there's
a
current
concept
that
africans
only
consume
right.
We,
we
are
used
to
utilizing
a
lot
of
software
that
have
been
created
over
the
years
and
what
we
are
doing
at
open
source
community
africa
is
it's
just
to
try
to
support
the
ecosystem
whereby
we
are
not
just
using.
D
You
know
this
softwares,
but
we
are
also
creating
our
own
softwares
right
and
that's
pretty
much
it
around.
All
that
we
are.
You
know
the
mission
is
for
us
to
have
a
diverse
community
of
open
source
love.
Us,
as
I
mentioned
earlier.
Open
source
is
a
concept
that
is
existing
now
for
quite
a
long
time
now
and
there's
a
lot
that
go
into
it.
And
you
know
at
the
point
of
creating
this
organization,
we
found
the
problem
that
there
weren't,
so
many
you
know
guides
around
how
to
build
this
open
source
ecosystem.
D
You
know
a
lot
of
people
were
not
really
so
sure
about
what
to
do
and
what
not
to
do,
and
we
wanted
to
step
in
and
and
solve
that
problem
by
providing
the
platform
and
the
guide
for
those
with
zero
experience
and
those
with
even
50
experience.
So
everyone
can,
you
know,
participate
in
this
concept
and
derives
the
several
benefits
that
exist
in
them
so
yeah.
D
Our
mission
is
just
to
create
an
atmosphere
where
africans
not
only
use
software
but
also
creates
and
contributes
to
the
same
software
right,
and
we
hope
that
in
a
couple
of
years
from
now
we
would
be
able
to
take
african
developers
and
other
career
paths.
You
know
from
being
the
billion
users
to
the
next
billion
creators
right
and
this
is
with
regards
open
source,
and
you
know
all
you
need
to
know
about
open
source
community
africa.
First
of
all,
it's
a
it's
a
community
of
creative
minds,
driving
open
source
movement
in
africa.
D
We
have
you
know,
members
in
different
technical
fields,
beats
course,
software
engineering,
design,
technical
writing,
community
management-
I
mean
just
name
it
right
and
we
kind
of
have
what
we
call
oss
groups
right.
So
we
split
the
efforts
of
building
the
community
into
like
four.
Currently
there
is
the
engineering
design,
documentation
and
data
science,
so
each
of
those
groups
have
different
activities,
split
based
on
the
requirements
of
people
in
these
groups.
D
Right
I
mean,
as
you
can
imagine,
for
engineering
you
can
think
of
the
core,
the
core
coding
behind
some
of
those
projects
and
for
design.
We
have
the
open
source
design
after
documentation,
we
have
the
technical
writers
and
the
documentation
engineers
and
the
other
science.
We
have
the
scientists,
analysts
and
you
know
bunch
of
all
that
stuff,
and
we
do
this
based
on
the
current
expertise
we
have
in
the
community
and
moving
forward.
D
We
hope
to
you,
know,
to
have
more
groups
and
the
thought
seem
to
notice
that
we
we
kind
of
operate
in
two
ways.
The
first
is
the
global
activities
and
next
is
chapter
activities
so
global
in
the
sense
of
we
have
general
activities
for
everyone
in
africa
in
the
community
and
then
next
we
have
a
chapters
program
which
we
call
the
chapter
leads
program
here
we
have
different
individuals
in
different
cities
across
africa
right
and
each
of
these
individuals
help
us
organize
local
activities
in
their
respective
cities.
D
Right
remember
that
the
whole
aim
is
to
ensure
that
everyone
is
able
to
benefit
from
open
source
right
and
we
being
the
organization
we
cannot
reach
everywhere.
I
mean
myself,
I
am
in
nigeria
in
kogi
state.
To
be
specific,
I
have
my
other
team
members
in
different
states
in
nigeria
and
also
in
other
african
countries.
We
all
cannot
do
it
all
right,
so
we
have
these
individuals,
amazing
individuals,
I
must
say
who
are
doing
the
groundwork
in
their
respective
cities
and
ensuring
that
you
know
everyone
has
access
to
open
source.
