►
From YouTube: A lap around GitHub One - GitHub Satellite 2020
Description
Presented by Mario Rodriguez, Senior Director of Product Management, GitHub
GitHub One offers enterprises the best of GitHub, all in one place. Tune into this demo-packed session to see what GitHub One can do for your enterprise—and learn about new products and features of GitHub that you've yet to discover if you've only been using it for open source development.
GitHub Satellite: A community connected by code
On May 6th, we threw a free virtual event featuring developers working together on the world’s software, announcements from the GitHub team, and inspiring performances by artists who code.
More information: https://githubsatellite.com
Schedule: https://githubsatellite.com/schedule/
A
Hi
hi
and
welcome
thanks
for
tuning
in
late
in
the
program.
Hopefully
you
are
all
enjoying
the
conference.
My
name
is
Mario
Therese
and
I
lead
Enterprise
at
github.
In
this
session.
We're
going
to
do
a
quick
lap
around
the
different
products
of
our
platform.
You'll
feel
a
little
bit
like
a
sprinter
on
a
track.
So
let's
go
ahead
and
get
started.
A
The
first
thing
that
I
want
to
talk
about
is
our
love
for
enterprise
and
how
all
enterprises
also
need
love.
Now,
all
jokes
aside,
enterprise's
care
a
lot
about
things,
and
we
want
you
to
build
like
the
best
teams
out
there.
That
means
giving
you
ability
giving
you
scalability,
give
you
innovation
and
openness
of
the
world's
best
software
teams.
You
also
as
an
enterprise,
want
to
attract
the
best
talent,
and
you
want
to
make
your
developers
and
software
teams
happy
to
do
that.
A
A
Again
I
want
to
stress
one
thing,
although
you
see
a
lot
of
features
and
products
over
here,
the
common
thing
running
across
all
of
them
is
that
community
power,
the
hope,
is
a
community
and
supply
from
off
communities,
and
it
is
important
that
everything
we
do
actually
is
grounded
on.
That
is
what
differentiates
us
at
the
end.
So
with
that
less
actually
you
know
go
spaces
has
been
so
successful
since
or
you
know,
there's
been
a
lot
of
buzz
lately
today
on
it.
A
So
I
want
to
actually
go
a
little
bit
off
track
and
do
Co
spaces
first,
so
with
Co
spaces
you
get
a
world-class
editor
running
in
the
browser
that
is
fierce
code.
It
is
backed
by
a
def
container
in
the
cloud,
so
you
don't
have
to
actually
be
running
anything
machine.
You
don't
have
to
configure
in
anything.
All
you
have
to
do
is
hit
code
and
start
coding.
It
also
has
it
because
it's
powered
by
the
it
also
has
a
built-in
debugger
has
a
burner.
A
It
has
all
of
your
dot
files
automatically
synced
and
it
could
actually
end
up
scamming
with
computer
options.
I've
been
looking
at
Twitter
hacker
news
and
a
couple
other
places,
and
one
of
the
things
that
God
asked
is,
does
her
work
on
an
iPad
and
one
of
the
designers
Joel.
So
thank
you
so
much
Joe
for
doing
this
was
able
to
record
a
quick
demo
of
that.
So
this
is
kind
of
like
hot
off
the
presses.
A
I
change
the
entire
presentation
to
be
able
to
do
this
first
and
I
just
want
to
show
it
to
you.
So,
let's
see
if
this
works
and
if
it
doesn't
please
someone
tell
me
because
it's
a
video
so
over
here
you
see
an
iPad
I'm.
Actually,
gonna
go
back
a
second,
so
you
can
see
that
it
was
actual
an
iPad
run.
I'm
gonna
hit
code
cut
with
codes
faces
and
over
here
is
preparing
your
container.
A
It
is
in
what
is
loading
right
now,
everything
in
that
repo-
and
this
is
just
a
simple
application-
that
Joe
was
playing
around
a
little
bit.
It's
called
pass
hall
and
it's
all
about
the
frustrations.
It's
a
puzzle,
game
created
to
mimic
the
lovely
world
frustrating
password
rules.
So
what
he's
doing
right
there?
