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From YouTube: [SIG ContribEx] Weekly Marketing Meeting 20210709
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A
Here
we
go:
everyone
welcome
to
the
friday
com,
contributor.coms,
slash
upstream
marketing,
meeting
thanks
for
joining
and
be
nice
to
each
other.
This
is
the
tl.
Dr
we've
got
happy
friday.
It
seems
like
we've
got
some
good
internet
connections
happening,
which
is
huge.
I
love
the
love,
the
pre-recording
banter,
but
anyone
any
introductions
or
anything
new
that
people
want
to
bring
up
to
start
get
on
the
agenda.
A
B
Yeah,
so
we
have
the
new
feature
live
so
thanks
to
kardashian.
So
now
we
can
create
pull
requests
from
an
issue.
So
if
someone
wants
to
tweet
something,
they
can
just
create
a
github
issue.
A
That
is
the
freaking
coolest.
It's
awesome
that
is
absolutely
wonderful,
and
I
heard
rain
was
able
to
use
it
to
to
give
this
a
a
try,
and
so
were.
I
see,
there's
a
kind,
slash
tweet
that
was
added
to
the
the
github.
A
A
And
you
know
the
subtext
of
this
being
like
one
of
our
all-time
goals,
for
this
group
is,
is
to
be
a
place
where
people
feel
like
they
can
contribute
to
kubernetes,
bringing
their
creative
skills
without
needing
any
sort
of
coding
experience
and
getting
people
away
from
the
pr
and
into
just
github
issues
is
one
step
closer.
I'm
really
proud
of
us
for
doing
that.
That's
that's
huge
may
seem
small,
but
it
is
definitely
big.
Speaking
of
small
things
that
are
huge,
the
latest
release
got
cut
yay.
A
Team
watch
this
other
than
you
reshula,
but
that's
really
impressive.
Anything
you
want
to
say
about
that
being
on
the
release
team.
B
A
A
Freeze
yeah,
thank
you
all
for
substituting
friday
brain
for
actual
reality.
Yes,
code,
freeze
no
releases
yet,
but
that's
that's
huge.
It
seems
like
so
far
at
least
I've
seen
rumblings
where
it
seems
like
people
got
the
message
ahead
of
time.
I
you
know,
I'm
I
don't
have
enough
data,
so
it's
incredibly
anecdotal.
But
what
are
all
of
your
anecdotes,
like
do?
Did
people
kind
of
feel
like
it
snuck
up
on
them,
or
did
you
get
any
impression
that
was
working
well
enough,
where
they
felt
informed?
C
I
I
generally
know
when
it
is,
but
I
saw
comms
about
it,
so
it
was
refreshing
to
see
that
reminder
get
floated
out
there.
A
D
A
How
did
how
did
freeze
feel
any
any
feedback?
Did
you
did
you
get
enough
information
in
the
channels?
You
were
looking
something
to
think
about
cool
all
right.
Well,
anything
that
we've
got
in
progress
that
we
want
to
jump
right
into.
A
I
think,
there's
I
don't
think,
there's
anything
that
immediately
comes
to
mind
with
the
folks
on
the
the
line
this
week,
but
this
is
generally
a
place
where,
if
you've
got
an
article
in
progress
and
want
to
talk
through
it,
this
would
be
the
time
if
you
have
ideas
for
future
articles
and
you'd
like
to
get
them
in
the
backlog.
A
That
is
also
wonderful,
and
we
tracked
that
on
the
the
link
here
actually
did
I
add
it
to
the
it
didn't
just
in
case
your
people
aren't
looking,
I
think,
everyone's
in
any
articles
in
progress.
D
D
D
215
was
the
one
that
was
giving
the
tldr
the
contributor
stories,
and
then
I
think
we
had
the
the
date
update
and
all
that
happened
in
previous
one
now
just
needs
to
be
incremented
again
and
then
then
I
can
go
out.
A
Is
this
oh,
this
is
my
pr,
oh,
I
might
have
been
waiting
for
chris
shoot
me.
Oh!
So,
if
I
do
a
quick
edit.
