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From YouTube: 2022 10 07 Docs Office Hours
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A
B
A
A
Okay,
so
action
items
I've
still
got
the
action
item
to
Archive
the
docs
mailing
list.
That
will
need
to
wait
until
November
because
of
the
second
item,
which
is
for
the
next
three
weeks
of
office
hours
I'll
be
out
of
the
office
so
that
the
let's
see
the
13th,
the
20th
and
the
27th.
The
27th
I
will
just
have
arrived
back
in
country
and
I
will
be
too
too
weary
to
be
able
to
see
straight
in
order
to
do
office
hours.
A
A
A
B
On
yes,
I
am
but
the
question
is,
we
still
need
to
add
the
links
to
the
slide
and
the
recording
right.
That's
remaining
correct,
because
I
watched
the
recording,
as
you
said,
Outreach
I
watched
it
last
night
and
I
saw
that
you
had
discussions
on
that,
and
this
is
something
you
want
to
publish
by
the
end
of
this
week
or
early
next
week.
Early.
A
Next
week,
so
what
what
Kevin
and
I
did
earlier
today
was
updated.
The
publication
date
to
be
October,
10.,
so
it'll
be
published.
The
plan
is
to
publish
this
and
the
other
blog
posts
on
the
10th
of
October.
A
A
A
So
for
your
benefit,
dear
Raj
I'm,
going
to
put
these
comments
in
so
that
you
know
oh,
this
is
why
Mark
wants
to
have
the
have
the
aspect
ratio
changed
on
that
image?
Sure
all
right.
So
let
me
put
a
note
here.
A
A
When
images
are
reduced,
okay,
when
images
your
problem-
I,
don't
remember
if
it
was
below
an
image
or
are
have
the
wrong
aspect.
Ratio.
A
So
the
wrong
height,
the
ratio
of
heights,
the
width
they
are
displayed
incorrectly.
So
it
says:
hey,
don't
we
want
to
be
sure
that
we
are
greater
than
200
pixels
in
each
Dimension
and
the
preferred
Dimension
is
1200
by
630
and
if
I
remember
right,
this
one
is
much
wider
than
12.
The
ratio
between
1200
and
630.
A
A
A
So
in
the
social
media
slide
deck,
what's
typically
done
is
we'll
take,
let's
see
what
have
we
got
for?
Do
we
have
2022
something
already
there's
one
good,
okay,
oops!
No,
so
here
they
are
no
none
of
those
Okay.
So
summer
gsoc
we
could
grab.
We
can
create
your
own
slide
Etc,
but
what
I'll
typically
do
is
do
a
file
download
so
choose
the
slide,
get
it
to
be
the
way,
I
look
and
then
do
a
download
of
PNG,
and
that
PNG
then
has
the
correct
dimensions.
C
These
really
tangential
question
yes,
angelique's
female
Jenkins.
Are
we
ever
going
to
use
that
for
anything
or
was
that
just
a
good
joke.
A
Let's
see
well
I've
I've
not
seen
it,
that's
a
good
point
yeah.
So
that's
that's
a
good
one.
We
ought
to
consider
I,
don't
know,
I
think
we
have
used
it.
Okay,
let's,
let's
do
a
search.
A
How
do
I
do
that
now?
Google
image,
search
image,
search
images.
Here
we
go
okay
and
now
what
we
need
to
do
is
drag.
You
know
not
that
one
this
one.
Let
me
drag
this
image
because
I'm
pretty
sure
we've
used
it
in
quite
an
oh
that
didn't
help,
drag
an
image
here
or
upload
the
file.
Okay,
paste,
the
this.
A
C
A
I
I
think
we
can
put
it
well.
So,
for
instance,
it
would
be
a
great
one
to
contribute
to
put
again
on
gsoc
on
the
on
the
hacktoberfest
2022
list,
because
we've
had
a
number
of
of
we've
actually
had
a
member
of
Duchess
France
be
one
of
the
contributors,
so
Kayla
alt
Peter
is
a
member
of
Dutchess
France
and
she's
contributed
to
Jenkins
core.
