►
From YouTube: Developer Experience Office Hours
Description
Join OpenShift's Developer Experience experts for our regularly scheduled program filled with cloud native, Kubernetes, and OpenShift tips and tricks for developers.
A
My
first
time
here
at
the
openshift
twitch
channel,
so
always
a
pleasure
to
join
this
like
great
set
of
people,
and
I
work
on
the
developer
advocacy
team
at
the
red
hat
developer
program.
So
usually
I
talk
about
java,
kubernetes
and
all
this
sort
of
stuff,
I'm
also
a
java
champion
and
a
microsoft
mvp
and
my
twitter
handle
is
atianaga
just
in
case.
You
can
see
here
here
shirt.
So
if
you
want
a
tip
well,
follow
me
on
twitter.
B
Excellent,
so
edson's
going
to
be
helping
recap:
a
portion
of
the
dev
nation
day,
activity
that
occurred
last
week.
Basically,
during
and
following
our
presentation
during
last
week's
show
a
couple
other
folks.
We
have
they're
going
to
help
recap
some
of
that
other
tracks.
I
think
we
have
jason
dobies
that
led
the
python
track
and
joel
lorde
who
led
the
javascript
track.
So
joel,
would
you
mind
giving
us
a
quick
intro
and
then
we'll
pass
it
to
jay
and
brian
sure?
Thank
you.
C
Yeah
well,
I
work
I
actually
work
with
ryan
as
a
developer
advocate
for
the
red
hot
openshift
platform,
and
I
I've
been
using
openshift
a
little
bit
or
exploring
around
openshift
in
the
last
year
or
so
ever
since
I
joined
this
team,
I
I
really
come
from
a
javascript
background,
so
that's
what
I've
always
done.
I'm
a
big
big
fan
of
javascript
and
that's
what
led
me
to
leading
this
or
hosting
the
the
javascript
track
at
devnation
day
last
week.
C
So-
and
this
is
what
I'm
gonna
talk
about
today,
you
can
find
me
on
twitter
at
joel,
with
two
underscore
stores
for
joel
underscore
underscore
lord.
It's
like
the
worst
twitter
handle
ever
but
hey
that's!
It
is
what
it
is.
E
So
my
name
is
jason
nobis,
I'm
also
on
the
same
team
as
ryan
and
joel
I've
been
on
this
channel
not
too
long
ago.
Talking
about
python
so
kind
of
no
big
surprise,
I
ended
up
leading
the
python
track,
I'm
I'm
kind
of
the
de
facto
python
guy
here.
I've
been
doing
that
for
my
god
10
years,
and
I
know
I
know
every
time
I.
E
And
yeah,
I
did
the
python
track
at
devnation
day
and
in
terms
of
twitter.
I'm
jdob,
which
chris
has
already
put
in
chat,
yeah.
H
So
yeah
I'm
brian
tannis,
I
am
on
the
same
team
as
ryan
and
jay
and
joel
I
am
developer,
advocate
focused
on
open
shift
and
I
didn't
lead
a
track,
but
I
attended
a
lot
of
the
sessions,
so
I've
got
some
commentary
for
some
of
that
stuff.
It
was
a
pretty
sweet
week
and
I'm
excited
to
talk
about
a
little
bit
of
of
what
happened.
B
Yeah
great
to
have
you
all
here,
so
I
had
a
small
amount
of
other
news.
I
was
hoping
we
might
be
able
to
kind
of
review
before
we
jump
into
devination
day
and
proceed
to
spam.
The
audience
with
all
of
our
really
great
content-
we've
come
up
with
lately,
definitely
worth
taking
a
look
at,
but
I
want
to
do
a
quick
stop
on
other
community
news
before
we
jump
back
to
devnation
day,
which
is
our
our
main
topic.
B
D
D
G
B
I
left
it
here.
We
go
so
oh
top
news
item
I
had
for
today.
I
noticed
that
there's
a
new
mini
kube
release
mini
coob
version
1.13,
which
is
their
100th
killer.
Release
of
minikube
take
a
look
at
if
you're,
a
kubernetes
upstream,
kubernetes
user,
that's
a
great
way
to
get
a
hold
of
a
kind
of
small
vm
based
kubernetes
environment.
B
We
also
have
a
news
item
number
two
and
shout
out
to
brian
tannis
here
on
the
on
the
stream.
Today,
we've
recently
updated
the
openshift
playground
environments,
I'm
not
sure.
If
there's
a
is
there
a
link
to
it.
Currently
I
got
it.
H
B
D
B
H
Exposed
yeah,
so
we
have
catacota
or
learn.openshift.com,
which
is
a
whole
environment
where
you
could
get
openshift
in
a
browser
without
you
know,
using
any
resources
on
your
machine
without
having
any
login
or
anything.
You
just
go
to
this
link
and
we
now
have
openshift
4.5,
which
is
the
latest
release
of
openshift
available
in
there.