D
On
the
date
you
will
not
be
able
to
do
it.
It'll
have
to
be
through,
because
you
can
see
the
date
there.
Yeah.
D
Just
there
it's
oh
okay,
nevermind
2021,
we'll
be
okay
there,
so
the
file
name
doesn't
be
changed.
That
just
has
to
be
changed.
A
A
A
D
Once
the
preview
is
done,
then
we
can
actually
act
on
it
with
like
provisional.
D
A
D
Yeah,
that's
definitely
what
it
sounds
like:
okay,
okay!
So
what
were
you
saying?
We
have
to
wait
for
netlify
to
finish
building
the
preview
and
we
basically
verify
that
the
preview
everything
looks
good
and
once
that's
done
can
toss
like
approve
on
it
and
it'll
go
out
the
door,
hey
kevin.
A
Good,
okay,
chris
will
you
keep
monitoring
that
while
we're
hanging
out,
maybe
we
can
get
this
over
the
line
today,
it'll.
D
It'll,
take
like
five
ten
minutes
for
the
yeah
to
build
the
finish,
and
you
just
want
me
to
hit
approve
bob
right.
You
can
toss
your
lgtm
on
it
and
then,
as
the
repo
owner
can
approve
cool.
A
Good,
it's
always
good
to
quality
check
to
go
remind
ourselves
of
that
specific
flow
yeah.
It's
a
flow
for
sure.
Good
call,
good
got
that.
We've
got
the
pr
thing.
Okay,
improvements
updates
to
work
in
progress,
but
I
see
usually
out
of
the
section
on
need
some.
B
Yeah
there
are
a
couple
of
things
that
we
observed
this
week,
so
the
first
one
was
so
even
when
a
user
creates
a
youtube
issue
in
order
to
make
it
into
a
cool
request.
They
need
to
sign
this
year
first.
So
it's
a
good
thing
for
us
and
the
other
one
is
that
so
I
found
this
and
then
I
think,
walk
so
github
has
this
thing
where,
when
a
new
contributor
creates
a
pull
request
or
something
so,
the
workflow
doesn't
run
by
default.
B
D
B
D
The
the
tl,
dr
is,
is
people
found
ways
of
abusing
github's
ci
to
try
and
mine
coins,
so
they
put
this
check
in
place.
So,
if
you're
opening
a
pr
for
the
first,
this
is
actually
like
very
similar
to
how
our
workflow
goes
right.
If
you're
opening
a
pr
for
the
first
time
or
if
you're
like
not
an
org
member,
it
will
not
run
checks
automatically.
It
waits
for
someone
to
approve
it.
So
it's
sort
of
like
just
like
what
we
do
with
you
know
like
okay
to
test
wow.
C
D
D
A
B
A
Good,
okay,
I
see
some
new
items
added
in
new
items,
so
going
back
up
the
stack
a
little.
What
what
you
got
going
on.
D
Oh
so
that
was
me
adding
items
a
little
late,
two
things
we're
hoping
to
like.
After
talking
like,
I
had
a
couple
of
conversations
and
there's
a
couple:
six
slash
people
that
would
probably
be
like
worth
profiling.
That's
sig,
node
on
don
chen
there's.
D
Also
a
couple
other
people
in
there
like
if
we
wanted
to
to
like
get
a
couple,
different
perspectives,
besides
dawn
derek,
is
the
other
sick,
chair
and
alana
has
been
very
active
there
same
thing
with
with
sergey,
so
I
don't
know
if
it
like,
maybe
try
something
a
little.
You
have
like
the
the
two
people
that
have
been
there
since
the
beginning
and
then
the
two
people
that
are
so
the
new
up
and
comers.
D
So
that
might
be
an
angle
to
take
and
another
one
is
that
is
like
becoming
really
popular
and
might
just
be
a
way
to
steer
more,
like,
I
should
say
popular
in
terms
like
the
cloud
native
space
and
steering
more
people
towards
the
the
sig
is
sick,
multi-cluster.