D
You
know
they
do
this
through
organizing
events,
organizing
activities,
hackathons
and
advocating
for
open
source
in
their
respective
cities,
and
this
way
we
are
able
to
link
everyone
up
to
open
source
as
a
concept
and
open
source
for
them
to
leverage
the
benefits
that
exist
in
them
right
and
the
last
part
which
happens
to
be
a
very
interesting
part
of
the
community,
is
mentorship
jobs
and
opportunities.
D
So
we
we
try
as
much
as
we
can
to
you
know,
mentor
people.
When
I
say
people
I
mean
technical
people
in
the
ecosystem
into
becoming
what
they
desire
in
their
respective
fields.
Right.
We
share
tons
of
jobs
and
opportunities
around
open
source
right.
You
might
be
familiar
with
the
google
summer
of
code
program,
outreachy
the
github
campus
expert
program
and
tons
of
other
open
source
initiatives
that
exist
around
the
world
right.
D
We
pride
ourselves
with
being
able
to
have
members,
or
rather
I
see
people
in
africa
who
have
gone
through
those
programs
and
have
been
successful
at
them,
and
what
we
do
at
oscar
is
also
to
help
others
who
are
trying
to
leverage
the
same
opportunities
to
have
the
mentorship,
and
you
know
the
resources
they
need
to
get
started,
and
that's
kind
of
like
the
idea
behind
all
of
this
right
and,
like
I
mentioned
earlier,
we
have
chapters
across
africa
and
from
now
we
have
about,
we
are
in
eight
countries,
nigeria,
syria
alone.
Ghana.
D
I
mean,
I
can't
even
remember
the
names
right
now,
but
then,
if
you
look
at
the
map,
you
kind
of
get
an
idea
where
we
are
nairobi
and
the
rest,
and
we
are
currently
represented
in
56
cities,
and
we
have
about
60
chapter
leads
in
each
of
these
cities.
You
know
ensuring
that
the
work
that
the
aim
of
open
source
community
africa
is
achieved,
and
one
important
part
of
the
community
is
the
project
itself.
D
So
when
you
think
of
open
source
right,
there
is
the
actual
contributing
to
projects,
and
then
there
are
other
things
that
go
even
before
the
contribution,
so
why
we
we
we
prepare
people,
we
we
we
link
people
with
opportunities
and
resources.
We
also
try
to
provide
them
with
projects
that
they
can.
You
know,
contribute
to
for
now.
This
is
a
work
in
progress
for
open
source
community
africa.
We
have
just
a
few
in-house
projects
that
people
can
contribute
to
ranging
from
javascript
related
projects,
document
documentation,
related
projects
and
design
related
projects.
D
In
the
coming
months,
we
plan
to
review
more
more
of
our
plans
that
we
have
for
in-house
projects
that
members
of
the
community
at
large
can
contribute
to.
But
then,
if
you
want
to
get
your
hands
dirty
with
beginner
friendly
projects,
you
can
definitely
check
out
our
github,
where
you
can
find
some.
You
know
small
projects,
you
can
start
with
and
then
moving
forward.
We
will
definitely
have
more
projects.
Like
I
mentioned
earlier,
the
idea
is
for
us
not
only
to
be
consumers
of
you,
know
software,
but
to
also
be
creators
of
them.
D
So
we
want
to
build
projects
that
solve
problems
that
africans
face
right
and
we
need
everyone's
help
because
the
community
is
built
by
the
community
itself
and
we're
represented
in
different
countries.
Each
of
these
countries
will
have
different
problems
to
be
solved.
So
if
you
have
a
problem
in
your
own
country
feel
free
to
reach
out
and
then
we
can
solve
if
it
opens
us
and
the
next
part
of
the
community
is
a
discord
server
which
is
kind
of
like
where
all
the
good
stuff
happens.
D
D
We
also
have
the
women
in
open
source
wing
and
in
a
bunch
of
other
stuff
and
everything
around
communication
happen
on
discord.
So,
if
you're
not
on
the
discord
yet
and
you're
in
africa
and
you're
interested
in
open
source,
then
most
likely
you've
been
missing
a
lot
and
the
next
parts
of
the
community
generally
is
our
flagship
events
which
we
we
have.
Every
year,
but
unfortunately
we
couldn't
have
it
last
year
due
to
coveid,
but
then
we
had
the
first
one
in
2020.
D
It's
called
open
source
festival
right
and
generally.
What
we
just
do
is
once
in
a
year
we
bring
everyone
in
africa
together
for
us
to
learn,
and
you
know
collaborate
together.
