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A
Hi
welcome
to
open
Jas
world
I'm
Robin
Jen,
the
executive
director
of
the
open,
Jas
Foundation,
coming
to
you
from
my
home
in
Washington
State,
we're
just
really
excited
to
have.
You
join
us
from
all
over
the
world.
We
have
a
great
week
ahead,
but
before
we
get
started,
I'd
like
to
give
a
thank
you
to
all
of
our
sponsors
for
supporting
us
and
a
special
shout
out
to
our
diamond
sponsor
IBM
I'm,
also
a
quick
reminder
about
our
event
code
of
conduct.
A
You
know
this
week
is
a
special
one.
Five
full
days
of
JavaScript.
The
community
is
coming
together
through
collab
summit
in
the
conference
to
discuss
the
past
the
present
in
the
future
25
years
since
it
was
created.
But
it's
you
know
also
today
is
really
a
historic
time
we're
living
through
a
global
pandemic.
A
That's
really
impacting
many
of
those
that
we
love
and
it's
made
us
all
change
the
way
that
we
go
about
our
daily
lives,
and
it's
also
a
time
that
I
believe
is
just
long
overdue,
where
the
fight
for
equality
and
justice
is
finally
being
recognized
and
heard.
You
know,
I
am
optimistic
that
things
will
change
and
get
better,
but
I
am
optimistic
without
ignoring
the
experiences
and
the
realities
of
underrepresented
communities.
Today,
there's
still
so
much
to
learn
and
actions
to
take
to
overcome
bias.
So
you
know
this
week.
A
I
hope
that
open
j/s
is
a
place
that
you'll
find
a
tech
home
and
a
sense
of
community
where
you
can
think
about.
You
know
how
can
I
make
history
with
technology,
not
only
in
what
you
build,
but
in
how
you
build
with
others
through
open
source
urban
90s?
For
me
growing
up
in
Seattle
it
was
a
decade
of
grunge
music.
It
was
also
a
banner
year
for
the
tech
industry.
A
Larry
met
Sergey
at
Stanford,
were
they
created
a
web
crawler
project
that
later
became
Google
Amazon
shipped
its
first
book,
which
interesting
enough
was
on
the
topic
of
computer.
Mount
modeling
and
Microsoft,
launched
windows,
95
and
Internet
Explorer,
leading
to
fierce
competition
in
the
browser
space,
and
the
news
that
also
hit
that
year
was
the
birth
of
JavaScript
in
1995.
A
So
today
you
know,
javascript
is
now
the
top
training
programming
language
in
the
world,
and
you
know
many
people
are
surprised
to
learn
that
over
96%
of
the
world's
websites
depend
on
JavaScript,
so
most
people
are
using
javascript,
whether
they
know
it
or
not.
And
today
the
open,
J's
foundation
is
here
to
be
the
home
in
neutral
home,
to
grow
the
JavaScript
and
web
ecosystem.
A
But
first,
let
me
give
you
a
quick
overview
of
our
projects.
The
open
J's
foundation
hosts
over
30
important
open-source
JavaScript
projects,
including
appium
dojo,
jQuery,
nodejs,
a
web
pack
and
Wow.
They
are
so
busy
all
of
the
time
and
I
wish.
I
could
just
share
all
of
this.
All
of
the
great
highlights,
but
you
know
we
had
webdriver
shipping
v6
dojo
shipping,
these
seven
nodejs
shipping,
v14
gosh.
A
We
launched
a
node.js
training
certification
program,
a
partnership
with
notes,
arson
near
forum,
man
and
these
certifications
they've
just
really
been
a
great
way
for
developers
to
showcase
their
talent
and
for
companies
to
find
great
talent
in
the
job
market.
I
mean
my
list
can
go
on
and
on,
but
you
know
you're
in
luck,
because
many
of
these
community
leaders
are
here
this
week
and
they're
going
to
be
sharing
many
more
highlights
throughout
the
week.
A
So
we
have
new
projects
that
open
jeaious
and
new
projects
start
as
incubation
projects
and
what
they
do
is
go
through
an
onboarding
checklist
to
ready
themselves
to
join
the
foundation,
and
we
welcome
some
pretty
awesome
incubation
projects.
Since
we
opened
our
doors
last
year,
including
amp,
electron
FASTA
file.
