►
From YouTube: NodeJS Board meeting (Public meeting)
Description
A
B
F
B
B
F
Yes,
so
yeah
are
the
only
update.
I
believe
we
have
from
the
public
session
is
getting
this
Charter
work
and
update
resolved.
So
that's
just
making
sure
that
we
have
both
a
calm,
calm,
chairperson
and
director
for
calm,
come
myself
currently
serving
for
the
calm,
calm
and
just
amending
the
bylaws
in
the
Charter
to
represent
that.
D
I'm
looking
through
this
charter
here
we
had
an
action
item.
From
last
time
the
board
saw
the
Charter
proposal
propose
changes
to
remove
the
visual
director
representation.
I
think
that's
still
a
desire,
but
I
don't
think
it's
captured
any
further,
maybe
Tracy
so
generally,
historically,
that
the
committee's
changed
their
Charter
and
then
bring
them
to
the
board,
and
we
had
passed
this
one
off
I
think
Andy
security,
guys
we
just
bounced
us
back
to
the
comm,
come
to
update
with
their
desires
about
the
individual
membership
representation
and
we'll
present
at
the
next
meeting.
Yeah.
F
This
was
sort
of
a
point
of
contingent
I
think
in
process
that
we've
done
in
the
past
so
quickly.
What
we've
done
is
you
know
either
the
TSE
or
kong-kong.
Traditionally,
when
we
have
changes
to
the
Charter
or
request
of
change
of
bylaws
vpr
that
we
don't
merge
it
until
it
gets
sent
to
the
board
for
the
board
to
also
concur
on
that,
and
then
we
would
merge
that
in
this
case,
because
of
the
number
of
changes
that
had
been
requested,
I
think
we've
worked
on
this
for
quite
some
time.
D
So
what
what's
happening
here
on
this
slide
is
separate
from
the
individuals
reference
I
was
trying
to
outline
with
that.
But,
yes,
come
come
to
my
knowledge.
Doesn't
one
this,
which
is
historically
what
we
do?
I,
don't
know
that
I've
heard
anyone
doesn't
want.
This
I
think
it's.
This
has
all
been
in
separate
conversations,
but
not
explicitly
PR
Dan
plus
like
well.
C
Can
I
make
a
suggestion,
since
we
have
exhibits
and
they're
in
front
of
the
board
right
now?
Could
we
not
get
approval
of
these
specific
changes
by
the
board
today
of
cinema's
favia
PR
and
if
there's
no
changes
that
need
to
be
made
just
land
it
and
not
require
another
meeting,
and
if
there
are
changes,
bring
them
to
the
next
meeting
yeah.
H
This
is
India
Peru
if,
if
what
you're
looking
for
is
that
the
board
supports
these
changes,
but
in
fact
the
Hong
Kong
will
still
have
will
be
looking
at
them
and
seeing
whether
they
agree
it
wouldn't
make
sense
to
result
to
use.
The
resolution
here
is
the
sense
that
the
calm
calm
would
like
to
know
that
the
exhibits
are
would
be
would
be
approved
by
the
board
if
the
calm
calm
supports
them.
Is
that
the
sense
of
what
I'm
hearing.
C
H
The
reason
I
mentioned
is,
if
you,
if
we
were
to
adopt
the
resolution,
as
you
see
it
on
the
slide,
the
changes
would
be
adopted,
and
that
would
be
what
the
the
calm
calm
would
be
operated
under
and
those
would
be
the
bylaws
we'd
be
operating
on.
We
could
certainly
amend
them
again
if
Kham
Kham
s
for
some
tweaks
or
meaningful
changes,
but
but
conceptually
it
you
know,
would
be
better.
You
know
for
us
not
to
actually
make
these
changes,
because
once
the
words
come
out
of
the
directories,
amal's
that's
how
the
board
becomes
constituted.
H
If
they
follow
me,
so
if
the
sense
is
you
know,
we
have
kind
of
I
guess
it's
what
I'm
saying
it
was
kind
of
a
chicken
and
egg
here
you
know
what
we
might
say
here
would
be
that
the
amendments
to
the
bylaws
in
charter,
the
committee
attached
said
blah
blah
blah
are
hereby
adopted
and
approved,
subject
to
concurrency
I
the
calm,
calm,
something
like
that.
Yeah.
B
B
I
I
think
that's
what
was
being
the
intent.
That's
why
I
asked
the
first
question?
Do
we
really
think
we
need
to
have
a
resolution
at
this
point,
I
think
from
from
my
perspective,
since
I
roll,
it
is
to
be
the
final
approver
that
I
think
we
could.