A
A
A
A
C
A
B
And
in
the
end,
there
will
be
section
like
check
out
these
slides
here's,
the
link
right
and
I
I
also
wanted
to
add
one
more
thing
near
that
link
to
Google
Slides
link.
Is
that
I'm
interested
to
thank
Jake,
because
he
helped
me
very
very
much
in
preparation
of
the
of
the
presentation,
so
I
wanted
to
make
sure
that
I
give
the
credits
so
can
I
do
that?
Yes,.
A
Absolutely
yeah:
it's
your
your
blog
post
to
write.
You
are
welcome
to
do
that.
Absolutely
so!
You've
you!
You
can
work
on
that.
It
will
be
merged,
I
I'm,
at
the
point
where
it
will
be
merged,
no
matter
what
on
Monday,
because
John
Mark
felt
like
hey
it's
already
good
enough,
so
you've
got
until
Monday
to
make
Corrections.
A
B
Okay,
so
I'll
complete
all
this
pending
tasks
today
and
I'll
press
that
button.
Yes,
so.
A
Of
law
this
this
worked
great
for
me,
I
thought
this
was
this
couple,
particularly
with
your
presentation
and
oh
hey,
hey
I,
gotta
show
you,
so
you
may
remember
that
plug-in
Health
previously
had
only
two
probes.
Now
it
has
five
wow.
B
A
A
B
A
B
A
A
First
thanks
very
much
Meg
for
your
work
with
the
rest
of
us
here
in
office
hours
for
the
work
on
hacktoberfest,
because
those
good
first
issues
already
were
being
Chosen
and
worked
and
resolved
beginning
October,
one
Saturday,
so
we've
had
great
progress
thanks
to
good
first
issues.
So
here
you
see
a
number
of
them
that
have
been
closed
in
the
last
few
days,
so
Powershell
python,
app
pipeline
page
groovy,
hook
scripts
plug-in
page.
That
was
out
of
date,
agent,
glossary
entries.
A
All
those
things
are
thanks
to
having
been
identified,
listed
as
good
for
its
issues,
they've
been
resolved
and
merged,
and
several
of
these
things
actually
have
relatively
sophisticated
things
hiding
behind
them.
This
one,
for
instance,
had
some
had
some
interesting
things
going
on
that.
Oh,
oh,
no,
I
take
it
back.
That
was
an
easy
one.
There
was
there
was
one
that
was
especially
complicated
and
it
was
oh
wow.
Where
did
that?
Come
from
here's
there's
a
good
one
on
the
open
with
work
pending.
A
If
we
look
in
the
good
first
issues
that
are
pending
what
you'll
see
is,
for
instance,
someone
took
on
updating
the
kubernetes,
install,
guide,
whoa
and
and
yeah
you
talk
about
there's
a
big
deal.
I
mean
that
is
an
amazingly
big
deal.
So
in
fact,
I
need
to
mark
this
one
as
hacktoberfest
accepted
we're
not
done
reviewing
it
yet.
So
it's
not
ready
to
merge,
but
it's
absolutely
hacktoberfest
Worthy.
A
C
It's
very
very
good
I'm,
seeing
that
too,
and
it's
I
guess
I'm
getting
old,
we're
starting
to
see
over
diet
traits
too
the
junior
people
coming
out
of
school,
no
kubernetes.
C
Still
kind
of
I
kind
of
know
kubernetes
a
little
bit,
but
these
people
are
coming
out
with
massive
kubernetes
knowledge
and
they're
looking
for
stuff
to
do
with
kubernetes,
which
also
makes
me
think,
that's
something
else,
though,
for
that
I
don't
know,
that's
the
first
issue,
but
the
information
that
we've
got
about
nodes
and
agents
as
I
recall.
