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A
A
Welcome
to
the
second
openshift
Commons
gathering
here
in
Berlin,
the
last
time
we
did
this
was
in
Seattle.
There
were
175
of
you.
It
was
the
day
before
khoob
con
again
and
now
there
are
I.
Think
220
of
you
here,
which
is
pretty
amazing
for
just
a
couple
of
months,
and
a
lot
of
good
work
has
gone
in
from
the
whole
openshift
team
and
the
red
hat
team
here,
inna
media,
so
I
want
to
thank
them.
A
There's
a
lot
of
them
in
the
room
too,
and
I'm
going
to
put
the
volume
up
a
little
bit
more.
Is
it
up?
Vol,
ok,
I'm,
going
to
speak
closer
to
the
mic,
so
my
name
is
Diane
Muller.
Many
of
you
have
seen
me
sort
of
virtually
on
some
of
the
open
shift.
Commons
briefings
and
a
lot
of
you
have
seen
me-
try
and
coerce
you
into
doing
other
things
around
the
community.
So
the
key
for
us
is
open
shifts.
A
Origin
is
the
project
that
all
of
the
open
shift
projects
and
products
are
based
on,
and
it's
really
about
creating
the
community
and
the
connections.
Today
between
you,
your
peers,
the
people
who
are
the
upstream
project
leads
that
are
in
the
house
and
trying
to
branch
and
connect
all
of
the
different
communities,
whether
you're
on
the
commercial
side
of
the
house
or
the
open
source
side
of
the
house,
and
get
you
all
to
connect
and
talk
to
each
other
and
collaborate.
A
What
we're
really
looking
for
today
is
to
change
sort
of
the
model
of
open
source
connectedness
in
a
way
so
that
you
have
the
faces
and
the
names
to
the
people
and
the
peers
that
you
need
to
connect
with
to
make
sure
that
your
jobs
and
your
deployments
of
open
shift
or
the
work
that
you're
doing
on
kuber
Nettie's
feeds
into
the
open
shift
upstream
projects.
And
today
what
we
really
want
to
do
is
make
sure
that
everybody
participates.
A
There'll,
be
some
Q&A
there's
some
microphones
that
will
have
that
will
be
able
to
pass
pass
them
back
and
forth.
And
you
can
ask
questions.
There's
a
couple
of
good
panels
here
that
we've
got
lots
of
people
who
volunteer
to
come
and
be
there
and
be
part
of
today.
So
make
sure
that
you
connect
with
the
people
that
are
sitting
next
to
you,
the
people
that
are
around
you
at
lunchtime
and
in
the
brakes
and
the
afternoon
in
the
evening
be
reset
as
well.
A
So,
as
you
know,
there's
a
ton
of
projects
that
feed
into
openshift
origin.
So
I
always
put
this
sort
of
ubiquitous
bubble
here
and
there's
really
not
even
a
third
of
the
projects
that
feed
into
openshift
origin
and
that
make
up
the
project.
So
we
really
know
that
we
have
a
lot
of
dependencies
internally,
the
red
hat,
other
projects
that
are
being
built
out
by
Red,
Hatters
and
externally
to
the
other
projects
there
and
they
feed
into
the
three
main
projects
or
products
from
openshift
that
many
of
you
are
using
today.
A
A
Many
of
the
project
leads
some
of
the
people
that
you'll
see
at
coop
con
over
the
next
couple
of
days,
some
of
the
vendors
who
will
be
up
at
coop
con
in
the
booth
up
there
here
to
sort
of
give
you
a
head
start
on
the
next
couple
of
days
and
a
head
start.
If
you're
not
going
to
coop
con
on
your
implementations
on
who's
who,
in
the
community.
A
So
one
of
the
things
that
we
really
try
and
push
from
an
open
source
perspective
is
that
it's
not
just
about
contributing
to
open
shift
origin.
It's
more
about
we're,
open,
shifters,
there's
a
lot
of
engineers
from
the
Red
Hat
teams
here
who
are
contributing
in
to
Coober
Nettie's
itself
and
into
another.
You
know
prometheus
and
to
docker
and
to
the
other
pieces
in
parts
oci
and
to
see
all
of
the
CNCs
that
are
going
to
be
talked
about
today
and
over
this
the
coming
week,
and
we
know
that
it's
a
two-way
street.
A
A
A
There
are
50
member
organizations
here
that
are
part
of
the
open
shift,
Commons
and
I'm
just
going
to
keep
advancing
because
we
so
what
the
real
future
looks
like
and
I'm
going
to
keep
running
through
you
one
more
if
I
could
click.
This
is
really
to
try
and
figure
out
how
to
create
this
model.
So
that
it
works
for
everyone,
not
everybody
can
be
in
the
room.
