►
Description
Join us to see what's new with Knative 1.0!
A
Yeah
welcome
everybody.
Yes,
I
wasn't
quite
sure
on
sort
of
kind
of
exactly
what
you
know,
sort
of
kind
of
what's
new,
with
the
1.0
sort
of
kind
of
contrasted
with
what,
since
you
know,
the
previous
release,
what
happened
in
the
last
six
weeks
or
or
so
forth,
so
I'm
just
gonna
go
ahead
and
yammer
a
bit
about
what
I
think
are
some
of
the
some
of
the
interesting
bits.
A
So
if
you
kind
of
start
thinking
about
where
we
started,
when
we
released,
let's
say
we
released
the
first
version
out
out
in
the
open
in
the
canada
repo.
A
So
at
those
times
we
basically
have
the
the
the
serving
build
and
the
eventing
and
we've
gone
a
way
since
then,
right
now
we
only
have
two
repos
there.
Well,
that's
not
true,
because
we
have
tons
of
reposts
there,
but
we
basically
lost
build
somewhere
along
the
way,
but
we
didn't
really
lose
it
in
the
sense
that
it's
it's
gone
away.
It
actually
has
gone
away
kind
of
like
what
what
the
parents
in
the
united
states,
maybe
elsewhere
too.
A
They
tell
their
kids
when
the
pet
dies
that
they
went
on
the
farm
to
be
a
better
place,
so
this,
of
course,
is
tech
time.
So,
but
before
we
kind
of
get
or
before
I
continue
more
about
about
the
tech
side
of
things,
one
of
the
things
that
I
really
wanna
underscore
highlight
boulder
is
the.
A
A
A
So,
especially
since
this
is
a
community
meeting
just
wanted
to
say
thank
you
for
everybody
and
for
everything
you're
doing
so
that
that's
been
a
very
humbling
experience
and
and-
and
it
makes
me
super
super
proud
that
we've
been
able
to
accomplish
that
all
right.
A
So
a
lot
of
the
things
have
changed
from
again
from
those
days
in
a
sense
and
because
one
of
the
things
we
did
a
lot
of
time,
noodling
over
and
sometimes
arguing
over
and
and
and
and
and
so
forth,
was
ensuring
that
we
get
the
model
right.
A
So
one
of
the
things
we
wanted
to
do
was
not
build
another
pass,
but
it
really
was.
We
wanted
to
build
these
reusable
building
blocks
that
could
be
assembled
into
a
pass.
A
So
we
spend
a
lot
of
time
really
working
on
the
model
and
when
I
say
model
I
mean
things
like
you
know:
what
are
the
roles
and
responsibilities
for
the
various
pieces
and
how
do
you,
slice
and
dice
them
in
such
a
way
that
you
can
come
and
choose
what
it
is
that
you
want
to
use
instead
of
again
just
choosing
the
apas
right.
A
So
while
we
spend
a
lot
of
time
doing
that
and
dividing
up
the
apis,
you
know
somebody
that
that
showed
up
in
some
of
the
previous
meetings
might
have
heard
that
you
know
there
was
like
weeks
and
weeks
and
weeks
by
various
folks
spending
on
tying
the
apis
together
and
and
then
iterating
on
those
and
so
forth.
And
while
I
feel
that
we
definitely
got
into
a
great
place
with
the
model
and
the
apis,
we
didn't
really
focus
a
lot
on
usability.
A
It
was
like
cube,
cuddle,
yeah,
that's
that's!
That's
fine!
That's
all
you
need
so
one
of
the
things
that
I
want
to
go
ahead
and
really
really
mention
is
that
is
that
there's
so
that
the
three
things
that
I
think
and
when
I
say
three
I
mean
four.
A
I
think
one
of
the
things
that
we
have
right
now
is
that
it's
very
easy
for
you
to
go
and
come
in
and
quote
unquote.
You
know
kick
the
tires,
try
it
out.
