►
From YouTube: Layer5 Newcomers Meeting (Dec 02nd, 2021)
Description
Layer5 Newcomers Meeting - December 02nd, 2021
Join the community at https://layer5.io/community
Find Layer5 on:
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LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/layer5
Docker Hub: https://hub.docker.com/u/layer5/
A
A
So
hey
everyone,
my
name
is
anita
human
and
I'll,
be
the
facilitator
for
today's
newcomers
call.
I
am
also
a
mesh
mate
in
layer,
5
community
and
my
day
is
going
great.
I
traveled
down
to
where
my
family
is
so.
I'm
excited
I've
not
got
to
see
them,
though,
but
I'm
looking
forward
to
that.
So
my
day
is
going
great.
So
far,
all
right,
that's
just
about
me
and
my
day
so
sahih
uti
might
give
us
a
quick,
intro
and
telling
us
how
your
day
is.
B
Yeah
so
yeah,
my
tv
was
very
good
and
I'm
sorry
from
india
and
currently
pursuing
ptech
csc
from
vip
epe
and
like
now
I
contributed
like
five.
I
solved
around
five
issues
till
now.
I
will
do
some
more.
So
that's
right,
I
guess.
C
To
go
next,
yeah
sure
anita
hi,
everyone
nice
to
meet
you
all.
So
I'm
just
graduated
from
new
delhi,
india,
igd2w
near
university.
C
I
love
to
connect
with
people
and
and
I'm
also
thanks
for
the
warm
welcome
and
yeah
and
I'm
looking
forward
to
contribute.
I
have
to
get
introduced
with
all
the
tech
stack
and
from
the
github
repository,
so
I'm
going
through
the
documentation
and
I
would
like
to
pass
on
to
bami.
D
D
I
think
our
nation
is
bad,
but
then
the
person
just
continues
with
this
right.
D
D
D
Okay,
so
moving
on
okay
moving
on
since
the
park
is
shining
spring
already,
so
it's
going
to
be
those
spells
while
I've
just
talked
about
anita,
so
there
are
five
landing
parts.
D
D
F
Now
I'm
working
for
the
one,
the
blockchain
company
name,
line,
speed
in
ho
chi
minh
city
and
actually
I'm
working
from
home,
yeah,
yeah
and
izzo
is
a
company
company
life
company
community
several
months
ago.
But
today
this
is
my
first
meeting
this
newcomer
meeting.
D
F
Sorry,
we
have
three
yeah.
Actually
I'm
a
product
owner
product
owner
of
my
company
focus
on
the
it's
about
the
web
tree
factory
and
bitcoin
technology.
Lining
network.
D
F
G
Hey
guys,
hey
I'm
just
here
to
help
just
here
to
hang
out,
it
looks
like
we
might
not
have
mesh
mate,
anita,
so
deepak
and
bommy
just
tap
tag
me
in
when
you
need
me.
G
Yeah,
you
know
yeah,
you
know
there
is
maybe
bomby
and
deepak
do
either
of
you
two
mind.
If
I
tag
in
if
I
change
that.
G
Is
that
okay,
all
right?
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Kindly
I
realize
it's.
The
both
of
your
networks
are
having
so
a
bit
of
challenges.
So
it's
a
little
bit
hard
to
hear
you,
and
I
know
that
that's
what's
going
on
for
mesh
mate,
anita
as
well,
and
so
man
great
what
a
great
opportunity
for
me
I
get
to
talk,
so
this
is.
G
You
don't
have
to
ask
me
twice
like
all
right,
good,
I'm
gonna,
I'm
gonna
try
to
share
the
meeting
minutes
so
by
the
way
for
it's
very
nice
to
meet
sahil.
He
and
I
have
interacted
a
bit
on
slack
already
so
good
good
to
be
on
this
on
well
sahil.
I
suspect
this
isn't
your
first
call
so
anyway,
it's
nice
to
be
on
a
call
with
you.
So
hong
li
is
here
and
so,
and
so
is.
G
Why
can
I
not
see
the
participants
names
and
so
is
prashi
how
nice
prashi
and
sahil
and
hungli
so
so
we're
having
as
it
turns
out
today's
session,
is
for
you,
which
means
before
we
really
get
into
explaining
all
of
what
layer
five
does
and
how
to
get
engaged?