The
last
time
we
looked
at
it,
I
mean
there's
a
little
bit
that
you
can
do
this
with
kubernetes,
but
there's
not
a
lot
of
details
and
sophistication
about
it.
C
But
we
could
I
will
try
to
get
to
the
last
couple
weeks.
Get
crazy.
I
will
try
to
go
and
look
at
some
more
stuff.
We.
A
Do
and-
and
that's
that
was
the
I
I
was
I-
truly-
was
fully
expecting
that
our
work
on
trying
to
identify
good
first
issues
was
going
to
be
largely
wasted
because
people
would
say:
oh
no,
that's
not
what
I
want
to
do
and
instead
I
was
completely
wrong.
It
was
very
good.
It
was
very
well
worth
the
time
invested
and
the
things
that
were
discovered
I'm,
not
sure
why
I'm
not
seeing
it
here,
but
there
was
a
particular
one
around
a
tutorial
revision
that
had
all
sorts
of
surprises
in
It.
A
B
A
So,
let's
see,
is
it
this
one?
No,
no!
It
was
this
one.
A
dress
reported
issues
with
the
Hello
World
tutorial,
okay,
and
so
what
happened
here
was
this
took
two
pull
requests
to
get
it
resolved
and
the
set
of
changes
was
ultimately
relatively
small
but
crucial
to
the
behavior
of
the
of
the
tutorial.
So
let
me
show
you
what
the
tutorial
looks
like
it's.
A
A
So
we
said:
hey,
let's
copy
this
same
comment
in
hopes
that
if
they
skipped
the
first
step
right
and
hit
a
failure,
they
would
see
this
comment
and
say:
oh,
oh,
maybe
I'm
missing
something
and
that's
why
it's
failing
right,
nice,
yeah!
So
so
and
again
it
was.
It
was
what
you'd
think
was.
Oh
that's
such
a
simple
thing:
no,
no
to
get
it
right.
It
was
two
iterations
and
multiple
people
looking
at
it
and
realizing.
Oh,
oh,
here's.
A
This
flaw
and
this
problem
that
we
need
to
fix
and,
of
course
one
of
the
contributors
included
this
video
from
Darren.
So
so
again,
exactly
it's
like!
Oh
yeah.
You
know
what
I
don't
have
to
go
to
additional
resources,
but
if
I
want
to
here's
a
video
that
talks
about
how
to
do
it,
nice,
so
yeah
and
and
special
thanks
to
hacktoberfest,
it's
done
a
great
job
of
helping
that.
C
A
Right
right,
exactly
well,
gee
hello
world
should
be
pretty
easy,
except
it's
not
as
easy
as
all
that,
and-
and
in
this
case
it's
doing
something
really
interesting.
It's
saying
Hey
what,
if
you
want
to
run
a
specific,
oh
and
by
the
way
we
upgraded
all
of
the
tool
versions
here
to
current
modern
versions,
so
that
we
don't
look
like
we're
running
ancient
stuff.
So
every
one
of
these
versions
is
now
the
the
recent
release,
and
it
looks
very,
it
looks
much
more
believable
now.
C
A
long
time
ago,
the
plug-in
stock
or
the
developer's
guide,
or
something
did
not
have
the
same
rendering
as
the
user
guide
all
right,
I
remember,
you
couldn't
I,
think
you
couldn't
x-ref
into
a
subsection
I
think
we
had
a
PR
to
make
that
work.
The
same
did
that
PR
ever
get
done,
or
could
that
be
a.
A
C
A
A
A
This
one
use
same
navigation
for
Dev
docs.
As
for
user
handbook,
yeah.
A
Right-
and
this
is
one
of
our
one
of
our
Google
summer
of
code
organization,
admins
Chris
stern-
was
the
release
lead
for
Jenkins,
2.361.1
and
2.361.2.
