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From YouTube: GitLab Heroes Summit - Lightning Talks
Description
This is a recording of the lightning talks from the GitLab Heroes Summit, recorded on 2020/01/21.
Lightning talk #1: Contributing to GitLab in 2020 - Mario García
Lightning talk #2: DesignOps with GitLab - Alejandro Mercado Peña
Lightning talk #3: Running Terraform and GitLab Together in Harmony - Will Hall
Lightning talk #4: Be a part of something bigger - Marvin Karegyeya
Lightning talk #5: Rescued by Kanban - Mario Kleinsasser
To learn more about the GitLab Heroes program, please visit https://about.gitlab.com/community/heroes/
B
B
B
So
most
of
my
contributions
to
to
gitlab
as
part
of
the
gitlab
heroes
programs
were
in
the
form
of
public
speaking
by
presenting
some
talks
at
conferences
and
hosting
a
few
workshops
last
year
and
writing
some
blog
posts
related
to
the
the
content
that
I
presented
at
some
of
those
conferences
that
I
had
the
opportunity
to
to
spoke
at
last
year.
In
the
in
the
picture.
B
That
was
from
from
an
event
that
I
spoke
about
python
and
gitlab
last
december,
and
I
also
got
involved
with
event
organization
by
spreading
the
word
about
some
of
the
gitlab
events
that
happened
last
year
and
helping
with
other
activities.
B
Well,
in
february
I
just
attended
a
few
last
in-person
events,
and
in
march
I
decided
that
it
was
time
for
for
taking
a
break
from
french
speaking.
I've
been
doing
this
for
the
last
12
years.
Well,
I
was
almost
13
years
already,
but
I
I
think
I
thought
it
was
time
for
for
taking
a
break.
B
At
least
that
was
the
plan,
but
I
just
take
two
months
off
and
I
just
ended
2020
presenting
a
little
more
than
20
conferences,
but
I
will
tell
you
a
little
bit
more
about
it
in
a
minute,
and
these
are
the
stats
of
my
participation
as
a
speaker
at
sound
events.
Last
year,
most
of
the
events
that
I
spoke
at
were
virtual.
B
I
just
attended
two
in-person
events
in
february
and
well.
I
just
presented
20
conferences
and
hosted
five
workshops
and
from
from
that,
those
four
and
four
conferences
and
where
one
workshop
were
in
english.
Well,
english
is
my
second
language
and
that's
a
little
more
than
than
what
I
presented
in
2019
I
and
from
that
40
percent
were
about
gitlab
and
I
just
hosted
a
three-hour
workshop
at
an
event
organized
by
by
the
italian
community.
B
Well,
something
I
I
think
was
positive
from
all
those
experience
experiences
speaking
for
for
me,
speaking
at
some
conferences
that
I
had
the
opportunity
for
for
going
out
of
my
comfort
zone,
I
just
presented
more
conferences
in
english
than
in
2019.
B
If
you
heard
my
story
of
me
as
part
of
the
gitlab
heroes
program
in
last
gitlab
commit,
I
just
shared
that
my
first
conference
in
english
was
at
gitlab
commit
london
in
2019,
and
I
also
had
to
record
a
few
talks.
I
had
to
learn
how
to
use
a
few
tools
like
obs,
studio
or
audacity
and
cadence
with
that
were
some
of
the
tools
that
I
had
to
learn
how
to
use,
and
I
wrote
a
few
new
talk
and
workshop
proposals.
B
Most
of
them
were
accepted.
I
had
the
opportunity
to
try
new
technologies.
I
just
presented
conferences
about
that
and
share
with
the
the
global
community.
I
also
had
some
networking
opportunities
for
meeting
people
from
around
the
world.
B
But
I
also
had
some
tech
problems
related
with
the
operating
system
I
used
and
some
of
the
tools
that
I
had
to
use
for
for
speaking,
like
zoom,
gtc,
stringer
or
disk
discord.
Most
of
those
tech
programs
were
related
with
updates.
B
B
I
also
had
some
problems
related
with
hardware.
I've
been
updating
my
setup.
I
just
changed
my
my
headphones
recently
that
that
those
are
the
ones
that
I'm
using
now.