It's
just
running
NPM
star
again,
this
is
took
like
less
than
five
seconds,
I
think
to
start,
and
then
he
was
able
to
actually
make
that
code,
deploy
it
to
production
and
he's
copying
where
that
is
deployed
and
voila.
A
You
are
able
to
play
the
game.
I
think
he's
gonna
put
a
couple
of
things
there
and
one
by
one.
Eventually,
you
get
a
password
that
you
could
utilize
in
this
side,
but
there
you
have
it
code
spaces.
It's
the
world
class
editor
again
vs
code
running
in
the
browser,
backed
by
a
deaf
container.
This
is
going
to
change
how
we
all
code
in
the
future,
how
we
all
interact
with
different
communities
and
it
works
in
your
iPad.
So
now
you
have
no
excuse.
So,
let's
continue
that
was
dad
demo.
A
Let's,
let's
get
back
to
our
normal
schedule
and
where
I
wanted
to
start
a
first
lab
was
in
the
enterprise
foundational
items
and
you're,
probably
gonna
notice
a
theme
across
all
of
these
things.
I'm
gonna
pause
for
a
second
and
see
if
you
get
it
and
if
you
get
administration,
you
are
right.
All
of
these
things
have
to
be
about
administration
at
scale.
When
we
think
about
foundational
items
we
want,
we
think
a
lot
about
that
administrative
persona.
A
You
know
all
the
way
from
simple
user
and
work
management
to
very
complex
rules
like
a
dial
out
list.
So
with
that
in
mind,
what
I
wanted
to
do
was
just
give
you
a
quick
demo
on
some
of
the
things
that
maybe
you
are
not
familiar
with
so
over
here.
I
have
avocado
Corp.
Our
kind
of
Corp
is
an
enterprise
is
not
an
organization.
It
is
not
a
user
account.
It's
an
enterprise,
just
like
you
have
org
accounts
and
user
accounts.
There's
this
concept
that
we
have
a
give
up.
A
That
is
called
an
enterprise
account
that
our
enterprise
users
can
get
so
since
this
year,
so
they
were
single
in
my
I.
Have
Carmen
chose
get
help
over
here
with
a
little
thing
and
I
also
have
another
one.
Let's
see
if
we
could
find
it,
it
already
came
back
so
Plateau
Yahoo
I
got
it.
So
that's
a
good
one
as
well.
So
as
you
can
see
in
the
enterprise,
you
have
a
name.
You
have
a
little
bit,
you
have
a
logo
as
well.
You
can
see
all
the
organizations
that
belong
to
your
enterprise.
A
A
So
if
I
just
do
this
automatically
filter
said,
as
you
would
expect,
not
only
do
you
get
to
see
the
organization's,
something
that
I
think
is
equally
as
powerful
is
being
able
to
see,
although
the
members
or
across
all
of
these
organizations
that
belong
to
your
enterprise,
you
could
also
filter
this.
So
I'm
gonna
find
myself
on
the
web
and
there
it
is
Here.
I
am
I.
Could
click
on
myself
in
looked
at
that
I'm,
an
enterprise
account
owner
I'm,
also
organizational
member
and
I,
belong
to
an
enterprise
server.
A
So,
yes,
you
could
hook
up
with
github
connect
an
enterprise
server
in
with
this
enter
this
enterprise
account
and
you're
going
to
be
able
to
see
use
across
both
of
that
not
only
in
your
cloud
presence,
but
also
in
your
own
premises
process,
and
you
know
it
kind
of
gives
you
the
hybrid
view
that
a
lot
of
us
want.
So
if
I
go
back
to
members
and
everything
that
you
could
see
again
across
all
of
your
organizations
and
repose
is
the
outside
collaborators.
A
A
So
we
have
a
role
for
them:
compiler,
managers
in
policies.
This
is
just
the
beginning
of
what
we're
going
to
be
able
to
do
in
the
future,
but
over
here,
you're
gonna
be
able
to
say
who
can
create
repositories,
for
example,
how
you
actually
want
policies
around
for
team
invitations,
even
action
execution
so
like
that
you
don't
want
to
be
trusting
things
from
the
outside.
Only
the
things
inside
of
your
organization,
then
you're
able
to
set
that
over
here
as
well.