So
you
could
go
and
install
operators,
and
you
know,
play
with
you
know
everything
that
is
open
shift.
H
It
is
fully
a
full
openshift
cluster,
that's
available
for
free
one
thing
is
it's
a
one
hour
time
limit
and
the
things
that
you
have
in
there
will
not
be
saved.
So
it's
a
testing,
playground
area,
but
just
make
sure
that
you're
aware
of
that
before
you
go
ahead,
and
you
know
put
your
app
and
stuff
in
there
because
it'll
close
in
an
hour.
B
Yeah,
so,
theoretically,
you
can
reload
your
browser
as
many
times
as
you
like
at
the
end
of
the
hour
as
long
as
you
don't
mind,
losing
your
if
you're,
a
stateless
web
developer,
you're
set
yeah
right,
but
anyway
yeah
great
opportunity
to
try
out
openshift45
for
free
without
even
needing
a
vm
setup.
You
just
need
a
browser
so
right,
thanks
to
brian
congrats,
on
getting
that
environment
updated
and
available
for
folks.
B
Other
options,
small
clusters
that
run
for
as
little
as
you
want
uh-huh,
yeah
and
another
option
in
there
in
that
try,
openshift.com
try
is
going
to
be
code,
ready
containers
which
gives
you
a
similar
to
minikube
of
vm
based
kubernetes
using
openshift
in
addition
to
the
stock
kubernetes
distro,
so
yeah
awesome,
nice
updates
all
around
docker
hub,
there's
a
link
to
a
docker
hub
and
quay
issue
that
that
chris
had
in
the
lineup
chris
is
this
well.
D
I
mean
not
so
much
like
a
link
to,
but
we
had
some
folks
on
earlier
this
month.
I
I
think
it
was
this
month
about
quay
and
docker
hub.
Talking
about
you
know
the
so
docker
hub
is
we've.
D
I
think
we've
talked
about
it
here
before
they're,
changing
their
retention
policies
a
little
bit,
and
you
know
it's
wise
on
their
decision
right
like
there's,
no
reason
to
keep
terabytes
and
petabytes
of
old
images
around
that
people
aren't
touching,
but
if
you
don't
touch
a
certain
amount
of
your
images
in
a
certain
frequency
right,
like
they're
going
to
get
deprecated,
so
you
know
there's
some.
D
You
know
we
wanted
to
make
sure
that
folks
know
that
koi
is
out
there
and
you
know
I
know
it's
supposed.
It
could
be
key,
it
could
be
quay.
However,
you
want
to
say
it.
I
don't
care,
say
it
the
way
you
want
it.
Whatever
makes
you
happy,
I
am
all
for
it,
but
I
call
it
quay.
So
that's
just
the
way
I
say
it
so
there's
a
speed,
there's
a
slide
deck
there.
That's
super
helpful:
how
to
get
started
with
koi
registry
and
I'm
gonna
be
working
on.
D
We
had
some
reliability
issues
with
quay
recently
and
phase
one
of
the
reliability
and
stability.
You
know
efforts
has
finished
and
we
had
an
entire
month
of
100
uptime
of
quay.
So,
like
I
want
to
get
that
on
the
program
to
see
you
know
hey
what
did
y'all
do
like?
How
did
you
all
do
that?
Like
you
know,
I
mean
we
went
from.
You
know
a
little
bouncy
for
a
little
bit,
a
little
scary.
You
know
to
like
100
up
time.
D
That's
pretty
great
right,
like
so
gonna
get
them
on
the
channel
and
gonna
get
the
engineers
on
and
have
them
talk
about
what
they
did
to
improve
the
environment
there
to
get
things
up
and
running
more
stably
cool.
B
And
it
looks
like
we
got
a
note
here:
we
may
have
a
blog,
post
or
or
yeah
a
guest
appearance
at
some
point
on
the
stream
from
those
folks,
so
cool
thanks
thanks
for
pointing
that
out.
Chris
oh
question
and
chat
actually.
B
D
Okay,
so
if
you're
ready
for
this
one
brian,
you
might
like
this
one,
l
or
joel
2.,
can
you
please
talk
about
time
zones
and
open
shifts?
The
documentation
says
that
it
depends
on
the
container
image,
but
I'm
not
sure.
If
that's
the
case.
Also,
the
doc
says
red
hat
recommends
against
changing
the
time
zone,
which
is
also
true
by
default.
Kubernetes
uses
utc,
who
wants
to
talk
about
what
happens
when
you
muck
around
with
time
zones
in
container
images,
though.
B
D
B
D
D
Because
yeah,
it's
not
working
for
you
nashon.
We
would
love
to
see
like
more
info
about
this
because
normally
like
for
us
cloud,
natives
I'll
call
us.
You
know
we
set
everything
to
utc.
D
But
that
vm
is
always
going
to
be
utc
yeah,
like
exactly
jpd
said
it
forget.
It.
