►
From YouTube: GitLab Heroes Summit - Panel Discussion
Description
This is a recording of the panel discussion with members of the GitLab Hero program lead by Roland Heuser and featuring Riccardo Padovani, Niclas Mietz, Abel Ayuba, and Will Hall. It was recorded during the GitLab Heroes Summit on 2020/01/21.
To learn more about the GitLab Heroes program, please visit https://about.gitlab.com/community/heroes/.
C
I
was
still
in
the
other
meeting,
so
hi
everyone,
I'm
roland,
I
am
located
in
in
california.
I
work
for
sr
international
there,
I'm
a
software
engineer
there
and
we
we
put
together
this
small
panel
because
we
thought
it
would
be
a
good
idea
to
get
it.
I
feel
like
these
virtual
settings
are
harder
to
get
the
conversation
going
and
to
meet
people.
So
I
know
we
have
the
coffee
chats
later,
but
just
to
get
it
kind
of
started.
C
I
wanted
to
have
a
conversation
with
a
few
people,
so
I
have
now
ricardo
bill
and
nicholas
with
me
and
abel
might
join
us
later.
So
let's
do
some
introduction,
I'm
just
gonna.
I
guess
call
out
the
names
really
quick
ricardo.
Do
you
want
to
start
with
introducing
yourself
who
you
are.
D
C
Thanks
for
joining
well,
we've
already
seen
you,
but
maybe
you
can
briefly
introduce
yourself
again
and
if
there's
anything
else,
you
wanted
to
share.
B
Sure,
yes,
so
we've
already
seen
me
and
in
other
things,
I'm
also
the
co-organizer
of
the
london
meetup.
Although
I
live
in
cambridge,
I
used
to
go
to
london
when
we
used
to
travel.
So
that's
probably
the
the
other
interesting
thing
yeah
and
I
think
I've
been
using
gitlab
and
and
since
about
2016..
But
I've
been
a
minimal
contributor,
I'm
going
to
say.
C
You
know
that's
cool
and
then
nicholas,
maybe.
A
Yeah
yeah,
my
name
is
I'm
using
a
github
I
seem
to
since
six
or
seven
years
at
least
I'm
also
not
so
the
official
contributor.
A
I
do
a
lot
of
maintenance
work
on
an
unofficial
image
that
it's
towards.
I
must
be
indoctrinated.
I
use
this
since
now
also
seven
years
or
something
like
that.
But
yes,
it's
mostly
it
mostly
my
day
work.
I
need
to
do
some
crazy
stuff,
so
I
work
so
if
you
want
to
play
with
me
buzzword,
bingo,
I'm
using
kubernetes,
I
use
blockchains
in
my
day,
work
and
also
doing
this
mostly
so
this
decentralized
identities,
but
I
will
really
open
twelve
for
one
and
one
on
that
afterwards,
yeah.
C
Okay,
I'm
just
gonna
go
through
a
few.
I'm
just
gonna
go
through
a
few
questions,
so
maybe
like
how
I'm
just
gonna
start
with
ricardo
like
how
do
you
like
got
involved
with
git
lab,
and
how
did
you
like
join
the
heroes
program.
D
So
I
started
using
gitlab
doing
my
first
job
seven
seven
years
ago
and
at
the
time
gitlab
was
still
a
quite
young
company.
I
think
there
were
four
or
five
developers,
and
so
there
were
a
lot
of
small
bugs
and
that
I
noticed
every
day
because
I
was
using
it
every
day,
so
I
started
contributing
to
it
just
to
fix
things
that
were
annoying
for
me,
they're
driving
by
necessity.
D
Let's
say
and
after
that,
I
just
liked
the
community
liked
the
product,
so
I've
I've
been
a
strong
advocate
for
git
elaboration,
the
two
next
job
I
had,
including
the
current
one,
and
I
start-
and
I
since
I
use
it,
I
create
scripts
and
small
acts
to
use
it
better,
and
I
started
the
writing
blog
post.
So
on
about
github,
we
are.
E
D
Now
so
I
I
I
like
the
project
and
I
like
to
do
my
small
part
to
help
it
grow,
so
I
think
every
every
contribution
is
valuable
for
for
the
community.
So
if
you
cannot
code,
you
can
translate
or
help
on
the
forum
or
on
twitter
or
whatever.
There
are
a
lot
of
different
ways
to
attribute
to
gitlab,
and
I
think
is
amazing.
C
B
I
guess
I
started
off
because
I
I
joined
a
company
that
was
running
a
gitlab
instance
and
it
appeared
that
when
I
started
well,
that's
not
your
job,
so
I
had
about
200
developers
who
I
then
administered
on
on
gitlab
as
an
application,
and
I
got
more
into
contribution
because
I'm
gonna
say
I'm.