You
could
safely
if
we
all
agree,
take
us
some
kind
of
statement
back
to
the
calm,
calm
that
we
believe
that
these
will
be
approved
if
you
with
minor
modifications
that
you
want
to
make
and
the
board
was
supportive
and
I.
Don't
think
that
requires
us
to
resolution.
D
F
E
D
B
F
I
You
crazy
hi.
Can
you
guys
hear
me?
This
is
Greg,
hey
Greg,
hi,
hi
Todd,
so
a
very
quick
marketing
update.
You
know
we
continue
to
grow
our
audience.
So
a
couple
ways
to
measure
that
is
our
subscriber
growth
on
our
newsletter
so
has
been
really
good.
Our
engagement
with
the
content
has
been
very
good.
We
consistently
average
high
than
our
industry
competitors
both
in
terms
of
opens
and
clicks,
and
you
know
because
this
is
public
I
want
to
take
advantage
of
that,
and
let
everybody
know
that
we're
always
looking
for
content
ideas.
I
I
B
I
Yep
yep,
we
are-
and
you
know
the
nice
thing
is-
the
list
has
grown
a
lot
over
the
past
year
or
so
that
we've
been
running
this
and
we've
we've.
You
know
our
open
rates
and
click
through
rates
haven't
stayed
as
high
as
they
were
when
the
when
the
list
was
smaller,
but
they've
stayed
above
average,
so
I
consider
that
to
be
to
be
good
and
kind
of
a
good
measure
of
quality
perceived
quality
quality
is
obviously
in
the
eye
the
beholder
our
website
traffic
continues
to
grow
as
well.
I
I
So
a
couple
of
highlights
from
the
content
perspective
we
we
did
publish
the
you
know
the
the
survey
results
back
in
the
spring
and
this
year
was
the
first
year
that
we
did
that
as
an
interactive
website.
So
it's
part
of
the
community
website
nodejs
org,
but
you
can
link
to
it
from
the
foundation
website.
We
got
a
lot
of
interest
in
this,
so
this
is
just
one
highlight,
but
the
folks
who
run
the
Jas
Party
podcast
as
part
of
changelog
ran
basically
dedicated
a
significant
part
of
one
of
their
recent
podcasts
j/s
party
podcasts.
I
To
discussing
the
surveys,
I
thought
that
was
really
awesome.
We've
started
a
new
kind
of
in-depth
technical
paper
series
called
node.js
foundation
field
guides.
The
first
one
was
building
api's,
that's
been
getting
a
lot
of
interest
on
the
website
and
we
are
just
now
kicking
off
the
second
one
which
is
on
server
lists
and
because
that's
such
a
big
topic
we're
actually
working
on
that
in
conjunction
with
the
Jas
Foundation,
as
well
as
CN
CF.
So
we've
got
probably
I.
I
Think
it's
about
10
to
15,
subject
matter,
experts
that
are
drawn
from
each
of
those
different
communities
that
are
going
to
be
contributing
to
that
paper.
So
pretty
excited
about
that
and
then
the
last
big
update
is
the
application
showcase.
So
we
are
now
at
117
apps
that
have
been
submitted.
This
is
a
self-service
thing,
so
there's
a
form
that
you
fill
in.
We
ask
you
a
bunch
of
questions
and
then
you
get
tile.
I
These
applications
are
sortable,
so
you
can
sort
by
other
technology
that
was
used
to
build
the
app
by
the
the
sort
of
maturity
of
the
app.
Is
it
still
in
development?
It's
an
invader.
Is
it
in
production,
as
well
as
the
use
case,
and
each
each
app
has
a
tile.
That
has
a
summary
and
then,
when
you
click
on
read
more,
you
get
an
expanded
view
like
this
one.
So
these
are
really
nice,
quick
kind
of
smack
sized
Testaments
to
the
value
that
developers
get
from
building
their
apps
with
node
and
I.
I
Just
want
to
give
a
shout
out
to
the
linux
foundation.
Product
team
they've
recently
done
several
enhancements.
The
one
that
I'm
probably
most
excited
about
is
this
little
Twitter
share
down
here
that
you
see
down
right
next
to
visit,
so
each
app
can
now
be
shared
on
a
per
tile
basis.
Previously,
you
can
only
share
that
the
entire
showcase,
so
those
are
those
are
my
kind
of
very
high
level.
Marketing
updates
but
I'd
be
happy
to
take
any
questions
at
this
time.
If
anyone
has
them.