H
I
mean
it's
like
the
user's
trying
to
look
at
you
know
a
log
or
graph
or
whatever
is
going
on.
You
know
I
think
about
oh
hey.
I
have
google
calendar
other
calendar
web-based
apps
and
every
time
I
change
time
zones
I
fly
to
somewhere
else.
I
get
a
notification.
Oh
hey
look
you're
in
a
different
time
zone.
Do
you
want
to.
D
Kind
of
curious
to
let's
go
on
with
that
yeah
there's
a
little
additional
thing
here.
The
dev
team
mentioned
that
their
remote
logs
have
different
time
stamps
than
what
they
collected
from
our
openshift.
D
That
is
interesting,
so
that
could
be
the
remote
logging
instance
applying
timestamps
or
converting
timestamps
on
its
own,
or
it
could
be
some
unusual
configuration
in
the
container
itself,
in
which
I
would
highly
encourage
you
to
go.
Look
at
the
container.
D
What
I
am
thinking
the
problem
might
be
there,
but
if
that's.
G
D
G
D
Issues
if
you're
doing
some
time
zone
conversion
there
I
feel
like
that
might
be
the
case
so
yeah
normally.
D
B
D
G
G
H
F
D
H
D
And
the,
why
of
it,
but
yeah
definitely.
H
D
D
D
B
B
B
Language
and
the
kubernetes
community
has
also
been
kind
of
reviewing
terminology.
What
do
we
want
to
call?
The
control
plane
is
master
an
appropriate
term
or
not.
So
if
you're
interested
in
that
type
of
discussion,
take
a
look
at
the
conscious
lang,
repo
there's
a
documentation,
link
or
a
documentation
sub-repo
within
there,
and
I
filed
an
issue
early
on
just
saying
so:
do
you
is
the
default
name
of
this
primary
branch?
Is,
should
it
be
master
or
should
it
be
something
else
I
don't
know
just
some
more.
B
As
a
as
a
point
of
debate
for
those
folks,
coincidentally,
I
have
already
updated
the
kubernetes
by
example
code
base,
so
that
the
default
branch
is
now
called
maine
instead
of
master
shouldn't
matter
to
any
of
you.
B
So,
but
if
you're,
if
you're
interested
in
using
kubernetes
by
example.com,
you
should
now
see
that
all
the
embedded
links
are
now
pointed
to
the
main
branch.
Instead.
D
B
D
Was
gonna
say
I
just
put
in
my
newsletter
this
week,
or
they
just
announced
this
week
that
github
is
announcing
october
1st.
All
new
repos
will
default
to
maine.
They
will
no
longer
have
master
as
the
default.
You
know,
branch
interesting,
cool,
all
right.
D
B
If
you
have
old,
repos
you're
gonna
need
to
do
the
work
to
update
all
of
your
public
references,
so
you
got
there's
a
couple
steps
involved.
If
you
want
to
see
some
migration
advice,
I
mean
feel
free
to
take
a
look
at
kubernetes
by
example.
I
recorded
kind
of
the
steps
I
took
to
switch
from
master
to
main
in
github
issues,
so
feel
free
to
kind
of
go
through
the
past
github
issues.
B
B
By
example,
let
me
grab
that
in
a
second
I'm
going
to.
I.
B
Yeah
yeah
yeah
I'll.
Look
that
up
while
I'm
looking
that
up
chris.
Would
you
be
interested
in
briefly
covering
the
next
issue?
Oh.
D
Of
course,
yeah
yeah
sure
I'll
happily
take
this
on
so
excellent,
a
friend
of
mine
and
open
source.
You
know
just
personality.
Sarah
novotny
said
that
you
know
the
linux
kernel.
Mailing
list
is
kind
of
a
barrier
to
entry
for
contributions
to
the
linux
kernel
in
a
in
a
register.
Article
recently-
and
you
know
I
you
know
my
take-
is
I
100
agree
right
like
we
need
to
make
the
barrier
to
entry,
to
contributing
to
any
project,
pretty
easy
right
and
working
in
the
upstream
kubernetes
community.
D
We
make
a
conscious
effort
of
doing
that
and
we
realize
that
sometimes
you
know-
and
we
see
this
quite
often
in
our
new
new
contributor
workshops-
that
barrier
to
entry
sometimes
gets
higher
and
higher
not
lower
and
lower.
So
you
know
a
conscious
effort
to
keep
that
barrier
of
entry
as
low
as
possible
is
something
we
focus
on
in
the
kubernetes
world.
However,
linux
development
has
been
done
via
patch
files
on
a
mailing
list
for
since
it's
inception,
and
that
seems
to
be
way
harder
to
keep
going
nowadays
as
like.
D
E
I
I
don't
want
to
comment,
because
I
have
my
issues
with
how
the
linux
kernel
is
run
in
general
and
I
think
right,
it's
interesting.