I
may
be
slightly
pedantic
about
things
and
my
big
frustration
is
when
things
are
not
linted
correctly,
and
none
of
the
templates
were
linted
correctly
and
therefore
I
decided
this.
Could.
This
is
a
an
ideal
situation
for
me.
B
I
can
go
and
relint
all
of
the
yaml
in
the
templates
and
then
put
yaml
lint
in
and
and
force
that
upon
everyone
else.
So
when,
when
someone
picks
a
template,
it
doesn't
fail.
My
yammer
linter
every
single
time,
because
I
picked
a
template
and
a
bit
unasked
for
I
then
unloaded
a
100
file,
merge,
request
and
asked
people.
Can
you
just
merge
this
for
me
guys,
so
that
was
my
kind
of
introduction
to
contribution
so
yeah?
I
had.
B
I
had
a
large
large
file
contribution
as
a
single
item,
which
was
a
bit
funny
and
then
I
kind
of
got
involved
in
in
my
back.
In
my
background,
I've
also
been
involved
in
docker,
so
I
arranged
the
docker
meetups
for
a
while
in
cambridge,
and
I
was
like
we
should
have
a
meet
up
in
england.
Well,
I
now
go
to
london.
London
is
bigger
than
cambridge.
I'll
do
I
spoke
to
john,
and
I
said
I
could
do
it
in
cambridge
or
in
london.
They
said
london's
better.
B
So
I
said
all
right
well,
we'll
organize
a
meet
up
in
london,
but
I
want
someone
to
co-organize
it
with
me,
and
so
I
I
have
anthony
who
worked
with
the
mid-market
team
in
that
and
I
moved
into
a
new
role
and
inside
that
new
role.
We
also
partnered
up
with
gitlab
for
doing
support
on
aws,
and
so
in
the
last
year.
I've
trained-
probably
I
don't
know
something
like
60
people
on
on
using
gitlab
for
different
aspects
and
we
run
a
managed
service
for
gitlab
as
well.
B
C
A
Mostly
it's
also
like
the
same
like
the
others,
so
I
did
also
get
in
touch
first
at
world,
mostly
with
it.
So
in
my
first
company
we
have
this
gitlab.
I
think
it
was
in
version
four
or
five.
So
it's
really
odd
and
then
I
was
really
curious
how
to
get
set
it
up
on
my
own
system.
But
then
was
the
problem
that
I
didn't
know.
A
Ruby
really
well,
and
I
brought
up
my
whole
system
literally
so
my
server
and
I
need
to
restart
everything
and
I
did
work
working
back
so
then
I
placed
it
a
little
bit
down
waited
and
then
the
new
other
technology
jumps
out.
So
docker
was
coming
in
place
and
then
there
was
a
docker
image
for
detlab
really
and
I
can
spin
it
up
in
10
minutes
and
it
was
working.
My
system
was
not
up,
so
that
was
really
great
yeah
and
then
I
decided
okay.
A
I
want
to
have
more
features
for
the
container
so
that
we,
for
example,
have
a
detailed
container
registry
and
mostly
in
since
version
8,
the
migration
was
happening
so
that
the
cicd
product
and
the
normal
version
control
system
was
built
up
into
one
product,
at
least
so
that
you
don't
have
the
two
separate
products.
So
I
said
okay,
I
want
to
have
more
features
on
that.
Mostly
my
biggest
contribution,
I
would
say,
was
on
the
gitlab
arm
support
for
arm
64..
A
So
it
was
the
merchant
request
that
was
open
at
at
least
I
think
two
years
open
mostly
on
the
digital
runner,
but
in
the
end
it
was
not
merged,
but
most
of
the
part
was
ported
from
upstream
maintainers
and
it's
not
included
mostly
in
web
stream,
but
regarding
the
heroes
program.
Another
unknown
person
probably
tell
me
about
this
because
niko
talked
to
me
on
the
conference.
I
think
it
was
the
last
conference
in
last
year
before
we
drove
it.
A
Stuff
was
happening
for
all
of
us
so
and
then
I
decided
yeah.
I
want
to
share
more
my
knowledge
and
with
others,
and
also
help
others
to
get
their
problems.
Mostly
fit
with
it,
because
my
main
intention
why
I
found
it
so
great
was
that
it
easily
supported
one
of
the
earliest
that
supports
containers
and
that
you
have
the
easy,
ci
armor
that
you
can
easily
get
start
to
get
dig
into
this
and
all
this
concept
of
that-
and
this
was
really
great
yeah.
C
Yeah,
I
was
actually
amazed
by
how
powerful
the
the
yaml
is
and
how
you
can
just
like.
We
used
to
use
jenkins,
and
so
like,
it's
like
you
can
just
to
pour
it
over
was
really
easy.
