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From YouTube: First 200 Days: The Adventures of the OpenJS Cross Project Council - Joe Sepi, IBM & Jory Burson, Bo
Description
First 200 Days: The Adventures of the OpenJS Cross Project Council - Joe Sepi, IBM & Jory Burson, Bocoup
Speakers: Joe Sepi, Jory Burson
An update from the OpenJS Foundation Cross Project Council featuring: tales from the humble beginnings; the challenges of early days; that time where Joe made that dumb mistake; our successes, small and large; and the clear bright future emerging from the dust and sweat.
A
B
And
I
guess:
I'll
get
started,
hi
everyone,
my
name
is
George
Burton
and
my
colleague
Joe,
the
bunny
is
joining
me
here,
but
as
he
dis
robes
d,
robes
I
want
to
tell
you
a
little
bit
about
the
first.
You
know
we're
gonna
talk
about
the
first
200
days
of
our
adventures
as
the
open,
J's
Foundation,
cross-project
Council,
but
just
for
some
context,
even
though
the
open
J's
foundation
itself
is,
is
a
newer
organization,
we're
built
on
a
pretty
long
history
of
open
collaboration.
B
B
Then
we
can
separately
so
like.
Let's,
let's
share
this
experience,
let's
share
this,
this
burden
together
and
and
kind
of
build
from
there.
So
where
do
we
fit
into
this
is
sort
of
the
next
question
like
you
know,
if
we
think
about
our
foundation
having
a
bit
of
an
origin
story,
this
long
history
of
growing
and
learning
and
shirring,
like
myself,
I,
came
into
the
picture
with
jQuery
in
the
late
2010s
and
I
started
watching
my
colleagues
who
were
working
on
jQuery
and
I
got
involved
in
the
project
and
said
gosh.
B
This
is
really
fascinating,
like
how
these
groups
are
coming
together
to
decide.
You
know
what
sorts
of
things
we
should
add
to
our
project
is
very
it's
it's.
It's
really
cool
like
it's.
It
was,
unlike
anything
I'd
ever
seen
before,
I
enjoyed
working
in
a
team
that
way
and
that
kind
of
started,
my
falling
down
the
rabbit
hole.
If
you
will
into
open-source
yeah.
A
I
started
when
I
worked
at
Sears
a
long
time
ago.
If
anyone
remembers
Sears
and
when
I
was
there
there,
there
was
a
really
great
community
of
developers
there.
In
terms
of
the
team,
we
were
doing
a
lot
of
brown
bag
lunch
and
learns,
and
going
to
meetups
and
a
really
great
community
and
from
there
everywhere
I
went.
A
I
was
always
kind
of
trying
to
replicate
that
or
find
that
again
ended
up
working
at
strongloop
and
IBM
and
got
involved
in
the
node
foundation
and
found
it
to
be
a
welcoming
community
and
also
very
accessible,
because
everything
that
we
were
doing
was
out
in
the
open.
So
that's
how
I
got
into
it.
I
think
you
know,
following
along
on
that
thought,
the
the
foundation
I
think
we
have
some
notes
here
too.
A
B
A
B
A
A
B
We
hope
that
you
imagine
now
sharing
our
origin
stories
here
like
this
could
be.
You
know,
part
of
hopefully,
this
part
of
your
origin
story
with
foundation,
like
imagine
yourself,
five
years
from
now
thinking
about
right
now,
when
you
get
involved
with
me,
so
we
we
thought.
You
know
that
was
just
over
a
year
ago
now
and
since
we
announced
our
intent
to
merge
and
well,
then
we
became
officially
the
open
J's
foundation
in
March
of
this
year.
We've
had
over
40
cross
project
council
meetings
of
an
hour
or
more.
B
So
this
is
lots
and
lots
of
hours
of
lots
and
lots
of
people's
times
all
on
the
open
that
we've
been
broadcasting.
These
things
on
YouTube,
you
can
go,
read
the
read
the
minutes
on
github
and
we've
had
we're
growing,
66
people
and
accounting
to
our
github
organization,
and
these
are
people
who
are
joining
the
across
project
councilor
and
participating
in
some
someway
so
yeah.
A
And
and
the
there
are
few
other
repos
there
as
well
like
the
summit's
that
people
are
getting
involved
in
and
I
just
want
to
come
into
that.
You
know:
Joey
wanted
to
put
a
hard
line
on
the
CPC
meetings
like
whenever
we
are
the
official
CPC,
but
we
were
the
bootstrap
committee
before
that.
Working
on
you
know
making
this
happen,
so
it
was
actually
well
over
40
but
yeah.
We
have
217
commits
to
the
CPC
repo
as
of
yesterday
morning
or
something
so
lots
of
activity.