B
I
Mean
I
I
think
it's
a
it's
a
combination
of
things.
I
think
you
know
the
the
application.
Showcase
is
popular
and,
in
fact,
if
you
type
in
Google
and
I've
tested
this
by
doing
it
anonymously,
so
I
don't
think
it's
just
me
just
type
in
application
showcase.
It's
one
of
the
top
things
that
comes
up.
You
don't
even
have
to
put
nodejs
in
there.
So
I
think
I
think
the
app
showcase
has
been
a
nice
organic
driver
of
traffic.
I
You
know
one
of
the
things
that
I'll
talk
about
and
Zippy's
asked
me
to
cover
the
following
slide,
which
is
about
some
of
the
communications
dots.
But
we,
you
know,
one
of
the
really
amazing
things
about
this
project
is
the
just
how
incredibly
engaged
the
community
is,
and
so
a
lot
of
the
programs
that
she
runs
around
like
node
collections
and
the
medium
page.
I
I
B
I
I
We've
got
thirty
four
stories
that
were
submitted
since
April,
and
this
to
me
is
kind
of
really
speaks
to
the
the
vibrancy
of
this
community,
and
you
know
it's
one
of
the
reasons
why
I
think
you
know
we
do
get
a
lot
of
traffic
and
and
trending
up
traffic
on
the
website.
You
know
our
our
social
media
engagement
is
really
incredible.
It's
very
envious.
I
I
Zippy
has
been
involved
in
running
the
the
social
media
accounts
and
she
knows
this
community
extraordinarily
well,
and
she
knows
the
kind
of
content
that
they're
interested
in
and
the
way
that
they
communicate
and
has
a
really
good
kind
of
two-way
dialogue
with
the
community
through
social
and
and
I.
Think
these
numbers
are
a
testament
to
that.
I
Thanks
yeah
I'll
I'll
make
sure
that
she
gets
that
because
she'll
certainly
appreciate
hearing
that
from
you
so
yeah
so
and
then
on
the
right-hand
side.
It's
a
it's
a
bit
hard
to
read,
but
you
know
these
are
just
a
few
kind
of
anecdotes
around
some
of
the
more
high
performing
posts
on
nodejs
collection,
as
well
as
some
of
the
highest
performing
tweets
to
all.
Let
folks
read
those
at
their
leisure,
but
generally
I'd,
say
you
know
from
a
marketing
and
communications
perspective.
Things
are
moving
along
really
well.
I
E
Great,
so
just
an
update
on
no
different
is
interactive,
so
we
have
637
currently
registered
that's
about
40%
higher
than
we
were
at
this
time
last
year
about
for
another
seven
we
have
but
472
for
our
first-time
attendees,
and
that
is
compared
to
all
other
node
interactive
events.
It's
2015
since
Ellis
started
managing
the
event
and
then
here's
just
a
breakdown
year-over-year
of
my
registration
types.
So
those
are
final
numbers
for
registration,
so
we're
in
really
great
shape
and
we're
really
looking
forward
to
a
awesome
event.
E
This
year
in
about
four
weeks,
we're
on
the
cap
down
and
then
in
terms
of
talk
status
or
breakdown
of
bias,
registration
or
sorry,
brick
Justin
pipe.
We
have
a
fifty-five
breakout
to
it
that
are
twenty
minutes
each.
We
have
about
five
to
six
fold.
Sponsors
break
up,
we're
just
waiting
for
some
contracts
come
back,
those
are
about
20
minutes,
and
then
we
have
six
workshops
that
are
an.
I
E
And
a
half
over
the
two
days
of
content,
and
then
we
have
the
compliments
and
Soudan
one.
That's
on
Friday
and
Saturday
breakdown
of
the
talk
type
and
we
have
39
percent
that
are
no
js'
content,
30%,
that's
ji,
foundation,
content
and
then
general
community
topics
is
about
31%
and
then
we're
working
on
the
with
the
Clem
con.
We're
listing
on
the
community
corner
kind
of
an
unconference
learn
it
come
learn
about
community
and
exhibit
an
update.
E
So
this
will
be
in
a
central
location,
near
registration
and
it
will
have
some
great
traffic
for
the
community
and
for
those
who
are
attending
them
or
how
to
get
involved.
And
then
we
did.
We
have
a
t-shirt
design
voting
that
is
underway
right
now,
so
city
has
put
that
out
on
Twitter,
so
we've
gotten
a
lot
of
votes,
so
these
are
the
three
available.
So
if
you
have
not
voted,
you
can
go
to
the
link
that
is
here
and
submit
your
vote.