I
actually
also
didn't
know
that
does
kit
labs
run
on
arm
now,
because
I
I
haven't,
I
didn't
know
that.
A
It
runs
on
amp
32,
so
arm
v6
and
v7,
mostly
so.
The
high
floated
also,
and
also
the
most
known
arm
64.
What
could
probably
be
in
the
apple
m1
is
m64
based.
All
this
stuff
is
now
running,
also
the
not
only
with
the
icd
part,
so
the
runner
is
running
on
64..
It
seems
there's
also
no
a
portion
of
that.
You
can
run
the
whole
gitlab
setup
on
arm64,
so
raspberry
pi
would
a
good
to
fill
it
to
get
starting
on
that
when
used
raspberry
pi's
are
also
arm64.
C
Okay,
yeah,
if
you
look
into
that
a
little
bit
more,
but
that's
that's,
that's
really
cool.
So
I
think
that
one
of
the
other
questions
I
had,
I
think
you
most
of
you
already,
partially
or
mostly
answered,
but
I
was
like
like
what
what
kind
of
challenges
you
you
you
solved
at
your
workplace
with
kit
lab,
I
don't
know,
did
either
of
you
wanted
to
add
something
to
that
or
I
think
we
m,
like
I
think
most
of
you
already
kind
of
have
covered
that.
D
B
D
D
To
to
work
with
cloud
a
system,
particularly
on
aws.
C
D
We
have
script
that
train
new
models
in
an
automatic
fashion,
then
delete
the
machines,
this
ac2
machines
and
so
on.
So
they
are
able
to
train
new
models
just
pushing
some
code
without
having
to
care
about
ssh
in
some
gpu,
based
instance
somewhere
in
frankfurt.
So
it
really
helps
our
my
colleagues
to
focus
on
their
blackmagic
and
don't
have
to
worry
about
infrastructure.
B
I
was
just
going
to
add
in
I,
so
I've
been
talking
to
people
a
lot
about
managing
gitlab
going
forwards,
and
I
think
one
of
the
exciting
things
is
that
you're
able
to
do
almost
what
I'm
going
to
call
a
hybrid
approach
to
runners.
So
you
can
get
a
runner
almost
anywhere
you
want
and
therefore
you
can
start
to
isolate
the
this.
B
Especially
I
don't
know
if
people
remember
the
edge
was
was
quite
popular
talking
about
three
or
four
years
ago,
but
but
I
imagine
well
the
the
potential
for
having
that
as
a
system,
that's
able
to
complete
deployments
at
edge
is
quite
exciting
and
it's
not
moving
us
into
a
new
product
category.
It's
just
re-implementing
things
that
we
already
know.
So
that's
when
I
think
the
the
other
interesting
thing
I'm
certainly
seeing
with
people
more
recently.
A
Yeah,
I
had
also
a
similar
use
case
because
in
my
first
job,
what
I
was
doing,
there
was
mostly
doing
a
mobile
games
development,
and
the
problem
was
was
that
when
we
want
to
test
some
new
releases
or
a
new
build
at
least,
we
need
to
wait
until
5
or
10
minutes
when
our
game
development
tour
was
finished
and
that
we
can
test
it
out
on
our
mobile
phones
mostly,
and
for
that
we
have
a
problem
also
that
we
don't
support
one
platform.
A
We
supported
macro
as
windows
and
also
I'm
during
that
time,
also
a
flash,
and
so
for
that
case
we
decided.
Okay,
let's
try
to
build
it
up
independent,
and
then
I
set
it
up
a
little
bit
runner
on
on
the
windows
machine
and
also
on
the
mac
os
machine,
so
that
we
can
have
automatic
builds
after
everything
was
mostly
released
and
that
we
can
see.
A
Okay,
we
can
now
use
this
build
to
test
our
current
features
on
it,
and
this
was
a
really
big
benefit,
because
we
don't
need
to
wait
on
our
screens
so
that
we
can't
do
anything
on
that.
A
So
it's
mostly
like
the
famous
htc
comic,
where
we're
saying
waiting
on
the
compiler,
and
this
was
really
truly
my
case,
so
that
I
need
to
wait
five
or
ten
minutes
and
if
you
do
it
like
every
hour,
whilst
you're
writing
on
that,
then
you
can
learn
at
least
in
your
language
or
something
else
in
the
meantime,
because
when
you're
brought
there,
we
tried
to
unbox
this,
and
this
was
really
successful
in
the
end.
Yeah.
C
A
C
This
can
be
very,
very
helpful
is
like
did
for
so
it
sounds
like
for
most
of
you
or
I
think
for
all
of
you,
you
all
the
company
already
had
gitlab
when
you
joined
or
did
for
some
of
you
did
you
experience
a
transition
of
a
company
to
gitlab
at
all,
or
I
was
just
curious
if
that
happened.
