►
From YouTube: Node.js Public Board Meeting
Description
A
Whew
then,
before
the
beta
watch
and
the
technical
reviewers
to
help
us,
if
you
are
of
someone
who
has
the
time
and
interested
in
certification,
Annie
Fisher
is
program
managing
that
and
we
would
love
for
anyone
who
is
interested
in
participating
in
it
to
help
us.
So
please
contact
Annie
right
and
then
the
final
thing
on
today's
agenda
is
zippy.
Keeton
and
Greg.
Wallace
are
going
to
give
an
update
on
where
we're
heading
for
our
marketing
in
2018,
so
I
think
zippy
are
have
we
permitted
zippy
Annie.
C
We
now
have
about
10,000
folks
that
subscribe
to
it,
which
is
really
really
great
other
things
to
just
kind
of
call
out
here,
are
just
general
coverage
around
nodejs
foundation
and
what
this
really
means.
It's
just
what
we're
pushing
out
whether
it's
blogs
around
release
updates,
know,
certification
program.
How
know
Jeff's
developers
can
get
hired
in
a
job
with
no
Jeff.
Our
focus
is
really
around
promoting
nodejs
about
5%,
it's
sometimes
no
GS
foundation
and
that
really
related
to
our
efforts
with
nodejs
Interactive
and
when
we
have
new
members
and
stuff.
C
C
We
did
more
of
an
ad
hoc
approach
to
speaking
opportunities
this
year,
you'll
see
a
lot
more
of
that
we'll
go
into
it
during
further
slides,
but
we
spoke
at
six
different
conferences
and
I'm
talking
about
know,
Jeff's
foundation,
members
doing
that
we
worked
with
a
few
partners
to
have
helped
them
host
a
booth
at
dr.,
calm,
I.
Think
one
of
the
big
wins
first,
this
year
was
really
know
Jess
collection.
This
is
a
effort
that
we
do
with
the
community
committee
trying
to
get
more
nodejs
content
and
voices
out
there
on
our
social
handles.
C
So
kind
of
going
to
educate-
and
this
is
just
kind
of
telling
nodejs
stories
and
how
node.js
is
doing
so.
We
had
a
lot
of
respondents
to
survey
I
think
we're
going
to
try
to
really
up
level
that
this
year,
key
cities.
We
had
to
we're
rethinking
that
program
and
trying
to
get
more
folks
telling
us
how
they're
using
IDs
and
then
just
kind
of
consistently
talking
about
interface
conversations.
So
that's
again
a
really
high-level
overview.
C
B
Like
bring
your
max
data,
so
we
thought
about
everything
that
we
were
going
to
be
doing
this
year.
We
bucketed
them
into
the
following
three
categories:
content,
outreach
and
engagement,
and
so
we've
got
a
few
slides
on
each
of
these.
That
we'll
talk
through
and
zippy
and
I
are
gonna
kind
of
bounce
back
and
forth
a
little
bit
high
level
from
a
Content
perspective.
B
And
lastly,
adding
a
technical
content,
work
stream
from
an
outreach
perspective
and
Judy's
going
to
talk
mostly
about
this,
but
I'll
speak
to
a
little
bit.
You
know
we
want
to
make
sure
that
the
the
partnership
with
the
ecosystem
is
really
really
strong.
So
we've
got
a
few
things
going
on
there.
We
really
would
love
to
know
which
events
do
you
all
think
we
should
go
to
you,
so
we've
got
a
slide
where
we've
identified
a
handful,
but
we'd
love
to
hear
from
everyone.
What
what
events
do
you
think
you
know?
B
Where
would
you
like
to
see
the
new
foundation
participating
in
and
then
you
know
continue?
Our
PR
are
really
our
communications
program
with
a
you
know,
maybe
a
slight
shift
away
from
social,
not
not
stopping
it
by
any
means,
but
just
lights
shift
towards
towards
PR
and
let's
see
and
then
the
last
engagement.
B
So
we
want
to
continue
all
of
the
really
great
work
that
has
been
happening
over
the
last
several
months
to
build
bridges
between
the
community
and
the
foundation
and
and
I
feel
like
that
is
working
really
well
from
a
marketing
perspective,
and
we
want
to
make
sure
that
we
keep
doing
that
and
then
look
at
adding
a
lightweight
Ambassador
Program.