And
you
know
the
various
initiatives
that
are
going
on
it'd
be
great
to
take
a
moment
to
have
you
say,
hi
to
just
get
to
know
you
a
little
bit
to
put
you
all
on
the
spot,
randomly
sahil.
G
Oh
okay
got
it
okay,
I
I
missed
out
and
that's
for
prashi
and
hong,
since
we
haven't
had
a
chance
to
interact.
F
Hi
everyone
hi
my
name
night
to
meet
you
out
here.
My
name
is
living
in
hanoi,
vietnam.
G
F
Yeah
nice,
I'm
working
for
the
one,
the
blockchain
company
name
line,
speed
in
ho
chi
minh
city,
our
our
company
focus
on
the
technology,
knighting
network
and
bitcoin
police,
digital
wallets.
F
I
I
knew
the
the
layer
5
community
via
the
the
is
about
the
the
fellowship
of
nina
foundation,
yeah.
G
G
Nice,
a
very
good
do
you
of
your
technical
focus
at
the
moment
for
or
either
of
your
current
technical
capabilities
or
of.
F
F
My
my
strength
is
at
least
about
the
python.
It's
nano's
self
screen,
yeah.
G
Perfect,
perfect,
okay,
there's
a
there's
like
three
ongoing
initiatives
that
pop
to
mind
that
might
interest
you
or
that
might
really
tap
into
some
of
the
abilities
that
you
just
mentioned
about
automation,
shell
scripting
python,
but
you'll
have
to
as
I
describe
those
you'll
have
to
tell
me
if
those
are
of
interest
or
not
so
so
that's
great!
That's
great!.
G
C
Yeah
sure
hi
lee
it's
really
nice
to
meet
you
actually
so
hi
everyone.
I
am
prashi
and
I
just
graduated,
so
I
have
passed
internship
experience
as
full
stack
developer
extensively.
My
interest
lies
in
front
end
and
I
hope
your
day
is
going
good
and
I
am
here
to
collaborate
with
people
and
learn
more
about
open
stores.
So
I
would
say,
like
my
strengths,
are
javascript
and
react
and
I'm
looking
forward
to
contributing-
and
this
is
my
first
call.
G
Nice,
it's
the
first
call
for
sahil
as
well
nice
and
then
good,
okay
sahil.
I
feel
like
I
feel
like
I
know
you
already
so
in
the
interest
of
time,
I'm
gonna,
I'm
gonna,
move
forward
a
little
bit,
I'm
gonna
at
some
point
I
will
stop
yapping
and
anita
and
and
deepak
and
bomi
will
kind
of
fill
in
some
of
the
blanks
that
I
miss
it's
really
nice
yeah.
So
it's
really
nice
to
meet
each
of
the
three
of
you.
G
I
it's
only
been
like
there's
a
couple
thousand
people
here
and
I've
talked
to
almost
all
of
them.
Personally.
Lately
it's
been
pretty
tough
to
kind
of
keep
up,
but
the
community
isn't
about
me.
I
was
just
going
to
reflect
on
the
fact
that
I've
spoken
to
the
vast
majority
of
them
and
they
only
like
twice.
Has
it
been
the
case
that
someone
said
I
just
I'm
really
into
some
other
tech
or
something
else
that
we
didn't?
G
You
know
we
weren't
actively
doing
something
with
which
means
that
we're
doing
a
lot
a
lot
of
different
things.
So,
okay,.
G
G
And
we
should
try
to
make
this
interactive
so
prashi.
Do
you
recall,
did
you
get
like
this
direct
message
sent
from
a
bot.
G
Nice,
okay,
we're
not
always
it's
not
always
obvious
that
people
are
getting
those
but
there's
a
ton
of
info
in
there,
so
good,
so
mesh,
mate,
anita
and
bobby
and
deepak
and
vedant,
and
other
people
that
have
done
a
lot
toward
trying
to
collect
up
resources
and
they
used
to
be
scattered
in
a
bunch
of
different
places
and
anymore
they're
coming
together
in
a
link
that
we're
trying
to
figure
out
how
to
proliferate.