One
of
another
policy
that
is
important
is
IP.
A
Allow
lists
with
this
recently
and
over
200
organized
into
process
are
using
this
feature
at
the
moment,
and,
and
it
is
what
you
guess
you
able
to
define.
These
are
the
IP
that
I
trust
that
come
from
my
network
and
no
one
else
in
the
public
internet
will
be
able
to
access
them.
The
organizations
that
belong
to
this
enterprise,
so
pretty
cool
again
very
advanced
set
of
scenarios
and
other
log,
is
another
feature
that
gets
requests
a
lot.
A
A
In
case
you
get
audited,
you're
able
to
export
these
to
CSV
or
into
Jason,
but
one
of
the
things
that
we
could
ask
a
lot
is
you
know:
I
just
want
to
be
able
to
see,
of
course,
all
your
Guinea
sessions,
the
enterprise,
what
is
happening
from
an
audit
perspective,
and
this
is
the
view
for
you,
so
that
is
a
little
bit
of
a
demo
into
it.
There's
one
more
thing:
Enterprise
license
that
we
have
that.
A
You
know
if
you
have
different
license,
that,
for
example,
our
partners,
we
partnered
with
Visual
Studio,
and
you
can
able
to
purchase
a
set
of
those
licenses
as
well
and
over
here
you
could
even
administer
your
server
licenses
if
you
have
made
that
and
as
I
said
before,
you
could
connect
through
github
connect
your
enterprise
servers
into
the
enterprise
and
be
able
to
see
them
and
manage
them
here
too.
So
with
that,
let's
go
back.
A
Another
great
announcements
that
we
made
today
is
github
private
instances,
so
think
about
this
as
the
most
secure
and
compliant
way
of
actually
consuming
to
help
in
the
cloud
we
created
this
for
highly
regulated
industries.
As
you
could
expect
this
a
fully
managed,
isolated
cloud
solution.
I
has
bring
your
own
key
encryption.
He
has
private
connection,
so
it's
kind
of
a
little
bit
more
advanced,
IP
Wireless.
Then
we
were
able
to
deploy
this
anyplace
anywhere
in
the
world,
so
it
actually
meets
au,
Motocross
laws
and
data
sovereignty,
and
it
also
provides
backup
retention
and
archiving.
A
So
a
lot
of
the
highly
regular
industries
need
to
keep
a
set
of
PACA
so
sometimes
up
to
ten
years.
So
this
allows
us
to
do
that
and
we
will
applied
for
a
lot
of
compliance
standards
as
well.
So
we
are
go
to
meet
them
for
the
customer,
so
that
is
github
private
instances
as
through
our
second
lap
and
our
second
nervous
around
code
to
cloud.
So
we
got
all
the
from
a
code
perspective.
We
got
everything
covered.
A
You
know
you
got
repos
issues,
you
got
Boers,
we
just
announced
code
bases,
which
is
amazing,
but
over
the
last
year,
I
know
everything
that
we
have
been
doing.
It's
also
filling
in
those
DevOps
workloads
and
being
able
to
give
you
a
code
to
cloud
solution
as
well
with
the
introduction
of
actions
and
packages
now
action,
some
packages,
you
know
and
I
understand.
This
slide
is,
is
you
know
it
has
a
lot
of
text
and
I.
A
Don't
want
you
to
remember
everything
that
is
here,
but
you
know
the
salon
both
of
these
products,
so
I
want
to
make
sure
that
I
included
him
in
here,
but
there's
four
words
that
I
want
you
to
get
out
of
this
one
of
the
the
first
to
center
price.
Great.
Both
of
these
are
ready
for
you
to
be
able
to
utilize
and
an
enterprise
grade
level.
You
know
they
actually
I
think
does
over
30
million
builds,
so
so
it
has
enough
scalability
to
actually
meet
anything
that
you
throw
at
it.
A
The
second
thing
is
community
power
and
I
would
say:
there's
thirty
four
hundred
actions
already
available
in
our
marketplace
for
our
community
and
that's
kind
of
the
beauty
of
it.
You
don't
have
to
do
everything
from
scratch.
You
could
just
utilize
what
is
out
there
and
then
put
a
workflow
together
that
really
meets
the
needs
of
your
enterprise.