So
if
you
could
switch
the
next
slide
for
me,
please.
B
Right
so
accelerating
end-user
and
enterprise
content,
so
we've
talked
a
little
bit
about
the
the
application
showcase.
If
you
haven't
seen
it
yet,
I
would
really
encourage
you
to
check
it
out,
oops
thanks.
So
basically
what
we
did
is
we
opened
up
a
form
that
said:
hey
are
you
building
stuff
with
no
js'
tell
us
about
it
and
in
the
forum
we
asked
people
to
indicate
the
type
of
application.
It
is
so
full
stack,
node,
orchestration,
IOT,
there's,
probably
fifteen
different
categories,
tell
us
the
other
technology
that
was
used.
B
You
know,
we
know
that
node
is
deployed
in
two
polyglot
environments
and
is
really
often
used
as
that
glue.
So
we
asked
people
to
indicate
the
other
technology
that
they
used
and
then,
lastly,
what
stage
of
development
are
they
in?
Well,
we
only
launched
it
two
weeks
ago
and
we're
already
up
to
about
ninety
submissions.
Up
40
of
them
have
been
published,
and
so
we
are
really
really
excited
about
this.
It
really
I
think
highlights
the
incredible
diversity
of
ways
that
people
are
using
this
technology.
B
So
you
know
please
help
us
spread
the
word
and
get
your
friends
and
colleagues,
and
you
know
people
that
you
know
who
are
building
great
things
with
node
to
submit
it.
It's
a
it's
a
great
way
to
get
a
little
bit
of
publicity
and-
and
this
is
going
to
become
and
has
already
been
something
that
we've
been
folding
into
our
social
media
outreach.
So
it's
a
great
way
to
get
some
my
balls
on
so
case
studies
zippy,
has
been
doing
a
really
great
job.
With
this
program,
we've
already
got
a
home
away.
B
We've
got
another
one,
that's
going
to
be
coming
out,
I'll
steal
any
thunder,
but
it's
done
and
we're
going
to
be
launching
it.
In
the
next
couple
of
weeks,
we've
got
a
few
more
in
the
pipeline
and
we're
getting
more
aggressive
about
reaching
out
to
people.
So
we
sent
an
email
out
in
in
the
annual
nodejs
user
survey.
We
asked
people
if
they
would
be
willing
to
be
contacted
by
the
foundation.
So
if
we
email
all
of
them
and
said
hey,
you
said
you
would
be
willing
to
be
contacted
by
the
foundation.
B
Here's
some
ways
that
we
can
help
give
you
some
visibility.
You
know
participate
with
us
in
a
case
study.
Do
a
enterprise
conversation
with
us.
Talk
to
the
press,
write
that
kind
of
thing,
and
so
we've
got
a
decent
number
of
people.
Who've
responded
there.
We
also
have
a
case
study
writer,
and
so
this
won't
help
us
with
our
case
studies
this
year,
but
going
into
2019
it's
going
to
give
us
a
really
strong.
B
You
know
backlog
that
we
can
work
with,
so
we're
gonna
have
her
and
maybe
we'll
invite
more
than
one
will
see,
but
we're
gonna
have
at
least
one
writer
come
to
J
s
interactive
in
October
and
schedule
meetings
with
the
end
users
that
are
going
to
be
there
to
to
you,
know
kind
of
get
the
the
meat
going
on
the
case,
studies
and
then
enterprise
conversations.
This
is
a
place
where
we
just
kind
of
do
the
bite-sized
snackable
content.
B
So
we
want
to
continue
that
program
and
we
want
to
branch
out
a
little
bit
and
do
enterprise
technology
conversation,
so
not
just
end-users,
but
also
the
companies
that
are
building
the
technology.
That
is
influencing
enterprise.
Adoption
of
nodejs
we
want
to
do
a
series
where
we
post,
you
know
10
to
15-minute
conversations
on
those
as
well.
Next
slide
I'll
try
to
speed
up
here.
Nobody
want
to
take
too
much
time
on
this
up,
leveling
the
impact
so
of
the
of
the
nodejs
survey
user
survey.
