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From YouTube: 05 26 2022 Open Visualization TAC Meeting
Description
05 26 2022 Open Visualization TAC Meeting
To learn more about critical open source JavaScript projects like Appium, Dojo, jQuery, Node.js, and webpack, and 27 more checkout The OpenJS Foundation: https://openjsf.org/
A
A
A
B
B
I
see
we
have
Robin
here,
it
also
joined
so
I.
Think
that's
everybody.
A
B
E
Yes,
hey
Meb,
I
I,
you
know
now
running
unfolded
team
at
Foursquare.
E
D
Hey
yes,
I'm
Chris
I
was
former,
formerly
colleagues
with
IB
and
Shannon
as
well,
at
Uber
and
but
I
was
on
in
a
different
division.
I
was
in
the
elevated
division,
which
does
electric
aircraft
did
electric
aircraft,
the
ecosystem
work
and
now
for
the
last
year
and
a
half
I've
been
at
Joby
Aviation,
which
is
an
actual
aircraft
manufacturer,
and
so
the
that
group's
moved
over
and
I
do
visualization
here,
yeah.
A
F
On
I
I
I'm
from
action
engine
was
supporting
water
gel
most.
F
C
Cool
and
I'm
Robin,
Ginn
and
I
think
everyone
on
pronunciation.
It
is
again
so
yeah
I'm
just
really
delighted.
You
all
are.
A
C
And
we
have
a
great
community
and
I'm
looking
forward
to
having
you
meet
the
other
folks
at
the
foundation.
I
think
I
always
say
when
it
started
it
started
very
node.
Heavy
I
had
been
part
of
the
node.js
foundation
since
before
it
was
a
foundation,
it
was
an
advisory
committee,
Jory
Burson
on
our
team.
C
She
was
on
the
JS
Foundation
side
and
she
was
very
active
in
jQuery,
for
example,
but
since
we
merged
almost
right
away,
we
brought
in
amp
and
electron
and
that
and
then
just
like
Community
folks
who
hadn't
really
been
active
in
the
past,
started
coming
and
participating
at
the
cross
project.
Council,
so
I
would
say
it's
it's
much
more
Diversified
from
a
project
level
from
a
region
level,
for
example
our
cross
project
Council.
C
We
regularly
have
folks
from
you
know,
Italy
and
Finland
and
UK
and
Switzerland,
and
things
like
that
and
we've
tried
adding
some
APAC
hours
in
and
attendance
wasn't
great,
but
we
do
have
contributors
and
free
translators
from
Project
people
in
China
as
well,
and
we
have
an
active
community
in
Japan
with
node-red
in
particular.
C
So
if
I
start
thinking
about
what
we're
going
to
be
doing
in
the
future,
I
think
what
we'll
be
doing
is
probably
like
consolidating
some
of
the
the
budget
that
we're
spending
on
one
Global
conference
and
instead,
like
co-locating,
perhaps
with
the
Linux
Foundation,
open
source
Summit,
and
try
to
look
at
doing
things
more
on
a
regional
level.
So
anyhow,
so
yeah
I'm,
just
really
delighted
you're
here
and
we're
here,
I
think
to
talk
about
the
announcement.
C
Let
me
give
you
a
little
quick
overview
of
our
team.
I
think
you
all
knew
Brian
pretty
well,
and
you
know
he
was
at
the
Linux
Foundation
two
stints
for
11
years,
so
I
knew
in
the
last
year.
He
was
looking
ready
to
do
something
different
and
bigger
and
better
so,
but
he
was
really
I.
Think
I
said
our
unicorn
at
the
LF
he
trained
everybody.
He
wrote
like
the
documentation.
He
wrote
the
book.
He
wrote
the
movie
literally
on
how
to
be
a
PM
at
the
Linux
Foundation.
C
So
you
know
knowing
that
he
was
on
his
way
out.
