►
Description
OpenJS Foundation Collaborator Summit, Berlin, 2019
A
Thank
you
for
coming
folks.
Initially,
when
I
proposed
this
session,
I
had
no
idea
what
we
were
going
to
talk
about.
Zir.
B
C
A
Again,
tourists
and
for
a
long
time
they
didn't
have
a
resource
for
it
and
then
eventually
they
did,
but
it
was
just
by
accident
that
we
started
doing
something
for
them,
so
I'll
get
into
that.
My
name
is
Manila
on
the
internet
and
usually
keyword
new
I
work
at
envision.
As
a
developer
advocate
and
I'm
for
the
passive
well
I've
been
like
involved
in
open
source
and
I'm
really
liking.
It.
D
A
A
A
Great,
so,
first,
what
we're
gonna
do.
We
are
and
they're
trying
to
figure
out
what
brings
people
into
open
source
and
then
we'll
go
over
a
couple
of
things
like
background
for
this
project
and
resources
that
other
people
might
need.
But
that's
what
I
want
to
get
a
feel
for
in
this
room,
just
see
where
people
are
coming
from
people
I
have
had
discussions
with
folks,
most
recently
at
Def
Con
in
Tokyo,
where
this
this
person
gave
a
talk,
would
really
get
insight.
A
A
For
the
past,
like
decade
or
so,
and
the
community
was
very
helpful
for
me
to
get
involved
like
become
a
developer,
which
made
me
just
kind
of
look
for
more
my
past
to
become
to
be
part
of
the
broader
tech
community,
not
just
like
in
my
city,
so
I
started
exploring
and
someone
invited
me
to
note
school
and
then
someone
invited
in
old
school
to
node
Interactive
to
conference,
and
then
someone
invited
like
that
that
session
into
the
collapse
of
it.
So
it
was
just
a
step
of
like
steps
of
accidents
of
people.
A
Just
saying
do
you
want
to
comment
like
okay
sure?
Thank
you.
Anyone
else
have
something
big
larger.
C
C
It's
certainly
easier
for
me
now,
when
I'm
working
for
I
want
for
as
a
consultant
developing
now
with
the
same
client
for
about
a
year
and
a
half
and
with
a
couple
of
other
clients
and
it's
easy
for
me.
These
are
finished
companies,
but
they
are
internal
private
divorce
that
most
of
what
they
do,
but
practically
everybody
I
managed
to
find
bits
of
things
that
make
sense
for
me
to
to
release
as
open
source
and
I've
been
able
to
sell
that
it
took
the
corporation,
say
yeah.
C
Babe
yeah,
okay,
there's
effectively,
you
can,
if
it's
not
that
difficult
to
attract
back
or
if
you
actually
build
a
useful
thing
and
have
someone
else
use
it,
then,
even
just
one
or
two
github
issues
that
someone
files
in
externally
can
you
can
point
it?
They
will
say
see.
This
thing
now
makes
your
code
better
and
you
did
not
have
to
pay
anyone
for
it
and
you
know
you're
getting
a
slight
benefit
and
it's
so
far
from
what's
your
actual
business
that
it
doesn't
matter
for
your
native
method,
negatively
for
your
income,
oh
I,.
E
E
E
A
And
so
it's
like
very
different
reasons
for
getting
into
that.
We
just
heard
three
and
to
me
that
sounds
like
different
reasons
to
get
included
in
to
start
participating,
open
source
I
think
with
so
the
reason
we
were
talking
about
this
is
because
in
Vancouver
we've
been
running
a
workshop
and
it's
called
getting
started
open
source.
It's
an
in-person
workshop
that
we
do
and
it's
basically
people
come
and
the
mentors,
and
there
are
folks
with
stories
very
similar
to
this.
We
all
have
different
reasons
for
getting
involved.
Some
been
involved
for
less
than
a
year.
A
Some
have
been
involved
since
I.
You
know
some
people
have
been
coding
since,
like
you're
really
young
that
that
sort,
but
everyone
just
wanted
to
put
something
into
the
community
where
here's
this
resource,
that,
if
you're
curious
or
you
had
questions
or
you
weren't
sure
where
to
start
here's
this
in
person
in
place,
you
could
show
up
to
basically
the
reason
people
go
to
meetups.
A
So
we
started
doing
that
in
the
summer
of
last
year.
I'm
sorry
I'm
going
fast
food
like
we
kept
the
session
short
coffee
break
and
y'all
go
get
your
puppy,
but
we
started
doing
that
workshop
last
summer
and
we
thought
okay,
we'll
see
how
it
goes
for
the
first
couple
of
months,
and
we
will
do
it
once
a
month
and
we'll
keep
signups
for
those
who
can
have
a
good
discussion,
and
maybe
some
people
will
show
up
and
if
not
we'll,
just
like
you
know,
try
our
own
issues
while
we're
there
all
together.
A
His
dependable
project,
you
have,
you
could
have
down
code
encodes
like
coachman,
so
we
started
off
by
just
making
ourselves
available
and
answering
questions
which
were
like
kind
of
like
here's,
the
myth
of
open
sources.