I
also
had
some
internet
connection
problems
where,
when
I
was
speaking
at
some
of
those
conferences
and
some
problems
related
with
audio,
if
you
watch
my
talk
at
gitlab
committee
last
year,
the
audio
is
not
really
good,
but
there's
a
a
blog
post
available
that
I
just
posted
a
few
months.
B
Later
I
think,
well,
I
I
wrote
about
git
lab
and
how
I've
been
using
gitlab
ci
with
ros
python,
docker
and
other
platforms.
I
also
wrote
about
my
participation
as
a
gitlab
heroes
and
my
experience
using
gitlab
pages
for
some
projects.
B
I
just
posted
four
articles
and
a
series
of
articles
that
I
that
that
has
for
blog
posts.
Most
of
those
those
content
were
in
english
in
spanish
and
I've
been
publishing
those
blog
posts
on
on
that
and
punto
tech
is
a
a
publication,
a
medium
publication
in
spanish.
I
posted
two
articles
there.
If
I
don't.
B
Well-
and
I
I
got
involved
with
the
organization
of
sony
last
year
we
had
some
gitlab
meetups
for
latin
america.
I
got
involved
with
spreading
the
word
and
preparing
a
demo
for
for
one
of
the
the
events
that
we
had
last
year
and
I
also
had
the
opportunity
to
present
a
talk
about
gitlab,
ci
and
python
in
december.
I
well,
and
I
also
got
involved
with
the
gitlab
hero
summit
organization,
and
that
was
my
participation
as
a
gitlab
hero
in
2020.
B
A
Hey
thanks,
mario.
That
was
great.
I
think
what
we'll
do
is
save
questions
for
the
end
or
you
know
in
the
chat
just
to
keep
things
moving.
So
if
you
have
questions
for
mario
put
them
in
the
chat
for
the
stage
and
I'm
gonna
promote
alejandro
to
join
us
and
and
alejandra
can
start,
the
next
talk
in
just
a.
A
A
C
Can
you
see
my
my
screen
right
now,
my
my
presentation,
yeah.
Thank
you
very
much.
Thank
you
very
much
for
having
me
here
pretty
honored.
I
am
going
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
signups
with
with
gitlab
I
am
alejandro
mercado
as
mario,
I
am
from
mexico.
C
C
C
Software
process
is
huge.
Huge
importance
is
so
what
we
are
seeing
now
they
still
are
seeing
is
that
the
designers
are
not
talking
to
or
no
are
not
talking
too
much
to
to
developers.
So
we
have
to
find
the
ways
to
to
lubricate
the
machinery
I
can
say
so
this
is
kind
of
common
and
my
experience.
We
we
see
that
a
lot
so
descends
operations
or
design
knobs
for
sure
is
or
orchestration
of
an
optimization
of
people,
processes
and
graphs
in
order
to
amplify
the
sense,
value
and
impact
at
scale.
C
I
don't
see
the
difference
I
mean
talking
about
develops.
The
descent
process
is,
must
be
in
the
same
cycle.
You
know
this
famous
cycle
of
infinite
loop
that
we
must
have
to
deliver
fast
and
with
a
better
quality.
So
it's
like
the
same
so
design
operation
is
something
that
you
don't
see.
It
feels
invisible
and
it
just
works.
No
that's.
This
is
something
that
that
malouf,
a
design
ops
leader,
put
on
the
table
on
twitter
almost
three
years
ago.
C
So
so
this
is
about
design-ups,
it's
a
collective
term
for
addressing
challenges
so
growing
and
evolving
design
teams
and
the
part
of
the
humanize,
meaning
that
you
have
to
take
care
of
the
designers
to
to
have
a
great
design
and
to
involve
the
the
stakeholders
in
the
whole
process.
So
it's
improving
the
quality
and
impact
of
design
outputs.
C
So
if
you
want
to
see
the
landscape
or
design
ops,
design
of
practices
should
be
defined
by
some
of
the
organization,
biggest
gaps
or
pain
points.
Maybe
one
of
the
first
questions
you
must
have
when,
if,
if
you
want
to
implement
these
sign-ups
on
a
company,
well,
you
have
to
take
in
consideration
these
three.
We
can
say
three
areas
or
practices
like
how
we
work
together,
how
we
get
work
done
and
how
our
world
creates
impact.