I
found
this
graph.
A
A
And
we
have
this
collaboration
page
get
open,
JSF,
org,
slash
collaboration
where
you
can
there
a
variety
of
resources
there,
but
in
particular
links
to
the
the
github
work
that
we're
doing,
which,
like
I,
said,
like
everything
that
we're
doing
is
out
in
the
open
streaming
meetings.
Meeting
notes
are
being
merged
in
all
these
things.
Yeah.
B
Definitely
so
check
this
out,
so
you
know
the
next
question
on
it's
like
okay,
we're
doing
all
this
stuff
in
the
open
and
you
might
be
going
okay
great
but
like
why?
What's
the
purpose
of
the
cross
project
Council?
What
do
you
do
and
really
for
us?
We
were
thinking
about
this
as
the
task
of
helping
our
community
build
their
communities.
Each
of
our
projects
is
special
and
has
their
own
needs
and
they're
they're,
they're,
unique
and
they're
awesome,
and
we
don't.
We
want
to
support
that.
We
want
to
encourage
that.
B
B
So
I
love
this
analogy
of
like
an
urban
City
right
where
that
city
has
its
own
sort
of
you
know:
identity,
but
within
the
city,
there's
also
lots
of
the
communities
that
that
make
make
it
up
that
make
it
rich
that
make
it
meaningful
and
awesome,
and
so
that's
what
we
hope
to
be
able
to
foster
we're.
200
days
in
so
you
know
it's
a
long
time
to
build
an
awesome,
City,
but
project.
B
A
B
So
you
know
what,
if
we,
what
have
we
been
talking
about
with
those
those
hours?
We
are
obviously
spending
a
lot
of
time,
thinking
about
creating
and
sustaining
community
programming,
which
will
tell
you
a
little
bit
more
about
some
of
those
programs
here
in
a
minute,
but
you
know
there's
a
lot
of
things.
We
want
to
provide
yeah.
A
And-
and
you
know,
we've
already
got
four
new
projects
to
the
foundation,
so
there's
been
a
lot
of
work
around
that
not
only
you
know,
evaluating
applications,
but
also
like
what
does
the
process
look
like
and
then,
as
people
are
coming
into,
we're
learning
through
that
process
and
updating
and
what's
great
is
the
people
that
are
coming
in
are
contributing.
You
know,
they're,
creating
pull
requests
and
issues
and
driving
some
of
these
conversations.
So
it's
been
really
great.
Yeah.
B
And
I
want
to
thank
Toby
angel,
who
runs
with
the
ant
project.
He's
been
like
super
super
helpful
to
that
regard,
so
you
know
we're
onboarding
our
new
incubating
projects.
We've
got
our
existing
projects
that
we're
helping
to
update
their
policies
and
also
making
sure
that
we're
sharing
best
practices
across
our
projects-
and
you
know
also,
very,
very
importantly,
supporting
our
maintainer
right.
A
B
A
A
We've
had
over
30
requests
approve
in
2019
I
know
of
several
people
who
are
here
because
of
the
travel
fund.
So
it's
really
great
if
you
get
involved,
and
you
want
to
come
to
Austin
in
the
June
where
the
event
will
be
next
year,
you
know
that's
something
you
can
consider.
As
you
know,
someone
a
part
of
the
work
that
we're
doing
and
it
started
in
the
note
foundation,
but
we're
looking
there
a
few
projects
that
we're
looking
to
elevate
to
allow
other
projects
to
take
greater
advantage
of
this
and.
B
A
Yeah
he
was,
he
was
great.
That's
another
thing
like
if,
if
you're
interested
in
getting
involved,
like
Jory
was
saying
Jonah
just
volunteered
and
we've
got
a
lot
of
great
people
in
the
community
that
if
you
volunteer
they're
happy
to
help
support
you,
it's
just
not
something
that
they
may
be
able
to
champion.
But
we've
got
a
lot
of
folks
that
are
ready
to
support
anyone
who
wants
to
get
involved
and
get
active.
Yeah.
B
So
you
know
another
program
that
we're
working
on
is
the
standards
working
group
in
the
open,
Jas
foundation.
So
you
know
open
source
and
open
standards
are
two
halves
of
a
coin
that
are
very
important
and
are
very
important
to
me,
and
we
are
a
proud
member
of
the
w3c
and
also
ACMA
International,
which
is
the
group
behind
tc39.
B
There
is
a
lot
of
feedback.
We
can
be
providing
the
standards
community.
There's
a
lot
of
feedback.
The
standards
community
can
be
providing
us.
We
want
to
make
sure
that
folks
who
are
active
in
our
project
communities
feel
they
have
a
voice
in
these
spaces
and
understand
how
they
can
get
involved
we're.