G
It's.
The
community
handbook,
like
this
link
in
particular,
is
a
great
one
to
keep
on
your
nightstand
just
so
as
you
doze
off
to
sleep
you'd
be
reading
through
it
perusing
it
dreaming
of
all
the
projects.
There's
a
lot
of
roles.
There's
a
lot
of
projects,
a
lot
of
tech,
different
ways
to
look
at
what
goes
on
in
the
community.
One
of
the
ways
is
to
like
look
at
the
purpose
of
the
projects
and
what
what
they're
doing
and
whether
or
not
their
goals
and
their
mission
statements
so
to
speak.
G
You
know
speak
to
you
whether
or
not
those
intrigue,
and
you
want
to
dive
in
from
that
perspective,
a
different
way
of
looking
at
the
projects
and
what
they've
got
going
on
is
just
it's
more
from
a
technical
perspective
of
like
what
technologies
or
frameworks
are
they
using?
Are
they?
Is
this
a
front-end
focused
effort?
Is
this
a
back-end
focused
effort,
just
automation,
focused
or
middleware,
or
just
have
a
lot
to
do
with
a
particular
field
of
technology,
either
around
like
networking
or
surface
mesh
or
a
particular
cloud
kubernetes
more.
G
So
there's
a
lot
each
of
the
things
that
I've
just
said:
chaos
engineering,
like
those.
G
All
those
projects
are
here,
there's
you'll
find
like
by
measure
of-
I
guess
by
the
mean,
was
it
the
mean
yeah
by
the
by
by
count
the
between
golang
and
react.js?
Those
are
probably
the
two
pieces
of
tech
that
get
used
the
most,
but
there's
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
in
between
we
were.
I
was
just
having
a
conversation
with
well
with
a
current
employee
at
layer
5
who
started
out
just
as
the
three
of
you
just
kind
of
mentioned,
like
he
was
here
to
learn
here.
To
do
some
things.
G
He
started
contributing
on
layer,
five
dot
io
just
on
the
website
and
then
did
a
bunch
of
other
things
and
went
through
an
internship
and
then
and
we
couldn't
get
enough
of
them,
and
so
he
asked
for
him
to
come
on
and
anyway,
the
point
is,
he
was
talking
about
a
github
action,
so
I
don't
even
know
that
we
have
these
listed,
but
they're
pretty
cool
to
talk
about
them
briefly,
because
this
may
interest
hung
and
actually
hung.
I
was
just
talking
to
an
intel
engineer.
G
Of
well,
I
don't
know
where
he
lives
in
china,
but
but
he's
going
to
help
out
at
kubecon
china,
mesh
mate
anita,
has
a
talk
at
kubecon
china.
G
G
The
github
action
is
what
it'll
do
is
so
in
service
mesh
performance.
This
project
is
a
specification.
It
defines
how
to
measure
the
performance
of
service
meshes
and
so
without
going
into
a
bunch
of
details
like
it.
Just
I'll.
Just
simply
say
that
it
tries
to
define
a
common
way
of
measuring
a
common
way
of
capturing
that
and
some
of
the
code
that
actually
does
capture
service
mesh
performance.
G
That
code
will
spin
up.
It
will
use
measurey
to
spin
up
any
number
any
number
of
service
meshes
and
test
them
like
generate
a
bunch
of
load
against
them
and
measure
how
well
they
respond.
G
And
I'm
just
going
down
here,
so
there
is
a
github
action.
There's
a
there's
like
five
in
the
community.
You
can
see
the
main
language,
at
least
measured
by
github
is.
G
Is
this
being
shell
shell
script,
so
this
particular
action
is
actively
being
worked
on
as
a
matter
of
fact
we're
going
to
talk
about
it
in
an
upcoming
cncf
meeting
later
today,
in
about
four
hours
five
hours
remind
me,
we'll
we'll
get
a
link,
you
all
are
welcome
to
join
if
this
interests,
so
jing
hong,
you
should
be
there
and
and
some
other
folks,
some
people
from
red
hat
google
cisco
were
there
last
time
so
who
who
all
is
familiar
with?
Who
is
yeah?
