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From YouTube: Keynote: Making Your Open Source Project Foundation-Ready - Joe Sepi, Open Source Engineer, IBM
Description
Keynote: Making Your Open Source Project Foundation-Ready - Joe Sepi, Open Source Engineer, IBM
Joe Sepi
IBM
Open Source Engineer
Greater New York City Area
Websitehttps://joesepi.com
Twitter Tweet
Joe Sepi is passionate about advancing the web forward through open source technologies and open communities. He has held engineering leadership positions at The New York Times, Adobe, Credit Suisse, Sears as well as a few start-ups. He joined IBM to lead developer advocacy for StrongLoop, was promoted to lead the North America-East (NYC and beyond) dev advocacy team, and is currently focused on his passion, Node + JS, as an open source engineer and advocate. He also plays in two punk rock bands.
A
Good
morning
Bonjour
comment
allez-vous,
my
I
took
some
French
in
school,
but
it's
not
so
great,
so
I
will
probably
keep
it
to
a
minimum,
will
not
be
seen.
Okay,
so
yeah
Jim,
Appel,
Giuseppe
I
see
a
lot
of
familiar
faces
out
there.
But
if
you
don't
know
me
I'm
a
open
source
engineer
at
a
little
company
called
IBM
and
by
little
I
mean
like
super
huge
and
also
we
do
a
lot
of
open
source
which
not
a
lot
of
people
know
but
I
take
the
opportunity
to
mention
any
chance.
I
get
in
fact.
A
Some
people
say
we
do
the
most
open
source.
But
you
know
these
are
opinions,
but
I
get
the
great
opportunity
to
do
lots
of
work
in
the
community
and
in
the
foundation
and
an
open
source
overall
and
I'm.
Currently
the
chairperson
of
the
cross
budget
Council
as
Robin
mentioned,
and
it's
been
exciting
since
the
announcement
of
the
intent
to
merge
last
year
at
let
the
last
node
plus
jeaious,
interactive
and
we've
been
working
tirelessly
on
on
bootstrapping
the
foundation
and
getting
the
cross
project
council,
the
CPC
up
and
running,
and
things
started
to
get.
A
You
know
really
exciting
and
with
that
merger
we
brought
in
collectively
30
some-odd
projects.
I
was
looking
last
night
trying
to
find
like
a
page
that
had
all
of
our
projects
in
a
nice
grid.
I
couldn't
find
one
so
I
went
to
our
slack,
and
this
is
the
best
I
could
find,
but
it
is
not
at
all
accurate.
So
don't
don't
quote
me
on
that?
That's
not
the
gospel,
but
I
will
take
this
moment
actually
to
mention
open,
JSF,
dot,
org,
slash
collaborate.
A
You
can
get
on
our
slack
channel
or
select
instance
and
see
our
calendar
and
all
sorts
of
ways
to
get
more
involved
so
yeah
and
with
that
excitement,
as
we've
been
ramping
things
up,
we've
had
some
a
lot
lots
of
interest
in
the
foundation.
We
now
have
one
one
home
for
for
JavaScript
related
projects
in
the
community.
A
You
know
under
a
foundation
and
so
the
the
first
project
as
Robin
had
mentioned
earlier.
We
we
are
super
excited
about
nvm
joining
and
then
amp
followed
after
that
and
FASTA
fire,
which
is
really
exciting.
And
then
the
huge
announcement
this
morning,
which
is
which
is
really
super,
duper
exciting,
is
electron
joining
right,
so
boom
right
we've
got
lots
of
progress,
lots
of
excitement.
Things
are
going
well,
let
me
get
so
how
many
projects
do
we
want
to
to
to
to
scale
up
to
you?
You
know
these
things
are
exciting
times:
progress
and
growth.
A
How
big
do
we
want
to
get,
and
it's
an
interesting
question,
one
that
I
don't
think
we
really
have
an
answer
for
and
I
think
the
main
thing
is
to
just
figure
out
how
to
scale
what
we're
doing
in
a
thoughtful
and
considerate
way
that
that's
you
know
the
ideas
and
the
plans
that
we
want
to
execute
for
our
projects
and
for
our
community
that
we
can
do
them
well
and
succeed
there,
but
how
many
projects
right.
So
this
is
maybe
not
a
fair
comparison.
This
is
a
screen
grab
from
the
Apache
foundation.
A
They
have
like
over
300
projects,
I
think
but
they've
been
around
for
a
while.
So
maybe
somebody
who's
a
little
bit
newer.
This
is
the
cloud
native
computing
foundations,
project
landscape.
They
have
a
lot
of
projects
like
I
think
we
may
need
begin
to
figure
out
how
many
projects
they
have.
So
we
don't.
You
know,
I,
don't
know,
that's
not
really
in
our
future
at
least
the
near
future,
but
we
are
growing
and
there's
lots
of
interest,
so
perhaps
perhaps
you're
involved
in
a
project.
A
That's
considering
you
know
the
benefits
that
it
may
get
from
a
foundation
and
and
the
benefits
that
I
can
bring
to
a
foundation.
So
perhaps
you're
thinking
about
what
makes
you
know
a
good,
a
good
fit
for
a
foundation
whether
ours
or
others.
So
the
good
news
is
that
we
do
all
of
our
work
in
in
the
open
and
we
have
lots
of
documentation
on
online
in
our
in
our
github
repo.
A
So,
let's,
let's
maybe
dig
into
a
couple
of
those
so
I-
suggest,
if
you're
interested
to
kind
of
read
through
the
documentation
there
and
and
kind
of
get
a
feel
for
the
foundation
and
the
work
that
the
cross
project
Council
is
doing,
and
you
know
see
how
your
project
may
align
with
that,
and
then
also
some
things
to
consider
are
like
the
the
impact
in
the
ecosystem
of
the
project
that
you're
involved
in
who
are
using
it.
Who
is
using
it?
A
A
In
so
you
know,
code
of
conduct,
governance,
documentation
and
and
like
contribution,
guidelines
and
I'll
have
a
quick
shout
out
to
github
who's
done
really
great
work
at
outlining
like,
what's
you
know,
good
aspects
of
projects
that
are
welcoming
and
good
spaces
to
get
involved
in,
which
is
really
super
important.
So.
A
A
So
yeah,
you
know,
I,
don't
I,
don't
have
a
summary
slide
per
se,
but
I
just
wanted
to
encourage
you
to
consider
this
and
the
work
that
you're
doing
or
projects
that
you
may
be
involved
in
and
also
take
this
opportunity
to
encourage
you
to
look
at
the
work
that
we're
doing
in
the
foundation.
Like
I
said
everything's
online,
you
can
find
our
calendar
at
that
open,
JSF,
org,
slash
collaborate,
we
do
all
of
our
meetings
or
live
streamed.
All
of
our
meeting
notes,
RP
art
and
it's
a
github.
A
So
it's
kind
of
funny
that
she
had
the
slide
up
there,
but
one
plus
one
equals
three
right.
The
more
we
work
together,
the
better
that
we
do
and
yeah
feel
free
to
connect
with
me.
I
hope
to
be
seeing
you
that's
my
Twitter.
My
DMS
are
open.
Reach
out,
I
want
one
other
plug
Joey
and
I
have
a
talk
on
day,
two
about
the
work
that
we've
been
doing
in
the
cross
project,
Council
and
kind
of
digging
in
to
the
nitty
gritty
there,
and
we
will
have
like
an
open
office
hours
after
that
talk.