I
was
looking
at
billing,
who
would
be
our
new
Brian,
and
we
have
somebody
temporarily
that
I've
tried
to
poach
that
they've
given
to
me
temporarily,
and
hopefully,
I
will
get
him
full
time.
His
name
is
kahil
white
he's
somewhat
new
to
the
LF,
but
the
other
project
he
works
on
is
the
open
source
security
foundation
and
we
have
the
first
Grant
from
openssf
and
Jory.
C
Burson
also
works
on
security,
so
we're
trying
to
have
some
cohesiveness
with
the
teams
and
just
culturally
I
think
he's
a
great
fit
for
our
community.
More
of
a
creative
sort
of
developer,
Community
I
think
that
we
have.
He
came
from
the
game
developer
space,
so
that's
pretty
cool
and
then
our
marketing
person
we
have
somebody
new
coming
on
the
person
we
had
was
more
of
a
like
a
like
a
graphic
design,
kind
of
production
person.
It
turned
out.
C
We
are
and
we're
very
much
heavily
into
content
production,
so
we
needed
really
strong
writers.
Somebody
who
gets
the
tone
you
know
of
our
community,
you
know
our
Twitter
handle
is
352
000
people,
that's
a
lot
of
responsibility
and
the
node
project
is
handing
over
their
Twitter
to
us.
Hopefully
we'll
just
be
like
foster
parents,
but
that's
750
000
people
on
that
Twitter
handle.
So
we
wanted
to
bring
somebody
in.
So
we
have
a
great
person
who
came
highly
recommended.
C
Her
name
is
Kylie
wager
she
is
at
a
public
relations
firm
and
for
the
last
four
years
has
been
supporting
Microsoft,
open
source
and
developer
tools.
Division.
So
hopefully
she'll
get
our
tone
and
she
is
an
excellent
writer
and
we
gave
her
a
writing
test
so
and
then
we
also
have
a
PR
agency,
Jesse
castman
and
he's
been
with
us
from
the
start,
he's
also
a
freelance
tech,
journalist
and
he's
awesome
because
he'll
one
he's
super
fast.
He
gets
our
community
he's
a
developer.
C
He
can
look
at
my
stuff
and
say:
oh
no,
that's
boring,
lose
it
or
that's
great
bump
it
up.
So
we
have
a
a
pretty
good
team
and
of
course,
you
all
probably
know
Jory
Burson
a
little
bit
as
well
and
she's
really
helped
sort
of
PM
a
lot
of
our
community
activities
and
so
she'll
be
kind
of
a
conduit
to
you
as
well,
at
the
Linux
Foundation
any
questions.
C
No,
so
from
an
announcement
perspective,
you
all
are
sort
of
our
one
of
our
big
announcements.
We
wanted
to
say,
but
a
little
bit
for
openjs
world,
so
I
was
just
wondering,
are
any
of
you
planning
on
attending
the
conference.
D
No
plans
at
the
moment,
but
I
think
that
probably
was
more
so
since
I
hadn't
considered
it
or
I,
don't
think
we
initially
knew
that.
That
was
something
we
should
do.
Oh.
C
Okay,
yeah
well
I.
What
I
thought
would
be
great.
You
know,
I
think
Brian
had
mentioned
that
you
all
have
some
great
content.
I
saw
his
mail
over.
He
talked
about
providing
content,
but
for
me
like
the
invitations
opened,
if
one
or
all
of
you
want
to
come
and
demo
on
stage
or
to
share
a
little
bit
about
what
you
do,
we
definitely
would
want
to
make
space
for
that.
So.
C
C
We
had
native
script,
but
we
didn't
have
as
many
people
sign
up,
so
we
dropped
it,
but
the
node
training
has
been
quite
popular
Tuesdays.
We're
calling
kind
of
the
it's
kind
of
the
JavaScript
Superstar
day,
but
it's
also
graphql
day,
so
the
executive
director
from
graphql
will
have
a
keynote.
But
if
you
kind
of
take
a
look
at
the
schedule,
do
you
want
me
to
go
to
openjsworld.com
and
day?