So
with
that,
let's
maybe
do
a
quick
demo,
so
you
can
see
a
couple
of
them
so
over
here,
I
have
a
pull
request.
A
It's
a
very
simple
request
and
what
happened
is
that
we
forgot
Ruby
the
most
important
language.
So
you
know,
given
that
we're
get
up
we're
very
sad
about
that,
so
we're
gonna
push
something
to
production
as
quickly
as
possible.
To
rectify
this,
and
where
you
can
see
over
here
in
the
timeline
of
the
pull
request,
is
that
we'd
run?
We
run
a
set
of
workflows
the
first
one
that
we
tried
to
deploy
to
stading
actually
ended
up
failing,
but
then,
after
that,
we
were
able
to
succeed
and
deploy
this
into
our
stage
environment.
A
And
then,
after
that,
we
went
ahead
and
we
do
a
couple
testing
we
deploy
to
production
as
well.
So
we
accomplish
this
with
two
quick
actions.
So,
let's
go
into
another
tab.
I
mean
the
actions
tab.
Now
you
can
see
here
deploy
to
staging
that's
one
of
the
workflows.
If
I
go
into
the
deploy
command,
specifically
you're
going
to
be
able
to
see
the
workflow,
the
workflow
file,
very
simple
one.
A
A
We
end
up
using
this
one,
which
is
deployment
action,
and
then
we
end
up
actually
tagging
at
the
end.
With
this
a
comment
in
that
pull
request,
so
you
can
see
Peter
Evans
and
you
can
see
CH
norm.
Ch
are
gone.
These
are
the
actions
that
we
use
and
again
these
were
not
created
by
the
hub.
This
were
not
created
by
us,
not
even
the
one
that
we're
using
nasha.
These
were
created
by
the
community,
so
if
I
go
into
this
one,
the
wish
is
called
deployment
status.
You
can
see
it
right
here.
A
It's
a
public
repo.
Everyone
can
see
what
it
does.
What
you
know.
You
could
even
recommend
the
fix
and
provide
a
pull
request,
and
if
I
click
on
I'm
on
Chris
Norman,
then
you're
gonna
be
able
to
see
what
he's
been
up
to
as
well
and
again.
This
is
the
thing
that
you
know
he
probably
needed,
and
then
he
contributed
to
their
community
presenting
with
Peter.
A
So,
thank
you
so
much
so
if
I
go
back,
I
could
see
that
and
not
only
that
in
this
comment,
I
was
able
to
go
ahead
and
put
the
link
to
production.
So
if
I,
just
click
on
that,
I
am
able
to
get
to
production.
So
just
think
about
that.
Yes,
by
a
pull
request
and
a
set
of
workflows
were
able
to
then
deploy
to
staging
with
something
automatically.
In
that
pull
request
a
says:
here's
the
link,
you
don't
have
to
search
in
a
thousand
places
to
be
able
to
see
okay.
A
Where
is
this
deployed
to
and
then
if
someone
else
has
deployed
that
to
production,
then
there's
another
workflow
that
in
self
creating
another
another
another
comment
and
saying
hey.
This
is
now
deployed
to
production
and
again
I
have
everything
available
to
me
right
there
and
all
this
is
powered
by
our
community.
A
Another
announcements
we
made
today,
which
I'm
very
excited
about,
is
that
all
of
this
power
now
is
coming
on
premises
and
is
coming
to
github
Enterprise
Server
later
in
the
year.
So
at
the
moment,
all
this
power
is
about
to
you
in
the
cloud
and
our
Enterprise.
Every
time
I
go
into
conversations
our
Enterprise
Server
customers
are
like
that's
amazing,
we're
using
it.
You
know
the
majority
of
them
have
a
hybrid
kind
of
deployment,
we're
using
it
right
now
for
a
lot
of
projects.
A
We
all
want
that
power
on-premises
and
we're
doing
that
thanks
to
the
team
for
getting
this
done
very
quickly
and
hopefully
you'll
be
getting
it
later
this
year.
So,
let's
proceed.
Our
next
lab
is
around
insights.
Instance
is
very
it's
an
interesting
thing.