A
lot
of
the
stuff
that
we
do
is
virtual,
so
I've
do
every
week
at
least
one
or
two
virtual
briefings
and
meetups
for
cigs.
A
So
you'll
see
my
face
opening
meetings
and
things
like
that
through
blue
jeans
and
if
you're
not
part
of
the
the
open
shift
Commons.
Yet
I'd
really
encourage
you
by
the
end
of
today
to
see
me
and
sign
up.
So
we
can
get
you
on
the
mail
inglis.
There
is
a
slack
channel
that
we
use.
We
try
and
use
as
many
of
the
tools
that
we
can
to
keep
us
connected.
Virtually
there's
great
Trello
board
flat
channel
is
pretty
active.
A
A
So
really,
what
we're
trying
to
do
is
figure
out
the
best
way
to
make
as
many
connections
here
today
as
possible.
So
if
you're
someone,
I
think,
deutsche
börse
came
in
last
night
about
2
a.m.
and
asked
to
be
put
on
the
waitlist
and
they
should
be
here
and
they
probably
haven't
met
most
everybody
in
the
room,
but
by
the
end
of
today
and
the
end
of
this
week.
Hopefully
they'll
have
been
connected
with
everybody
upstream
and
everybody
in
the
open
shift
team.
A
So
what
we
really
like
to
do
is
not
be
anonymous,
so
one
difference
I
think
between
this
community
and
other
communities
and
in
the
open
source
world.
Is
we
really
encourage
you
not
to
use
your
gmail
when
you
sign
up
for
the
mailing
list,
we
really
ask
you
to
identify.
You
know
who
your
corporate
sponsor
is,
who
you're
working
with
what
project
you're
working
on,
so
that
people
have
a
way
of
knowing
who
to
reach
out
to
and
talk
to,
because
it's
not
all
about
red
hat
or
me
being
the
gatekeeper
for
this
community.
A
A
So
one
thing
we
do
know
is
that
you
guys
talk
a
lot.
You
guys.
We've
got
over
once
877
different
authors
on
the
repos
and
github,
and
that's
just
the
github
stuff
alone.
We've
got
tons
of
people
doing
pull
requests
people
on
the
slack
channel
people
in
a
stack
overview.
There's
lots
of
chatter
going
on
what
we're
trying
to
do
is
make
sure
that
that
is
all
constructive.
It's
a
very
healthy
and
vibrant
open
source
community.
A
We
want
to
keep
it
that
way
and
that's
why
these
gatherings
will
be
doing
one
we're
doing
one
here,
we're
going
to
do
one
the
day
before
Red
Hat
summit
on
may.
First,
if
you're
coming
to
Boston
and
we'll
do
another
one
at
the
Austin
kook
on
as
well,
so
we're
just
going
keep
a
cadence
of
these
actual
physical
events
going
on
so
that
we
can
make
sure
it's.
The
virtual
is
just
not
enough.
We
need
to
really
have
that
face
time
too,
so
we're
going
to
keep
trying
to
do
that
and
do
another
one.
A
So
really
that
the
one
very
interesting
thing
to
me
is
that
the
community
collaboration
and
all
this
communication,
when
we
first
started
doing
this
new
model
well,
when
I
first
started
being
sort
of
a
community
manager
for
open
shift.
It
was
all
about
getting
the
folks
here
in
the
room
to
contribute
code
to
origin.
It
really
my
focus
and
the
focus
of
most
open
source.
Community
managers
is
trying
to
herd
cats,
so
they'll
contribute
some
code,
make
a
pull
request.
A
Do
that
feedback
and
what
we're
really
worried
about
in
the
beginning
was
that
bye-bye,
including
all
of
these
different
pieces
and
parts
to
vendors,
the
end
user,
that
that
we
were
losing
our
focus
on
getting
code
contribution
and
if
we
go
to
the
next
slide.
One
of
the
things
that
became
very
clear
is
we
don't
have
the
picture
of
that?
Well,
there's
a
nice
pie
chart
that
should
be
on
there,
but
that's
all
right,
we'll
survive
it.
A
A
So
the
thing
I'm
going
to
keep
iterating
on
is
everybody
if
you're
not
because
I
know
about
fifty
percent
of
you
in
the
room
are
not
in
the
open
shift
common
jet,
which
means
you're
not
on
the
mailing
list.
You're,
probably
not
listening
to
me,
blather
on
about
weekly
topics
on
the
briefings
and
you're,
not
on
the
slap
channel
so
by
the
end
of
today.
There's
a
forum
on
commons
at
openshift
or
go
there
or
see
me
and
will
sign
you
up.
A
So
today's
agenda
really
is
not
about
me
and
it's
really
not
about
Red
Hat
selling,
you
any
products
or
getting
anything.
It's
about
you
participating
in
the
conversation,
so
we're
done
with
a
welcome
part.