This
is
the
topic,
because
this
is
the
most
god
I'm
gonna
get
for
this,
but
toxic
community
open
source
community
out
there,
and
I
think
that
I
saw
a
lot
of
smiles
come
up
when
I
said
that.
I
think
this
in
particular
is
one
of
the
the
ones
that
is
in
dire
need
of
of
revamping
I'm
just
I'm
just
going
to
punch
out
there,
because
this
is.
D
You
I
can
give
some
context
to
all
of
that.
Right
like,
for
example,
linus
took
some
time
off
last
year
and
they
implemented
a
code
of
conduct
because
of
the
toxicity
within
the
community.
It
had
gotten
to
such
a
point
where
it
was
just
like
how
are
we
going
to
continue
to
develop
if
we're
constantly
screaming
and
yelling
at
each
other
right,
like
linus
torvalds
is
not
known
for
being
the
nicest
person
on
the
internet.
D
E
This
a
little
bit
my
previous
before
I
got
onto
openshift,
I
worked
on
openstack
and
one
of
the
legitimate
reasons
when
I
transferred
teams
over
to
that
was,
I
was
dying
to
see
how
such
a
spectacularly
large
project
with
that
many
companies
with
a
vested
interest
would
actually
work
together,
because
I
kind
of
I
had
this
mentality
going
into
it
that
I
really,
I
didn't
believe
it
could
work.
E
I
thought
we
were
going
to
run
into
issues
of
oh
well
such
and
such
a
company
needs
something,
but
the
company
who
largely
is
driving
that
feature
has
different
deadlines.
So
it's
going
to
match
up
watching
it
play
out.
I
mean
it
wasn't
the
smoothest
thing
in
the
world
and
there
were
definitely
personality
conflicts,
but
to
see
that
many
companies
with
that
much
money
riding
on
it
all
playing
nice
together.
The
exact
same
thing
could
be
said
for
cube.
It's
just
I
I
first
saw
it
for
openstack.
E
I
think,
is
a
really
interesting
model
to
see
how
you
have
these
developers
who
understand
upstream,
and
they
understand
open
source
and
they're
driven
by
companies
who
largely
understand
them.
But
I
know
there
has
to
be
some
kind
of
pushback
in
some
of
these
other
companies
of
the
company,
not
the
business
side,
not
really
understanding
why
the
developers
are
telling
them
like.
No.
This
is
going
to
be
six
months
out,
because
this
isn't
just
for
people
in
the
room
who
you're
saying
we're
not
going
to
pay
you
if
you
don't
hit
next
friday.
E
This
is
a
lot
of
other
people
who
are
going
to
get
paid
next
friday.
So
they
really
don't
give
a
about
your
arbitrary
deadline
and
I
think
that's
super
healthy
in
a
really
interesting
way
of
seeing
kind
of
open
source
run
and
and
optimistic
where
yes,
they're
still
managed
to
get
things
done.
It's
still
a
huge
project
again
same
thing
for
kubernetes,
where
it's
obviously
trucking
forward,
and
I
think
it's
kind
of
interesting
how
the
business
side
had
to
adapt
to
that
and
be
like
okay,
we're
buying
into
this.
E
But
we've
we've
got
to
buy
into
this
with
two
feet.
I
have
also
spectacularly
gone
off
topic
for
what
you
originally
asked
me.
So
that's.
B
No,
no,
we
should
we
should
move
it
along.
We
got
a
couple
I'll
I'll,
try
to
wrap
up
the
news,
and
then
we
could
move
to
the
devnation
day
recap
because
we've
got
plenty
of
guests
and
plenty
of
content
to
review
there.
So
last
couple
announcements
for
news
that
we
have
there's
a
kubernetes
steering
community
or
committee
votes
are
currently
happening.
B
Now,
if
you
care
about
who's
at
the
leadership
team
in
the
kubernetes
community
or
if
you're
a
kubernetes
contributor,
you
should
be
able
to
vote,
go
go
ahead
and
do
that
voting's,
probably
important,
especially
for
communities
you're
involved
in.
So
let's
see
also
related
to
making
sure
you
got
the
right
leadership
in
your
community.
B
The
red
hat
is
hiring
a
new
gm
for
our
developer
business
unit.
I
will
post
a
link
in
chat
regarding
a
kind
of
brief
announcement.
I
don't
have
a
full
announcement
here,
but
if
you
know
anyone
who's
a
developer,
gm
that
would
be
a
particularly
good
fit
for
the
role
definitely
make
sure
they
are
aware
of
the
opening
and
the
last
bit
of
news
I
have
if
you
just
joined
us
during
this
hour.
B
The
hour
immediately
before
us
is
the
devination
show
with
sebastian
blanc
new
show
definitely
give
it
a
look.
Sebastian's
been
doing
a
great
job,
promoting
it
recently.
Just
thought
I'd
give
them
a
mention.