C
So
this
is
something
from
a
normal
nissan
group
that
they
they
made
this
research
to
see
how
companies
are
implementing
design
ops
in
in
companies.
So
so
there
is
no
doubt
that
design
is
very
important,
so
you
have
to
well
at
the
beginning.
You
have
to
organize
collaborate
and
then
humanize
humanize,
meaning
that
the
onboarding
process
and
the
career
of
the
designers.
Well,
you
have
to
take
care
of
the
career,
and
after
that
you
must
want
to
on
a
standardized.
C
You
know
to
help
the
things
going,
harmonize
and
prioritize
the
design
process.
At
the
same
time,
you
have
to
measure
how?
How
are
you
going
to
improve
if
you
don't
match
your
things?
So
so
this
is
very
important
in
implementing
the
sign.
Ups
socialize
is
giving
visibility
to
the
whole
company,
the
stakeholders
and
all
the
people
related
to
the
process
and
enable
so
other
outsource
talks
about
four
pillars
of
design:
ops
design
process.
C
You
know
from
discovery
to
review.
To
enough
I
mean
to
the
release
of
the
piece
of
software,
a
mobile,
app
or
a
website,
but
I
don't
know,
as
I
said,
what
are
the
well
the
metrics,
of
course,
the
team
contamination,
the
same
tools
and,
of
course,
the
design
culture
is
like
pretty
the
same
with
with
er
as
the
bots.
You
know
you
know
it's
a
cultural
thing,
so
there
are
a
lot
of
design
tools
like
figma
sketch,
adobe
xd,
but
well
in
this
case.
This
is
where
gitlab
helped
help
us.
C
So
there
is
a
plugin,
so
that
can
help
us
it's
pretty
similar
to
have
an
issue.
So
we
we,
we
find
it
pretty
useful.
It's
helping
us
and
our
clients
to
make
the
whole
process
fluently.
So
figma
is
a
powerful
design
tool.
It's
gaining
a
lot
of
popularity
right
right
now
so
well,
I
must
say
that
the
plugin
is
currently
better
but
well.
It
helps
a
lot
of
design
things
to
have
the
same
visibility
metrics
that
we
have
as
developers.
C
So
if
you
want
to
take
a
a
shorter
look,
a
deeper
look
to
the
to
the
implementation
of
the
plugin.
There
is
a
pretty
good
well,
of
course,
the
the
official
documentation
on
gitlab,
and
there
is
a
video
of
christine
dibenko,
who
is
also
part
of
gear
lab.
So
if
you
want
to
know
how
to
set
up
and
install
the
the
plugin
well
as
a
conclusion,
I
can
say
start
with
a
team
kanban.
I
think
that
there
is
going
to
be
another
talk
about
canvas,
and
this
is
because
you
have
to.
C
A
Thanks
alejandro,
that's
my
first
time
actually
really
getting
an
overview
of
design
ops.
I've
heard
the
term,
but
never
really
understood
it
before.
So,
thanks
for
sharing
so
will's
up
and
we'll
take
it
away.
D
So
you
should
be
hearing
my
audio
because
we've
just
had
a
little
chat.
So
hopefully
that's
that's.
That's
that's
good
enough,
and
in
theory
you
can
see
my
screen
now
as
well.
Well,
a
portion
of
my
screen.
I
only
run
things
in
windowed
mode.
Hopefully
that's
okay!
So
I'm
going
to
be
talking
about
running
git,
lab
and
terraform
in
harmony
and
hopefully
that's
going
to
be.
You
know
what
people
expect.
D
You
can
see
we're
on
a
corporate
slide
deck
again
here
so
yeah,
it's
it's
going
to
be
lovely
lovely,
looking
slides,
like
bethan's
session,
suggested
earlier.
So
with
this
being
lightning,
I
need
to
talk
quickly
right.
D
This
is
a
picture
of
me.
I've
got
a
new
badge
next
to
my
shoulder
on
that
which
is
a
professional
service
engineer
one
you
should
get
that
too,
but
I
think
you
need
to
be
a
partner
to
do
it
at
the
moment.
I
wonder
which
number
I
am
in
people
who've
actually
got
this
as
external
people,
and
these
are
all
my
other
titles
that
I
kind
of
work
on
at
helicloud,
which
is
the
company
I
work
at.