We
bring
experts,
beginners
and
you
know
different
technical
fields.
We
bring
everyone
together
and
we,
just
you
know,
have
a
festival
aimed
at.
I
know,
showcasing
open
source.
We
showcase
open
source
projects
that
have
been
built
across
africa.
We
help
those
who
are
just
getting
started.
You
know,
find
their
parts
in
open
source.
D
We
do
this,
we
try
to
do
this
each
time
we
have
the
festival
and
the
last
sustained
event
was
last
year,
I
think
around
november,
and
basically,
what
sustain
is?
Is
we
try
to
have
discussions
around
sustainability?
How
do
we
sustain
the
people
and
the
resources
behind
open
source
right?
We
talk
about
open
source
and
all
that
goes
around
it.
D
But
then
there
are
certain
people
who
you
know
kind
of
like
build
this
open
source
projects
that
a
lot
of
us
contribute
to
right,
and
if
we
leave
things
the
way
they
are
most
likely,
we
will
be
experiencing
decline
in
in
several
aspects
of
open
source.
So
we
come
together,
bring
open
source
experts.
People
who
you
know
have
been
doing
this
thing
for
quite
some
time,
and
we
talk
about
our
problems
that
open
source
is
currently
facing.
We
try
to
find
solutions
to
them
and
work
towards
implementing
those
solutions
right.
D
So
this
is
also
one
core
aspect
that
open
source
community
africa
does
just
to
ensure
that
you
know
everyone
in
the
open
source
space
is,
is
good
to
go
basically,
the
third
aspect
of
the
community
at
large,
if
you're,
trying
to
find
projects
to
contribute
to
in
made
in
africa
right.
I
know
this
is
biased,
because
this
only
covers
just
one
country,
nigeria.
D
There
are
tons
of
other
projects
across
africa,
but
then
this
is
a
great
point
for
you
to
start
at
least
iski
has
collected
together
a
lot
of
projects
that
have
been
created
by
nigerians
and
africans
at
large
right.
There
are
tons
of
other
countries
specific
projects.
I
think
I've
seen
the
made
in
nairobi
or
something
like
that.
But
then
this
is
just
a
kind
of
collection
where
you
can
find
specific
projects
right.
D
It's
a
good
way
for
you
to
get
started
and
for
you
to
also
find
products
that
you
can
use
right
a
lot
of
times
we
find
ourselves
using.
You
know.
Generic
projects,
whereby
you
know
one
created
by
one
of
our
own,
already
exists,
but
then
no
one
knows
about
it.
So
you
might
want
to
check
this
out
just
not
just
to
contribute,
but
also
to
find
products
that
you
yourself
can
use
in
your
own,
your
engineering
department
or
something
you
can
use
for
your
own
company
and
all
of
that
right
and
yeah.
D
These
are
just
some
pictures
from
the
last
festival
you
can
see
happy
faces
and
you
can
see
people
of
different
backgrounds,
different
age
groups
and-
and
all
of
that
is
coming
together
with
just
one
sole
aim
of
learning
and
sharing
together
right
and
at
the
end
of
the
day,
we
ensure
that
you
are
connected
with
the
right
platform
with
the
right
resources.
You
need
to
grow
as
an
individual
and
as
a
corporate
body
in
whatever
capacity
you
represent
right
and
that's
pretty
much
it
about
the
community
at
large.
D
D
The
idea
of
open
source
community
africa
is
to
bridge
the
gap
between
those
who
are
not
an
open
source
yet,
and
those
who
are
interested
in
becoming
I'm
we're
interested
in
exploring
the
capabilities
and
the
benefits
that
comet
opens
us
and
at
the
end
of
the
day,
we
get
to
increase
the
number
of
people
creating
open
source
projects
across
africa
and
also
supports
those
who
are
already
creating
projects.
D
So
they
can,
you
know,
have
better
and
sustainable
projects,
and
likewise
we
want
to
ensure
that
africa
is
not
only
be
the
consumers
of
software,
but
also
creates
the
software
right
and
so
feel
free
to
reach
out.
If
you,
you
know,
need
any
help
with
joining
the
community.
