►
Description
Speaker: Noah Abrahams
A
But
in
my
mind,
one
of
the
things
that
makes
kubernetes
so
successful
is
the
way
that
it
is
built
not
just
as
a
project
on
github,
not
just
as
a
collection
of
bits
stored
in
a
repo,
but
that
kubernetes
is
explicitly
defined
as
a
community.
Kubernetes
is
explicitly
defined
as
a
group
we're
a
family.
We
all
work
together
and
we
all
have
to
talk,
and
we
all
have
to
be
able
to
share
our
ideas
and
we
all
have
to
be
able
to
share
information.
So.
A
A
The
capybara
has
become
not
really
an
unofficial
mascot,
but
the
way
capybaras
work
when
they
are
put
in
various
environments
is
they
will
naturally
nurture
each
other.
They
will
take
care
of
themselves
and
they
will
take
care
of
other
animals
when
orphaned,
animals
are
put
together
in
a
zoo,
they're,
often
given
to
a
capybara,
so
that
they
can
take
care
of
them.
They
have
a
natural
instinct
to
be
a
parent
to
be
a
shepherd
to
be
a
mentor
for
other
animals.
A
We
like
this
analogy,
because
this
is
how
we
see
a
lot
of
the
activity
in
the
kubernetes
community
when
you're
dealing
with
the
people
in
the
kubernetes
community,
when
you're
working
together
when
you're
trying
to
solve
a
problem,
our
ability
is
to
Shepherd
each
other
and
our
abilities
to
take
care
of
each
other
are
part
of
what
drives
this
community.
We
have
an
explicit
code
of
conduct
on
how
we
conduct
business,
how
we
conduct
ourselves
that
helps
define
more
than
just
be
nice
to
each
other.
A
So
why
is
everybody
so
nice
we've
got
a
code
of
conduct,
that's
explicitly
defined
and
part
of
that
code
of
conduct,
as
I
said,
is
more
than
just
don't
be
a
jerk.
It's
that
you
have
to
take
care
of
each
other.
You
have
to
be
able
to
communicate.
I'm,
probably
gonna,
say
the
word
communicate
like
84,000
more
times
over
the
next
15
minutes.
A
A
Some
of
the
few
traditions
that
we
have
are
when
you're
looking
for
technical
assistance
when
you're
having
technical
questions
that
you
need
to
get
answered,
a
lot
of
open
source
communities
tend
to
go
to
github.
First
say:
if
you
have
a
question
just
open
an
issue:
that's
not
how
we
want
to
handle
things.
We
have
other
places
for
that.
We
have
slack.
A
There's
65,000
people
on
the
kubernetes
slack
I'm,
pretty
sure
you
can
find
an
answer
to
a
question
that
you
have
there's
the
discuss
forums
there,
Stack
Overflow,
there's
all
sorts
of
places
where,
if
you
have
a
question
of
the
type
I'm
trying
to
do
X
with
my
cluster
and
it's
not
behaving
properly
or
how
should
I
expect
something
to
work
or
anything
of
that
variety.
Anything!
That's
not
related
to
a
direct
working
on
kubernetes.
It's
self
issue.
All
those
questions
we've
got
several
places
to
go
to
them
start
and
slack.
A
A
Now
that
we've
established
now
that
we've
established
that
technical
questions
are
not
specific
to
github
that
we
want
to
have
those
questions
exist
somewhere
else,
we
want
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
what
does
the
conversation
look
like
on
github,
and
primarily
all
of
the
conversation
on
github
should
be
around
the
issues
that
you're
working
on
now.
Of
course,
there's
lots
of
peripheral
discussions
that
happen.
There's
general
conversation,
that's
fine,
but
all
the
all
the
conversation
that
happens
on
github
should
ideally
be
focused
on.
What
is
the
issue
at
hand?
A
A
It's
pretty
straightforward
once
you've
got
through
all
that,
though
then
it's
a
party,
then
you
get
to
places
like
this,
where
you
can
start
having
freeform
conversations
where
you
can
get
to
who
is
in
the
room?