G
G
And
for
those
of
you
that
I've
known
for
a
long
time,
this
is
a
chance
to
embarrass
yourself
like
it
doesn't
matter.
I
don't
care
if
you
know
it
or
not,
but
like
this
is
a
great
chance
to
just
try
to
articulate
it
anyway,
and
I
will
only
think
more
of
you
for
taking
an
attempt,
anita.
G
Vedant,
like
what
does
a
github
action
mean
to
you.
G
No
I'm
just
kidding.
I
was
just
talking
to
myself
since
that's
what
I'm
doing
anyway,
yeah
no
problem
vadon,
so
moving
down
the
line,
have
you
gotten
a
chance
to
look
at
the
concept
of
a
github
action
before,
because
this
might
be
of
interest
to
you.
F
I
never
worked
with
github
action
before
I
only
work
with
gitlab
yeah.
Oh.
G
Nice
yeah
very
so
extremely
similar.
Actually,
it's
kind
of
funny
sid
their
their
founder.
I've
spent
a
fair
bit
of
time
with
get
lab
founders
sid
and
some
of
their
I've
worked
with
some
of
their
their
leadership
in
the
past
at
cisco,
actually
and
man.
G
I
love
the
company
culture
of
being,
like
totally
open,
they're,
probably
the
most
open
company
they're,
the
most
open
company
that
I
know
of
it's
funny,
because,
as
the
ceo
of
twitter,
jack,
dorsey
stepped
down,
that
was
like
his
one
wish
for
twitter
was
for
it
to
be
the
the
most
open
company.
It's
like
you
get
a
long
way
to
catch
up
to
get
that
so
anyway,
get
lab
concepts
and
git
lab's
ability
to
do
some
pretty
intriguing
things
around
continuous
integration
is
really
the
same
area
of
focus
for
github
actions.
G
Github
actions
are
a
way
of
running
of
doing
well
of
doing
continuous
integration,
that's
what
their
their
core
focus
is,
although
the
reality
is
github
actions
and
github
workflows,
they're
actually
like
hung
speaking
of
you
being
at
a
digital
currency,
focused,
and
you
know,
place
of
employment
like
they're.
A
great
way
to
do
free,
bitcoin
mining,
because
you
can
run
almost
whatever
process
you
want
to
inside
of
these
workflows,
so
so
most
so,
okay,
let's
take
a
look
at
one
of
these,
for
as
an
example.
G
Inside
of
a
workflow,
the
workflows
themselves
are
generally
defined
in
just
this
yaml
syntax.
So
this
particular
action
is,
is
a
combination
of
a
few
workflows.
The
difference
between
a
github
workflow
and
a
github
action
is
not.
The
is
just
that
a
github
action
is
basically
a
curated
set
of
workflows.
G
Workflows
can
like
build
a
project,
so,
let's
so
so,
to
give
like
a
real
simple
example,
briefly,
layer,
five
dot
io.
This
is
a
website,
that's
run.
Actually
sahil
now
knows,
I
think
it
was
sale.
Now
knows
that
this
is
run
off
of
github
pages,
so
layer,
five,
that
I
o
is
a
site.
G
That's
built
on
gatsby,
that's
just
a
static
content,
static
content,
site,
static
content,
site
generator,
it's
what
gatsby
is
it's
react
based
and
when
it's
done
building
the
site,
building
all
the
static
artifacts
of
like
html
files
and
javascript
files,
css
files,
image
files,
all
that
static
content
that
doesn't
require
a
web
server
or
a
database
behind
it
to
run,
because
these
are
just
against
static
files
that
sit
on
a
file
system
and
get
served
over
http
github
gives
you
static
site
hosting
for
free,
and
so
that's
what
layer?
G
Five
is
using
this
layer,
five
dot
io
website
is
hosted
at
github.com
layer,
five
io
slash
layer,
five,
so
it's
this
layer,
five
repo.
This
is
the
source
for
the
layer,
five
site.
So
if
we
go
over
to
assets
like
brand
there's,
there's
vedant
there's
a
number
of
like
just
as
a
random
example
like
there's
a
number
of
brand
kits
out
here,
like
there's
a
mesh
re
brand
kit.