D
C
Yeah,
I
really
like
the
the
part
of
trying
to
create
the
next
billion
creators
here
in
africa,
so
I
that
was
a
really
good
talk
and
I
think
it's
it's
it's
good
for
people
to,
because
I
get
a
lot
of
questions
you
know
I
I
didn't
come
from
a
background
of
tech.
It's
something
that
I
stumbled
into.
C
You
know
I
think
about
five
years
ago
and
you
know
played
a
a
very
important
role
in
my
transition
into
into
the
technology
space.
So
like
open
source
africa,
it's
a
great
place
for
you
to
start.
If
you're
looking
to
break
into
tech,
many
people's
eyes
have
been
opened
with
all
the
other
blessings
of
like
remote
work.
You
know,
which
is.
C
In
technology
I've
been
I've
been
in
nigeria
for
four
months,
and
I've
continued
to
work
for
gear
up
in
san
francisco
so
definitely
check.
Take
it
take
some
time
to
go.
Take
a
look
at
open
source,
a
community
africa
and
try
to
like
ask
questions,
there's
so
much
resources
out
there
if
you're
looking
to
get
started
in
your
journey-
and
I
think
that's
that
repository
go
go
on
on
on
on
the
chat
and
you
know
take
advantage
of
all
of
those
links
and
connect
with
us.
So
you
can.
C
B
All
the
details-
and
it
will
also
be-
I
think
it's
also
be
remote
as
well.
So
you
can,
you
know
yeah
as
well,
so
there'll
be
that
option,
because,
like
a
hybrid
event
and
what's-
and
thank
you
for
that
awesome-
you
know
talk,
and
you
know
everything
you
shared
about
oscar
first,
you
know
the
last
oscar
festival
was
in
2020
and
then
the
funny
thing
was
then
I
had
not
started
coding.
B
So
I
had
my
friends
that
were
part
of
you
know
the
organizers
and
I
I
was
seeing
it
all
over
their
whatsapp
status,
and
you
know
I
could
feel
the.
Although
I
was
not
into
tech
at
that
moment
I
could.
I
could
feel
the
impact
of
the
events
of
the
festival
in
2020.
I
could
feel
it
then
so
please
try
to
attend.
You
know
oscar
first
of
all
this
this
year
it's
going
to
be
in
march
and
the
exciting
thing
is
we
are
giving
out
20
tickets.
B
So
if
you,
if
you
want
to
attend-
and
you
do
not
have
a
ticket,
you
can
indicate
in
the
youtube
chat-
and
you
know-
would
give
you
a
ticket,
you
are
giving
out
20
tickets
to
support
open
source
community
africa
and
also,
if
you
have
questions
for
apology,
please
put
it
in
the
chat
as
well,
but
going
to
join
us
live
and
you
know
we
are
going
to
but
is
going
to
answer
all
your
questions
about.
B
You
know
open
source,
community
africa
and
you
know
how
to
get
involved
and
all
that
interesting
stuff
so
would
have
yuma
very
soon.
Yoma
is
going
to
be
talking
about.
You
know
the
guitar
campus
expert.
Let's
be
sure
you
might
read,
you
call.
C
Yeah
and
if
you
are
a
compost
expert
and
you
are
watching
this
live
stream-
just
let
us
know
in
the
chat,
so
we
can
say
hello
to
you
and
you
know
thank
you
for
the
good
work
that
you
do.
I
don't
know
if
okay
yeah
it
looks
like
you're,
my
hiss,
hello
emma.
How
are
you
doing
hi.
E
E
So
today
I'm
going
to
be
talking
about
the
campus
experts
program,
which
is
an
initiative
by
the
github
education
team.
So
just
start
out
with
what
a
movie
campus
expert
is.
So
a
campus
expert
is
a
student,
particularly
student
leader.
That's
focused
on
building
communities
that
are
diverse
and
inclusive
on
their
campus
for
japanese,
so
learn
new
skills,
share
experiences
and
build
projects
together.
E
So
to
be
a
campus
experts,
you
just
need
to
be
a
student
and
be
up
to
18.
That
makes
you
eligible
the
other
eligibility
rules
can
be
seen
on
the
websites.
E
So
why
should
you
become
a
campus
expert?
Building
communities
isn't
actually
easy,
it's
not
as
easy
as
it
seems
so,
while
building
a
community
being
a
campus
expert
means
you
have
support
from
the
entire
github
education
team
to
be
the
best
at
what
you
want
to
do.