B
So
this
year
we're
really
going
to
be
focusing
on
the
HTML
report.
That's
the
way,
the
audience
that
we
care
most
about
wants
to
consume
data,
I
hats
off
to
note
source
I.
Think
I
thought
there
knew
by
first
report
did
a
really
nice
job
in
this
regard
its
interactive.
You
know
it's
sort
of
snackable.
You
can
share
different
bits
of
it
and
that's
what
we're
aiming
for
here.
So
that's
the
big
strategy.
Our
target
go
live
is
in
April.
B
We
are
gonna,
try
to
host
a
webinar
with
like
a
sneak
peek
of
the
data
for
pressed
and
analysts
to
try
to
generate
a
little
bit
of
buzz
around
it.
But
that's
that's
our
big
focus
here
and
if
anybody
has
questions,
please
stop
me.
I'll
I'll
try
to
keep
an
eye
on
the
chat
and
see
if
there's
questions
looks
like
we're
good
technical
content,
work
stream,
so
something
that
a
lot
of
folks
in
the
community
have
been
talking
about
for
a
while
has
been.
B
How
can
the
foundation
provide
sort
of
a
you
know,
a
vendor
agnostic
set
of
what
I'm
sort
of
loosely
and
I
think
the
working
name
right
now
our
field
guides
right,
so
field
guides
to
the
way
enterprises
can
consume
nodejs.
So
we've
identified
a
bunch
of
topics
and
we
prioritize
them
to
start
with
api's
the
next
one's
going
to
be
on
ions,
then
single
page
apps,
then
mobile
backends,
then
front-end,
optimization
I
couldn't
be
more
excited
by
the
group
of
subject
matter:
experts
who
have
raised
their
hand
and
said
that
they're
willing
to
help.
B
We
have
a
kickoff
call
last
week
with
the
folks
you
see
here
if
you'd
like
to
participate
and
you
are
willing
to
help
write
this
thing.
Please,
let
me
know
right
this
is
we
are
not
limited,
limiting
it
to
two
members
or
anything
like
that.
Al
Tseng
was
the
CTO
I
think
inform
one
of
the
founders
of
strongloop
he's
now
with
a
new
startup
lunch
badger.
If
you
feel
like
you,
can
help
us
make
a
building
api's
field
guide,
you
know
really
amazing
and
awesome
and
have
the
time
to
contribute
shoot
me
an
email.
B
B
All
right,
let's
see
I,
guess
Sydney
how
about
I'll,
take
this
first
column
and
then
I'll
hand
it
over
to
you.
B
B
So
we
are,
you
know,
looking
for
ways
and
I've
already
identified
a
few
and
we're
continuing
to
look
for
ways
that
we
can
partner
not
just
with
the
JSF,
but
also
with
other
projects
that
are,
you
know,
highly
related
to
node
the
cloud
native
computing
foundation.
For
example,
you
know
even
hyper
ledger,
which
is
the
blockchain
project
at
the
Linux
Foundation
one
of
the
most
popular
projects.
So
that's
also
an
umbrella
project
like
CN
CF.
B
So
there's
a
lot
of
different
code
repos
within
hyper
ledger,
nine
of
them
now
one
of
the
most
popular
ones
was
built
with
not-it's.
It's
called
hyper
ledger
composer,
so
you
know
we're
trying
to
find
ways
that
we
can.
You
know
kind
of
exploit
one
of
the
real
strengths
of
node,
which
is
its
polyglot
nature
and
you
know
work
with
adjacent
foundations
here
at
the
Linux
Foundation
to
make
sure
that
we're
you
know
reaching
all
of
the
audiences
that
we
that
we
can
and
telling
the
most
interesting
stories.
B
C
Apologize
I'm
having
a
little
bit
of
technical
difficulties,
so
if
it
becomes
too
unbearable,
please
speak
up
in
terms
of
third
party
strategy
kind
of
broadening
it
up.
I.
Think
one
thing
we're
really
wanting
to
focus
on
this
year
is
a
few
things.
One
is
trying
to
get
mark
at
more
events
peaking.
These
could
be
events
that
focus
on
node.js
and
JavaScript,
but
also
kind
of
ecosystems
that
we're
seeing
nodejs
fall
into
whether
it's
cloud
native
potentially
hyper
ledger.