G
This
file
after
the
github
workflow
executes
all
of
the
static
content
is
then
posted
for
on
layer,
five
dot,
io,
and
so
if
we
were
to
go
to
verify
with,
if
I've
got
ios
brand
and
we
were
to
find
like
the
mesherie
brand
kit,
this
zip
file
here.
G
It
mastery
hyphen
brand
hyphen
kit,
dot,
zip,
it's
just
the
same
as
well.
That's
the
exact
same
file
that
we
just
saw,
I'm
here
and
so
github
is
allowing
us
to
host
this
site
for
free.
Why?
Because
this
particular
repository
is
a
public
one.
It's
it's
open
and
then
we've
had
quite
a
few
people,
helping
us
make
it
what
it
is
some
of
you
on
the
call
anyway.
The
point
is
well
the
way
that
it's
coded
up
and
pros.
G
You
might
be
familiar
with
this
and
if
you
aren't,
this
might
be
an
area
of
intrigue
for
you
as
you
further
your
your
react
skills
and
like
it's
a
good
way
to
dive
into
graphql
as
well,
because
graphql
is
part
and
parcel
to
the
way
that
gatsby
or
the
way
that
you
can
use
gatsby
and
we
are
using
gatsby
with
graphql
there's,
actually
there's
a
a
fantastic
gal
in
the
community,
her
name's,
deborah
priya,
her
last
name
is.
G
G
Really
nice
in
individual,
she
does
quite
well
with
visual
design
as
well
as
like
makes
quite
the
mess
in
a
good
way
of
the
layer.
Five
that
I
owe
site
she's.
She
is
actively
well.
I
hope
that
she
is
I'm
going
to
talk
to
her
in
20
minutes,
she's
actively
working
toward
I'm
creating
this.
G
So
I'm
going
to
drop
this
in
because
prashi
I'd
be
curious
to
know
if
this
is
like
stuff
that
that
you
know,
like
the
back
of
your
hand
like
this,
this
is
a
super,
easy
issue
for
you
or
if
this
one
stretches
you
a
little
bit
and
would
make
you
learn
some
after
you
take
a
look,
it'd
be
nice
to
know
that
way.
We
can
try
to
orient
you
toward
issues
where
you
would
be
successful,
but
also
issues
that
would
cause
you
to
cause
you
to
grow
and
to
learn
a
little
bit.
G
Okay,
cool.
So
let
me
let
me
step
back
in
that
digression
and
just
say
great,
so
we're
talking
about
ghetto
actions,
get
up
workflows
the
fact
that
you
can
build
a
static
content
site
like
player5.io.
It's
hosted
here
on
github
pages,
like
by
the
time
that
you're
the
site,
so
it's
like.
What's
the
process
to
building
the
site?
G
Okay?
Well,
well,
the
pro
the
way
that
it
works
hung
on
get
on
github,
for
if
you
want,
you
can
build
this
site
using
jenkins
or
tectonic,
or
you
know
like
all
travis,
ci
or
whatever,
or
you
can
actually
build
this
site
using
gitlab
if
you
want,
but
but
if
you
want
to
use
github's
kind
of
free,
compute
or
free
workflows,
free
up
to
a
certain
point
that
the
way
that
those
are
defined
is
under
a
folder.
G
Tend
to
or
shepard
your
repo
one
of
the
things
that
happens
in
your
repo
are
these
these
workflows,
and
so
this
particular
repo,
the
layer.
Five
one
has
these
one.
You
know
one
two,
three
four
five
has
a
few
workflows
that
the
most
intriguing
of
which
are
the
ones
that
will
build
the
site
like
generate
the
static
content
and
then
deposit
those
artifacts,
those
files
so
that
they
can
be
served
over
the
domain
layer,
5.
G
io,
so
the
syntax
that
the
github
workflow
syntax
that
is
used
to
perform
these
tasks
like
do
a
build,
is
well
it
looks.
It
looks
like
this,
so
okay,
so
it's
like
hey.
What
does
this
workflow
do?
Well,
it
builds
and
previews
this
website.
Well,
when
does
this
workflow
trigger
like?
When?
Does
it
actually
perform
a
build?