So
Chris
is
deeply
experienced
and
said:
hey
yeah,
I'm
interested
in
working
on
this,
so
I
gave
him
a
brief
outline,
hey
here's
what
you
need
to
consider
and
here's
here's
what
the
good
thing
looks
like
and
here's
what
the
bad
thing
looks
like,
and
his
answer
was:
oh
good
he'll
start
work
on
it
cool,
so
yeah.
A
The
the
and
the
the
problem
to
remind
the
problem
is
that
it
looks
like
this
right.
So
here's
the
user
handbook
with
nice,
expanding
Contracting
and
highlighting
of
which
section
I'm
on
it
just
looks
good
and
it
feels
good.
It
helps
the
reader
as
they
navigate.
They
understand
where
they
are
and
what's
next,
when
you
do
the
same
thing
with
the
developer
handbook,
this
top
level
page
is
not
a
bad
thing,
but
then,
if
I
click
how-to
guides
I
get
dropped
into
something,
that's
well.
A
Where
am
I,
you
know,
I,
don't
know
quite
where
I
am
and
and
it
it
actually
goes,
gets
worse
from
there.
So,
oh
me:
what
if
what
if
I
do
improve
a
plug-in?
Okay,
I
still
don't
okay,
this
one
highlights
where
I
am,
but
the
other
one
didn't
all
sorts
of
inconsistencies
like
that.
B
A
Saying
yeah:
this
is
definitely
not
a
good
first
issue.
This.
This
thing
that
Chris
Stern
has
picked
up
is
is
well
worthy
of
Chris's
skills,
because
I
expect
it
will
be
challenging
to
understand
how
the
site
is
generated
with
the
awestruckt
generator.
What
the
Ruby
code
does
that
does
the
generation
what's
different
between
the
user
handbook
and
the
developer
documentation
pages,
and
what
will
it
take?
It
probably
will
be
a
relatively
small
change
in
terms
of
number
of
lines,
but
a
large
change
in
terms
of
understanding
how
to
unify
the
two
things
right.
B
C
Want
me
to
tell
you
all
my
friends,
I
just
started
opening
stuff
up
and
reading,
and
and
it's
amazing
how
many
pages,
if
you
opened
them
up
and
read
them,
you
say:
ooh,
ouch
I,
especially
looked
for
sort
of
older
basic
topics,
because
the
stuff
that's
been
done
lately
I
think,
has
been
in
general
higher
quality
than
some
of
the
old
stuff.
C
Or
or
I
started,
looking
I
discovered
like
I,
forget
a
couple
of
them.
There's
like
the
same
topic
in
four
different
places
and
I.
Don't
you
know
and
I,
don't
know
that
they're
all
matching
Etc
sort
of
like
one
of
those.
Whoever
was
writing
just
decided
to
say
it
again.
C
Another
one
I
wondered
about
is
doing
that
with
some
of
the
plug-in
guides
too,
is
just
open
them
up.
I
mean
I
I
remember
when
I
was
looking
at
them
every
once
in
a
while
I'd
look
at
something
and
go
and
kind
of
go.
Oh
ouch,
then.
A
We
do
we
don't
want
someone
to
spend
the
energy
to
create
it
well
and
and
the
the
poster
child
for
me
is
this.
One
right,
I'll
show
it
again,
just
because
it's
it's
a
painful
one.
So
if
I
look
at
Docs
table
plug-in
migration
progress
here
we
go
and
if
we
look
for
ansible
so
ansible
is
has
20
000
insulation.
So
it's
the
ansible
plug-in
is
a
popular
plug-in.
20
000
means
it's
somewhere
between
five
and
ten
percent
of
the
installed
base
has
it
installed
and
the
pull
request
has
been
open
since
September
of
2021.
A
Let's
see
who
is
the
Emilio,
Escobar
or,
and
then
it's
I,
don't
remember
who
the
others
are.