It's
a
person
coding
and
no
one
ever
meets
each
other,
and
it's
just
awkward
stuff
like
that,
and.
A
There
are
more
than
just
code
ways
like
code
channels
community
and
we
weren't
sure
what
the
efficacy
of
this
would
be
like,
whether
or
not
folks
to
take
this
information
and
eventually
like
because
that
ideal
outcome
as
they
go
and
commit
to
a
project,
and
we
weren't
sure-
and
we
don't
have
hard
data
yet,
but
we
do
know
that
there
are
some
people
come
back
after
making
convinced
er
projects,
including
those
and
they
say
hey
now.
They
want
me
to
follow
up
and
make
this
other
pull
request.
A
Something
like
this
would
help
them
come
together.
The
conversation
started
on
if
this
was
something
that
other
people
wanted
to
run
in
their
own
town
or
if
you
wanted
something
like
this
to
happen
in
your
hometown.
What
kind
of
resources
would
you
want
to
give
the
people
who
are
going
to
organize
this,
so
someone
reached
out
from
Austin
and
the
they
had
attended,
one
of
our
community
committee
meetings
and
they
find
out
about
this
project
so
they're
like
well
I,
think
you
have
a
slide
deck.
Can
we
use
that
okay
slide
deck?
A
But
what
else
would
you
need,
and
they
talked
about
a
curriculum,
so
we
actually
started
putting
together,
create
limbic
touched
on
a
lot
of
what
we
had
discussed.
We
hadn't
brought
curriculum
life
and
we
thought
a
there
are
some
common
questions.
Maybe
we
put
something
together
and
we
run
through
these
each
time.
We
do
our
meetings
that
worked,
so
we
thought
hit
what,
if
we
split
this
up
into
three
sessions
that
we
just
repeat
so
month,
1,
2,
3
and
then
reset
start
again.
A
That
didn't
work
so
well,
because
some
people
would
miss
the
first
one
and
have
no
context
for
the
second
one.
So
we
just
recently
went
back
to
every
month
is
its
own
standalone
thing,
but
people
still
come
back,
even
though
they
know
there
will
be
repeats,
because
we
deliberately
keep
50%
of
the
time
for
open
discussion.
A
The
reason
we
added
CI
and
continuous
integration
to
what
we
talked
to
people
about
or
what
we
introduced
was
because
someone
asked
us
about
it,
and
then
another
person
asked
about
it
like
two
months
later
so
yeah
I
wanted
to
open
the
conversation
up
to
what
people
might
look
for
in
something
like
this.
Would
you
want
to
see
this
in
your
own
town
and
if
you
wanted
someone
to
organize
it,
what
would
you
be
looking
for
in
a.
E
A
You
at
this
stage
having
contributed
already
to
open
source
like
projects,
would
you
mean
so
I'm
not
saying
that
you
should
run
I'm,
just
saying,
isn't
at
this
age?
Will
you
be
comfortable
with
the
idea
like
yeah
I
feel
like
I
can
shoulder
that
you
know
responsibility
of
like
yeah?
If
that
ask
me
questions,
I
can
answer
it
from
the
point
of
view
of
a
maintainer
like
or
do
you
think
it
takes?
Is
there
a
sort
of
barrier
there
well,
I'm,
not
sure
I
would
classify
myself
specifically.
E
As
a
maintainer,
more
of
a
contributor
to
public
use
projects-
okay,
but
personally
I
am
I'm.
Gonna
tell
people
I,
don't
know
the
answer
you
know,
but
what
I
hear
from
what
you
told
me
so
far
about
the
workshop
you
created
it
sounds
like
you
know:
you're,
showing
people
that
open
source
software
is
community
like
that's
that's
what
I'm
getting
out
of
it.
Essentially
there
could
be
you
know:
50%
broken
discussion,
50%
for
kind
of
teaching
and
walking
people
through
that
sounds
good.
C
E
I,
don't
know
how
the
other
chapters
are
but
noted
school.
One
reaches
the
point
eventually,
where
you
know
people
have
kind
of
made
their
way
through
the
curriculum.
They
still
like
that.
So,
like
it's
socially,
so
look
every
month,
yeah
there's
not
necessarily
so
like
this
sounds
it's
only.
It's
like
a
natural
progression
of
how
you
keep
it
interesting
for,
like.
A
B
I'd
be
interested
in
the
curriculum
and
we
need
something
so
you're
talking
to
a
general
audience
about
contributing
to
general
open
source
right.
Yes,
but
there
are
lots
of
smaller
or
just
getting
started
with
such
projects
that
could
use
these
materials
with
some
really
strap
themselves
like
okay,
here's
a
template
for
how
people
should
contribute
to
our
project.
Why
are
we.
E
E
A
D
A
B
E
E
E
A
A
A
Topic
and
that
project
to
use
it
anymore,
yeah,
we
we
have
found
a
lot
of
people,
will
come
and
figure
out,
hey
this
not
for
them,
but
that's
to
be
expected
not
just
with
open
sores,
that's
to
be
expected
with
like
any
sort
of
like
Ian
person
where
child,
and
maybe
the
format
doesn't
agree
of
them,
which
is
why
sometimes
we
have
it's
great
to
have
these
discussions
where
your
suggestion
for
mountain
and
we
can
actually
iterate
on
what
we're
doing-
maybe
we're
not
doing
something
as
well
as
and
we're
also
yeah
I'm.