C
C
Think
one
thing
that
we
are
focused
on
this
year
is
doing
more
Media
Relations
we're
currently
doing
a
messaging
refresh
and
trying
to
find
some
higher-level
stories
around
nodejs
that
we
can
share
with
media
members
and
really
get
some
more
meta-narratives
around
ojs
out.
There
I
think
continuing
to
work
with
analysts,
especially
as
we
see
and
hear
a
lot
of
feedback
with
analysts
who
are
looking
to
better
and
Honda
Jazz
fits
within
different
environments
will
be
a
big
priority
for
this
and
again
to
not
annoy
people
because
I
know
I'm
not
going.
B
Cool
I'll
take
this
one,
so
you
know
I,
think
continuing
to
work
with
the
community
and
find
those
places
where
there's
work
happening
within
the
community,
that
the
foundation
can
support
and
just
find
those
opportunities
to
partner.
So
you
know,
I've
had
the
privilege
of
spending
some
time
with
Michael
Dawson
and
Dan
Shaw
and
and
some
others
on
the
node,
Enterprise
user
forum.
I
think
is
what
this
stands
for.
B
I
might
be
messing
that
up,
but
also
they're,
working
on
a
survey
that
I've
been
helping
with
for
the
benchmarking
performance
working
group
and
and
then
there's
ongoing
zippy
already
spoke
to
the
work
that
she
does
with
Kham
Kham
around
the
nude
collection.
So
these
programs
are
super
successful
and,
and
it's
I
really
enjoy
it
right.
It's
it's
a
lot
of
fun.
B
This
community
is
so
vibrant
and
big
and
engaged
and
expert,
and
we
want
to
make
sure
that
we
are
helping
and
being
supportive
of
all
of
the
great
work
that's
happening
in
the
community,
and
you
know,
and
and
taking
advantage
of
some
of
that
work
as
well
right
and
making
sure
that
we
are
providing
a
platform.
An
additional
platform
for
the
community
to
kind
of
plug
into.
B
B
And
you
know,
and
as
a
consequence
of
that
feedback
that
they've
received
from
the
node
community,
their
their
architecture
is
significantly
more
performant
than
it
had
been
previously,
and
so
that's
just
one
example
of
where
you
know
the
you
know.
The
engagement
with
the
community
is
incredibly
valuable
for
many
of
the
vendor
members
that
that
support
the
development
right
and
that
support
node
through
their
membership
in
the
node
foundation.
And
so
we
want
to
provide
a
channel,
a
platform
where
we
can
talk
about
those
things.
B
And
so
that's
the
idea
behind
the
enterprise
tech
conversation
series.
This
would
be
very
similar
in
format
to
the
enterprise
conversations
that
we've
been
doing,
but
would,
instead
of
focusing
on
focusing
on
an
end
user,
would
focus
on
the
technology.
That's
really
driving
the
enterprise
trends,
and
then
you
know
this
is
still
something
that
we're
sorting
out,
but
we
do
we
do
want
to
if,
if
there's
a
way
that
the
foundation
can
on,
you
know
serve
as
a
kind
of
a
clearinghouse
to
connect.
You
know
great
speakers
and
experts
within
the
community
to
speaking
opportunities.
B
We
would
like
to
do
that
and
so
we're
exploring
this
right
now.
It's
still
sort
of
early
stages,
but
we
would,
you
know,
welcome
input,
and
so,
if
you
have
thoughts
on
how
we
might
do
this
or
you
know
what
you
see
is
being
some
gaps
that
we
could
potentially
fill,
we
would
love
to
hear
from
you
and
I
think
that's
the
last
one
yeah.
That's
it
so
Marc
I
guess
we
can
hand
it
back
to
you
all.
A
Right
thanks
great,
alright.
Well
that
was
the
last
thing
on
today's
agenda.
Are
there
any
questions
in
the
chat
I
haven't
since,
but
we
can
take
any
questions
before
we
adjourn
the
meeting
and
for
those
that
weren't
paying
attention
to
the
chat
we
could
put
the
links
to
the
the
showcase
and
to
Greg's
email.
If
you
were
looking
to
follow
up.