D
We
do
lots
of
stuff
with
aws
and
generally,
what
we
look
at
is
gitlab,
being
kind
of
a
central
devops
platform
for
us
to
be
able
to
trigger
off
parts
of
running
the
infrastructure
that
we
that
we
build,
and
you
can
imagine
that
working
with
aws
a
lot.
We
do
a
lot
of
infrastructure
in
general.
I
I
reckon
there's
two
ways
of
provisioning
infrastructure:
there's,
there's
terraform
and
there's
doing
another
way,
which
is
wrong
so
yeah.
D
We
we
don't
have
time
for
nuance
in
lightning
yeah
terraform
is
the
right
way
to
do
it,
and
overall
terraform
is
really
about
infrastructure,
provisioning
and
you're,
using
apis
to
manage
your
infrastructure,
you
can
use
it
as
infrastructure
as
code
with
a
whole
different
range
of
tools.
D
I
think
year
is
that
we
can
start
to
do
state
management
and
potentially
we
will
be
able
to
do
terraform
registry
or
package
management
and
I'm
going
to
link
to
the
issue,
that's
being
being
that's
at
the
end,
so
we're
going
to
look
a
little
bit
at
those
kind
of
things
of
actually
using
gitlab
as
a
landing
point
to
be
able
to
deploy
your
infrastructure.
D
Now,
generally
speaking,
to
do
this,
we
have
to
start
using
gitlab
as
a
back
end
for
it.
So
you
can
custom
set
up
your
your
backend.
If
you
want
to-
or
you
can
just
put
this
in-
and
it
will
choose
the
default
backend
from
what
you're
running
in
inside
terraform,
providing
that
you're
running
the
gitlab
terraform
image
inside
your
local
machine
you'll
need
to
initialize
this
terraform
state.
D
There
are
various
things
here:
you'll
be
able
to
go
through
the
walkthrough,
but
largely
what
we're
looking
at
here
is
is
integrating
with
the
gitlab
api
to
be
able
to
send
requests
and
we're
going
to
be
also
authenticating
with
a
username
and
an
access
token,
and
when
you're
using
this
in
your
ci
cd
projects,
you
have
to
make
sure
that
you're
using
the
the
tf
address
that
you've
just
named
and
that
you're
using
the
right
location
for
for
the
route
for
your
projects.
D
If
you're
running
this
in
route
of
the
actual
project,
then
you
don't
need
to
to
obviously
do
anything
else,
but
this
is
giving
an
example
where
we
have
multiple
environments
and
you
also
need
to
give
the
correct
name
for
state.
I
think
the
default
one
is
default,
but
if
you're
running
multiple
states
inside
the
same
project,
then
you
would
need
to
run
multiple
different
names,
and
you
can
get
to
something
like
this,
where
this
is
viewing
terraform
state
inside
your
projects,
so
terraform
state
is
on
the
in
the
left
bar,
I
think,
under
operations.
D
So
you
can
go
and
look
at
terraform
and
you
can
have
a
numerous
states
inside
a
project
and
this
is
available
to
on
the
the
core
product
as
well.
So
it's
not
something
that
you
need
to
have
an
elevated
use
of
privilege
and
you
don't
have
to
purchase
license
to
do
that.
D
I've
got
some
examples
here
as
well,
so
I
will
ping
these
into
the
chat
afterwards,
but
there's
an
example
about
using
the
gitlab
terraform
aws
item
and
there's
also
some
an
example
here
that
about
this
is
a
terraform
serverless.
D
So
this
is
a
project
that
actually
goes
a
little
bit
further
with
terraform,
so
we
have
lambda
and
terraform
working
together
and
I
actually
added
in
terraform
compliance,
which
is
like
a
testing
suite
for
for
doing
testing
on
what
you're
running
and
also
an
opa,
so
open
policy
agent
for
running
against
terraform
as
well.
So
we
actually
have
start
to
be
able
to
build
our
test
compliance
into
what
we're
doing
and
opa
is
quite
interesting
for
other
things.
D
If
you
want
to
look
at
it,
because
you
can
start
to
bring
nuance
into
the
changes
that
you
allow,
you
can
allow
a
certain
amount
of
changes.
You
cannot
allow
deletions
that
kind
of
thing,
and
I
did
promise
that
I
would
forward
some
links
for
the
for
the
other
items.
