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From YouTube: What Powers learn.openshift.com? Katacoda Straight Talk
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A
A
All
right,
good
morning
again
today
we
have
a
very
special
guest
with
us.
It's
been
hold
the
founder
of
calico
dot-com,
and
why
am
I
sharing
it
with
you?
Well,
very
simply,
let
me
quickly
show
you
you
might
know
already,
but
if
not
learned
it,
which,
if
not
come
actually
is
powered
by
Qatar
Qatar
and
we
very
happy
customers
and
we
are
building
out
all
the
little
courses
there
and
you
know
so.
B
A
B
Yeah
sure
so
have
you
kind
of
kindly
introduced
cuts,
Kotov
segment
focused
on
learning
at
helping
developers,
okay,
their
skills
and
understand
new
technologies
and
how
they
can
actually
be
adopted,
just
solve
their
problems,
and
so
I've
always
had
an
interest
in
helping
developers
and
sharing
content.
So
I've
spoken
at
many
different
conferences,
some
of
which
we
have
Co
presented
at
the
same
conference.
It's
always
always
good,
the
nice
validation
and
delivered
training
courses
and
different
blogs
and
writing
books,
etc.
A
B
So
we're
an
interactive
learning
platform
for
software
developers,
so
we
teach
developers
how
to
learn
and
how
to
use
docker,
kubernetes,
OpenShift,
obviously,
but
also
the
other
aspects
of
the
cloud
native
ecosystem.
So
where
does
tooling
lie
previous
at
it?
And
how
do
you
stop
monitoring
and
understanding
what's
happening
within
systems
and
we
take
people
from
not
having
any
awareness
so
foundation,
understanding
of
what
containers
are
and
get
them
to
the
point
where
they
can
securely
deploy,
docker
containers
within
kubernetes
or
on
top
of
cuban.
B
And
so
when
you
go
to
cut
code,
and
not
only
do
you
have
a
hundred
hundred
fifty-three
tutorials,
you
also
have
the
interactive
platform
and
a
kubernetes
cluster
which
has
been
pre-configured
that
you
can
experiment
with
within
the
browser.
You
don't
have
to
worry
about
downloading,
go,
install
anything
anything
you
can
just
go
on
and
get
started
instantly,
learn,
experiment,
break
everything
hit
refresh
and
you
get
given
up
a
new
clean,
fresh
environment,
I've.
A
Seen
you've
recently
added
even
machine
learning,
so
cute
flow.
Is
there
as
well?
You
can
toy
around
with
the
cube
slow,
which
is
essentially
yeah,
tensorflow
plus
the
tubular
notebook,
so
they
can
do
machine
learning
there.
Yeah
I'm,
not
sure
everyone
knows
that,
but
this
is
really
like.
This
is
the
real
thing
like
you're,
really
deploying
a
capacity
robust
or
whatever,
and
really
interacting
with
the
real
thing.
But
it's
not
just
going
on
in
your
browser
right
exactly.
B
B
We
beat
them
and
see
kind
of
like
workloads,
go
down
and
see
how
keeping
it
is
responds
and
then
bring
them
back
up
again
and
I'm
kind
of
like
experiment
in
a
safe
place
and
because
we
don't
have
any
restrictions
like
it's
free
for
so
you,
if
you
want
to
start
crashing
boxes
and
kind
of
simulating
failures
or
networking
going
down,
then
that's
also-
and
it's
a
great
place
to
do
that.
Instead
of
doing
it,
I
know
and
your
production
production
systems.
A
B
B
It's
an
open
platform
and
some
of
the
scenarios
like
I'm
open
to
if
we
don't
even
prompt
for
an
email
or
kind
of
like
an
he
sign
up,
so
people
can
just
jump
in
and
get
started
right
away
and
obviously
that
do
the
tracks
and
wanted
attention
every
now
and
again
yeah.
As
we
see
different
things
emerging
and
different
approaches,
then
we
combat
that
so
that
they
don't
get
very
far.
A
Let's
switch
gears
a
little
bit
like
from
from
with
talking
I'm
talking
about
the
the
end-user
consumer,
whatever
aspect
here
so
far,
what
about
you
know?
Imagine
you
have
a
cool
open
source
project
or
whatever
and
I
want
to
show
it
out.
I
want
to
give
people
something
to
try
it
out
and
I
just
go
there
and
create
something
really
cool
about
that.
Yeah.
B
B
And
so
you
can
go
into
the
platform
you
we
have
a
teaching
section
and
then
you
can
start
creating
your
own
content.
On
top
of
it,
you
have
your
own
profile
page,
you
can
repurpose
our
existing
environment.