B
So
I
think
that
one
of
the
things
that
people
often
are
surprised
by
if
they're
going
from-
let's
say
an
another,
very
similar
product
with
a
very
similar
name,
is
that
they
get
a
lot
more
and
they
get
a
lot
more
than
just
source
control
management,
so
source
control
management
and
people
kind
of
understand
what
that
is.
B
You
know
every
release
every
month
has
something
new
and
you
kind
of
go.
Well,
I
I'm
as
an
administrator,
I'm
always
like.
Well
do
people
want
this?
I
don't
know.
Does
anyone
want
to
use
this
thing?
I
I
I
don't
use
it
myself,
but
I
think
a
lot
that
comes
from
at
least
what
I'm
saying
is
that
you
know
the
ultimate
level
where
you've
got
this
security.
Suite
that's
whether
some
of
that
starts
to
trickle
down
is
going
to
be
interesting.
C
C
A
Yeah,
we
mostly
so
in
the
meantime
when
I
was
not
a
mobile
developer
anymore.
I
worked
literally
as
a
consultant,
and
we
decided
to
give
the
knowledge
into
germany
to
more
companies
that
they
should
use
gitlab
for
some
of
the
jobs,
but
it's
really
hard
to
convince
them
that
they
need
to
replace
mostly
her
the
complete
supply
chain.
So
mostly
that
companies
has
probably
some
of
the
companies
doesn't
have
git
at
all.
So
this,
then
quite
the
easy
part,
but
the
problem
was
really
mostly.
A
They
had
jenkins
in
place
and
you
can't
easily
convince
them
that
they
should
replace
this
new
tool
that
has,
in
terms
of
it,
has
not
more
feature
set,
but
it's
more
decorative,
because
what
I
don't
like
on
jenkins
is
mostly
that
it
has
this
dsl
stuff
and
the
people
write
its
own
own
system
on
that,
and
you
can't
migrate
jenkins
anymore,
because
you
have
written
literally
on
groovy
a
whole
new
system
and
it
isn't
portable
anymore
and
yeah
and
interesting
was
when
I
gave
charts
on
conferences
about
little
app
how
you
can
easily
spin
it
up,
so
that
it
only
take
10
minutes
to
have
a
full
ci
cd
system,
and
you
can
work-
and
this
was
a
really
mind-blowing
game
for
a
lot
of
people,
because
this
coke
they
can
be
productive
right
now,
instead
of
focusing
and
how
I
can
get
it
into
work
into
this
tool
and
this
tool
now,
you
need
only
to
get
started.
A
C
Yeah,
so
I
have
actually
I
have
a
few
more
questions,
but
then
the
idea
is
that
I
was
going
to
open
it
up
to
the
audience
so
like
they.
If
they
want
to
post
questions,
then
we
can
like
discuss
them
as
a
group,
but
in
the
meantime
I
had
like
a
kind
of
an
umbrella
question,
but
I
was
just
curious
how
how
has
like,
because
last
year
has
been
unique.
I'm
just
curious.
C
How
has
your
your
work,
especially
maybe
with
interacting
with
gitlab
or
just
in
general,
changed
in
developing
software
or
yeah.
D
So,
on
my
side,
we
do
a
lot
of
consultancies,
I'm
a
solutions
architect
I
used
to
spend
a
lot
of
time
traveling
and
going
to
customers.
I
think
I've
never
slept
so
long
in
the
same
bed
like
last
year
same
meaning,
I've
I'm
here
in
munich
and
last
business
trip
was
back
in
march.
I
think
so.
D
I
was
able
to
focus
more
on
the
technical
part
that
is
cool,
but
on
the
business
side
it
makes
things
a
bit
harder
because
it's
harder
to
do
not
talk
with
people
in
person
or
going
out
for
a
beer
mix
harder
building
teams
talking
with
the
customers.
So
on
the
technical
side,
I'm
super
happy
also
because
all
the
communication
tried
to
be
on
email,
so
you
always
have
a
track
of
what
I've
been
choosing
or
what
have
been
said,
but
on
the
business
side,
makes
things
harder
makes
our
director
collaborate.
A
C
I
just
thought
that
I
will
join
hey
abel.
Do
you
want
to
briefly
introduce
yourself
and.
F
Yeah,
hello,
everyone,
my
name
is
ebel
ayuba,
I'm
the
founder
of
sub
drum.
We
have
british-based
software
development.
Compliments
where
we
get
to
build
innovative
products,
then
launch
to
markets.
F
Currently
we
have
about
two
products:
we're
working
on
one
in
the
fintech
space,
one
in
the
virtual
reality
industry
and
the
last
one
in
the
remote
working
tool,
also
a
good
lab
hero
at
abuja
here
in
the
federal
capital
territory.