So
there's
a
lot
of
work
and-
and
I
bring
this
up
because
some
of
these
are
not
in
the
in
the
you
know-
k
native
proper.
In
a
sense,
but
it
really
has
been
a
long
goal
for
myself
hopes
and
dreams.
A
If
you
will
on
for
casual
folks
to
come
in
and
be
able
to
be
up
and
running
in
five
minutes
and
and
and
and
try
things
out
and
be
certainly
odd
there.
So
there's
there's
quite
a
few
tools
set
up
folks
have
built
like
carlo
system.
I
think
it's
conch
and
matt
did
mink
and
there's
few
there's
quite
a
few
of
those.
A
So
so
that's
been
really
nice
to
see
because
that
was
kind
of
a
pet
peeve
for
mine
for
for
a
long
time,
but
it
was,
it
was
very
tricky
to
get
started
and
along
in
the
same
vein,
one
of
the
nice
things
that
has
has
been
getting
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
care
and
feedings
the
docs.
So
the
documents
was
overhauled
and
it
looks
so
much
better,
and
that
was
a
tremendous
effort
by
folks,
so
that
again
has
been
a
pet
peeve
of
mine.
A
So
if
you
joined
any
of
the
working
group
meetings
over
the
years,
I've
always
been
complaining
about
them.
A
So
it's
been
amazing
to
see
that
happening
and
the
command
line
that
the
client
is
is
is
just
super
awesome
again
kind
of
going
into
the
folks
that
are
gonna
go
ahead
and
get
started
and
not
write
a
bunch
of
yamls
and
and
whatnots
it's
been
great
to
see.
So
I
think
it's
much
more
approachable
to
folks
and
then,
of
course,
it's
also
with
the
with
the
operator
work.
It's
it's
it's
it's
easier
for
you
now
to
go
and
keep
your
system
up
and
running.
A
So
when
there's
new
release,
it's
because
you
know
we
we
again
have
been
keeping
on
the
six
six
week,
release
train
cycle
for
a
while
now
so,
if
you
wanna
go
and
choose
to
go
ahead
and
and
upgrade
every
six
weeks
and
then
by
using
tools
like
operator
is
fantastic,
which
again
speaks
to
the
the
maturity
of
the
project,
that
those
are
the
kinds
of
things
where
there's
a
lot
of
work
that
is
going
on,
so
those
are
looking
at
the
quote.
A
Unquote,
you
know
hazy
kind
of
core
bits
and
pieces,
but
I
think
there's
a
lot
of
other
neat
features
that
have
been
added.
That
that
you
know
when
you
sprinkle
your
eyes,
they're,
not
necessarily
in
the
api
and
we're
in
the
original
api
and
and
they
you
know,
you
could
argue
they
don't
even
belong
there.
So
there's
a
lot
of
really
neat
features
that
have
been
added
on
top
of
it
or
parallel
to
it.
A
So
the
magic
tls
bit
is
amazing.
So
when
you
can
come
in
and
you're
like
hey,
you
know
for
so
long
it
was
just
all
the
examples
were
like:
oh,
okay,
cool.
It's
super
easy.
All
you
have
to
do
is
curl
with
the
dash
h
host
header
and
look
how
easy
it
is
and
here's
the
website
I've
been
at
this.
This
whole
whole
bit
about
like
oh
yeah,
but
but
it's
not
tls,
terminate
and
everything
else
like
that.
A
So
many
of
those
previously
kind
of
complicated
things
are
super
easy
now
and
and
when
you
look
back-
and
I
was
just
kind
of
thinking
about
what
are
some
of
the
things
I'm
going
to
talk
about-
was
when
you
look
back,
it
used
to
be
that
you
know
doing
things
like
setting
up
the
clusters
and
the
tls's
and
everything
else
that
was
was
really
tricky
or
difficult,
and
especially
for
newcomers
and
and
it
kind
of
led
to
this
whole
point
about.