There
are
the
supports,
there's
training,
this
guidance
and
mentorship
that
just
help
you
do
it
right.
So
it's
an
exciting
program.
E
There
are
a
lot
of
people
that
have
gone
through
the
program
and
are
doing
amazing
things.
I
mean
for
that
university
campus
as
part
we
have
opener
and
some
other
people
a
lot
of
other
people.
Rather
that
have
been
campers
as
parts.
E
So
the
application
is
currently
open
and
it
ends
on
the
28th
of
february.
You
should
check
check
it
out
on
github
campus
starts
esports.
This
is
the
last
week
to
apply
it
ends
next
week,
monday.
So
I'll
be
open
to
answering
all
questions.
You
have
respond
on
twitter
and
probably
in
the
comments
on
the
youtube
channel,
so
yeah.
E
D
B
Okay,
cool!
Thank
you
so
much
yuma
for
sure.
Martin!
Do
you
have
any
questions
or
do
you
see
any
questions.
B
E
Okay,
so
as
long
as
you've
had
a
github
account,
that's
up
to
six
months
old,
you,
your
eligibles,
it
doesn't
matter
if
you
have
the
student
pack,
yes,
so
there's
kind
of
like
there's
a
team
that
approves
the
students
back.
So
I
guess
there's
just
a
lot
still
hanging
right.
Now,
that's
not
going
to
affect
the
application.
B
Okay,
thank
you,
I'm
I'm
sure.
Sorry,
if
I
didn't
pronounce
your
name
correctly,
but
you
can,
you
can
still
be
considered.
Regardless
of
you
know
your
git
up
student
pack
not
been
approved.
So
thank
you
so
much
yo
ma
for
that
detail.
Imagine
you
have
thanks.
C
No
that
that's,
I
think,
that's
pretty
accurate.
As
far
as
like
you
maintain
your
your
gear
up
student
park,
you
should
be
able
to
get
into
the
program,
I'm
just
looking
through
youtube
to
see.
If
there's
any
other
question.
B
B
You
know
tickets
in
case
you
are
not
in
case
you
should
attend
if
you
are
attending.
We
are
attending
oscar
first
this
year,
please
indicate
on
the
youtube
chat
and
we
have
20
tickets
available.
So
we
will
get
you
a
ticket,
so
you
can
put
a
comment
on
the
youtube
chat
and
yeah.
I
love
already
go
ahead.
D
All
right,
I
don't
know,
I
think
there
are
some
questions
for
me.
B
You
have
questions
so
okay
asks,
can
open
source
software
be
used
for
commercial
purposes.
D
Okay,
yes,
I
mean
it
depends
on
how
you
want
me
to
answer
that
question,
because
if
I
answer
the
way
you
asked
it,
can
it
be
used
for
commercial
purposes?
D
A
B
D
Yeah:
okay,
if
that's
it,
then
yes,
you
you
can.
I
mean
the
only
difference
between
open
source
and
every
other
kind
of
project
is
that
one
is
open
source
and
the
other
isn't.
So
it's
still
the
same,
then
there's
no
regulation
behind
how
you
use
open
source
project.
I
mean
it's
already
open
for
you
to
use
it.
However,
you
want
to
use
based
on
the
the
license
of
the
project,
so
yeah
you
can
use
open
source
projects
commercially
yeah.
I.
C
Don't
know
just
yeah,
I'm
just
to
biology
like
there's,
there's
no
company,
there's
no
new
company
coming
up
right
now
that
that
doesn't
leverage
open
source.
C
If
you
think
about
like
even
like
your
dependencies
like,
you,
would
see
one
project
and
it
has
like
thousands
of
dependent
dependencies
and
all
of
those
dependencies
are
all
open
source
software
right,
and
so
there
is
no.
There
is
no
way
for
you
to
like
view
like
the
most
innovative
companies
in
the
world
like
have
that
they
have
a
dedicated
page
for
open
source,
so
yeah.
C
B
Yeah,
okay,
great
so
bolaji
just
to
make
the
listeners
you
know
lighten
up
a
bit.
What
was
your
first
open
source
contribution?
Your
mind
was
the
documentation
project.
D
Okay,
if
I
remember
clearly,
I
think
it
was
open
source
community
africa's
website.