So
if
you
need
capabilities
or
Feenie
docker
denotes
all
setup
a
pre-configured.
You
can
like
that
basic
environment
start
lighting,
some
content
in
markdown
click,
publish
and
you
have
a
beautiful
interactive
scenario
which
can
showcase
demos
interactive
ways
of
learning.
However,
you
want
to
demonstrate
what
your
or
your
building
right.
B
Completely
so
we
offer
different
ways
which
kind
of
match
how
people
like
to
create
content.
So
some
people,
like
the
in
browser,
experience
it's
more
self-contained,
I'm
great
for
kind
of
technical
writers
and
documentation
teams,
because
they
don't
need
to
understand
the
get
workflow
and
kind
of
create
and
get
all
people
with,
etc.
And
but
when
we
were
working
with
kind
of
open
source
projects
and
teams
and
collaboration,
github
is
a
natural
place.
It's
where
everything
is
sitting
already,
and
so
you
can
create
give
up
hope.
B
B
So
the
whole
landscape
of
cloud
native
is
changing
so
rapidly.
It's
hard
to
predict
what
the
end
of
2018
is
going
to
look
like,
but
there's
some
things
which
we're
definitely
excited
about
working
on.
Well,
we
have
the
interactive
nature
at
the
moment.
It's
at
the
moment
it's
very
descriptive,
so
we
walk
you
through
how
to
tell
particular
problems,
and
so
we
give
you
like
how
do
you
ploy
container,
okay?
Well,
here's
doctor
wound
if
you've
worked,
the
images
that
this
is
where
the
hope
exists,
etc
and,
for
example,
of
security.
B
If
I
right
here
see
groups
his
namespaces,
if
you've
what's
happening
the
covers
and
we
kind
of
walking
people
through
those
different
steps,
what
I
think
the
next
stage,
what
we
want
to
experiment
is
making
it
more
challenge
focused.
So
how
can
you
verify
that
you
understand
what
we're
explaining,
and
so
you
can
walk
through
things
like
yes,
I
understand
now
how
to
launch
container,
and
it's
like?
B
Okay
so
prove
it
so
actually
go
ahead
and
fill
particular
challenges
and
a
particular
aspects
to
cut
Khan,
Khattak
Oda
and
then
use
that
to
kind
of
like
verify
that
you
have
understood
all
the
different
moving
parts
making
sure
you're
not
missing
something
test,
your
command-line
skills
in
a
safe,
safe
place,
and
then
that
kind
of
reinforces
that
hole.
Cutter
mindset,
which
is
where
the
name
playing
on-site,
deliberate,
learning,
continuous,
practicing
repeating
the
same
steps
over
and
over
again
to
improve
muscle
memory
and
make
it
something
which
is
very
natural
and
I.
B
B
So
we
definitely
are
working
on
that
and
then
decided
more
content,
working
with
different
open
source
projects
and
different
communities
and
showcase
what
they're
working
on
and
kind
of
area.
So
if
you
mentioned
coop
flow,
if
an
exciting
project,
it's
kind
of
an
extension
to
kubernetes,
and
so
it
falls
within
the
kind
of
our
existing
content
manner.
B
But
when,
if
you
start
talking
about
coop
flow,
then
teaching
tend
to
flow,
makes
perfect
sense
and
when
he'll
teach
intense
flow,
then
deleting
the
left
of
machine
learning
ecosystem
and
it's
kind
of
a
natural
evolution
and
a
natural
growth
plan
which
we're
slowly
rolling
out.
And
we
already
have
some
great
tensile
flow
content
on
the
website,
which
kind
of
goes
into
the
different
aspects
of
tend
to
flow,
but
also
into
a
deep
learning
and
how
tends
flow
works
and
recovers,
and
it
gets
a
little
bit
too
complex.
B
Even
for
me,
I
am
NOT,
stating
scientist
by
any
stretch
of
the
imagination,
I'm
really
popular
and
people
are
really
excited.
It's
a
great
way
to
see
how
you
can
at
least
start
training
models
and
because
we've
all
hosted
it
by
ourselves.
You
don't
have
to
worry
about
having
an
expensive
laptop
or
having
a
huge
machine
available
to
your
disposal.
You
can
alternate
FiOS
out
and
then
you
can
just
focus
on
what
the
results
are.
Instead
of
worrying
about
burning
for
your
an
SSD
disk
on
your
laptop
right.
B
Have
a
great
place
where
we
can
allow
people
to
focus
on
what's
important,
which
is
producing
great
content,
but
do
you
think
they
products
and
delivering
a
great
workshop?
Not
the
okay
now
need
to
spend
up
a
hundred
fifty
machines
for
the
attendees
and
how
do
I
give
them
the
IP
addresses
and
passwords
and
okay?