Two?
C
Is
we're
sharing
the
keynote
day
with
the
CD,
Foundation,
continuous
delivery,
and
so
the
we're
sharing
the
space
and
they're?
Essentially
we're
calling
it
three
conferences
in
one,
because
graphql
is
marketing
their
graphql
conf
CDF
is
marketing
theirs
and
then
we're
marketing
ours,
but
then
we're
sharing
that
what
we're
calling
our
kind
of
our
thought
leader
day.
C
C
C
We
couldn't
quite
do
that
with
a
venue
we
had
booked
three
years
ago,
but
we
we're
trying
to
add
more
at
the
beginning
and
the
end,
so
just
recognizing
hallway
track
and
getting
folks
interested
in
your
projects
and
then
the
the
last
two
days
are
collab
Summits
and
that's
where
a
lot
of
the
projects
find
they
get
their
pipeline
of
people
to
work
on
their
open
source
projects.
C
People
who
may
want
to
roll
up
their
sleeves
and
just
dig
into
things
so
there's
some
sort
of
deep
planning,
so,
for
example,
appium
is
bringing
their
contributors
there
and
some
other
projects,
but
I
do
think
and
how
I
was
at
kubecon
last
week.
Sometimes
that
face
to
face.
Is
that
good
place
to
make
those
great
connections
Partnerships?
If
you're
looking
for
more
people
to
work
on
your
projects,.
B
I
mean
I
I
have
a
conflict.
I
will
be
talking
at
another
event
on
that
day,
so
I
definitely
will
be
able
to
make
it
so
looking
at
the
room,
maybe
do
you
is
it
possible
just
do
it
virtually.
C
It's
technically
we
may
be
able
to
make
it
work
to
be
men.
We
we
were
saying
no
on
technical,
but
if
it's
a
quick
thing
we
could
try.
The
only
person
that's
going
to
beam
in
is
Corey
doctorow,
which
was
such
a
huge
win
for
us
to
get
him.
He
just
found
out
he's
having
his
citizenship
interview
and
becoming
a
citizen
that
day
and
he
can't
change
it,
and
so
that
was
a
good
excuse.
C
Why
he
couldn't
do
it
so
he's
going
to
he's
going
to
do
virtual
at
the
end
of
the
second
day,
and
then
he's
promised
he's
going
to
do
it
in
person
for
us
next
year,
which
is
super
cool
because
he's
you
know
has
a
great
following,
but
we
could
you
know
I,
don't
know
what
would
be
so
that
would
be
sort
of
Zoom
beaming
in
and
so
what
they
would
do
is
they
would
put
you
all.
I
was
just
I.
C
G
E
D
I
will
be
in
Utah
or
Salt
Lake
City
on
that
Monday,
the
6th
and
I
suppose
I
could
come
to
Austin
on
the
next
day
and
change
my
flight
I
know.
I
can
do
that
so
I
guess
I
think
I
could
be
there,
but
I'm
just
curious,
I
I'm,
not
necessarily
prepared
to
speak
on
behalf
of
all
of
this
GL
and
Kepler
GL
I.
C
Think
it's
just
it
would
be
just
you
know,
just
a
quick
minute
on
sort
of
what
UCF
is
and
why
you
all.
C
F
E
Mean
we
can
give
you
we
could
give
you
the
visual
fireworks
right.
That's
what
we're
all
about!
We
can
give
you
a
incredible
slides
or
video
Whatever
right,
but
I
mean
it's
a
long
trip
to
make
to
to
just
do
a
five
minute.
Lightning
talk
right!
So.
F
E
G
D
Yeah
I
think
I
could
be.
You
know
the
body
on
stage
right,
I
think
if
I
had
both
of
your
help
to
you
know
Shannon
to
create
the
slides
and
get
the
sizzle,
then
I
could
say
a
few
words
or
you
know
kind
of
just
see
some
support.
I.
