►
From YouTube: GitLab Heroes Spotlight - Carlos Eduardo Arango
Description
GitLab Heroes Carlos Eduardo Arango and Marvin Karegyeya chat about GitLab's community and the Heroes program.
A
A
I
I
happened
to
be
part
of
like
big
lab
committee
team,
so
I
thought
this
was
one
of
like
the
ideas
that
could
help.
You
know
like
promote.
You
know
like
some
content
that
could
be
used
by
other
heroes
in
terms
of
you
know
like
reference
and
I
trying
to
join
the
heroes
from
them,
yeah
so
yeah,
that's
I,
think
a
brief
about
me.
I,
don't
know
I
think
my
first
question
would
be
like.
Would
you
could
you
please
tell
us
about
yourself.
B
Whoa,
so
thank
you
and
thank
you
for
for
this
cause.
It's
a
great
initiative.
What
about
myself,
I'm
an
environmental
engineer
and
so
I
got
into
computing
for
some
work,
that
I
was
doing
for
my
undergrad
thesis
and
started
like
love
in
open
source
and
I
started
like
getting
into
open
source
projects
just
to
be
able
to
do
my
thesis,
my
resources
and
after
that
I
started
to
contribute
a
lot.
I
got
like
really
into
the
cloud
native
ecosystem,
so
I
started
to
contribute
a
lot
into
containers
and
things
like
that.
B
B
A
B
I
will
say
inspiration,
but
I
would
say
a
lot
of
research
projects
are
offsetting.
It
lab
and
lots
of
like
universities,
Research
Institute.
They
have
their
own,
get
lab
instance
for
their
project,
so
I
start
work
with
those
projects,
but
at
some
point,
I
needed
things,
and
some
of
these
things
were
more
related
to
like
to
the
CI
right.
So
I
started
to
look
into
the
give
lab
see.
B
A
B
So
that's
my
day,
job
and
I
see
myself
contributing
back
to
get
lab
allowed
on
the
CI
bought
again
because
we
need
to
integrate
Kira
Nerys
and
more
of
the
guid
lab
with
supercomputer
kind
of
systems.
Right,
so
he's
not
saying
how
you
deploy,
give
lab
on
cloud
house
like
Amazon,
Google
or
usher,
and
how
do
you
plug
in
lab
in
this
super
restricted
control,
academic
environments?
Only
you
have
like
protected
data,
or
things
like
that.
A
A
B
B
Everything
is
paused,
but
yeah
I'm
very
new.
It's
been
amazing
to
interact
with
John
and
the
other
gierek
people
to
like.
They
are
always
asking
you.
How
can
I
help
to
help
you
go
and
talk
about
yield,
laughing,
tell
people
how
to
contribute
back
to
open
source
and
I,
really
hope
I'm
going
to
be
able
to
do
something
very
soon.
B
A
B
A
I
I
guess
you
know,
like
everything,
has
you
know
like
a
staff?
So
it's
a
it's
a
really
wonderful
story.
That's
it
yeah,
cuz
I
chose,
you
know
like
I
mean
I
would
say
like
the
beginning
has
been
rough,
maybe
for
you,
Oh,
hospitals,
and
especially
in
terms
of
like
you
know,
organizing
it's
like
a
meter.
A
You
aren't
able
to
like
organize
one
because
of
the
current
situation,
but
yeah
I
think
it's
really
inspiring.
You
know
like
your
journey
and
how
you've
been
doing
I
feel
like
that's.
You
know
like
one
of
the
stories
that
I've,
never
even
you
know
like
sort
of
as
a
possibility,
because
I
mean
like
joining
because
of
like
people
that
you
met
on
the
bus.
He
was
a
quite
you,
know,
shocking
and
inspiring
some
way
so.
A
It's
it's
a
little
jiggly.
So
what
what
would
you?
Why
would
you
say,
have
been
like
you
major
setbacks,
except
you
know,
like
the
ones
who
you
know,
organizing
the
party
I
mean.
So
what
I
like
the
challenges
that
he
faced,
you
know
like,
as
you
join
the
program,
so
I
think
that
could
probably
be
a
hindrance
to
you.
B
B
Want
to
start
like
some
local
meetups
and
talk
about
just
like
fewer
open
source,
how
to
contribute
back,
because
there's
lots
of
enterprises
here
in
companies
and
whatnot
about
tech.
But
you
don't
hear
about
open
source,
so
I
do
want
to
change
that.
So
I
I
know
that
that
is
going
to
be
my
challenge.
B
A
That's
interesting,
you
know
I
feel
like
actually.
Equally
the
same,
you
know
it's
quite
inspiring
to
see
how
everyone
is
willing
to
help
and
I,
not
the
community
here.
So
what
would
be
like
the
things?
Maybe
that
you
would
love,
maybe
to
see
change
your
heart
and
bring,
and
maybe,
apart
from
you
know
like
trying
to
contribute
to
like
the
open
source
and
organize
a
couple.
You
know
like
parties
and
maybe
meetups
in
San,
Francisco
I.
B
A
B
A
Already
wonderful,
you
know
like,
but
I
think
you'll
be
doing.
We
had
a
couple.
You
know
like
meetings
that
we
talked
about
me
and
adjourn
and
a
couple
of
other.
You
know
like
committee
members
who
are
talking
about
the
issue
of
you
know
like
being
able
to
have
it
like
us.
You
know
kind
of
team
for
the
Key
Club
program.
You
know
to
have
it.