If
you
think
about
software
development
and
companies
are
becoming
software
driven,
they
want
to
understand
how
can
I
get
better
I
practically
produced
his
software.
A
So
a
lot
all
of
us
collectively
from
a
team
perspective,
get
better
our
aircraft
now.
One
of
the
things
that
I
would
say
is
that
this
can
be
sometimes
view
as
dangerous,
and
we
were
very
very
aware
of
that.
So
we
want
to
focus
on
team
and
not
individuals
and
I'll.
Repeat
that
again,
the
entire
product
of
insights
is
focusing
on
team
and
not
individuals.
We're
not
here
to
actually
do
being
counting
on
individuals
and
be
able
to.
You
know,
provide
data
at
the
individual
level.
We
want
you
to
think
about
it.
A
At
the
team
perspective,
how
is
that
team
actually
executing
and
what
are
the
metrics
that
they
need
to
get
better?
So
the
key
metric
we
have
around
five
key
metrics
to
help
you
improve
code
review
on
collaboration
they're
based
on
research
that
has
been
done
in
the
industry.
We
have
benchmark
a
set
of
them,
but
we
also
have
allow
you
to
set
goals,
so
you
can
make
it
your
own
and
then
later
come
in
this
year.
A
A
I
am
on
insights
at
the
moment,
and
what
you
will
see
first
is
in
overview.
We
actually
share
five
key
metrics
that
we
think
are
very
important
when
it
comes,
you
know
to
teams
getting
better
a
software
development.
The
first
thing
that
you
see
is
Co
review
turnaround
time.
So
you
know
I'm
a
developer,
I'm,
actually
coding
I
send
this
for
review.
The
longest
succeeds
on
that
review
and
the
longest
is
not
getting
pushed
to
production.
A
So,
if
I
think
about
an
integrative,
you
know,
iteration
of
a
I
have
something
I
want
to
push
it
to
production.
I
want
to
learn
from
it.
I
want
to
do
that
again
and
kind
of
getting
this
very,
very
nice
loop.
If
it's
just
sitting
in
there-
and
it's
cannot
get
interviewed
and
I
love
getting
review
by
my
teammates,
then
it's
not
actually
creating
that
value.
So
we
want
to
let
you
to
actually
shorten
that
as
much
as
possible.
A
In
this
case,
I
believe
we
have
set
a
goal
in
in
December
of
less
than
three
hours
and
you're
able
to
see
which
one
are
the
ones
that
have
made
that
goal
or
not
as
a
team.
You
could
set
this
to
tend
to
start.
You
know
one
day
even
to
start,
but
you
eventually
you're
gonna
start
getting
it
to
less
than
three
hours
less
than
an
hour
even
so
time
to
open.
This
is
how
long
did
it
actually
take
me
to
code
all
of
this
and
then
ended
up
submitting
that
pull
request?
A
So
again,
we
want
to
start
minimizing
that
as
much
as
possible
that
together
will
put
request,
size
and
work
in
progress
and
how
much
of
the
pull
requests
that
are
given
reviewed
gets
distributed
to.
People
is
also
something
very
important
for
you
to
get
better
and
again
all
of
these
are
about
teams.
These
are
so
if
I
go
to
the
key
metrics
and
click
on
them,
I'm
able
to
see
okay
17
hours
on
average.
What
is
my
success
rate
for
less
than
three
hours
while
mid
goal,
and
they
not
and
then
I
could
start?
A
You
know
it
might
be
prospective
or
in
my
stand
up
or
anything
like
that,
I
could
start
actually
asking
questions
on.
Okay,
we
just
bottleneck
on
something.
Is
there
too
much
work?
We
could
start
getting
better
at
it
and
the
goals
it
me
know
allows
us
to
make
it
our
own.
So
same
thing
we
have
time
to
open.
We
have
put
request
sighs.
This
was
one
of
my
favorites.
A
You
know
you
probably
as
a
developer,
hate,
getting
put
requests,
10,000
lines
of
code
very,
very
hard
to
end
up
reviewing
that
so
and
then
that
goes
together
with
working
progress
and
also
code
review
distribution.
There's
a
lot
more
reports
on
it.
I
do
want
to
show
one.