G
Oh
well,
it
triggers
on
a
pull
request
event,
specifically
when
there's
a
pull
request
against
the
master
branch,
because
there's
a
bunch
of
contributors
that
come
by
and
they'll
create
other
branches
and
they'll
do
things
and
work
on
stuff,
but
but
we
want
to
build
a
site
preview.
You
know
before
you
merge
the
pr
it's
like.
Really
nice
to
be
able
to
just
quickly
click
on
a
link
to
check
out
a
preview
of
what
was
changed
and
that's
what
this
workflow
is
doing.
G
It's
like
okay,
so
it
triggers
when
there's
a
pull
request
and
when
the
pull
request
is
against
the
master
branch.
Great,
because
that's
the
branch
that
gets
that's
excessive
branch
that
we
use
to
like
publish
the
site
on,
and
but
it
only
triggers
not
on
every
pull
request
event.
But
when
a
pull
request
is
either
opened
when
someone
resyncs
their
branch
or
when
maybe
a
pull
request
is
reopened.
Okay,
great,
then
that's
when
it
triggers
and
and
where.
But
what
does
it
do?
G
Well,
it
does
these
jobs
so
that
you
can
name
your
jobs,
and
I
guess
it's
there's
just
one
job,
because
you
can
tell
by
indention
here
that,
like
there's
only
one
job,
someone
gave
it
the
name
site
preview.
I
think
it
was
mesh
mate.
The
kill
he's
a
great
mesh
mate
to
connect
with
by
the
way
is
anita
still
on
so
okay
she's,
a
great
mesh
mate
to
connect
with
as
well
just.
G
But
I
guess
knowing
all
the
particulars
here
is,
isn't
the
point.
The
point
was
to
introduce
you
to
github
actions
and
to
do
that,
you
want
to
take
a
look
at
github
workflows.
This
is
a
sample
workflow
the
job.
It
runs
three
steps.
Actually,
as
it
turns
out,
the
steps
are
largely
actions.
G
Then
you
want
when
it's
done
building
you
have
all
your
artifacts,
you
zip
them
all
up
and
then
upload
them
so
that
this
to
a
preview
locate
to
a
preview,
location
wow
that
was
really
concise
and
it
skipped
over
all
the
details
like
where
are
all
the
details
about
how
this
actually
worked.
Oh
those
details
are
inside
this
action
and
and
inside
this
action
about
how
to
upload
stuff.
G
G
That
we
can
look
at
like
when
we
go
back
to
the
github
action
that
caused
this
whole
conversation
to
happen.
In
the
first
place,
is
this
service
mesh
performance
action?
It
does
a
couple
of
things.
It
has
these
shell
scripts
that
stand
up.
Kubernetes
stand
up
meshery
as
a
multi-mesh
manager,
deploy
a
service
mesh,
deploy
a
sample.
G
They
want,
they
want
to
run
it,
it's
so
much
more
concise
for
them
and
easy
for
them
to
use
it.
So
if
we
we
go
out
to
the
marketplace
and
look
at
this
action,
if
someone
wants
to
come
run
these
tests
themselves
in
their
environment,
they
can
be
a
consumer
of
this
action.
So
these
folks
produced
a
consumable
action
out
there
that
that
well,
microsoft
has
been
talking
about
and
so
has
nginx
because
they're
using
this
to
be
they're
using
it.
Why?
G
Okay,
I'll
stop
there
because
I
think
I've
kind
of
done
justice
to
like
hey,
where
we're
using
some
shells
scripting
some
currently
active
project,
that's
going
on
and
how
workflows
what
workflows
and
actions
are
and
I've
either
done
a
good
job
of
that
or
I've
totally
confused
people,
because
I
kind
of
jumped
around.
I
wanted
to
make
sure
that
prashi
understood
in
part
like
where
some
github
or
some
react
is
being
used.
There's
one
thing
that
I
do
want
to
point
out
before
I
stop
talking
and-
and
we
let
you
guys,
ask
some
questions.
G
One
thing
I
wanted
to
point
out
was
so
so
bami
bami
who's
on
the
call
is
a
community
manager
here
in
the
layer,
five
community
and
she
was
just
answering
one
of
the
community
members
questions
and
and
by
the
way,
when
you
have
questions
like,
I
highly
encourage
that
you
ask
those
here
on
disqus.layer5.io
a
couple
of
reasons:
one
because
people
ask
a
lot
of
questions
in
slack
and
slack
has
a
very
short-term
memory.