Think
on
that
on
the
content
side,
but
I
can
be
the
person
to
present
it.
Yeah.
C
And
you
can
even
have
the
sometimes
the
fireworks
running
behind
you
as
you're
sort
of
talking.
You
know
over
it
as
well
is
sometimes
a
nice
way
to
do
it
and
I
can
help
you
if
you
need
any
help,
editing
and
things
like
that.
So.
D
Yeah
I
think
I
won't
be
able
to
represent
Joby
in
any
way
without
the
approval.
There's
not
enough
time.
We.
D
You
do
want
that
anyway,
but
I
just
mean
that
we
haven't
really
released
a
lot
of
like
deck
GL
made
stuff
at
Joby
yet,
and
so
I
won't
be
able
to
bring
any
of
that,
but
we
can
just.
We
could
I
think
there's
so
much
in
the
visual
Community
already
that
Capital
Community,
with
all
our
examples
and
showcases
and
things
like
that
that
people
in
the
community
have
made
that's
what
we
probably
want
to
do.
I
just
haven't
that's
why
I
don't
have
anything
prepared
because
I've
only
ever.
C
No
and
I
think
it's
more
stuff,
yeah,
it's
more
personalizing
the
work
that
you
all
do
and
the
initiative
behind
it
again.
C
You
know
we
have
Diversified
and
even
we
just
brought
in
the
jest
project
from
Facebook
from
meta,
and
we
have
mocha,
which
is
testing,
but
you
know
that's
kind
of
on
the
decline
a
little
bit,
but
just
as
like
the
largest,
so
it's
just
really
nice
to
bring
in
new
communities
of
people
and
and
so
people
who
are
interested
in
in
contributing
and
understanding
how
they
can
get
involved
or
just
having
a
nice
friendly
face
to
say.
Oh,
it's
not
so
scary.
It's
easy!
C
If
you
want
to
you
know,
because
sometimes
I
look
at
the
stuff
I'm
like
boy
that
seems
pretty
intimidating,
right
and
there's
lots
of
ways.
So
I
think
that's
really
the
message
that
there's
this
you
know
great
community
of
people
who
are
working
across
organizations
who
are
pretty
passionate
about
the
space
and
there's
a
place
for
you
to
participate.
So.
C
C
Unless
you
have
something
that
you
specifically
want
to
say,
or
you
can
just
scrap
it,
but
that
sort
of
takes
hopefully
some
of
the
burden
off
as
well,
and
then
he
usually
sends
those
out
to
reporters
under
embargo
a
few
days
before
so
so
they
have
kind
of
a
head
start
to
do
some
research
they
may
sometimes
they
even
follow
up
with
us
and
our
community
people
on
email
or
in
person
like
a
day
or
two
before
the
event.
Just
to
ask
questions.
D
Cool
yeah
Shannon,
if
you
have
time
over
the
next,
do
you
have
time
to
help
with
this
on
kind
of
the
prep
side
over
the
next
week?
It
really
we
have
like
a
week,
so
it
seems
like
we're.
Gonna
have
to
work
together
to
yes
and.
E
I
think
we
can
also
enlist
Xiao
Jay,
and
this
is
great
yeah,
we'll
we'll
come
together.
C
And
Chris
I'll
get
you
the
registration
information.
We
have
someone
at
the
Linux
foundation.
Events,
team,
Shannon,
Jesse
she'll,
send
you
all
of
the
logistical
information,
but
we
have
a
like
registration
code
for
you
to
get
registered
and
and
all
of
that
so
and
if
you
all
I'll
make
sure
that
you
have
the
registration
information
for
virtual,
so
people
we
do
have
a
virtual
platform
for
people
who
want
to
tune
in
and
then
we
take
all
of
our
sessions
and
we
post
them
on
YouTube
the
week
after.
C
So
it's
super
easy
and
then
we
take
those
Keynotes
throughout
the
year
and
just
do
little
side
blogs
with
them
with
timestamps.