So
it's
just
not
getting
any
JC
Siro
was
the
original
author
and
it's
it's
just
not
gotten
any
any
attention.
Yeah.
A
C
A
C
C
We
can
we
make
a
hacktoberfest
to
review
and
adopt
ansible.
No,
that
probably
doesn't
work
yeah.
A
See
adopt
a
plug-in
feels
much
bigger
than
a
hacktoberfest
topic.
True,
the
the
idea
with
the
with
the
improve
a
plug-in
tutorial
was
get
people
started
towards
adoption
so
that
they're,
comfortable
and
confident,
and
hopefully,
by
the
time
they've
completed
four
pull
requests
for
hacktoberfest.
They
realize
oh,
this,
isn't
that
bad
I
could
adopt
this
plug-in
right.
B
A
See
adopt
a
plug-in
and
do
it
well,
we'll
we'll
require
more
than
four
PR's,
ultimately
right
and-
and
the
tutorial
shows
us
that
right,
the
tutorial
has
many
more
than
four
steps
and
as
preparation
for
devops
world,
we
took
a
set
of
25
plugins
and
ran
the
steps
through
about
15
or
20
of
them,
and
absolutely
every
one
of
them
had
at
least
three
or
four
items
on
this
checklist.
That
needed
to
be
done.
A
C
C
Good,
we
have
a
special
hacktoberfest
category
of
adopting
a
plug-in
to
encourage
that.
Yet
somebody
comes
in
for
Oktoberfest
because
it
looks
like
you're
getting
some
sophisticated
people
and
to
just
you
know,
maybe
make
a
list
of
some
that
I
mean
those
that
have
got.
You
know
10
installations,
the
last
one
done
five
years
ago.
Who
cares?
We
could
put
out
a
list
of
like
10
or
15
high
priority
plugins
that
need
to
be
adopted.
A
Yeah
and
certainly
see
here's
the
list
right,
you
you
look
at
this
list
and
plugins
plugins
with
a
hundred
and
seventy
thousand
installations
like
javadoc
or
lockable.
Resources
are
great
candidates
to
be
adopted
right
now,
they're
a
little
bit,
there's
a
little
bit
of
the
fear,
part
where
you
say:
wow,
a
hundred
and
seventy
thousand
installations,
if
that's
for
users
per
installation
I'm,
almost
at
a
million
users
right
I'm
at
least
I'm.
Well,
over
half
a
million
users
for
this
plug-in
I
got
to
be
sure
that
I
don't
don't
hurt.
C
C
B
C
It
okay,
my
and
I'm,
not
sure,
because
I
don't
so
I'm
just
talking
off
but
off
the
top
of
my
head,
see
what
you
think
of
this.
My
feeling
is
like
we
have
a
section
on
how
you
install
kubernetes
and
somebody
you've
got
somebody
who's
working
on
General
stuff,
but
Maya
is
that
a
lot
of
the
basic
Jenkins
topics
that
are
covered?
There's
a
kubernetes
aspect
like
when
you're
talking
about
nodes
and
agents?
C
You
know
to
go
in
and
update
this.
A
lot
of
I,
don't
know
about
Mark,
God,
proxy
stuff
and
plug-ins
like
if
I
install
well,
if
I
install
a
kubernetes
or
a
plug-in
on
a
kubernetes
environment,
do
I
that
has
five
namespaces
do
I
have
to
install
that
on
on
each
namespace,
or
is
it
good
enough
to
put
it
on
one?
If
it's
all
one
Jenkins
instance.
A
C
Can
I
can
I
for
performance
reasons?
Are
there
some
of
these
that
it
would
make
sense
to
you
know,
there's
just
there's
a
lot
of
places
where
just
a
sentence
that
says
nothing,
changes
on
kubernetes
put
it
wherever
you
want
to
and
do
whatever
you
want
to
with
it,
which
is
still
knowledge
because
I'm
looking
at
something
and
then
I'm
like
well
gee,
I,
wonder
if
this
is
different
for
kubernetes,
but
would
take
somebody
with
more
knowledge
than
me
to
go
through
and
come
up
with
really
valid
things.