It
was
a
very
silly
contribution
right.
I
used
to
be
a
big
fan
of
having
buttons
with
border
radios,
10
pixels
then
so
I
think
the
buttons
for
the
websites
was
like
rectangle
and
it
looked
really
ugly
to
me.
So
I
just
added
border
radius
to
the
major
buttons
on
the
home
page.
I
think
that
was
it.
That
was
the
first
contribution
I
made,
which
I
mean
led
to
every
other
thing.
D
B
B
Another
question
so
abdul
carrying
jackson,
where's
the
location
for
the
event
for
oscar
fest
this
year.
D
B
Okay,
that's
awesome,
don't
take
back
with
this,
so
we
are
going
to
be
playing
card
hopes
games.
This
is
the
most
interesting
part
and
usually
we
usually
play
you
know,
post
events
on
zoom,
but
we
are
bringing
it
this
month
to
youtube
and
kahoot
games
is
very
interesting
and
it's
it's
basically
you're
going
to
link
is
going
to
be
shared
on
youtube
and
you
join
the
game
and
you
have
a
couple
of
questions
and
the
questions
are
based
on
biology
stocks.
So,
if
you
are
listening,
you
definitely
yeah.
B
They
are
definitely
going
to
be
the
first,
so
I'm
going
to
be
based
on
volatile
stock.
You
know:
what's
your
ma
shared
as
regards
keep
up
campus
experts,
and
it's
also
going
to
be
some
geography
which
I
do
not
like,
but
I'm
reacting
to
it.
B
So
yeah
we're
going
to
be
playing
some
kahoot's
game,
so
I
think
everyone's
going
to
be
dropping
it
on
the
youtube
chat
very
soon.
B
B
B
So
you
just
go
to
the
url
kahoots,
that's
it
and
you
enter
the
game
pane,
which
is
which
has
been
posted
on
chat
and
then
you
put
in
your
name
and
then
it's
set
to
play.
B
B
B
C
You
know
the
the
the
the
changing
contest
from
like
going
from
youtube
and
then
logging
into
zoom.
So
most
people
don't
come
come
on
zoom.
So
I
think
that's
like
it's.
It's
actually
cool
to
just
have
the
game
here
and
you
know.
B
Nice
so
reminder:
if
you're
just
joining
us,
we
are
giving
out
20
tickets
for
open
source
community
africa
festival
and
if
you
needed
tickets,
you
just
indicate
on
youtube
chat
that
you
want
to
attend.
I
will
send
a
ticket
to
you,
so
please
ask
for
a
ticket.
A
C
F
C
A
A
B
A
G
A
A
G
C
G
C
So
I
think
there'll
be
like
instructions
on
the
chat
on
like
how
to.
D
C
The
prices-
let's
see.
C
Yeah
roots,
I
don't
I,
I
think
you
have
too
much
swag
at
this
time.
You
guys
spread
a
lot.
B
B
Yeah,
you
can
still,
you
know,
comment
on
the
chat.
If
you
are
attending
oscar
fest
and
you
don't
don't
have
a
ticket,
so
we
give
it
okay,
we
have
20
tickets,
we
are
giving
out
so
yeah,
please
bolaji
and
your
map
is.
Can
you
share
your
twitter
handles
as
well
so
yeah.
B
C
B
So
if
you,
you
know,
if
you
want
to
give
us
like
info
on
how
we
can
make
the
this
virtual
makeup
better,
please
use
the
survey
link
to
put
in
like
your
thoughts
and
also
we
we
have
like
a
cfp,
a
call
for
proposal
link.
If
you
want
to
speak,
you
know
in
one
of
these
meetups
you
can,
you
know,
apply
even
if
you're
not
sure
what
you
want
to
speak
about
yet
so
you
might
that's
not
refreshment.
B
That's
why
I'm
laughing
yeah,
so
you
can
apply
to
speak
at
any
of
these
any
of
the
months
that
I
feel
comfortable
with
you,
and
you
can
also
guide
you
on
what
you
want
to
talk
about
as
well.
So
welcome
first
times
because
you
know
from
all
over
and
yeah,
I
think
the
links
in
cf
will
be
shared
in
the
youtube
chat,
so
you
can
check
it
out
and
come
speak
at.