Yeah,
that's
it
about
me.
It's
been
a
quite
an
awesome
journey.
You
know
contributing
to
the
community
and
yeah
making
the
community
a
better
place.
C
Okay,
nice
yeah
we're
just
going.
We
were
just
discussing
how
the
like
development
process
and
like
just
I
guess,
work
in
general
changed
in
the
last
year.
I
don't
know
if
bill
did
you
want,
or
did
you
have
anything
to
add
to
that
or.
B
I
mean
nothing,
I'd
say
it's
incredibly
lonely
yeah
and
for
for
the
realness
of
it
about
not
software
development,
but
I'm
used
to
seeing
people
and
that's
literally
like
I'm
lucky,
because
I
have
you
know
in
many
ways
I'm
lucky
I
have
a
job.
I
still
have
my
health.
I
live
with
a
family,
we
have
a
garden,
but
it's
incredibly
lonely
and
talking
in
my
office
to
people
for
five
hours
a
day
as
I
as
I
probably
do,
it's
it's
it's.
Maybe
thirty
percent
like
seeing
people
in
real
life.
B
So
that's
probably
the
thing
I'd
say
it's
it's
a
hard
thing
to
upkeep
all
the
time,
at
least
from
from
my
side.
If
I'm
showing
a
bit
of
vulnerability,
it's
that
I
find
it
so
lonely,
and
it's
not
like
I
used
to
it's
like
some
of
the
bits
of
work
I
didn't
enjoy,
and
some
of
the
bits
that
I
did
enjoy
were
taken
away.
As
in
talking
to
my
my
my
colleagues
about
non-work
related
or
work
related
stuff,
I
think
that's
the
thing
that
that
I
miss
out.
A
No,
no,
no,
that's
fine,
so
I
think
everyone
experienced
the
same
literally
because
what
what
the
good
side
of
this
provide
face
for
me
personally
yeah
I
have
a
job
and
so
on,
but
also
I
learned
that
I
can
work
fully
remote
because
I
have
the
same
situation
that
we
got
ricardo
has
before
that
I
my
last
company.
I
worked
mostly
outside
transition,
so
I
have
a
lot
of
travel
stuff
that
I
need
to
cover.
But
right
now
I
learned.
A
Okay,
I
can
sit
in
here
my
office
slowly
and
work,
and
what
I
really
enjoy
about
this
is
that
he
can
meet
with
more
people
than
before,
because
now
is
everyone
open
to
have?
Let's
have
a
quick
chat
on
that
and
let's
have
a
short
traffic
chat
so
around
the
globe.
So
literally
when
I,
when
I
recite
before
that,
I
didn't
meet
people
that
I
mostly
then
see
on
conferences
and
sometimes
but
right
now,
I'm
currently
trying
to
arrange
some
meetings
with
them.
A
So,
let's
have
a
short
coffee
chat
for
30
minutes
or
something
like
that
where
we
can
deal
with
this,
but
I
really
also
missed
conferences
in
person
where
you
can
grab
up
a
dream,
something
and
do
some
real
networking.
In
terms
of
that,
you
can
see
and
fear
the
people
and
the
teams
are
brief.
Yes,
the
really
missing
part,
but
we
will
see
how
it
evolves
and
I'm
really
positive
that
I
think
it
will
be
shifting
this
year,
mostly
next
year,
getting
slowly
back
to
normal.
A
So,
but
it
takes
some
time
to
recover
yeah.
C
Yeah
and
abel-
I
don't
know
like
how
did
things
change
for
you
in
the
past
year?
Maybe
did
that
just
lose
you,
maybe
I
can
say
like
for.
I
think
it's
okay
to
the
that
we
share
a
little
bit
of
vulnerability
here,
because
I
think
it's
like
the
social
aspect
is
important
and
of
course
there
are
other
things
that
are
nice.
C
F
Okay,
yeah,
I
said
well
in
the
past
year.
The
first
thing
I'll
say
is
I
miss
traveling
to
like
different
places
to
either
speak
or
to
attend
events
and
the
experience
of,
like
you
know,
networking
fiscally
with
people
during
the
whole
pandemic.
It
has
changed
a
lot
because
you
can't
actually
get
to
go
to
fiscal
meetups
and
events.
You
don't
get
a
chance
to
network
with
people
physically,
so
you
just
have
to
do
everything
online
and
that
has
kind
of
been
a
total
shift
of
thing.
F
Well,
though,
we
worked
remotely
soft
jump.
We
are
an
oil
remote
company,
but
overall
for
for
the
company,
it
has
not
really
been
a
new
process
to
say
because
you're
already
used
to
the
remote
environment,
but
generally
you
meeting
people
you
hanging
out
around
and
all
of
those
kind
things
had
to
like
kind
of
stop
and
be
on
pause,
so
yeah.