So
we've
got
things
about
terraform,
merge
requests
where
largely
we're
taking
the
json
that's
generated
and
we're
passing
this
through
through
jq,
and
we
can
put
this
into
our
merge
request
items.
So
we
can
see
how
many
things
are
being
changed.
D
You
can
also
look
at
using
the
lab
terraform
image,
which
is
a
docker
image,
that's
configured,
especially
for
using
with
git
lab.
So
it
has
a
whole
series
of
items
in
there
that
are
useful
for
using
with
the
gitlab
ci
system
and
then
there's
a
merge
request
which
is
on
on
here,
which
is
the
around
the
terraform
registry,
which
has
been
languishing
for
a
while,
and
I
did
try
to
contribute
for
a
while,
but
yeah
when
this
gets
through.
D
We
should
also
have
package
management,
so
a
terraform
registry
that's
available
to
run
inside
gitlab,
which
would
be
super
useful
because
it's
reducing
the
amount
of
tools
we
need,
and
that
is
the
end
of
my
slideshow.
Thank
you.
A
Yeah,
that
was
great,
though,
and
I
think
marvin
is
gonna-
be
up
next
more.
Let's
hope
that
the
audio
is
working.
This.
A
A
A
The
one
thing
that
you
could
try
is
there's
a
gear
at
the
bottom
of
this
video
screen,
or
at
least
I
see
a
gear,
so
there's
a
camera,
a
microphone,
a
screen
share
and
a
gear.
If
you
click
the
gear,
you
may
just
want
to
check
what
microphone
you
have
you've
set
to
for
the
stream
to
use
that
might
be
able
to
help
takuya.
If
you're
here
we
can
add
you
to
go
right
now.
If
you
add
yourself
to
the
panel.
A
Mario
takuya
or
marvin,
if
any
of
you
could
add
yourself
to
the
panel,
we'll
get
you
up.
If
not,
let's
see
marvin's.
A
E
So
yeah,
as
you
have
heard
from
john,
my
name
is
marvin
and
I
happen
to
be
part
of
this
theory
committee
and
basically,
what
I
thought
about
in
this
presentation.
I
just
wanted
to
talk
about
being
a
part
of
something
bigger,
so
yeah
being
a
part
of
something
bigger.
E
In
this
sense,
I
wanted
to
talk
about
community
and
why
the
community
is
important,
why
the
community
plays
an
important
role
in
open
source
software
and
how
to
choose
the
right
community
that
keeps
you
focused
and
motivated
how
to
grow
as
a
community
member
and
finally,
why
you
should
contribute
and
be
part
of
our
office
community
yeah.
So
what
is
an
open
source?
What
is
a
community
so,
according
to
wikipedia
a
community,
is
basically
a
social
unit
with
commonalities
such
as
norms,
religion,
values
and
customs
and
identity.
E
E
Basically
is
a
freedom
so
that
freedom
includes
maybe
access
to
like
source
code,
freedom
to
collaborate
and
freedom
to
share
ideas
across
multiple
platforms,
so
basically
open
source
is
a
philosophy
and
a
movement
and
what
makes
open
source
thrive
is
a
community
that
grows
up
and
around
it.
So
basically,
let's
go
to
our
next
point,
which
would
have
been.
Why
do
you
need
to?
E
Why
do
you
need
an
open
source
community?
So
you
basically
need
an
open
source
community
to
sort
of
like
have
that
identity
as
a
group
on
the
community,
where
you
gather
around
and
share
a
couple
of
ideas,
so
you
also
need
a
community
to
achieve
personal
goals.
E
For
example,
like
I
myself
happen
to
be
an
active
contributor
to
like
the
declarable
school
and
one
of
the
things
about
the
communities
like
there
are
a
couple
of
people
who
share
in
in
the
guitar
channel
for
the
contributors
they
share,
like
tips
and
hacks,
on
how
to
do
a
couple
of
different
things,
and
I
find
that
this
is
something
that
has
enabled
me
to
grow
as
a
developer
and
also
generally
like
to
learn
new
things.
E
For
example,
I
think
one
of
the
things
I
learned
how
to
use
was
how
to
use
the
github
platform,
which
I
found
to
be
fascinating
and
really
exciting.
So
yeah.