Who
can
I
talk
to
and
just
start
sharing
all
that
information,
the
amount
of
brainpower
in
this
room
in
that
room
all
around
the
conference,
the
amount
of
people
and
the
amount
of
experience
that
can
help
you
build
whatever
it
is
that
you're
trying
to
build
out
of
your
kubernetes
contribution
life?
A
It's
it.
It's
really
a
sight
to
behold
and
when
you
get
out
there
and
just
start
talking
to
people,
you
will
learn
far
more
than
you
will
in
any
other
any
other
mode.
I
I
can
firmly
vouch
for
when
you
are
around
the
conference,
spend
time
in
the
hallway
track.
I
think
I
have
a
slide
about
that
later.
A
So
what
do
we
have
for
online
communication?
If
you've
already
mentioned
a
couple
of
these,
but
let's
go
down
the
list.
Slack
is
the
first
and
foremost
one
pretty
much.
Everybody
is
on
slack,
not
everybody's,
paying
attention
to
it
all
the
time,
but
pretty
much
everybody
is
on
slack
discussed
at
kubernetes.
Geo
is
a
forum
based
our
forum,
styled
area
so
that
you
can
ask
questions
about
anything,
doesn't
have
to
be
technical,
could
be
hey
who's
in
my
city.
A
That
also
wants
to
talk
about
kubernetes
and
get
Coffee
I
mean
you
can
do
that
and
there's
there's
several
sub
forms
in
various
languages.
So
don't
feel
that
you
have
to
be
constrained
to
just
English
the
mailing
list.
Most
of
the
formal
communication
ends
up
going
out
on
the
kubernetes
mailing
lists,
they're
managed
through
Google's
groups.
A
A
A
If
you're
working
on
a
team,
if
you're
working
on
a
PR,
if
you're
working
on
a
cig,
if
you're
working
on
whatever
spend
time
in
the
zoo
meetings,
learn
who
you're
talking
to
they're
gonna,
be
your
friends,
they're
gonna,
be
your
family,
that's
what
it
comes
down
to
so
I
think
already
ranted.
Through
most
of
this,
when
in
doubt
ask
on
slack
the
slack
is
found
at
slack
gates,
tayo
and
everyone
I
believe
by
default,
starts
in
the
channels
kubernetes
users
in
kubernetes
novice.
A
So
you
will
see
some
high
traffic
in
those
channels.
It's
a
great
place
to
ask
questions.
But
again
your
answer
may
come.
Fourteen
hours
later,
sig
Trebek's
is
another
great
channel.
Those
of
us
who
manage
the
contributor
experience
have
a
channel
specifically
designed
to
talk
amongst
ourselves,
but
also
to
help
people
who
want
to
know
where
to
go
next.
The
whole
point
of
contributor
experience
is
to
help
you
as
contributors.
So
come.
Ask
us
if
you
say
I
want
to
know
who
I
should
talk
to
to
work
on
X
Y,
&
Z.
A
Discuss
as
I
mentioned
is
a
forum
based
website
discussed
at
kubernetes.
Io
has
various
regional
discussions
in
a
couple
of
different
languages,
and
you
will
find
topics
all
over
the
board
on
pretty
much
everything
go,
meet
some
people
and
have
some
chats
the
mailing
list.
Every
cig
and
every
working
group
gets
a
mailing
list.
A
Some
of
them
do
get
used
more
than
others.
Some
of
them
are
very
high
volume,
and
some
of
them
are
once
a
month.
So
don't
necessarily
expect
that
you're
going
to
get
a
lot
of
volume
out
of
them,
because
it's
based
on
what
people
are
putting
into
them.
However,
the
the
important
point
there
is
that
you
should
be
paying
attention
to
whatever
communication
is
coming
out
of
the
areas
that
are
of
interest
to
you
and
you've
already
gone
around
the
tables
and
shared
a
little
bit
about.