B
B
B
And
here
is
announcement
that
you
should
go,
take
a
look
at
the
devnation
show
and
then
I've
got
a
link
to
the
devnation
day
landing
page
and
for
folks
in
chat,
go
ahead
and
click
on
that
link,
developers.redhat.com,
slash,
devnation,
slash
devnation
day,
and
that
should
give
you
access
to
all
of
the
videos
that
we're
going
to
be
discussing
here.
Like
I
said
this
just
took
place
last
week,
so
these
are
all
available
on
demand.
B
Let's
start
off
with
kind
of
doing
a
brief
walkthrough
of
the
main
track.
The
first
talk
on
the
lineup
here
was
kubernetes
is
boring,
featuring
clayton
coleman,
who's
been
kind
of
one
of
our
lead
architects.
For
a
very,
very
long
time,
from
from
red
hat,
focusing
on
the
upstream
kubernetes
effort.
This
talk,
I
I
don't
yeah.
This
talk
is
really
kind
of
downplaying
you
know.
B
Kubernetes
is
really
meant
to
just
be
infrastructure
and
meant
to
be
boring
and
meant
to
be
kind
of
in
the
background
and
not
in
your
face,
and
so
I
think
clayton
did
a
good
job
of
kind
of
driving
home.
That
point
that
this
is
just
boring
infrastructure,
or
at
least
it
should
be,
and
so,
if
it's
taking
up
too
much
of
your
focus
and
attention,
maybe
you
need
to
reevaluate
your
approach.
B
Next
topic
we
had
in
here
was
kubernetes
the
easy
way,
which
is
maybe
looking
at
how
you
might
reevaluate
your
approach
focusing
more
on
yaml,
and
that
talk
was
by
jessica,
forrester
from
red
hat.
We've
got
a
link
to
the
the
video
there
on
on
the
page.
For
you,
this
was
really
just
saying:
hey.
Look
we
do
have
kubernetes
does
have
easy
controls
that
hopefully,
can
give
you
the
keep
the
complexity
out
of
your
face.
E
Half
listening,
half
doing
ad
mini
in
the
background.
This
is
my
first
event.
I've
ever
like
kind
of
run,
joel
smiling
because
he
knows
exactly
what
I'm
talking
about.
Edson
too,
like
it's
like
a
whole
bunch
of
scramble.
I
mean
I,
I
guess
I'll
toss
I'll
I'll
kind
of
explain
that
a
bit
so
we
had
6400
registrants,
which
you
know
devnation
without
getting
into
into
behind
the
scenes.
E
Internal
base
inside
baseball
stuff,
like
edson's
team,
is
kind
of
the
owners,
the
founders
of
devnation
and
we're
still
new
to
it,
which
is
say
we
meaning
pretty
much
everyone
else
on
this
call
the
the
four
of
us
from
my
team
and
then
chris
short
starting
to
contribute.
You
know,
I
know
I've
done
a
master
course
on
there.
We've
definitely
contributed
to
it,
but
the
where
I'm
going
with
this
is.
I
was
floored
at
the
reach
of
donation.
E
I
did
not
expect
nearly
6
400
registers,
which
was
incredible,
seeing
it
and
then
the
software
we
using
obviously
not
anything
red
hat
based,
but
they
were
slightly
under
prepared
for
that
level.
We
had
a
number
of
people
in
the
internal
the
keynote
it
was
amazingly
global.
It
was
bonkers.
I
love
this
in
our
new
world
of
virtual
conferences,
where
this
kind
of
thing
has
cropped
up
where
people
come
in
and
they
just
say,
hi
and
chat
hello
from
wherever
and
I'm
from
new
jersey.
E
So
I
don't
say
that
because
nobody
gives
a,
but
it's
cool
when
you
see
like
hello
from
singapore,
hello
from
brazil
and
like
just
see
how
global
it
is
really
bonkers.
All
of
this
goes
back
to
yeah.
We
were
dealing
with
some
internal
stuff,
so
I
didn't
get
to
pay
too
much
close
attention
to
them.
But
the
one
comment
about
clayton's
talk.
E
I
don't
believe
he
drew
this
parallel,
but
I've
drawn
it
myself
that,
like
a
good,
build
system
or
a
good
ci
cd
system,
that
those
are
boring
too,
where
they
should
just
get
there,
they
should
work
and
you
should
forget
they're
there
and
they
should
just
continue
to
function
and
do
their
thing.
But
you
shouldn't
be
actively
thinking
about
it.
So
if
you've
got
a
good
jenkins
set
up
like
yes,
I
care
when
a
build
breaks,
but
I
don't
care
about
how
jenkins
is
functioning
just
there.
E
Maybe
we
have
someone
doing
some
basic
administration
on
it
and
I
think
that
that's
an
interesting
parallel
to
draw
to
kubernetes,
which
is
different,
I
wanna
say
more
important
than
a
ci
cd
system
or
build,
but
obviously
has
a
longer
tail
to
a
bigger
reach
to
it.