There.
A
Yeah
and
and
see
that
I
think
is
a
good
topic
to
put
into,
but
really
that's
where
what
we
I
think
what
we
need
for
that
kind
of
knowledge
transfer
is.
We
need
kubernetes
administrators
who
run
Jenkins
to
tell
us
so
people
like
Damian
de
portal,
like
erve,
like
Stefan
Merrill,
all
three
of
them
run
Jenkins
on
kubernetes
for
the
Jenkins
project,
Sam
gleska,
who
I'm
pretty
sure,
runs
Jenkins
on
kubernetes
and
others
like
him
who
are
expert
administrators
and
know
the
the
barriers,
the
strengths
and
the
weaknesses.
You
know
hey.
C
C
They're
yeah
I'm,
not
positive,
I
I,
think
I
got
that
from
one
of
our
external
training
groups
a
couple
years
ago,
and
it
may
have
ceased
to
be
true,
also
interesting,
but
that
they
were.
You
know
that
they
were
fine
with
their
controller
and
everything,
but
all
the
dynamism
was
with
their
agents
and
notes
and
that
they
were
and
I.
C
You
know,
you'd
have
to
check
with
somebody
with
more
knowledge,
but
it
might
have
been
something
that
was
just
happening
in
the
early
stages
of
adopting
kubernetes
and
that
we've
moved
on,
but
that
that
was
you
know
that
they
had
it
already
running.
They
just
needed
more
agents
and
nodes
and
they
needed
more
flexibility
and
how
many
agents
and
nodes-
and
they
were
just
throwing
up
a
kubernetes
cluster
and
throwing
them
up
there.
A
C
C
That
and
then
that
is
an
issue
of
you,
know,
discuss
agents
and
nodes
on
kubernetes
in
the
agents
and
node
section
or
one
of
them
I
think
there's
multiple
sections
on
agents
and
nodes,
I
think
I
made
another
issue
of
that
yeah
I'm,
just
trying
to
think
of
place,
places
to
look
and
read,
and
some
you
know
some
of
which
you
read
you're,
going
to
go
yeah
that
reads
pretty
well
and
some
of
it
you
may
read
and
say:
gee
I
wonder
about
this
and
I
wonder
about
that.
We
don't
have
to
answer
it.
C
That
just
becomes
an
issue
of.
Is
there
something
here
since
we
seem
to
be
seeing
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
people
coming
in
who
knew
no
kubernetes
better
than
they
know
anything
else.
B
So,
basically,
going
through
the
guides
and
trying
to
see
whether
it's
Google
is
friendly
or
not.
Is
that
what
you're,
suggesting
and
try
to
oh
okay
and
try
to
see
that
there
are
helpful
documentation
around
kubernetes
storms
or
not?
Did
I
get
that
right?.
A
C
Probably
and
I
don't
I,
don't
know
for
sure.
What's
in
the
kubernetes,
it
might
be
kubernetes
admin,
but
if
I'm
running
Jenkins
on
kubernetes,
what
information
can
I
get
out
of
cube
control
that
I
that's
relevant?
To
me,
that's
not,
in
other
words,
all
most
of
our
docs
here
were
written
by
people
who
were
Jenkins
people
who
were
learning
to
get
it
up
on
kubernetes
and
I'm
thinking
about
somebody,
who's,
really
the
kubernetes
sort
of
end
of
things
and
really
want
to
use.
You
know,
use
kubernetes
to
the
greatest
effect,
I
mean.
B
C
B
A
C
C
C
And
you
might
find
there
used
to
be
more
bad
writing.
It
seems
to
me
that
a
lot
of
just
the
pure
bad
writing
and
formatting
issues
of
most
of
them,
but
there
there
were
a
couple.