What
is
that
I
now
need
to
be
able
to
turn
them
off,
but
I
think
I
want
to
do
at
the
end
of
the
work.
B
Suppose
we
number
to
turn
off
machines
if
I
forget
got
more
cost
like
there's
lots
of
moving
parts
which
generally
are
filled
with
some
random
bath
scripts,
which
I
then
need
to
be
maintained
and
kind
of
like
tested,
etc.
So
it's
a
distraction
and
by
you
think,
a
Takoda.
We
finding
that
people
can
actually
focus
the
game
more
on
the
content,
spend
more
time
on
what's
important
for
the
attendees
and
less
time
on
the
surrounding
infrastructure,
and
we
can
take
care
of
that
for
them.
So.
A
I
can't
firstly
can't
wait
to
see
these
quizzes
or
tests
whatever
you're
gonna
call
this
feature
in
place.
I
lost
that
idea
to
essentially
really
have
the
kind
of
what
told
me
it
saying:
okay,
not
just
rushing
fluid,
say
I
out
whatever,
but
really
saying:
hey
did
I
actually
understand.
What's
going
on
there
like
crew,
right
and
attacked
or
clicking
plays
or
whatever
yeah.
B
And
I
think
it
would
be
great
when
just
to
the
extra
place
to
start
learning,
so
you
had
a
great
blog
post
on
openshift
blog
and
if
I,
okay
boy
have
I
actually
read
that
properly
or
how
I
understood
all
of
them,
even
part,
I
have
a
mr.
section,
it's
so
easy
to
miss
critical
aspects
when
you're
reading
online.
A
And
you
know,
I
might
be
biased
because
I'm
using
code
enough
but
extensively
in
the
context
of
learned
or
ownership
calm,
but
the
other
day
I
just
wanted
to
show
my
new
little
cube
and
I
was
like
okay,
I'm,
just
gonna
put
together
a
kind
of
color
scenario,
but
I
literally
only
took
me
I
think
15
minutes
or
whatever
I
initially
started
out
online
editor
and
just
you
know,
I
of
course,
I
knew
what
I
want
to
do
there,
but
like
literally
from
starting
to
having
it
online.
Everyone
just
go
there
and
try
it
out.
A
B
Have
some
really
interesting
projects?
My
favorite
at
the
moment
is
chaos
toolkit
apart
from
yours,
a
really
interesting.
It's
going
into
that
whole
chaos.
Development
theory
which
everyone's
getting
excited
about
I'm
winning
chaos
bonkers
on
infrastructure
and
if
you
application,
actually
work,
if
you
expected
to
when
that
things
start
falling
apart
and
I,
think
that's
a
really
great
case
where
they
do
start
dividing
content
and
they
didn't
need
anything
for
myself.
They
didn't
engage
initially.
They
just
went
onto
website
and
I've.
B
You
said
it's
like
white
sand,
a
blog
post,
pretty
much
takes
about
the
same
time,
but
the
benefit
is,
is
interactive
and
people
can
experiment
and
now
they've
got
a
great
set
of
content,
which
kind
of
demonstrates
different
aspects
of
their
open
source
projects
and
their
tool.
Kit,
and
you
can
start
winning
from
chaos,
theory
and
principles
and
seeing
out
see
how
it
works
in
a
place
on
life.
B
So,
if
it's
not
to
see
projects
starting
to
kind
of
embrace
it
with
us
without
our
involvement,
because
that's
so
that
actually
there's
something
there,
which
is
always
always
good
to
see
and
I,
find
a
pension
and
then
once
we
have
that
we
can,
with
promoting
different
community
projects,
more
free
cuts
code
of
itself.
So
you
have
your
own
profile
page,
which
you
can
kind
of
promote
and
share.
But
we
want
to
do
more
to
support
that
and
obviously
half
the
battle
is
discovery.
B
So
I
think
we
can
do
more
to
help
how
people
discover
their
different
projects
and
actually
discover
what
problems
can
be
solved
very
similar
to
what
the
cloud
native
landscapes
doing
like
just
highlighting
all
of
the
moving
parts
in
a
knife
categorized
way.
I
think
we
can
do
something
similar
with
open-source
and
the
content
which
we
have
on
katakana
to.
A
B
So
I
think
one
of
the
things
which
I
enjoy
about
cuts
coda.
It's
it
itself.
It
can
evolve
as
the
world
around.
It
is
evolving.
So
initially
we
very
much
focused
on
docker
and
kind
of
like
what
containers
are,
and
then
we
saw
more
growth
and
energy
around
cubing.