So
we
talk
about
it
being
the
gift
that
keeps
on
giving.
So
as
we
Market
those
things.
B
D
C
Think
again,
this
is
a
really
fun
group,
they're
famous
for
the
karaoke
I,
don't
sing,
but
so
we
hired
a
Texas
live,
live
band
karaoke
on
Wednesday
after
the
sessions
are
over,
so
that
should
be
entertaining
I
will
be
in
the
back
of
the
room,
taking
pictures
not
on
stage
and
but
yeah
it'll
be
a
good
opportunity
for
for
you
to
meet
some
of
those
folks
great
and
are
you
all
did
Brian
plug
you
into
like
when,
if
you're
all
are
interested
in
the
CPC,
the
cross
project
Council
we
used
to
meet
every
week
and
now
we've
switched
to
every
other
week,
and
then
we
have
working
sessions.
C
So
we
make
sure
you
kind
of
take
a
look
at
some
of
the
agenda
topics
that
we're
covering
and
then
what
else
and
then
it
seems
like
as
soon
as
our
conference
is
over,
it
seems
like
a
few
months
later.
We
start
again
so
if
there,
if
this
is
something
you're
interested
in
our
program,
committee,
is
quite
robust
and
well
attended
to
kind
of
shape.
C
Some
of
these
conferences
so,
and
that's
also
a
nice
way
for,
if
there's
other
folks
in
your
companies
or
your
communities,
who
may
be
looking
for
other
ways
to
get
involved
that
are
not
just
you
know,
code
contributions,
there's
lots
and
lots
of
programs
that
we
have
a
lot
of
volunteers
from
from
a
variety
of
projects.
D
C
For
across
project
Council,
what
happens
is
the
the
projects
the
impact
projects
have
two
people
assigned
to
the
CPC
and
then
the
other
projects
have
a
somebody
assigned
and
those
are
voting
members.
But
then
we
have
open
voting
members
and
essentially
to
be
a
voting
member.
You
just
have
to
show
up
for
a
couple
of
months,
and
then
you
PR
yourself
into
the
into
the
repo
on
being
a
regular
member.
C
What's
our
technical
strategy
moving
forward
and
then
just
setting
sort
of
best
practices
on
things
like
code
of
conduct,
we're
just
spinning
up
a
security
working
group
as
well
taking
what
we're
the
grant
we're
getting
from
the
CPC
and
trying
to
build
some
best
practices
that
flow
out
through
the
rest
of
the
projects
so
but
yeah
so
to
be
a
regular
member
and
again,
I
think
I
find
a
lot
of
cross
collaboration
like
even
companies
get
stuck
on
something
and
they
end
up
now
know
having
that
sort
of
great
greater
Network
across
the
tech
industry
and
they
really
do
sort
of
help
each
other
out.
B
D
Well,
I
think
I
think
we
had
a
few.
So
after
this
announcement
occurs,
should
we
kind
of
be
lining
up
all
of
the
in
that
email
thread
that
we
have
going
there's
a
lot
of
different
action
items,
yeah
the
fact
that
UCF
is
still,
you
know
a
thing
right:
it's
still
like
a
site,
that's
a
name
and
all
that
you
want
to
transition
all
that
to
the
new
name
on
I
think
there
was
like
basically
things
for
stuff
for
both
of
us
to
do
on
both
sides.
C
Well,
that
typically
is
Jory
but
she's.
She
just
had
a
baby
and
she
split
her
maternity
leave
in
half
so
after
so
at
the
beginning
of
July
she's
taking
the
second
part,
so
I'll
have
to
heal
start.
Do
that
because
she'll
cross
train
him,
so
she
has
one
more
month
of
maternity
leave.
But
you
know
you
don't
have
to
stress
or
worry
about
it
too
much.
C
G
C
Know
we're
still
adding
some
documentation
on
some
projects
are
so
small.