We
are
constantly
having
those
conversations
with
folks
like
Wendy
from
the
w3c,
who
is
here
a
little
early
earlier.
We
want
to
make
that
a
very
clear
program
and
benefit
for
our
yeah.
A
A
User
feedback
is
another
program
that
started
in
node
and
it
started
in
2017
that
image.
There
is
one
of
the
surveys
that
we
did.
This
seems
like
another
thing
that
would
be
great,
for
you
know
more
projects
in
the
foundation.
The
idea
is,
we
would
have
a
framework
in
place
and-
and
this
is
a
fairly
fleshed
out-
I
need
to
still
move
the
repo
over
to
to
the
open,
JSF
fort,
but
a
framework
in
place
where
projects
who
are
trying
to
make
decisions
but
want
to
get
data
on.
You
know
questions
they
may
have.
A
Can
can
you
know
craft
craft?
These
questions
work
with
the
foundation
to
maybe
further
flush
them
out
to
make
sure
they're,
they're
gonna
get
the
data
points
that
they're
looking
for
and
then
the
foundation
can
help
them
execute,
and
you
know
return
some
some
data
back
to
them
to
help
them
make
these
decisions
and
work
through
different.
You
know
whether
they're
features
or
what-have-you
be
very
helpful.
I
mean.
B
I'm
really
excited
about
this
particular
program,
because
I
think
it
will
be
awesome
when
we
can,
as
a
community
work
in
a
more
like
data-driven
way,
and
we
have
this
sort
of
like
system
for
how
we
ask
questions
of
our
community
and
we
integrate
the
the
feedback
and
the
lessons
learned
from
that
those
questions.
One
thing:
here's
a
program
idea:
anybody
love
like
bigquery
and
HTTP
archive
and
all
that
sort
of
stuff
like
let's
do
some,
let's
do
some
stuff
with
that.
B
The
great
feedback
yeah
infrastructure.
So
this
is
another
set
of
programs
that
we're
really
I'm
just
sort
of
diving
into
all
of
these.
Open-Source
projects
need
infrastructure
and
it
is
a
mess
sometime.
So
we
have
a
menu
of
services
that
the
infrastructure
services
that
the
foundation
provides
and
that's
sort
of
a
baseline.
In
terms
of
you
know
what
what
a
project
might
need
in
terms
of
servers
in
terms
of
CI
support.
You
know
domains,
those
are
the
data
and
that
that's
sort
of
just
the
starting
point.
B
But
there's
lots
of
other
infrastructure
needs
to
that,
especially
are
some
of
our
larger
projects
might
have,
and
we
are
excited
about
getting
more
into
helping
ease
the
burden
for
those
projects
when
it
comes
to.
You
know
their
infrastructure
needs,
and
that's
certainly
a
space
that,
if
you
have
DevOps
DevOps
skills,
that
this
is
something
that
you
are
excited
about
influencing
the
this
is
a
program
that
I
want
desperately
to
talk
to
you
about
yeah.
A
A
So
you
know
another
program
that
we
are
managing
and
trying
to
build
upon
is
the
collaborator
summits
which
I
mentioned.
You
know
we
have
a
bunch
of
great
sessions
there
tomorrow,
some
around
nodes,
some
around
amps
I'm
around
just
kind
of
general.
How
do
we
support
these
projects
better?
We
have
a
bunch
of
open
time
for
the
cross
project
Council
to
kind
of
flesh
some
other
things
that
were
working
out
further.
B
I
think
it's
just
a
really
it's
a
wonderful
time
for
people
from
all
the
different
project
communities
to
come
together
and
talk
about
some
of
those
shared
experiences
and
shared
concerns
like
security,
for
example,
or
infrastructure,
as
I
mentioned
before,
but
also
you
know,
and
how
to
solve
those
things
tactically,
but
also
for
more
of
like
the
blue
sky
conversations
of
like
what
could
we
be
doing?
What
can
we
do
to
make
things?
B
Way,
and
so
there
I
mean
these-
are
some
specific
programs
we've
talked
about,
but
there's
also
a
lot
of
other
benefits
to
projects
within
the
foundation
that
the
CPC
helps
facilitate
to,
to
a
large
extent.
One
is
for
our
projects
providing
some
just
legal
support,
so
you
know
there's
obviously
the
standard.
You
know
IP
policies
and
things
like
that,
but
you
know
you
may
be
saying.
Oh
well,
I
want
to
understand
a
little
bit
more
about
the
difference
between
you.
B
Should
my
project
have
a
CLA
it
should
we
use
the
DCO,
which
what
should
we
do
like?