You
know
like
to
run
through
like
a
couple
other
diverse
backgrounds,
and
so
what's
your
take
on
that,
you
know
like
how
would
you
see
us?
B
It's
it's
very
diverse
yeah
how
to
increase
that
I
wish
I'd
with
the
heroes.
Programs
is
really
awesome
like
things
that
I
want
to
do
in
my
city,
Latin
America
is
very
diverse,
so
if
we
can
get
more
people
from
these
regions
contributing
back,
that
is
what
you
love
a
lot
right
and
then
we're
in.
For
me.
That's
something
that
drives
me
like.
When
I
was
younger
every
time
everything
was
like:
oh
yeah,
Silicon,
Valley,
sitcom,
Valley,
Silicon,
Valley
and
now
being
able
to
contribute
back
to
those
projects
from
around
the
globe.
A
I
think
so
too,
you
know
like
I,
feel
like
it's
a
great
program.
You
know
like
to
bring
people
on
board,
especially
people
who
really
noticed
you
know
like
take
centric
and
I
feel
like
most
of
the
people
who
are
on
board
willing
to
you
know,
go
to
their
way
to
like
do
things
like
organize
meetups,
like
the
one
you're
actually
planning
on
doing
so,
which
is
a
huge
you
know,
like
maybe
I,
believe.
A
It's
a
huge
opportunity
for
people
of
diverse
backgrounds
to
be
able
to
like
join
gitlab,
contribute,
contribute
the
give
club
contributors
and
maybe
the
guitar
hero
program
as
well.
So
regarding
maybe
like
the
kind
of
work
that
you
plan
on
doing
and
the
me
types
II
organize
one
of
the
issues
that
I
was
popped
up
about
the
Heroes
program
has
been
you
know.
Most
of
the
people
try
to
see
it
as
a
program
that
is
for
people
who
aren't
you
know
like
tech
centric
by
people
who
aren't
you
know
giving
called
contributor
contributions.
A
So
my
my
question
would
be
like
what
was
your
ideal.
You
know
like
kind
of
person
who
attend
your
meetups,
and
what
are
you
planning
on
doing
for
these
people
who
are
into
tech
centric?
The
problem
could
probably
focus
on
and
maybe
have
them.
You
know,
participate
in
something
that
would
probably
well.
B
B
So,
for
me
was
like
super
clear,
but
watching
people
that
was
like
five
years,
studying
the
computer
science,
not
knowing
how
to
use
gain
and
knowing
how
to
do
a
pull
request
and
knowing
how
to
create
a
branch
how
to
for
curry
poor
I
was
like
super
shocked
like
so.
These
guys
are
with
me
study
like
a
PhD
for
computer
science,
and
they
know,
sir,
about
Gil
yeah.
They
are
super
amazing
and
algorithms,
and
they
are
better
than
me
in
Java
and
C++
programming
things
like
that.
B
But
when
it
comes
to
doing
a
pull
request,
they
were
like.
Oh
how
what
is
a
pull
request
and-
and
the
teacher
had
had
to
spend
like
a
full
two
hours
classroom
just
explaining
people
how
to
do
a
branch
and
create
a
food
request
and
I
was
shocked.
So
since
then,
I
have
been
like
contributing
giving
free
classes.
So
one
of
the
things
I
do
here
before
becoming
a
hero
was
once
a
year.
I
request
like
a
classroom
in
my
University
and
for
a
full
day.
B
I
teach
people
from
using
the
common
line
to
using
git
Bergy
and
then
going
with
that
get
to
give
lab
in
the
cloud.
So
what
I
want
to
do
for
my
meet-up
that
a
meet-up
should
be
like
two
hours
right,
like
two
or
three
hours
was
like
creating
a
story
right
because
I
don't
want
to
toast
languages
like
oh
we're,
going
to
be
running
this
meetup
in
Python
and
go
in
Java.
A
B
Right
so
it's
like
tell
me
the
story
of
the
ponytail.
You
know
whatever
and
just
contribute
to
this
story
be
appears
in
that
that
is
going
just
to
enable
everything
right
because
people
we
need
to
fork
the
repo
clone,
the
repo
locally,
modify
the
text
file
and
add
some
lines
to
the
story
and
push
them
back
and
create
a
pier
right.
So
it's
very
simple,
no
programming
needed
just
you
just
need
to
know
how
to
modify
a
file
and
in
contribute
back
to
ice
cream.
B
I
was
I
was
thinking
at
the
beginning,
like
I'll
doing
some
good
project
with
Python
or
with
whatever,
but
then
I
got
I
just
said,
I
got
thinking
like
and
the
people
that
do
not
know
Python.
They
are
going
to
feel
like
not
welcome
to
the
meetup
yeah,
so
I
got
like
okay.
Just
let's
write
a
funny
story.
I
like
the
pony,
was
walking
down
the
street,
you
know
whatever
and
then
people
contributing
back
to
that
with
lines
and
adding
colors
and
adding
more
to
that
history.
B
A
B
Don't
know
I'm
always
telling
them
they
straight
my
life,
because
I
feel
that
open
source
gave
me
everything
like
it
gave
me
a
job.
They
gave
me
everything
so
I
am
always
encouraging
people
to
contribute
back
and
and
to
help
me
out
this
first
right
and
to
understand
open
source
like
I,
making
a
life
out
of
open
source.
So
you
can
get
paid
and
also
contribute
back
to
open
source,
and
that's
awesome
and
that's
why
I
like
doing
stick.