G
But
it
also
it
also
works
out
well
because
then
other
people
can
learn.
As
you
ask
the
questions,
you
get
credit
for
asking
your
questions.
G
Someone
had
just
asked
about
a
mesh
mate
and
the
answer
is
really
relevant
because
in
part
part
of
the
answer
was
that
this
this
individual
saying,
hey,
hey,
I'm
new
I'd
like
to
hook
up
with
the
mesh
mate.
They
look
amazing
by
the
way
I'm
kind
of
focused
on
javascript
mommy
was
pointing
them
in
the
right
direction
and
part
of
pointing
them
in
the
right
direction
was
to
highlight,
like
hey,
here's.
G
Here's
an
example
of
something
that's
been
done
with
javascript
with
react
brand
new
on
the
layer,
5
site.
Here's
a
massive
effort,
massive
in
a
good
way
to
re-factor
mescheri's
ui
meshre
has
a
react-based
user
interface.
G
I
won't
start
to
describe
the
rest
of
it
because
there's
kind
of
a
lot
to
it,
we're
about
like
right
now,
it's
actually
it's
actually
just
started:
we're
refactoring
the
ui
we're
going
to
bring
in
redux
and
some
observables
and
some
other
good
stuff.
There's
a
I'm
a
collection
of
people
that
are
working
on
this
and
you
can
see
who's
working
on
it
here,
there's
a
lot
more,
a
lot
more
to
do.
G
Nit
dish
is,
and
scienton
and
there's
others,
but
these
are
good
individuals
to
connect
with
on
this
topic,
also,
there's
a
whole
call
on
mondays,
that's
dedicated
to
just
things
that
are
focused
on
front
end,
so
the
the
call
on
mondays
is
a
good,
so
vedant
is
on
the
call
he's
been
doing
a
number
of
front
end
things
across
on
a
bunch
of
different
repositories
here,
so
good
hong,
were
you
going
to
ask
a
question
a
minute
ago.
G
G
Great,
as
a
matter
of
fact
like
you
can
always
ask
here
as
well.
This
is
the
service
mesh
performance,
topic
or
threat.
You
know
area
great
to
ask
here
when
you
do
I'll,
probably
introduce
you
to
three
or
four
people,
one
of
them
being
the
intel
engineer.
I
was
just
mentioning
and
so
actually
we're
to
put
this
intel
engineer
on
stage
at
kubecon
just
to
try
to
be
nice.
G
So
that's
good.
I
totally
skipped
over
all
the
standard
intro
of
material
like
like
if
you're
gonna
spend
time
here,
which
is
like
one
of
the
best
places
I
think
to
to
learn
and
one
of
the
safest
environments
to
ask
really
stupid
questions.
In
I
mean
I
do
it
all
the
time
so
like
like
spend
time
going
through
these
links.
There's
a
lot
of
questions
that
have
been
answered
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
things.
G
I
think
you
should
look
at
even
if
they
don't
immediately
look
interesting,
because
part
of
the
way
to
look
at
the
projects
is
also
from
the
perspective
of
roles
that
people
play
in
the
community
so
like
deepak
who's
on
the
call
is
a
fantastic
example
of
someone
who
brings
what's,
what's,
sadly,
something
of
an
uncommon
talent
to
the
community
and
and
I'll
say
it
with
a
chuckle,
because
I
hope
that
it's
a
funny
joke,
but
but
but
it's
not,
but
it's
kind
of
a
sad
joke
and
that's
like
there's
a
number
of
things
that
he
brings.
G
How
is
that
a
missing
talent,
I
don't
know,
but
grammar
is
a
challenge
for
a
lot
of
us
and
and,
as
such,
he's
he's
doing
a
number
of
things,
but,
like
one
of
those
things
is
we've
been
trying
to
tell
begin
to
tell
the
world
about
the
projects
and
what
we're
doing
and
attract
more
people
to
it
and
give
people
opportunities
to
make
an
impact
and
get
their
name
out
there
and
learn
stuff.
And
all
you
know
all
these.