You
also
need
to
community
to
have
like
that
sense
of
motivation,
because
you
know,
like
github,
has
like
this
thing
called
the
github
hackathon
and
a
couple
of
people.
You
know
engage
in
this
thing,
so
they
sort
of
like
compete
and
share
ideas
and
do
a
couple
of
other
things
within
the
hackathon.
E
So
in
terms
being
part
of
the
community
can
make
us
feel
like.
We
are
a
part
of
something
and
that's
a
feeling
that
I
think
everybody
desires,
especially
if
you
are
at
a
point
where
you
feel
like
you
need
to
have
some
ambition
in
life.
So
how
do
you
become
part
of
the
community?
E
Contributing
to
an
open
source
project
is
obviously
the
start,
but
it's
definitely
not
the
whole
process,
so
you
can
start
out
by
especially
joining
like
the
community
like,
for
example,
most
of
the
heroes
here
have
clicked
on
the
heroes
page
and
they
have
joined
and
they
have
expressed
their
interest
so
yeah.
That's
some
good
way
to
join
and
come
out
of
the
community,
so
another
way
could
possibly
be
reaching
out
to
fox
within
the
community.
E
So
another
thing,
maybe
would
basically
be
like
I've
said
interacting
with
the
other
people
in
the
channel
and
basically
you
know
like
finding
other
platforms
to
engage
with
people
and
asking
them,
for
you
know
like
information
on
how
to
be
a
part
of
the
channel
and
to
be
a
part
of
the
community
so
finally
like
when
you
have
joined
the
community.
So
how
do
you
recognize
your
involvement?
E
And
I
think
we
have
that
with
the
kickback
as
well.
These
are
probably
in
the
community
section.
There
is
a
section
that
talks
about
contributors
for
each
year,
so
other
ways
to
recognize
would
possibly
be
to
judge
the
impact
on
the
social
media
platforms,
for
example,.
E
There
are
a
couple
folks
who
have
made
a
great
reputation
that
in
case,
someone
like
a
newbie
would
want
like
information,
specific
information
to
do
something
special.
They
would
reach
out
to
those
folks
so
yeah.
There
are
also
like
a
couple
of
other
ways
that
you
could
get
to
see
and
recognize.
The
involvement
in
the
community
is,
I
think,
other
ways
could
possibly
be
in,
like
I
think
what
adriana
talks
about
earlier,
the
coffee
chats
that
I
scheduled-
and
I
think
that's
also
like
a
great
way
to
recognize
the
involvement.
E
So.
Finally,
I
would
like
to
conclude
this
presentation
by
saying
thank
you
to
the
listeners
and
thank
you
to
everyone
and
personally
send
out
my
special
thanks
to
nicole
and
mario,
who
generously
facilitated
us
with
this
template
for
the
purposes
of
presentation
use.
Also,
I
would
like
to
extend
my
sales,
my
thanks
to
each
one
and
the
entire
gitlab
heroes
submitted
organization,
team
yeah.
So
basically,
that's
what
I
had
for
you.
Thank
you.
Everyone
for
listening.
A
Thanks
marvin,
that
was
great
and
I'm
really
happy
that
we
were
able
to
get
your
audio
working.
So
thanks
for
the
the
lightning
talk
and
next
up
will
be
mario,
we're
hoping
that
we
have
moved
past
the
technical
difficulties
portion
of
the
day.
So,
mario,
when
you
are
ready,
you
can
take
it.
A
C
F
Okay-
let's
start
yes,
my
name
is
mario
and
today,
in
this
lighting
talk
I
would
like
to
give
you
or
I
would
like
to
show
you
why
my
team
and
I
were
rescued
by
the
kanban
gitlab
boards,
so.
F
A
F
Important
point
here
so,
as
we
know
what
kanban
is,
let's
talk
about
the
word
campaign
itself.
Kanban
consists
of
two
countries,
symbols
and
the
first
one
is
khan.
This
is
the
chinese
country
symbol
for
the
english
word
to
watch
and
and
the
second
conscious
symbol
to
form
the
word
kamen
is
this
one
in
japanese,
the
symbol
stands
for
baan
and
the
english
meaning
of
bani
is
bored
and
together
khan
and
baan
symbols
are
formed.
The
japanese,
the
japanese
word
kanban
and
the
english
translation
is
just
signboard.