I
really
missed
that
that
time,
yeah.
C
Yeah,
so
that's
pretty
good!
So
now
I'm
thinking
I
was
wondering
if
the
audience
had
any
questions.
Oh
john
actually
just
asked
a
few
questions.
Oh
so
he's
curious.
What
should
gitlab
do
better
to
support
our
community
members.
C
I
can't
answer
that.
My
thoughts
to
the
second
questions
actually
are
that
I
actually
got
motivated.
I
wanted
to
share
my
company's
transition
process
from
we
had.
If
you
know
any
source
control
assist,
if
you
think
of
a
source
controls
management
system,
whatever
name
pops
up,
we
probably
had
it
in
our
company.
C
We
have
probably
I
think,
six
different
solutions
and
the
collaboration
was
insanely
hard,
and
so
because
it
didn't
work
for
me
like
whenever
you
have
a
software
problem
and
you
don't
have
a
standard
for
it,
you
create
a
new
standard,
so
we
spun
up
gitlab
and
eventually
we
had
everyone
migrate
over.
So
what
motivated
me
to
become
an
active
contributor
is,
I
actually
spoke
at
the
enchant
last
last
year
in
january,
at
gitlab
commit
and
shared
how
my
company
transitioned
through
that
period
of
like
six
different
systems
over
to
gitlab.
C
So
that's
what
motivated
me
yeah,
I
don't
know
if
either
of
you
wanted
to.
D
C
D
Like
a
lot
of
the
thing
that
it'll
be.
F
D
You
can
try
to
contribute
in
a
lot
of
different
parts,
so
if
you
want
to
improve
some,
I
don't
know
if
you
want
to
improve
your
goal
and
skills
or
if
you
want
to
improve
your
frontend
skills
or
any
other
stack
technology,
you
can
find
somewhere
in
gitlab
where
you
can
contribute-
and
this
is
super
cool,
because,
if
you're
already
starting
contributing,
you
already
know
how
the
procedures
are.
So
there
is
no
entry
barrier
and
yeah.
D
D
D
Lot
I
often
think
that
gitlab
gives
me
more
than
what
I
give
to
gitlab
so.
D
To
to
be
motivated,
I
really
don't
have
a
good
answer
to
the
first
question.
I
think
gitlab
is
already
an
example
for
a
lot
of
open
source
projects
on
how
to
manage
your
community,
I
think,
is
the
one
of
the
best
program
moniker
one
on
the
security
side,
but
also
in
the
open
source
community
like
for
contributing,
I
contributed
to
ubuntu
before,
especially
to
good,
to
touch
the
mobile
phone.
It
was
a
bit
cancelled.
Unfortunately,
so
I
moved
to
gitlab
and
yeah.
B
Sometimes
it
becomes
a
something
that
the
sword
of
damocles
hanging
above
you,
you
don't
really
want
to
be
in
it
anymore,
but
you
can
kind
of
get
stuck
in
it
and
that's
what
I'd
say
in
terms
of
you
know
better
supporting
people.
I
think
we
have
to
imagine
that
gitlab
is
part
of
a
larger,
open
source
ecosystem
and
part
of
that
is
about
supporting
the
tools
that
we
all
need
to
run.
B
The
the
things
that
we
that
we
do,
I'm
going
to
say,
support
for
things
like
curl
or
you
know,
support
for
for
people
who
run
open
ssl,
which
is
all
part
of
you
know.
We
see
that
the
technology
companies
that
make
lots
and
lots
of
money,
and
then
we
see
the
the
thin
underbelly
of
those
two
people
who
make
commits
to
core
parts
of
of
that
infrastructure.
That's
probably
the
the
big
challenge
that
I
see
is
is
how
we
effectively
drip
money
down
through
our
constituent
parts
to
make
sure
that
they
keep
running.
B
Hopefully
that's
not
too
contentious,
and
it's
something
that
I've
seen
with
with
other
open
source
developers
who
reach
a
point
and
they
go.
I
just
don't
really
want
to
do
it
anymore.
I
it
if
you
don't
get
the
same
buzz
out
of
it
that
you
used
to,
and
it
feels
like
a
day
job.
Then
generally
people
drop
off.
So
you
have
to
try
and
find
ways
to
keep
developing
that
buzz
and
keep
you
know
getting
people
motivated
to
do
it,
which
is
not
easy.
C
Yeah
and-
and
I
think
also
to
run
a
company
at
the
transparency
like
gitlab
does
is
I
mean
I
think
it
looks
easy,
but
it's
like.
I
don't
think
it
is
that
easy
to
run
a
company
and
like
my
company,
that
I
work
at
we
are
actually
like.