C
D
A
D
Like
a
lot
of
people,
don't
know
that
the
actual
sig
exists
yeah
it's
about.
It's
been
an
issue
for
a
while,
like
there
was
this
period
where
there
really
wasn't
like
any
activity
going
on
in
it
for
a
bit.
D
But
now
the
idea
of
multi-cluster,
like
the
stick,
has
been
around
for
quite
a
while
and
like
I
even
like
my
first
real
foray
into
kubernetes
was
multi-cluster
back
in
like
2016
2017,
but
now
it's
really
becoming
a
thing
again
and
I
think
you
know
try
and
ride
some
of
the
popularity
of
it
becoming
a
thing
and
get
more
people
there
is
paul
are,
is
paul
still
the
chair.
No,
I
paul.
C
D
A
That'd
be
cool
if
you
want
to
kick
it
off,
and
maybe
we
can
kind
of
round
robin
it
until
a
draft
comes
together,
I
think
with
multi-cluster
I
can
see
like
a
pretty
simple
format
of
that
of
you
know,
acknowledgement
we're
interviewing
multi-cluster
and
like
in
the
introduction,
like
a
brief
like.
Why
is
it
a
big
deal
in,
in
our
own
words,
in
a
vendor
neutral
way?
I
think
we
all
work
at
different,
massive
cloud
companies
to
the
most
degree,
except
for
julia.
A
So
I
feel
like
there's
a
good
pitch
at
the
beginning
anyway.
So,
like
intro,
what
is
multi-cluster
multi-cluster
and
maybe
their
own
words
like
of
a
few
of
the
members
and
then
call
to
action
of
where
to
get
involved.
I
think
it
follows
the
standard
template.
D
C
D
C
A
Yeah,
I,
like
I
kind
of
put
it
under
the
header
of
evolution
like
kind
of
yeah
history
for
for
sure,
but
like
how
how
they
I
feel,
like
kubernetes,
has
grown
with
the
industry.
Understanding
of
of
the
problem
slash,
I
love
that
point
of
just
like
just
people
trying
to
get
their
heads
around
kubernetes
to
start
like
this
is
different.
It's,
like
the
conflation
of
you,
know
contributing
code
to
a
project
and
understanding
git
and
markdown
like
they're,
not
the
same
thing.
A
You
gotta
learn
things
one
at
a
time:
intro
evolution,
you
know,
sig
quotes
or.
B
D
It's
also
one
of
the
most
complicated
pieces
of
the
code
base,
just
because
there's
so
much
nuance
with
how
it
plays
with
underlying
systems,
and
especially
like
now
with
windows.
You
sort
of
have
this
forking
of
the
node
codebase.
A
D
It
is
it's
incredibly
difficult
to
get
into,
but
it's
really
needed
and
it's
it's
that's
sort
of
like.
As
far
as
a
general
call
to
action
like
I
will
say,
it'd
be
difficult
for
your
part-time
contributor
to
get
started
in
it,
but
like.
A
To
see
if,
like
you're,
if
you're
getting
contribut,
if
you're
looking
to
contribute
as
part
of
your
work
as
a
programmer
like
node,
is
a
place
to
be
influential
and
effective,.
D
If
you
have
like
deep
understanding
of
linux
like
that,
is
one
of
the
best
places
to
dive
into
and
again,
this
is
something
like
dawn
derrick
like
derek
clayton,
when
he
used
to
be
more
involved
with
node
nice
and
like
alana,
and
sergey
too
has
the
two
people
that
have
that
can
talk
about
how
it's
been
getting
started
in
it.
C
C
B
C
A
Oh,
no,
that's
really
cool,
so
yeah
I'll
put
them
into
the
backlog.
Chris
accepted
one
of
them,
but
next
meeting
I'll.
If
there
are
people
looking
for
author
opportunities,
I'll
I'll
recommend
them,
it's
a
great
idea.
A
A
Okay,
well
with
that,
I'm
gonna
stop.
The
recording
people
are
welcome
to
hang
out
and
chat
for
a
bit,
but
thanks
all
and
have
a
wonderful
friday.