A
You-
know
the
clusters
sort
of
kind
of
became
like
these
things
you
have
to
you,
know
the
the
old
kubernetes
cats,
no,
no
cats,
pets
versus
cattle
analogy.
So
it
makes
super
easy
now
to
go
and
start
kind
of
treating
clusters
much
more
like
that,
because
it's
it's
so
easy
to
go
and
spin
them
up
and
and
get
everything
up
and
running
in
there,
so
that
that
that's
going
to
lead
some.
A
I
think
some
pretty
neat
neat
neat
stuff
down
the
line
and
then
then
there's
a
lot
of
other
stuff
tech.
Some,
I
don't
know
innovations
things
like
that.
That
also
have
kind
of
grown
out
of
the
gay
native,
then
that
are
now
getting
some
attention,
whether
it's
in
the
upstream
or
whether
it's
in
the
other
projects
or
some
some
some
ideas
that
are
percolating
throughout
the
other
communities
as
well.
A
So
that's
been
really
kind
of
awesome
to
see,
and
I
think
you
know
sometimes
it
doesn't
get
as
much
interest,
because
we
are
so
kind
of
knee-deep
in
this.
If
you
will
so
that
you're
kind
of
like
we
take
a
lot
of
those
things
for
granted.
But
you
know
some
of
those
things
are
things
like
the
duct
typing
stuff
and
some
of
them.
A
This
is
like
the
k-native
package,
where
there's
a
lot
of
really
neat
stuff
there
with
with
things
like
you
know,
the
way
we
build
reconcilers
with
the
injections
and
and
and
all
those
kinds
of
other
things
that
that
are
just
now
super
easy
for
you
to
go
ahead
and
come
in
and
you
can
take
advantage
of
those,
even
if
you
choose
not
to
use
k
native,
but
you
you
just
want
to
go
and
hang
out
and
play
with
the
in
the
kubernetes
or
you're
building.
A
Your
own
stuff,
some
of
those
tools
and
technologies,
are
going
to
be
well,
hopefully
helping
other
communities
and
and
and
and
other
folks
that,
are
you
know,
building
software
just
like
you
know
what
we
wanted
to
do
originally
k
native
in
the
first
place,
and
then
then
some
of
the
productivity
tools,
like
we
have
some
dependency
management
tools,
because
we
are
releasing
fast
and
furious,
so
being
able
to
roll
things
out
can
be
a
bit
of
a
a
pain.
A
So
we
have
done
a
lot
of
work
there
as
well,
and
it's
been
it's
been
great
to
see
how
seamless
the
releases
processes
have
gotten
over
the
well
over
the
years
where
it
used
to
be
very
carefully
crafted
operation
and
every
now,
and
then
it
would
end
in
tiers.
It's
been
much
more
smooth
running
machines,
so
some
some
really
amazing,
tooling,
has
been
built
as
well,
and
this
one
doesn't
mean
touching
the
k
native.
A
But
one
of
the
things
that
makes
me
very
happy
is
that
very
early
on
in
decay
native
and
especially
in
the
eventing
land.
We
wanted
to
go
ahead
and
and
really
focus
on
on
community
standards
or
public
standards
for
for
for
how
we
wanted
to
exchange
information
between
different
points,
and
so
we
took
a
big
bet
and
got
very
involved
in
the
cloud
events.
A
So
one
of
the
nice
things
that
I've
been
that
I
am
super
excited
about,
is
this
whole
promise
of
being
able
to
go
ahead
and
and
finally
have
eventing
infra
that
allows
you
to
go
and
cross.
Not
only
you
know
cluster
boundaries
or
anything
else,
but
organizational
boundaries,
different
cloud
providers,
because
it's
starting
to
be
in
different
kinds
of
places,
so
so
that
that
that
makes
me
really
really
really
happy.
And
now
I'm
going
to
stop
talking,
because
I
think
I
put
everybody
to
sleep.