But
I
think
that's
it's
an
interesting
notion
that
yeah,
if
this
is
doing
its
job,
it's
just
kind
of
there
doing
its
job
and
you
shouldn't
really
have
to
interact
with
you
shouldn't
have
to
think
about
it
too
much,
except
for
the
occasional
holy.
E
This
is
cool
that
I
was
just
able
to
scale
up
the
load
and
stuff
like
that.
So,
like
I
said
I
I
have
paid
attention
to
it,
so
he
may
have
even
drawn
that
analogy,
but
I
know
the
first
time
I
heard
something
like
that
was
about
a
build
system
that
yeah
it
should
be.
Just
absolutely
you
don't
you
set
it
up
and
then
you
don't
think
about
it
again,
barring
some
very
minimal
routine
maintenance.
E
B
Yeah
yeah
excellent
turnout
and
if
you
were
not
one
of
the
6400
people
who
caught
the
the
show
live,
definitely
take
a
look
at
these
links.
I'm
going
to
run
us
through
the
last
couple,
there's
three
more
topics
on
the
main
track
that
I'll
briefly
mention.
We
had
derek
carr
who's.
Another
major
upstream
kubernetes
contributor,
talking
about
kubernetes
pods
in
kubernetes
pods,
are
really
kind
of
a
fundamental
concept
and
your
minimum
unit
of
scale
if
you're
new
to
kubernetes
so
really
important
point
to
get
for
for
new
folks.
B
Next
topic:
paul
mori,
another
excellent
core
contributor
who's
worked
on
a
lot
of
different
details
of
kubernetes
talked
about
spoke
on,
kubernetes
k-native
features
being
able
to
scale
down
to
zero
pods
in
a
in
a
serverless
replica
and
then
instantly
auto
provision
or
auto
respond
to
requests
in
kind
of
real
time,
without
a
huge
delay
for
spinning
up
that
initial
container.
B
B
That
was
it
for
the
main
track.
We
have
three
additional
tracks
and
I've
reshuffled.
The
order
on
these
since
edson
is
new
to
the
channel
or
to
the
stream,
and
he
hasn't
been
speaking
much.
I
was
hoping
to
put
java
up
front
and
then
we
could
swap
to
javascript
and
python
if
that's
all
right
with
y'all
that
sound
okay
with
everyone.
G
D
B
B
B
Now
I
think
sometimes
I
see
those
listed
as
separate
languages,
even
though
node.js
is
actually
javascript
server-side,
but
yeah.
I
think
it's
java
javascript
are
both
really
high
up
on
the
list.
Java
probably
beats
it
out
for
enterprise
work.
I
imagine.
A
It's
funny
because
depends
on
the
like
of
the
paper
that
you
get.
You
get
different
numbers,
so,
of
course,
I'm
using
the
ones
that
are
in
my
favor,
so
at
least
for
me,
it's
still
number
one.
I
guess
it's
just
a
a
matter
of
taste
and
just
to
compliment
what
jason
said
for
you.
Those
of
you
I've
seen
here
in
the
chat
james
date
is
a
huge
fan
of
that
nation,
because
he's
absolutely
in
every
single
streaming
that
we
present.
A
So
thank
you
very
much
for
for
watching
this
one
too
yeah.
It's
not
strictly
about
destination,
but
since
we're
talking
about
definition,
yes,
we
have
a
huge
fan
james.
Thank
you
very
much
for
attending,
like
almost
everything
that
we
present
so
red
hat,
usually
talks
a
lot
to
system
operators
and
devnation
is
the
brand
that
we've
been
nurturing
for
for
some
years
to
talk
for
the
developer
audience.
So
we
and
we
did
that
nation
events
like
physical
events
when
this
was
such
a
thing
that
yeah.
G
A
Things
used
to
happen
so
we
started.
It
was
like
five
six
years
ago,
some
devastation
events.
Last
year
we
had
two
physical
events
in
two
three.
Actually
we
had
one
in
bangalore.
We
had
one
in
london,
we
had
another
in
austin
and
these
days
we
intended
to
keep
doing
the
physical
events.
But
for
the
first
time
we
had
this
virtual
initiative
and
with
six
6400
people
and
at
the
peak
top
of
the
hour
we
had
like
more
than
three
thousand
people
watching
us
live.
A
I
think
it
was
such
an
accomplishment
and
we
tried
something
different
you've
seen
well
yeah,
yeah,
goodness
to
all
the
the
the
team
that
organized
the
event,
and
you
might
have
notes
that
we
tried
to
do
something
different
because
everything
was
live.
We
didn't
stop
in
any
given
moment
of
time
and
between
the
sessions
we
didn't
want
people
to
even
go
like
grab
some
coffee
or
go
to
the
bathroom
and
help
a
restaurant
break.
We
wanted
people
to
stay
so
we
have
like
interactive
games.
A
But
we
also
had
great
content
and
I
know
a
lot
of
people.
Oh,
we
broke
the
platform
like
we
use
the
crowd
class
survival
platform.