I
mean
obviously
for
a
lot
of
companies.
Things
are
closed,
source
and
internal,
but
even
internally
it's
something
sometimes
hard
to
get
access
to
things.
So
it's
like
yeah.
C
D
D
How
underfunded
are
the
basic
collaborators
that
keep
our
our
daily
life
safe
and
make
possible
actually
internet
work,
so
yeah,
I'm
not
sure.
Actually,
if
gitlab,
I
know
it
contributes,
contributed
upstream
to
software
that
is
used
already
by
gitlab.
I
don't
know
if
it
can
be
done
more
to
help
small
software
developers
that
are
the
cornerstone
actually
of
part
of
our
ecosystem.
I.
B
Think
it's
a
very
important
point,
however,
and
you
have
initiatives
so
something
like
inside
github,
where
they
try
and
distribute
sponsorship
money
to
to
open
source
developers
and
whether
there
could
be
some
money
is
difficult.
But
you
know
whether
you
could
work
out
a
way
of
of
being
able
to
give
kudos
contributions
to
people
and
realistically
the
main
thing
that
matters.
B
I
don't
want
to
say
the
main
thing
that
matters
is
it's
kudos
and
money
right,
the
the
reason
that
most
people
are
motivated
to
be
involved
in
things,
and
so
that
you
get
you
feel
good
from
solving
problems.
You
also
don't
want
you
do
a
day
job,
because
you
get
paid
to
do
a
day,
job,
that's
an
uncomfortable
thing
in
open
source
right
that
everyone
still
has
day
jobs
they
get
paid
for.
A
It's
mostly,
it
would
get
him
back
to
nutrition.
I
would
split
it
into
two
parts
to
the
second
question,
so
I
would
first
go
into
the
product,
so
it's
like
the
product
is
still
open
core.
It's
in
the
community
edition.
It
says
so
rich
feature
set
and
mostly
what
is
really
true.
It
has
an
api
for
everything.
So
if
you
don't
have
a
workflow
right
now,
yet
it's
not
adopted
in
gitlab,
you
can
do
it
by
your
own
and
contribute
back
afterwards,
so
or
if
it
doesn't
be
get
merged
into
upstream.
A
It's
also
fine,
but
then
you
can
use
the
workflow
or
if
you
want
to
have
most
of
the
features
that
are
really
that
you
need
to
pay
for
are
for
enterprises
that
are
really
needed,
but
in
the
community
editions
it's
really
great,
and
you
can
also
see
that
the
adoption
change
a
little
bit
more.
A
lot
of
linux
communities
adopt
this
declared.
Last
year,
debian
adopted
this
kde
adopted
this
airplane.
Linux
is
using
gitlab
for
the
internal
package
management.
A
A
You
can
read
it
in
the
handbook
and
probably
what
is
also
better
currently
because
I'm
working
in
a
startup
we
try
to
adopt
some
of
the
parts
so
that
we
have
like
a
reference
where
you
can
see
how
it
goes,
because
sometimes
we
don't
need
to
take
the
same
mistakes
that
were
made
or
probably
that
we
did
be
secured
to
taking
these
mistakes
and
they're.
A
Currently,
two
hidden
games
of
the
clips
that
are
probably
not
many
people
are
aware
of
so
currently,
my
biggest
stem
is
the
youtube
unfiltered
channel
of
gitlab,
where
you
can
watch
every
day,
all
meetings
or
watching,
for
example,
a
deep
dive
how
the
infrastructure
is
team,
I'm
checking
why
gitlab.com
has
an
outage
or,
for
example,
how
they
can
optimize
filter
image
and
so
on.
That's
really
great!
If
you
want
to
watch
something
besides
your
work,
it's
really
good
to
do
that,
and
also
the
same.
A
It's
also
for
blog
posts,
so
blog
posts
there's
also
an
unfiltered
channel,
so
you
can
use
it
and,
besides
that,
what
I
get
learned
during
profit,
I
get
informed
into
where
everyone
can
contribute
initiative
by
michael
friedrich.
What
are
we
doing
now
on
a
weekly
basis,
a
youtube
meeting
at
least
one
times
in
german
and
also
in
english,
at
6,
00
p.m,
mostly
on
wednesday,
and
while
we
are
sharing
only
technology
ideas.
A
So
when,
for
example,
last
week
this
week
we
tested
out
the
club
auto
scale
runner
and
it's
augmented,
it
isn't
tied
to
the
company.
So
we
can
do
everything,
for
example,
and
probably
that's
really
cool
it's
more
like
you
don't
need
to
use
our
product,
you
can
use
it
and
mostly,
then
you
will
get
the
benefit,
but
you
aren't
forced
to-
and
it's
not
mostly
like,
I'm
not
feeling
here
so
like
like
a
sales
pitch,
so
that
you
need
to
adopt
these
technologies
and
you
need
to
use
it
well.