G
These
things
and
part
of
wooing
people
are
part
of
touch
attracting
people
that
we
haven't,
that
we
don't
know
that
none
of
us
know
is
well
is
through
google,
it's
like
when
people,
I
don't
know,
I'm
just
going
to
randomly.
Do
this
keep
my
fingers
crossed
if
people
search
google
for.
G
G
If
we're
even
on
page
two,
oh
so
disappointing
a
book
that
I
wrote,
is
there
that's
good,
a
a
comparison
piece
that
calls
us
out
that
points
to
layer.
Five?
Is
there
that's
good,
but
oh,
it's
so
sad
we're
not
on
the
third.
So
then
you
know
there's
like
0.0005
percent
of
the
world
that
makes
it
to
page
three.
G
There
we
are
point
is
he's
helping
us
in
a
trip.
You
know
like
in
a
significant
way,
which
is
to
say,
we've
done
a
ton
of
interesting
things.
We
just
need
to
go.
Make
sure
we
have
some
decent
grammar
is
one
way
of
putting
it
so
that
people
can
take
a
look
at
stuff.
G
G
That
would
be
fantastic
navendi
who
has
started
navenu
and,
I
suppose,
have
started
to
kind
of
write
that
up
like
what
are
these
actions,
but
there's
a
ton
of
other
things
that
we
didn't
cover,
and
it
doesn't
mean
that
it
has
to
go
very
deep.
Technically,
it
really
doesn't
actually
it's
kind
of
nice
if
it's
not
technical,
because
it's
just
like
all
that
crap
that
I
just
said.
G
G
Oh
by
the
way,
little
inside,
so
it's
not
exactly
a
joke,
but
devil
priya
bhattacharjee
goes
by.
G
She
goes
by
this
and
why?
Why?
Because
because
she
works
that
fast,
like
I
don't
get
it
like,
we
talk
about
something
and
then
like
five
minutes
later
she's
like
yeah.
No,
I
already
did
that
it's
kind
of
her
general
response,
so
she's
earned
herself
the
zap
nickname.
G
Cool,
I
actually
need
to
jump
off
to
prepare
for
my
next
meeting,
but
vedant
and
bomi
and
deepak
are
here,
I'm
gonna
hand
off
a
host
in
case
people
have
ongoing
questions.
H
D
Hi
hi
certainly
I've
said
everything
and
do
we
I
mean
now,
hong
kong,
do
you
have
any
questions.
D
Hi
hi:
do
you
have
a
question.
G
D
Okay,
you
can
always
gather
in
this
class.
Did
you
get
a
personal
message
telling
you
give
me
some
couple
of
links
when
you
join
the
community?
Can
you
get
that?
Okay.
D
Yeah,
I
mean
so,
you
could
see
the
the
roadmap,
the
contributors
journey,
and
all
of
that
you
could
see
that
in
that
that
document
immediately
you
signed
up
as
a
member
or
as
a
newcomer,
you
will
get
those
all
of
those
documents,
so
you'll
be
able
to
see
the
roadmap
over
there.
Five
and
all
what
is
done,
your
project,
you
can
also
check
out
the
vehicles
we
have
on
people,
and
all
of
that,
for
you
is
oh,
they
are
all
in
that
documentation.
D
D
All
right,
so
it's
so
nice
to
see
everybody
here
today
and
I
really
hope
so.
I
really
hope
we
all
join
again
next
week
and
also
don't
forget
to
join
the
community
meeting
on
friday.
Please
you
will
definitely
get
a
reminder.
So
please
don't
forget
to
join
the
community
on
friday.
That's
tomorrow
and
also
join
the
subscribe
to
me,
and
if
you
have
any
questions,
just
ask
openly
you
can
go
to
the
new
commerce
channel
or
the
general
channel
or
the
mystery
channel.
D
Just
make
sure
you
are
asking
your
questions
and
all
your
questions
will
be
answered
by
most
esteemed
messages
and
community
managers
and
every
other
person.
There's
always
someone
to
answer
your
question.
So
thank
you.
Everyone
do
have
a
lovely
day
enjoy
the
rest
of
your
day.
All
your
nights
as
the
case
may
be
all
right.
Bye.
Everybody.