We
know
a
lot
of
people
complain,
especially
in
the
morning,
because
I'm
lagging
voice
is
breaking
or
something
and-
and
we
tried
everything
we
said
it's
going
to
be
a
huge
crowd
watching,
but
even
the
platform
guys
didn't.
A
I
think
they
were
expecting
that
much,
but
they
were
able
to
fix
it
during
the
day,
but
all
the
sessions
were
recorded
so
just
in
case
you're
watching
this,
and
you
missed
a
bit
of
the
sessions
in
the
morning
during
that
nation
day,
you
have
the
opportunity
to
watch
everything
again
now
at
your
own
pace.
Even
you
now,
it's
all
on
youtube.
So
if
you
want
to
to
click
on
that
two
times,
speed
you're
good
to
go
you'll
be
able
to
cover
the
same
content
in
your
half
the
time.
Let's.
B
Get
through
it
yeah,
where
any
you
have
a
favorite,
standout
track
or
a
presentation
that
that
was
a
highlight
for
you
from
the
I
know,
as
a
track.
Lead
you're,
probably
not
supposed
to
pick
favorites
like
your
children
or
something.
B
One
particular
that
seemed
relevant
based
on
what
you're
working
on
lately,
I
noticed.
There's
a
jax
rs
in
there
there's
a
lot
in
that
track.
Yeah
yeah,
ray
sang
from
google
did
a
presentation.
A
B
Yeah
yeah
anyway,
get
if
you're
a
java
developer,
give
that
link
a
click
find
out
what
information
is
relevant
for
you,
based
on
what
you've
been
working
on
recently
awesome.
Thank
you
edson.
Next
up,
unless
you
have
any
other
thoughts
on
the
java
track
or
if
anyone
else
has
thoughts
on
java
next
up
would
be
joel
with
the
javascript
track.
Recap.
C
I
have
no
thoughts
on
java
whatsoever,
so
yeah,
I'm
gonna.
My
track
was
the
obviously
the
one,
the
most
popular
language
nowadays,
so
the
one
to
reach
the
most
developers.
C
It's
actually
funny
because
tamar,
our
first
speaker,
she
talked
about
building
effective
micro
services
in
node.js,
and
one
of
the
first
stats
that
she
came
out
with
the
biggie
right
at
the
beginning
of
her
talk
was
that
58
of
developers
that
are
building
microservices
are
using
javascript
nowadays.
So.
H
B
Yeah
to
me
it's
like:
are
you
targeting
people
who
are
using
a
web
browser?
If
so,
that's
like
everyone
yeah,
then
you
maybe
you
need
javascript.
It's
it's
like
the
use
case.
If
you
missed
that
one,
you
know
you're
only
dealing
with
command
line
people
and
that's
a
specific
group
of
people
right.
C
No
not
to
bash
any
languages,
but
it
was.
It
was
a
fun
track,
and-
and
that's
where
I
spent
most
of
my
time-
you
know
in
the
in
the
pre-covet
world
is
at
javascript
conferences.
So
all
the
speakers
that
we
had
were
speakers
that
I
knew
from
those
conferences,
the
first
one
was
tamar,
as
I
already
mentioned
from
xm
cyber.
I
was
very
happy
that
she
was
here
she's
based
in
israel,
so
that
was
time
zones
and
stuff.
C
C
The
number
of
speakers
so
the
number
of
attendees,
so
she
talked
about
building
effective
micro
services.
She
mentioned
a
lot
of
different
things:
a
lot
of
good
tips
on
how
to
make
your
services
more
effective
using
javascript.
So
how
can
you
use
that
asynchronous
aspect
of
javascript
and
reuse
workers
behind
the
scenes
and
making
sure
to
you
know
just
just
make
sure
everything
is
efficient.
C
There
are
a
few
interesting
things
there.
I
I
wasn't
wasn't
familiar
with
nest,
js
the
the
new
back-end
framework
for
node.js.
I
I
heard
about
it,
but
I
hadn't
seen
anything
really
so
that
was
kind
of
an
interesting
takeaway.
I
will
definitely
take
a
look
at
it.
It's
it
uses
typescript
a
lot
as
well
as
a
lot
of
decorators
and
a
lot
of
very
new
modern
aspects
of
javascript,
so
that
was
really
interesting
and
definitely
something
that
I
will
look
into
in
the
next
few
days.
C
I
guess
what
talk
was
that
the
the
one
from
tamar
from
effective,
microservices
and
node.js,
okay,
cool
yeah.
I
noticed.
C
Also,
developer
advocate
very
good
speaker,
he's
always
very
entertaining,
but
also
very
informative.
So
his
talk
was
about
internet
of
toilets
so
how
he
built
a
iot
kitty,
litter
box
using
javascript.
C
So
if
you,
if
you
didn't
see
that
doc,
if
you
need
to
look
or
see
or
watch
one
talk
that
that's
a
very
good
one,
you
should
definitely
take
a
look.