They
don't
have
a
code
of
conduct
committee,
so
then
they
can
flip
it
up
to
the
CPC
code
of
conduct
committee,
for
example,
so
we're
trying
to
just
make
those
just
easier
to
implement,
but
Jory,
typically
PMS
the
onboarding,
with
all
of
our
projects
and
she'll
go
through
with
the
checklist
and
work
with
you
all
on
that,
and
then
our
srpms,
who
are
like
Brian,
we're
like
plugged
into
the
back
end
of
the
LF
and
all
of
those
systems.
C
No
right
away,
no,
we
can
start
right
away.
Oh
yeah
I
will
start
right
away,
and
but
just
the
person
it'll
be
jorian
kahil.
It
typically
would
just
be
jewelry,
but
since
maternity
leave
so.
A
C
D
Yeah,
the
in
the
in
the
past,
there's
usually
a
meeting
email
ahead
of
time
and
like
a
slide
deck,
and
maybe
a
few
projects
and
few
talks
lined
up
I
think
during
this
transition.
Then
this
is
probably
the
lowest
attendance
we've
ever
had
that
I've
been
involved
in
and
I
think
it's
just
because
the
transition
is
in
progress.
People
are
kind
of
figuring
out
or
they're
wondering
what's
happening
so
I
want
to
hopefully
give
them
that
clarity
as
quickly
as
we
can
I.
D
B
C
C
So
that's
good,
so
we're
feeling
pretty
good
about
taking
things
on.
We
were
just
this
event
has
just
been
a
lot
so
we're
a
little
Mighty
team
did
I
love.
The
Ben's
team
is
pretty
awesome.
They
do
a
lot
of
the
the
venue
work
as
well.
So.
D
Maybe
we
should
set
something
up.
We
could
do
that
over
email
or
now,
but
next
week
soon
to
prepare
the
pr
and
talk
about
an
outline
for
the
presentation
yeah
for
just
the
short
slides
really
sounds
like
we're
talking
67
90
seconds
on
stage.
So
it's
very.
C
Yeah
yeah
and
then
I've
sent
Jesse
all
of
the
information
for
the
press
release
again
I'm
going
on
to
call
with
him
shortly
so
it
sometimes
he
likes
to
interview
you.
Sometimes
he
has
enough
to
go
on,
but
I'll
kind
of
get
a
pulse.
If
not,
then
we
might
ping
you
to
jump
on
a
call
even
earlier
if
you
can
but
we're
pretty
agile,
we're
small
and
mighty
and
pretty
agile.
So
it's
like
a
startup,
but.
C
B
The
next
steps
so
I
think
the
June
23rd
one
will
be
a
good
one,
too
collaborative
work
on
a
you
know,
announcements,
deck
and
then
how
things
will
work
from
now
on.
So
this
is
today
is
a
good
time
to
just
yeah.
C
And
get
the
work
started,
yeah
great!
So
no
just
speaking
here,
so
the
announcement
will
be
the
seventh
and
you're
all
comfortable
with
that.
Yet
so
yeah
so
yeah
I
think
the
June
23rd
you're
saying
that
will
be
just
on
the
onboarding
and
getting
your
you
know
all
of
those
transition,
things
that
need
to
take
place.
B
Yeah,
so
usually
I
will
send
out
the
email
to
the
entire
attendee
of
the
Tech
conference.
Now
we're
going
to
open
this
open
with
meeting
so
this
I
usually
send
out
and
invite
about
agenda
what
we're
talking
about
with
what
we
will
talk
about
during
the
monthly
meeting.
Okay
I
think
it'd
be
good
to
have
a
formal
announcement
during
that
meeting,
so
I
can
send
send
emails,
invite
people
so
that
we
will
have
more
attendees.
Okay,.
A
D
Yeah
I,
don't
have
any
other
questions.
I
think
there's
just
a
good
amount
of
asynchronous
work
to
do.