Nvm,
we
have
a
couple
of
project
leaders
keynoting
today
to
share
some
news
and
truly
our
foundation
could
not
survive
without
our
members.
Members
like
Google,
IBM,
giant,
Microsoft,
GoDaddy
and
more.
A
They
really
make
it
happen
if
I
put
not
only
providing
the
financial
support
to
fund
our
programs
but
playing
an
active
role
in
the
governance
process.
So
you
know,
if
you
rely
on
our
JavaScript
projects,
we
would
love
to
have
your
company
join
us,
a
member
we
have
so
many
growing
needs
to
expand
our
programs
and
support
the
infrastructure
for
many
of
the
projects
that
you
all
rely
on.
A
So
what
has
open
governance?
You
know
I'd
like
to
say,
open.
Governance
is
kind
of
like
a
manual
for
how
projects
operate
and
how
decisions
are
made,
but
all
in
a
clear
and
transparent
way
and
this
open
governance.
It
really
creates
this
positive
place
for
collaboration
by
setting
a
little
structure
and
accountability
in
the
process
and
at
the
open,
J's
foundation.
Since
we
are
in
a
Brella
organization,
a
big
goal
of
ours
was
to
create
a
governance
model
designed
to
give
a
strong
voice
to
our
projects.
A
So,
for
example,
each
project
has
its
own
technical
steering
committee
and
a
variety
of
business
and
community
working
teams
to
really
manage
their
projects
and
then
at
the
board
or
at
the
foundation
level.
We
have
our
board
of
directors
who
sets
our
and
direction
are
crossed.
Project
Council,
which
is
like
a
centralized
technical
advisory
and
moderation
team,
and
we
have
our
staff
that
provides
a
number
of
functions
from
marketing.
A
Legal
and
events
like
you'll
see
this
week,
and
so
really
we
want
all
of
our
projects
to
operate
independently,
while
at
the
same
time
sort
of
at
that
foundation
level.
We
can
kind
of
remove
some
of
that
friction
to
allow
you
to
work
more
quickly
and
work
more
quickly
with
the
community
and
code,
and
so
one
other
cool
thing
is
most
of
our
meetings
that
open
jeaious
are
broadcast,
live
on,
YouTube
and
then
documented
on
github
and
you're
enjoy
invited
to
join.
A
So
you
could
simply
just
tune
in
as
an
observer,
or
you
can
just
jump
right
in
and
share
your
ideas
and
input
and
if
the
time
doesn't
work
for
you,
you
can
go
to
our
YouTube
channel
and
check
it
out
and
go
to
github
and
check
out
our
notes.
So
lots
of
ways
for
you
to
get
involved
go
to
our
collaboration,
page
on
open,
JSF
org,
and
you
can
add
our
meetings
to
your
calendar.
A
So
a
lot
of
people
ask
us
like
just
why?
Don't
you
just
put
your
projects
on
github
and
call
it
a
day,
so
you
know
we.
We
know
that
neutrality
is
important,
so
whenever
a
piece
of
technology
is
so
important,
you
don't
want
one
company
to
control
that
so
moving
a
piece
of
technology
to
a
foundation
is
sort
of
a
way
to
ensure
that
the
future
direction
of
the
project
has
really
developed
in
a
community
way.
A
So
just
take
a
look
at
how
some
of
the
foundations
today
have
supported
connect
technologies
over
time,
including
Linux,
Eclipse
and
dotnet.
So
if
you
know
you
really
want
to
build
a
truly
neutral
organization
and
maybe
offload
some
of
that
non
development
aspects
of
running
a
project,
the
open,
J's
foundation
is
really
the
place
to
be
because
you
know
everything
we
do
supports
this.
A
So
again,
we
have
a
great
week.
You'll
have
the
opportunity
to
engage
with
inspiring
speakers
who
have
simply
been
unstoppable
in
reaching
their
dreams.
So
again
we
invite
you
to
join
us,
not
just
today
but
throughout
the
year,
because
now
is
really
the
right
place
and
the
right
time
to
make
history
happy.
Anniversary,
JavaScript
and
one
more
thing
I'd
like
to
now
introduce
our
open,
J's,
Foundation,
Board,
President,
Todd
Moore
Todd
is
the
vice
president
of
technology
and
developer
advocacy
at
IBM
time.