We're
going
to
have
a
very
tight
schedule
because
we're
already
like
10
minutes
late
off
schedule
or
as
it
is
we're
going
to
hear
today
on
some
of
the
emerging
technology
trends
and
challenges
and
for
the
digital
transformation
from
chris
wright
from
Red
Hat.
A
Now
we're
going
to
hear
from
google
and
hear
about
what
their
point
of
view
is
on
Cooper,
Nettie's,
1.6
and
the
road
ahead.
We're
going
to
get
then
Clayton
somewhere
in
the
back
is
going
to
come
up
and
talk
about
openshift,
3.5
or
as
I
call
it
three
point
X,
because
it's
a
moving
target
every
time.
I
turn
around
there's
a
new
number.
A
There
then
we're
going
to
actually
hear
we're
going
to
take
a
little
break
after
Clayton
and
then
we're
going
to
have
T
systems
come
up
and
talk
about
big
data
on
openshift
and
their
implementation
of
open
shift
here,
and
then
we
will
just
before
lunch,
we're
going
to
do
the
upstream.
This
panel,
which
will
give
a
chance
for
many
of
the
upstream
project,
leads
to
come
and
a
new
member
of
the
Red
Hat
team,
stormy
Peters
is
going
to
be
the
moderator
for
that,
and
then
we've
done.
A
A
Then
we're
going
to
hear
from
vulval
I
think
Roberts
in
the
room,
I'm
hoping
yes
Roberts
in
the
room
and
he's
way
he's
probably
working
on
this
slides
right
now
and
then
we're
going
to
we're
going
to
have
bring
together
a
panel
of
people
from
one
one
or
two
from
each
walk
of
the
community.
So
some
service
providers
some
end
users,
some
open
source
project
leads
and
and
get
allow
them
to
give
feedback
directly
to
the
community
and
their
thoughts
on
what
they
need
to
see
in
the
road
ahead.
A
Then
we're
going
to
hear
from
Amadeus
and
then
we're
going
to
get
a
little
snippet
about
the
future
or
the
current
state
of
containers
that
container
ecosystem
from
Vincent
bats
who's,
a
member
of
the
open
container
initiative
and
then
we're
going
to
get
one
really
interesting.
Talk,
I,
hope,
someone
who's
just
come
out
of
the
open
innovation
labs
working
on
a
mobile
app
in
healthcare,
easier
AG
is
going
to
come
up
and
give
us
a
talk
and
hopefully
inspire
us
a
little
bit,
and
then
there
will
be
beer.
A
So,
first
off
we
do
things
a
little
differently
at
lunch,
or
at
least
we
try.
You
will
see
when
you
go
out
to
lunch.
There
will
be
a
little
table,
tents
with
topics
on
them.
There's
special
interest
groups,
topics,
and
if
you
don't
see
your
special
interest
group
topic
there
and
you
have
a
different
one.
Let
me
know
we
have
some
blank
ones
and
we
can
add
those
there
so
we're
trying
to
encourage
people
to
gather
at
lunchtime
and
talk
about
the
things
that
are
of
interest
to
them.
A
I've
tried
to
make
sure
that
there's
one
person
from
each
of
those
topics
who
will
lead
that
conversation
at
the
table?
Sometimes
this
works.
Sometimes
it
doesn't
one
more
the
word
about
the
evening
around
five.
Thirty,
if
we're
timely
in
the
back
room,
where
we
had
lunch,
there
will
be
some
beer
and
sausage
and
typical
German
stuff
and
I
good
stuff.
I'm,
German
I
love
this
stuff
and
then
tonight
the
CNCs
actually
is
kicking
off
at
around
7pm.
A
So
if
you
have
passes
to
coop
con,
upstairs
there'll
be
some
lightning
talks
and
I
know,
there's
at
least
one
by
an
open
shifter
going
on
so
there'll
be
some
movement
upstairs
to
the
bigger
room
and
the
thing
that
the
next
time
I
do
this.
In
Berlin
we
will
rent
the
upstairs
room:
okay,
I
promise
we'll
have
more
chairs
and
that,
because
we
turned
away
about
50
people
and
I'm,
really
amazed
at
the
progress
that
open
shift
and
the
Red
Hat
team
is
made
here
in
in
amia.
A
We
have
folks
has
come
from
Norway
and
Sweden
and
Turkey
and
unbelievable
on
places
that
there
are
a
few
folks
signed
up
from
China,
even
so
I'm
waiting
to
see
a
ZTE
showed
up
in
the
house-
maybe
maybe
not
so
anyways
I'm
going
to
ask
one
more
slide.
I
think
there's
one
more
slide,
so
I
really
want
to
get
started.
Chris
Wright
is
hiding
somewhere
here
and
come
on
up
and
let's
get
your
slides,
and
this
is
going
to
be
interesting
to
see.