That
is
one
of
my
favorites
too,
because
we
could
ask
about
this
all
the
time
which
is
languages
over
here.
You
see
all
of
the
rise
in
languages
that
what
is
declining
and
many
people
do
not
even
know
at
an
organization
perspective.
Are
we
develop
more
in
rust?
A
Are
we
not
and
how
is
that
actually
doing
how
many
people
are
doing
it
so
critical
stuff?
So
the
last
lap
is
security
and
you
know
we
started
our
security
journey,
I.
Think
back
in
2017
with
security,
vulnerability
alerts
from
there
we
introduced
secret
scanning.
We
have
a
lot
of
you
know.
Let's
say
you
have
an
AWS
stop
and
they're
utilizing
an
API.
You
know
those
can
lead
to
a
lot
more
than
you
know
what
you
would
you
would
think.
A
So
we
did
something
where,
if
you
shake
that
in
we
automatically
contacted
the
US
they
could.
Then
we
book
that
token
and
then
we
let
you
know
so
it's
pretty
cool
stuff.
We
call
that
secret
scanning
last
last
satellite.
We
did
automated
security
fixes
by
the
acquisition
of
dependable,
we
think
of
dependable,
a
step
Roomba.
They
just
keeps
your
code
clean
it.
You
know
it
goes
to
where
it
goes
in
and
says.
Okay,
you
need
to
update
these
dependencies.
A
You
need
to
do
all
of
these
things,
so
kind
of
keeps
your
house
in
order
and
then
at
universe
last
year
in
November
we
started
getting
more
into
that
community
feel
with
key
helps.
You
develop
an
advisor
database,
so,
okay,
so
we're
securing
your
dependencies.
We
are
securing
as
well
your
secrets
and
what
about
your
code,
and
that
is
where
code
scanning
comes
in
it
seamlessly
finds
the
group
owner
ability
Snavely
integrated
into
the
developer
workflow.
It
is
powered
by
code
ql,
their
world's
most
advanced
semantic
analysis
engine.
A
This
comes
from
our
similar
position
and
again
that
community
piece
is
essential
in
everything
we
do
so
code
QL,
it's
backed
by
1700
open-source
queries
by
leading
security
researches.
So
you
get
all
of
these
actions
on
a
community
around
actions,
you're
going
to
have
insights
in
the
community
about
insights,
and
you
have
security
and
a
community
community
around
inside
all
everything
coming
together
to
not
only
allowed
open-source
to
remain
secure
and
productive
and
all
of
that,
but
also
our
enterprise
customers
can
utilize
it.
A
So
with
that,
let
me
just
give
you
a
quick
demo
and
well
call
it
so
in
here,
I
could
see-
and
you'll
probably
have
seen
this
a
couple
of
times
so
I'm
not
sure
gonna
fast
forward,
so
we're
probably
sure
in
time
I'm
gonna
show
you
one
really
quick,
so
you
get
an
idea.
So
is
this
one
so
right
here
integrated,
you
could
be
back.
No.
You
could
also
integrate
this
into
a
pull
request.
Flow
I'm,
able
to
already
had
it
scan
and
everything
and
I'm
able
to
see
that
I
have
a
security
vulnerability.
A
A
Ql
go
repo
all
accessible,
you
could
even
do
pull
requests
against
our
code,
QL
go
and
the
more
people
submit
queries
and
the
more
vulnerabilities
we
could
find
how
they're
in
the
open
and
the
more
enterprise
customers
can
also
benefit
from
that
too.
So,
and
with
that,
we
are
gonna,
give
it
a
close.
So
what
kind
of
end
where
we
started
with,
which
is
a
community
power
platform?
We're
doing
all
of
this?
To
really
empower
your
teams
and
allows
you
to
transform
your
enterprise
into
a
community
entrance,
so
thank
you
so
much.
B
Thank
you
so
much
Mario
for
that
amazing
tour
around
get
one
it
was.
It
was
extremely
informative
and
I.
Remember
what
you
said.
You
said
you
want
us
to
take
two
words:
enterprise-grade
that
get
up
actions
and
enterprise
server
as
enterprise-grade.
That
means
to
get
handle
over
30,000
builds,
and
the
second
word
is
its
committee
powered.