D
C
C
B
C
Okay
and
pretty
good
about,
if
you
go
to
the
CPC
on
GitHub
there's
also,
if
you
unopenjs,
there
is
a
CPC
or
cross
project.
Council
Channel
there's
also
a
cross
project,
Council
GitHub.
So
you
see
any
issues
that
pop
up.
C
D
One
thing
I
think
I
see
is
that,
like
our
slacks,
that
we're
using
right
now
are
probably
on
the
free
tier
and
have
been
deleting
messages
and
stuff
like
that?
Is
that
something
that
you
guys
support
by
any
chance?
Yeah.
C
We
do,
we
do
have
that,
and
some
projects
have
chosen
and
I'll
have
to
double
check
on
this.
But
the
node
project,
for
example,
decided
to
roll
into
openjs
with
their
own
private
channels
for
their
communities.
But
we
do
have
yeah
Enterprise
for
sure.
D
Okay,
okay,
so
that
may
be
something
we
can
work
towards.
C
Great
and
same
with
zoom
accounts,
I
assume
that
you
have
the
your
your
UCF
Zoom
account
from
the
LF
still
I
want
to
make
sure
you
have
that,
if
not
we'll
make
sure
that
you
have
access
and
resources
to
get
that
real
I
think
what
should
go
through
like
a
whole
checklist
on
resources.
C
Some
projects
need
more,
some
need
less,
some
we're
working
on.
You
know
infrastructure
and
cdns,
and
some
are
lighter
weight
depending
on
what
resources
they
need.
So
we're
here
to
really
help
sort
of
figure
that
out
with
you
and
and
help
get
it
done.
G
Awesome
I
just
joined
the
opengs
foundation,
so
I'll
do
a
little
introduction.
C
The
other
I
think
group
is
in
addition
to
security.
That's
spinning
up.
We
have
a
very
active
and
established
standards
working
group
if
you're
a
standards
geek,
that's
the
place
to
be
folks-
are
active
in
ecma
on
w3c
and
unicode
Consortium
right
now.
But
if
that's
areas
that
you're
working
in
and
you
have
representation
in
standards,
bodies
is
a
great
place
to
be,
and
it's
a
great
place
for
us
to
sort
of
amplify
the
work
that
you're
doing.
C
Oh
good,
we
would
definitely
love
to
have
visibility
and
support
in
that
we
we
take
some
of
our
budget.
We
fund
a
resource
at
the
w3c,
not
a
resource,
but
a
subject
matter
expert.
We
fund
travel
to
standards,
body
meetings
and
things
like
that.
So
matter
of
fact,
tc39
was
going
to
have
their
plenary
at
openjs
world,
but
there
are
folks
who
just
weren't
quite
ready
to
travel,
but
they
do
have
a
room
where
the
folks
who
are
on
tc39
will
be
okay.
E
E
C
Funding-
and
it's
it's
just
it's
just
amazing.
The
people
like
I
had
last
our
last
conference.
I
had
Jeff
Jaffe
and
Rob
Palmer
Jeff
is
w3c
and
the
Rob
Palmer
chairs
tc39.
They
were
in
my
keynote,
but
I
think
they
were
saying
that
we
have
more.
You
know,
someone
said
we
have
more
standards
IQ
at
the
openjs
than
some
of
these
standards
bodies,
because
it's
just
so
many
people
are
active
and
they
bring
in
all
of
what
they're
working
on
together
in
the
standards
working
group.
C
So
it's
nice
and
then
we're
trying
to
that
group
is
really
trying
to
educate
kind
of
the
next
generation
of
people
to
be
editors
and
participants
in
standards,
bodies
and
so
working
on
some
education
things
as
well.
C
But
yeah
you
can
once
you
start
sort
of
following
some
of
those
channels,
you'll
start
kind
of
discovering
all
the
goodies.
You
know
that
people
are
working
on.
C
Great
well
thanks
for
having
me
here,
it
was
great
timing,
so
I
will
be
syncing
with
all
of
you
in
the
next.
In
the
coming
days,.