I
found
a
cup.
You
know
a
few
bullet
lists
where
half
of
the
items
were
knit
capped
and
half
weren't
and
some
were
bold
and
some
weren't
and
few
inconsistencies,
and
then
those
are
to
me.
My
idea
of
a
good
first
issue
is
something
that's
brainless,
so
I
can
get
used
to
the
tools
and
you
know
so.
C
A
B
A
very
short
topic:
sorry
Mark,
go
ahead.
I
I
get
DM
on
Gator,
you
know
from
contributors
who
want
to
contribute
in
that
improve
a
plug-in
tutorial
right.
So
they
asked
me
what
plugin
should
they
choose?
And
my
intention
before
answering
that
question
is
I
should
be
suggesting
them.
The
plugins,
which.
B
Are
ready
to
you
know,
review
the
PRS
so
so
do
we
need
a
section
for
this
in
the
Improvement
plugin
tutorial?
Because
or
is
there
any
section
in
that
already
I
need
to
go
through
that?
Because
when
you're
reading
the
tutorial
they
would
need
to
pick
a
plugin
to
improve
correct
and
there
are
some
guidelines
that
they
need
to
follow
before
deciding
a
Plugin
or
else
there.
It
would
be
like
ansible,
plugin.
A
So
what
I
did
was
I
provided
a
list
of
plugins
that
have
already
already
have
people
who
are
really
willing
to
review
pull
requests
as
part
of
Google
summer
or
as
part
of
hacktoberfest
I'm
trying
to
find
the
list
now,
because
I
copied
and
pasted
the
list
into
a
getter
post,
and
you
are
welcome
to
just
reuse
it.
Where.
A
C
About
the
step
documentation
that
we
were
working
on
with
she
codes
Africa,
is
there
anything
there
that
we've
got
somebody
who
will
review
that's
doable
that
hasn't
been
done
yet
they're.
A
Really
there
really
isn't
the
problem.
There
is
it's
a
it's
usually
a
beyond
beyond
a
good
first
issue,
level
of
skill
required
because
we
have
to
you
have
to
find
the
place
in
the
code
to
to
add
the
content.
Then
you
need
to
learn
enough
to
to
actually
add
the
content
and
between
those
two
things.
That's
that's
a
larger
barrier
than
than
most
people
can
overcome.
Where
is
that
list?
I
know
I
generated
a
list.
B
A
A
A
Candidate
plugins
that
we
candidate
plugins
up
for
adoption,
so
what
we
did
is
John
Mark,
Mason,
Bruno,
Marsden
and
I
adopted
about
25
plugins,
and
this
is
that
most
of
that
list
of
adopted
plugins
that
we
are,
we
intend
to
drop
and
not
have
them
adopted
anymore.
Once
we've
finished
this
exercise,
so
we
need
someone
else
to
adopt
them.
A
C
B
A
Yeah
I
think
Meg
is
alluding
to
she's,
using
an
analogy
for
a
longer
term
case.
So
let's,
for
example,
say
that
a
child,
a
child
has
both
parents
die
in
a
in
an
accident,
and
then
someone
needs
to
take
care
of
them
in
in
the
U.S
at
least,
there
are
times
when
those
children
will
be
offered
as
they'll
be
adopted
by
another
family
and
sometimes
in
the
transition
period
before
they
are
adopted
by
another
family
they're
placed
with
a
foster
parent
family.
That's
known
to
be
temporary,
non-permanent
adoption.
B
A
Yeah,
so
don't
don't
worry
about
it
all
right,
so
we've
we've
got
a
list
and
that
list
is
usable
and
pull
requests
are
already
actually
I'll
show
you
one
that
was
just
processed
today.
So
here's
this
one
and
we
see
a
brand
new
contributor,
submitted
a
pull
request.
I
reviewed
it
and
it's
been
merged
thanks
to
Pam.