A
It
could
be
better
because
sometimes,
sales
pitches
are
mostly
more
like,
like
a
short
breath
and
everything
is
going
away
afterwards.
After
the
pitch
happens,
yeah.
C
Yeah
yeah
thanks
for
calling
out
the
handbook
and
the
youtube
videos.
Those
are
definitely
helpful.
I
haven't
watched
too
many
of
their
youtube
sessions,
yet
I
think
this
is
actually
a
good
point
to
wrap
up
this
our
panel
here
thanks
all
of
you
for
like
joining
and
taking
the
time.
I
think
sean
will
probably
make
announcement
about
the
networking
or
how
that's
gonna
work
up
there.
He
is
so
thanks.
Ricardo,
well
nicholas,
and
thank
you.
E
Yes,
thank
you
to
our
panelists,
so
you
probably
just
saw
on
the
left-hand
side
of
your
window.
There's
sessions
and
networking
have
a
now
logo
attached
to
them,
and
so,
if
you're,
looking
to
make
kind
of
one-to-one
connections
check
out
the
networking
tab.
If
you're
looking
to
be
involved
in
small
group
discussions,
you
can
check
out
the
sessions
tab
when
you
go
to
sessions,
you'll
be
able
to
there's
two
kind
of
sessions
that
I
seeded,
but
you
can
also
create
new
sessions.
E
My
recommendation,
you
know,
is
to
make
sure
that
you
just
choose
a
topic
that
you
think
other
people
will
be
interested
in
so
you're,
not
just
sitting
in
there
alone.
But
if
you
want
to
create
your
own
session
about
a
specific
topic,
feel
free
to
do
that
and
yeah.
So
we'll
try
this
out.
E
I
see
that
we've
kind
of
lost
some
people
as
it
gets
later
into
the
evening
in
europe,
and
there
will
be
no
hard
feelings
from
me
if
we
lose
people.
I
I
was
planning
to
do
some
closing
remarks
a
bit
later,
but
in
case
I
do
lose
anyone
between
now
and
then
I
just
want
to
you
know
say
this
now,
while
I
have
as
many
people
as
I
can
thank
you
so
much
to
all
of
you
for
making
this
possible.
This
has
been
a
great
day
for
me.
E
Personally,
I
think
it's.
I
hope
it's
been
a
good
day
for
you.
I've
learned
a
lot
about
the
people
in
the
program.
I've
learned
a
lot
about.
You
know
why
people
are,
you
know,
excited
to
be
part
of
this
community
and-
and
I
think
it's
been
a
great
experience
just
to
get
to
know
you
all
better
and-
and
I
do
feel
closer
to
many
of
you
know
that
I've
had
a
chance
to
get
to
know
you
better
through
these
different
activities.
E
Thank
you.
So
much
to
all
the
speakers,
the
panelists,
our
planning
committee,
our
steering
committee,
rolling
great
job
with
the
panel
panelists.
Thank
you
so
much
for
your
time.
Keynote
speakers
lightning
talk,
people.
Everyone
did
great
and
I
hope
that
this
is
my
first
time
using
hopkin.
But
supposedly
these
have
been
recorded
and
I'll
be
able
to
share
them
after
the
fact.
So
I'm
looking
forward
to
that
as
well,
but
yeah.
E
Thank
you
so
much
everybody
and
I
will
see
you
in
the
networking
sessions
and
then
again
when
there's
five
minutes
left
in
the
hour
just
to
kind
of
close
things
out
officially,
but
thanks.
E
Oh
yeah,
no,
but
my
hope
honestly.
We
had
hoped
to
do
this
in
person
back
in
like
basically
april
of
last
year,
and
then
we
thought
about
doing
it
in
person
in
september
of
last
year
and
then
we
thought,
maybe
we
could
do
it
in
person
later
this
year
and
then
it
just
became
apparent
that
we
were
just
running
out
of
time
and
it
would
have
been
pushed
off
forever.
Basically,
you
know
to
will's
point
earlier
just
about
feeling
lonely
and
things
it
was
like
all
right.
E
We
need
to
get
everyone
together,
because
this
is
just
ridiculous,
so
we
decided
to
do
it
virtually,
but
I
think
it's
worked
out
pretty
well,
and
you
know
hopefully
the
next
time
we
do
it
is,
is
going
to
be
just
as
great
as
this.
If
it's
a
ritual
or
you
know
even
better-
would
be
for
all
of
us
to
be
able
to
get
together
in
person-
and
you
know,
maybe
on
the
day
before
a
gitlab
commit
event
whenever
that
may
be.
So
that's
the
kind
of
hope
for
the
future.