F
The
simplest
form
of
a
kanban
board
is
just
a
board
where
you
can
stick
paper
notes
on
it
and
that's
it
so,
but
in
this
lighting
talk
I
would
like
to
shift
your
focus
to
the
consumer,
the
first
of
the
consciousness,
which
means
to
watch,
and
furthermore,
I
say
watch
if
I
say
what
you
can
and
we
together
should
think
about
to
observe
something
as
verbs
the
difference
between
observe
and
what
she's
that
observe
means
to
few
or
something,
especially
I'm
careful
or
with
attention
instead
of
watch,
which
just
means
to
be
awake,.
F
But
why
does
the
ability
to
observe
something
in
detail
just
saved
my
team
at
me?
So
what's
the
reason
behind
our
three-year,
why
we
are
using
our
three-year-old
kanban
boards
still
so
the
reason
for
it
is
devops
is
dead
during
the
past
three
years
in
the
community,
so
we
perfectly
managed
it
to
change
our
working
culture,
but
we
did
not
change
the
organization
of
our
work
in
the
same
way.
So
the
first
of
two
reasons
for
this
is
everyone
is
talking
about
digitalization
and
beliefs.
F
That
digitalization
is
just
an
easy
task,
but
to
be
honest,
I
think
it
will
never
be.
Maybe
an
easy
task
could
easy
to
handle,
because
there
are
a
lot
of
complex
things
to
handle
about
it,
and
the
second
thing
is
the
developer
first
campaign,
which
started
about
three
or
five
years
ago
was
extraordinary
successful.
So
we
have
a
lot
of
developers
today,
but
the
operators
were
just
left
a
little
bit
behind
and
nowadays
we
have,
we
have
and
this
proportion
between
the
developers
and
the
operators
from
10
to
1
or
even
higher.
F
F
No,
then,
you
should
use
gitlab
kanban
boards
because,
due
to
the
gitlab
camerabots,
we
today
exactly
know
within
my
team
what
is
going
on
inside
and
which
updates
we
have
to
do
when
so
we
can
plan
our
work
and
we
know
which
work
we
have
to
do
and
which
lifetime
cycles
we
have
to
manage
to
be
fit
in
the
operations,
but
that's
not
all
with
cameron.
We
can
also
see
what
is
currently
in
the
queue.
What
is
coming
up?
F
What
we
have
to
do
next
and
of
course,
as
this
picture,
shows
which
tasks
or
which
issues
are
currently
closed
and
which
ones
we
are
struggling
around
at
the
moment
and
which
one
are
already
airborne.
F
F
Well,
because
company
is
flexible,
we
do
not
aim
for
perfection
because
in
the
sre
team
like
I
have,
there
are
many
different
people
on
it.
Some
want
to
have
much
more
development
focus
and
some
other
ones
like
I
am.
I
have
to
make
the
organization
as
team
leader
and
the
benefit
of
a
camera
board.
F
If
you
use
a
camera
bot
for
to
organize
to
organize
your
work,
is
that
you
can
easily
change
it
at
any
time
and
you
can
be
flexible
as
such,
as
I
said
before,
as
a
as
a
sre
team,
with
software
and
system
engineers
on
board
have
to
handle
a
lot
of
different
tasks,
and
I
think,
use
a
common
board
to
change
your
organization
of
work
and
how
you
work,
and
then
you
can
be
rescued
by
kanban
too.
So
thank
you.
A
All
right,
thank
you,
mario,
that
was
great
and
cool
to
learn
about
the
kind
of
etymology.
I
think
that's
called
of
the
word
kanban.
So
thanks
for
sharing
that
we
had
one
more
talk.
One
more
lightning
talk
schedule,
but
I
don't
think
takuya
is
with
us
and
that's
totally
fair,
because
it's
about
2
30
in
the
morning
their
time.
A
So
let's
take
a
quick
break
and
then
we'll
come
back
and
do
the
panel
discussion.
So
if
you
need
to
refresh
your
beverage
or
do
whatever
you
need
to
do,
check
your
email
quickly
and
let's
reconvene
at
45
minutes
past
the
hour.
So
in
eight
minutes,
we'll
kick
off
the
panel.
So
thanks
everybody
and
we'll
see
you
back
here
in
a
few
minutes.