These
are
kinds
of
questions
that
the
foundation
staff
and
the
the
support
from
the
CPC.
Your
peers
in
the
community
can
help
you
answer.
Project
governance
support,
there's
a
lot
of
years
of
experience,
managing
open
source
projects
among
the
individuals
on
the
CPC,
for
example,
Dylan
Shimon
who's
with
the
dojo
project,
he's
been
around
for
a
while
right,
like
dude,
has
seen
some
stuff.
B
B
Then,
of
course,
I
would
be
totally
remiss
if
I
didn't
talk
about
the
staffs
marketing
and
NPR
Rachel
romoff
is
just
amazing
and
our
our
new
executive
director
Robin
not
Robert
and
bring
with
them
a
lot
of
marketing
and
PR
expertise
to
help
you
kind
of
think
about
your
project.
Your
positioning
like
how
to
tell
the
story
that
you
want
to
tell
to
your
community
to
potential
consumers
to
potential
contributors
as
well
the
tutu
about
your
project.
B
What
else,
if
there's
anything
that
you
know
and
again,
bearing
in
mind
that
we're
still
new
CPC
200
days,
if
there's
anything
that
you
see
missing
or
you'd
like
to
see
us
do
or
you
think
we
can
be
doing
better,
which
is
probably
you
know
not
like
it's
probably
a
lot
right,
there's
always
room
for
improvement.
We
would
love
to
hear
from
you
yeah.
A
There
are
a
variety
of
ways
to
get
involved
and
we
wanted
this,
to
kind
of
you
know,
come
to
a
call
to
action
of
sorts.
Like
we've
said
we
work
out
in
the
open,
the
magic
happens
and
issues
and
PRS.
We
have
a
good,
well
documented
proposal
process.
So
if
you
get
involved
and
there's
something
you're
interested
in,
you
know,
you
can
follow
those
steps.
It's
not
too
hard
help
and
improve
and
maintain
existing
programs.
A
B
So
we
adopted
a
four
program:
ideas
for
improvements,
that
sort
of
thing
we
adopted
a
staging
process
because
we're
engineers,
like
oh
we're,
gonna,
do
this
like
tc39
Desmond's
thing
process,
so
you
know
ideas
that
we
say
are
stage
zero
or
stage
one.
These
are
sort
of,
like
you
know,
any
they're
open
they're
for
grabs.
Somebody
threw
some
spaghetti
at
a
wall
and
they
thought
like
this
might
be
a
good
idea
and
we're
like
yeah.
That
could
be
a
good
idea.
Let's
save
that
and
we're
looking
for
you
know,
help
or
support
with
that.
B
A
We
I
pointed
this
out
earlier,
but
I'll
share
it
again:
open
jsf,
org,
slash
collaboration,
I,
usually
type
and
collaborate
in
there.
Remember
it's
collaboration,
but
it
has
links
to
getting
involved
on
slack
the
mailing
lists.
The
calendar
is
up
there,
I,
don't
know
if
the
youtube
link
is
specifically
up
there,
but
I'm
gonna
ask
to
get
that
up
there.
Like
we
said
our
meetings
are
open.
Observers
are
encouraged,
but
also
they're
live
streamed.
Our
meetings
are
live,
streamed
and
meeting
notes.
B
We
have
we,
we
have
a
number
of
different
channels,
as
you
said,
like
and
they're
all
open
to
you
right.
So,
like
you
know,
you
don't
have
to
wait
to
be
invited
to
the
slack
channel
if
you
just
click
that
link
you
too,
and
thank
you
for
so
many
of
you
are
joining
the
slack
channel
this
week
at
the
event.
So
that's
awesome
that
we
have
a
mailing
list.
A
Yes,
so
we
are
going
to
have
an
open
office
hours
like
now.
You
know
4:00
p.m.
or
pretty
much
once
I
can
put
my
bunny
suit
away
and
Jory's
got
to
go,
get
ready
for
a
panel,
but
I
think
Michael
offered
and
Michael
voluntold
Chris
Hillier
to
come
so
there'll
be
a
few
of
us.
There
we'd
be
happy
to
answer
questions
and
and
talk
more
about
any
of
these
things.
B
So
we'll
just
show
this
up
here,
one
more
time.
You
know
our
direct
messages
are
open.
I
know
that,
for
for
it
can
be
a
little
intimidating
to
join.
You
know,
group
of
people
who've
been
collaborating
for
a
while.
We
want
to
totally
eliminate
that
intimidation
factor
for
you.
So
if
there's
a
thing
in
the
world,
we
can
do
to
help
you
get
hooked
in
to
some
of
the
stuff.
That's
going
on
with
any
of
our
project
with
the
cross
project.