Very
common.
A
Look
like
that.
We're
very
short
of
time
and
I
wish.
This
discussion
could
continue
more
so
I'm
wondering,
like
all
the
people
here,
I
think
the
best
quality
probably
didn't
move
forward
on.
This
is,
if
you're
still
interested
and
somehow
continue,
the
conversation,
async
say
participating
in
discussions,
or
maybe
we
will
come
up
we'll
post
our
curriculum
somewhere
public
and
you
can
actually
look
through
it
and
make
suggestions
change
it.
A
D
A
B
B
B
A
B
E
A
E
D
D
D
For
every
specific
person
needs
us
very
like
specific
projects
which
they
can
be
in
and
completely
credibility
as
a
a
and
that's
the
point
where
it
should
realize
this
part
of
a
completely
open
source.
You
can
technologies
recharging.
The
front-end
back-end
may
be
obvious.
You
can
look
on
those
technologies
to
be
using
will
happen.
Always
you
will
have
the
information
and
you
will
have
to
compute
to
the
project.
You
know
you
know
the
people,
that's
the
thing.
So
here
we
need
to
like
look
into
the
also
as.
A
So
chance
you're
part
of
your
question.
We
do
offer
ourselves
as
a
resource,
so
the
mentors
in
that
workshop
we
happen
to
contribute
in
the
JavaScript
space,
not
all
no
jest
to
node.js
one
runs
a
framework
like
it's
a
rest
framework
and
talk
with
node
and
another
person
who
worked
mp5.
Yes,
but
what
we
do
try
to
do
is
we
try
to
make
ourselves
available
to
answer
questions
where
it's
like?
You
can
bring
this
if
you're
interested
in
a
project
you
can
bring
it
to
us
and
we'll
help
you
identify
a
way
to
get
it.
A
A
Nature,
try
to
contribute
features,
it's
easier
for
us,
I
think
to
notice
that
kind
of
is.
We
have
other
if,
if
you're
an
open
source
for
a
little
while
you
might
start
up
some
cutters
and
translate
across
projects
and
that's
another
thing
you
do
is
we
help
people
identify,
including
mutual
contribute?
So
if
it
doesn't
have,
for
example,
that
it's
partly
for
the
conduct
and.
A
People
like
go
there
and
we
try
to
explain
why,
because
sometimes
that
might
not
be
immediately
obvious,
but
another
thing
I
do
want
to
make
clear
is
that
what
we're
trying
to
solve
for
is
lowering
the
barrier
of
entry?
We
are
not
necessarily
trying
to
create
motivation
to
contribute
to
open
source.
What
we're
trying
to
do
is
on
this
lunch
end
that
you
have
the
motivation
to
convene
open
source
we're
trying
to
lower
the
barrier.
C
A
D
Most
of
the
time
like
everyone
in
the
community
has
at
least
contribute
to
do
some
project,
maybe
a
type
of
something,
but
the
problem
is
that
most
of
the
difference
is
not,
but
if
they
think
this
is
so
awful,
sometimes
because
you
don't
defeat
the
first
barrier,
but
after
then
they
don't
know.
Yeah
I
did
first
thing
no
I
see.
C
A
E
D
E
C
E
Awesome,
but
for
me
having
that
social
aspect
of
just
paint
come
together
will
maybe
give
some
talks
like
this
would
be
more
of
a
meetup
thing,
online
distant
talks
and
education,
and
then
you
know
people
just
work
on
open
source
or
disgusting
or
whatever
I
was
interpreting
it
as
more
of
like
people
being
able
to
come
together
and
have
that
social
aspect.
I
think
that
that's
what
keeps
people
motivated
in
my
opinion
is,
you
know,
open
source
is
community
in
a
lot
of
ways.
E
They
hear
the
kind
of
person
where
you
can
find
that
community
easily
online
through
your
online
persona,
then
it
can
really
help
you
keep
motivated,
but
if
you're
just
the
person
who
wants
to
try
to
gain
that
habit,
you
already
like
it.
You
know
whatever
I
feel
like
having
a
recurring
event
where
people
come
together
and
work
on
whatever
projects.
They're
gonna
work
on
Venus
suddenly
pitches,
you
a
project
whatever,
but
that's
really
satisfying
to
me
to
think
about
bringing.
B
E
E
E
B
E
D
E
That
was
our
having
that
that's
in
like
real
life,
social.
Do
you
me
like
people
suck
in,
but
you
know
like
we
want
you
to
be
here.
The
very
least
yeah
thank.
A
We
I
think
it's
a
projects,
responsibilities
to
make
sure
that
they
are
conducive
to
recurring,
like
two
divisions
and
they're,
supportive
and
helpful,
and
that's
why
we
try
to
be
very
careful
about
recommending
working
places.
Go.
We
will
not
actually
call
out
like
say
you
should
contribute
here
totally
yeah
until
we
know
for
sure,
like.