It
is,
and
you
know
we
could
then
support
and
add
more
content
to
folks
in
there
we've
got
some
Nomad
content
coming
from
the
how
to
cook
team,
which
is
very
exciting.
No
matter
itself
is
a
very
interesting
proposition.
B
I
think
many
people
overlook
and
kind
of
like
kubernetes
I've
got
such
mindshare,
and
just
such
a
community
passion
behind
it
now,
no
matter
it
is
probably
the
purest
scheduler
of
the
more
it
just
schedules
workloads,
but
for
many
companies,
that's
exactly
what
they
need.
They
just
want
a
schedule
if
they
just
want
to
like
ring
this
JVM
somewhere
and
I
just
make
it
happen
and
then
return
with
results.
They
don't
want
to
go
for
the
threat
of
settle
Christians
and
networking,
and
everything
like
that.
B
So
I
think
it's
interesting
see
where
all
of
this
technology
is
evolving
and
just
kind
of
being
being
able
to
play
and
learn
and
see
what
the
different
viewpoints
are
it's
great
and
then
obviously,
that
then
drives
helping
compares
and
more
now
helping
them
have
a
better
adoption
strategy
and
kind
of
solving
more
interesting
problems.
So
that's
always
interesting
and
I
still
really
enjoy
doing
that.
B
If
the
way
the
filter
delivery
works
up
in
a
classroom
and
see
how
a
different
computer
facing
different
problems
and
how
we
can
help
utilize
cloud
native
to
make
their
lives
easier
and
make
their
lives
better.
So
that's
fun.
So
we've
got
more
of
that
coming
in
the
future,
partnering
with
different
companies
to
kind
of
do
coal
workshops
together
through
working
with
their
community,
taking
advantage
of
cuts
coda
and
a
we
thought
which
we
have
available
and
kind
of
like
share
and
collaborate
and
commit
at
the
best
of
both
worlds.
B
B
We
can
start
pushing
that
and
seeing
it
so
we're
playing
with
some
secret
things
which
are
not
so
secret.
If
you
him
hard
enough,
but
yeah
there's
some
things
which
were
exploring
to
try
and
enhance
what
else
can
we
bring
to
an
interactive
platform
and
how
I
look
and
feel
so
yeah?
There's
lots
in
the
future.
B
It's
all
a
bit
over
because
Maps
roadmaps
are
being
crafted
and
explored
at
the
start
of
year.
So
yeah,
that's
good.
I've
got
an
energy
search,
more
kind
of
helping
people
in
the
classroom,
helping
companies
and
themselves
adopt
new
technologies
and
helping
them
understand
it
from
kind
of
like
a
internal
viewpoint,
so
you've
got
I,
it
should
be
two
teams.
You've
got
different
teams
working
on
different
things.
B
How
can
they
collaborate
more
effectively
together
and
make
sure
that
they're
transferring
knowledge
effectively
and
making
sure
that
knowledge
hasn't
been
dropped
when
people
move
around
or
shift
teams
or
contractors
come
in
and
out,
making
sure
that
everything's
being
captured
in
a
successful
way?
So
read
lots
of
different
moving
parts.
A
B
We
do
have
some
from
the
community,
so
there
is
some
community
driven
content
and
so
yeah
again
it's
that
whole
I'm
trying
to
discover
it
so
well
add
enough
attention
and
so
that
you'll
be
able
to
come
in
and
type
blockchain
and
you'll
discover
all
of
our
block
team
content
created
by
the
community.
So
that's
a
much
better
way
of
discovering
a
Pierrette.
B
Definitely
there's.
Definitely
some
blockchain
content
on
there,
because
it's
an
exciting.
It's
like
people
are
excited
like
what.
If
this
new
technology
is
it
even
relevant
to
me
and
people
want
to
explore
so
yeah
if
the
community's
kind
of
stepped
in
and
kind
of
started,
producing
some
of
that
to
showcase
creating,
like
II,
threw
em
contracts
and
ethernet/ip
ient
stuff,
like
that.
So
it's
it's
cool
to
see.
Yes,
yeah,
not
on
my
radar,
yet
too
many
too
many
other
things
to
be
learning
myself.
A
B
Definitely
yeah
we're
based
in
central
London
and
then
we
just
kind
of
go
to
different
comforters
yeah.
If
you
ever
see
me
see
me
around,
I
want
to
have
a
chat,
then
definitely
yeah.
Send
me
a
tweet
or
tell
me
an
email
and
I
would
be
great.
Also,
we
go
spend
a
lot
time
at
different,
Lynda
meetups,
so
keeping
that
if
Linda
and
cloud
native
Linda
and
dr.
Linden,
which
we
helped
organized
sto
London
we've
got
a
great
community
here.