A
Don't
know
that
you
necessarily
need
to
if
you
are
just
looking
for
information,
but
you
do
need
to
in
order
to
be
a
member
of
the
kubernetes
org
and
we're
gonna
talk
more
about
that
later
today,
but
being
part
of
the
kubernetes
dev
mailing
list
is
the
central
place
for
all
contributors.
So,
while
you
may
say,
I
don't
know
if
I
really
need
that
go
sign
up
for
it.
It
will
be
important
to
you
being
part
of
the
kubernetes
community.
A
A
Informal
take
on
how
we
handle
the
phrase
that
we
didn't
have
an
informal
take
on
how
we
want
to
handle
the
the
way
we
interact
with
each
other,
though
we
do
make
sure
that
we
are
always
within
the
code
of
conduct.
If
that
makes
sense,
long
story
short
we're
all
friendly
and
there's
Gwynne
zum
meetings
are
scheduled
on
the
kubernetes
calendar.
A
There
are
zoo
meetings
for
the
SIG's
there's
a
weekly
community
meeting
that
I
suggest
everyone
should
attend
at
least
once
it's
a
it's
a
grand
old
time,
and
there
are
various
other
meetings
that
take
place
depending
on
what
you're
working
on
don't
be
afraid
to
ask
about
changing
meeting
times.
As
we've
already
mentioned,
this
is
a
global
community
and
you
will
get
a
lot
of
people
all
over
the
world,
so
you
may
have
a
cig
that
has
three
meetings
a
month
and
Pacific
time
and
one
in
Bangalore
time,
because
it
needs
to
facilitate
more
people.
A
Other
forms
of
communication
that
we
have.
We
have
meter
contributors
sessions.
Those
happen
once
a
month
where
you
can
come
in
and
meet
people
who
have
been
contributing
to
the
project
for
a
while,
and
you
could
just
ask
them
whatever
you
could
ask
them
about
a
particular
contribution.
You
could
ask
them
about
what
their
journey
was
like
again,
that's
a
fairly
informal
session
and
it's
done
on
YouTube.
A
We
also
have
office
hours,
which
is
similar,
but
that
is
specifically
for
asking
questions
more
along
the
lines
of
how
to
use
kubernetes
or
how
to
accomplish
things
as
opposed
to
asking
about
the
crew
Benet.
The
kubernetes
contributor
lifestyle
coop
con
you're
at
one
good
job,
you've
already
check
that
one
off
well
done
face
to
face
sig
meetings.
We're
gonna
have
some
this
week.
There'll
be
some
today
and
we're
gonna.
A
Do
the
meet
and
greet
with
the
SIG's
later
on
today,
at
around
3:30
I,
think
that
is,
and
last
but
not
least,
my
personal
favorite
meetups
I
say
that,
because
I
run,
one
meetups
are
a
great
way
to
meet
other
folks
in
the
community,
who
may
or
may
not
be
contributors.
You'll
go
out
and
you'll
meet
people
who
are
using
the
project.
Who
are
using
the
product,
maybe
in
their
daily
life?
Maybe
they
didn't
know
anything
about
the
community.
A
There
are
a
lot
of
them.
There's
last
I
checked
167
kubernetes
meetups
worldwide,
so
you'll
find
quite
a
bit
of
them.
If
you
don't
have
one
start,
one
go
ahead:
I
did
it
I
three
people
at
my
first
meetup
that
didn't
really
change
for
the
second
third
or
fourth,
but
eventually
we
got
some
people
to
show
up.
A
If
you
want
to
start
a
meetup
and
don't
have
any
resources
reach
out
to
any
of
the
CN
CF
ambassadors
you'll
find
us
around.
We
have
ambassador
tags
on
us
and
we'll
be
happy
to
talk
to
you
about
it.
So
next
exercise
everybody
gets
to
go.
Do
something
go
join,
discuss,
go,
join
slack,
subscribe
to
kubernetes,
Deb
mailing
list
and
sign
up
for
the
calendar
if
it's
still
there
if
it
hasn't
moved
the
links
for
all
of
those
will
be
right.