So
we
have
four
minutes
for
Q&A.
I'm
gonna
go
straight
into
the
first
question
as
an
administrator
and
get
up
Enterprise
instance.
This
looks
compelling.
We
have
regulator,
concerns
and
retention
as
long
as
35
years.
A
Definitely
if
they're
talking
about
github
enterprise
I'm
sorry
give
her
private
instances
that
many
years
I
have
not
heard,
but
yes,
we'll
work
with
our
enterprise.
Customers
will
definitely
work
with
our
enterprise
customers.
On
this
you
know
we're
you're
gonna
be
able
to
actually
store
this
in
your
owned
object
store
the
main
thing
that
we're
facilitating
is
being
able
to
take
that
back
up
and
then
feed
it
into
you.
So,
whatever
you're
using
as
your
you
know,
you
can
put
it
in
cold
storage.
A
B
C
Got
a
question
I've
been
trying
to
get
this
question
out
since
the
conversation
with
Chris,
so
I'm
hoping
you
can
answer
it's!
Okay,
if
you
can't,
but
Chris
mentioned
something
about
cell
phone
at
hosted
runners.
That
was
also
mentioned
in
the
Arduino
conversation,
because
you
talked
more
to
that
and
what's
possible
there
yeah.
A
So
yeah
definitely
so
self
hosted
runners.
Is
there
some
beautiful
system?
You
know
like?
We
already
have
runners
that
we
could
run
your
action
song,
but
sometimes
you
actually
want
to
have
an
especific
less
a
binary
installed
into
that
runner.
You
want
to
have
a
specific
setup
actually
made
because
you
build,
you
know
it's
very
complicated
and
you
know
the
way
to
accomplish
that
is
through
self
foster
runners.
So
you
end
up
configuring
an
image
then
we're
able
to
call
that
instantiate
it
and
be
able
to
run
the
workflow
in
it.
A
But
again
it's
preset
to
whatever
you
need
it
to
be,
and
we
just
kind
of
I'm
ministry
and
being
able
to
have
the
life
cycle
that
self
Foster,
dryer
or
kind
of
the
ability
to
call
it
and
then
get
the
information
back
after
the
run
is
finished.
All
the
workflow
is
finished.
So
what
we
see
the
most
may
be
answering
your
question.
We
see
self
owners
can
use
the
most
behind
the
firewall.
A
If
you
want
to
think
of
right,
like
if
I
have
something
where
my
workflow
needs
to
end
up
calling
into
you
know
a
system
that
is
from
premises
or
anything
like
that,
we
see
that
a
scenario
a
lot
or
another
kind
of
use
cases
again
something
that
hey
my
build
needs
a
lot
of
customization
when
it
comes
to
minors
that
are
needed
in
that
machine
or
a
specific.
You
know,
batch
files
are
needing
that
machine,
and
this
is
the
only
way
to
do
it.
So
you
know
versions
of
frameworks
and
things
like
that.
A
A
Yeah-
and
you
know
that
that's
all
fair,
so
thanks
for
asking
that
I
do
one
I
kind
of
make
sure
that
everyone
hears
this
is
our
promise.
Is
that
all
of
the
features
that
we
do
have
in
our
cloud
for
a
good
cloud?
First
company
write
it
first
launches.
Our
promise
is
that
those
features
end
up
going
on
premises,
one
quarter
or
two
quarters
after
it
ends
up
in
general.
The
ability
in
the
cloud
we're
doing
a
lot
of
work
right
now
to
make
sure
that
that
is
true,
so
actions.
A
You
know
it's
taken,
maybe
a
little
bit
longer
than
that
quarter,
but
it
is
something
that
we
are
committed
of
making
it
in,
but
going
forward,
while
you
should
be
expecting
of
github
is
what
whatever
the
fisherman.
Sometimes
the
feature
cannot
actually
go
into
club,
because
you
know
it's
not
into
on-premises,
because
it
was
not
meant
for
in
premises,
but
99%
of
the
features
are
meant
for
both
of
these
flavors
or
deployments
or
topologies.
So
you
should
expect
any
feature
1/4
to
2/4
lag,
but
that's
our
promise
to
you.