So
you
really
showed
how
he
built
a
iot
device.
H
E
Have
been
interesting
and
then
it
would
have
been
held
together
with
duct
tapes
and
and
hopes
and
dreams.
It
was
actually
like
a
nice
wood
cut
out
and
like
he
actually
took
time
to
hide
the
wires
and
stuff
like
that,
and-
and
meanwhile
like
I,
have
a
rat's
nest
of
just
my
mouse
and
keyboard
and
monitor
wires.
Like
literally
right
here
on
my
desk.
But
his
kitty,
litter
looks.
C
No,
it's
not
an
iot
device,
but
if
you're,
if
you're
into
iot,
there's
a
red
hat,
robot
kit
that
is
available
and
it
actually
uses
javascript,
which
is
a
fun
little
robot
that
you
can
build
on
your
own.
So
I
I've
just
recently
built
it
and
it
won't.
You
know
it's!
It's
a
nice
kit
that
comes
like
all
3d
printed,
so
it's
not
duct
taped
and
or
anything
it
actually
works
pretty
well
so,
but
but
it
shows
how
javascript
is
everywhere
and
it
you
can
even
use
it
for
iot
johnny
5.
C
The
library
that
he
demonstrated
is
one
that
I've
used
in
the
past.
It's
it's
very
versatile.
You
can
use
it,
for
you
know
pretty
much
everything
that
you
want
to
do
either
with
the
raspberry
pi
or
arduino,
or
even
the
esp8266,
I'm
just
trying
to
sound
smart,
I'm
not
sure.
What's
the
name
of
that
chip,
but
I
believe
that's
what
it
is.
H
C
Between
outer
fruits
and
red
hat-
oh
cool,
I
didn't
know
that.
G
B
B
Yeah
excellent
there
we
go
cool
yeah,
definitely
check
that
talk
out.
Two
other
talks
that
I
I
didn't
get
the
opportunity
to
to
catch
all
of
the
talks
in
this
track.
Yet
I
need
to
double
back
and
and
catch
a
couple
of
these
two
that
stood
out
to
me
as
being
really
interesting.
B
Were
the
web
assembly
talks.
There's
one
called
introduction
to
web
assembly
by
g
gui,
roy's
skyrockets,
okay
at
redis
and
then
there's
frameworks
are
dead.
Long
live
the
compiler
from
mike
harrington
at
ionic,
those
both
sound
like
they
probably
are
doing
web
assembly.
H
H
B
D
C
Yeah
yeah,
it's
bytecode
the
the
biggest
issue
with
web
assembly.
Now
so
it's
it's
getting
accepted
it's
getting
support
by
most
major
browsers.
The
biggest
issue
is:
how
do
you
communicate
and
how
do
you
have
access
to
the
dom
from
within
your
your
web
assembly
code?
So
that's
the
big
issue
at
the
moment.
It
is
definitely
a
great
technology.
C
If
you
need
to
do
a
lot
of
computations
in
the
background,
then
it's
great
it
will
make
it
really
really
fast,
but
you
have
to
kind
of
link
through
some
messaging
system
between
your
front-end
and
your
web
assembly.
So
that's
that
part
gets
a
little
bit
tricky,
but
there's
definitely
potential
there,
so
that
was
yeah
and
he
showed
a
great
demo
on
just
doing
a
fizzbuzz
and
how
it
was
actually
done
then,
but
he
was
messaging
back
and
forth.
So
there
was
no
way
for
him
to
access
that
dom.
B
Yeah
yeah
tons
of
work
going
in,
I
mean
it's
compiled,
so
you
can't
just
view
source
and
and
read
it,
but
most
javascript
sources
is
minified
or,
or
you
know,
gone
through
some
kind
of
processing
anyway,
so
yeah
interesting
kind
of
evolution
for
the
javascript
language
space
last
talk
we
had
in
this
track
was
sorry
to
interrupt
joel.
I
should
hand
this
back
to
joel,
but
last
talk
was
james,
quick
with
auth0
talking
about
react
and
serverless.
G
C
F
E
Not
much
how
you
doing
I'm
doing
good,
so
the
python
track,
I'm
not
going
to
try
to
compete
with
these
two
and
say
python's
the
most
popular
language,
because
it's
it's
just
not
but
hey.
E
F
E
Up
there
and
I
could
be
obnoxious
and
flip
the
argument
onto
the
ones
that
developers
like
the
most
yeah.
D
Ugly,
so
did
the
stack.
G
E
We
did
a
couple
of
weeks
ago
so
what
it
was,
what
is
our
vi
versus
emacs
stream,
because.
H
E
Oh
man
hey,
so
I'm
glad
jp
day
said
this,
because
I
was
gonna
mention
exactly
that
that
ai
guys
love
python,
but
honestly
the
variety
of
talks
I
had
was
kind
of
bonkers,
so
where
I
was
going
to
leave
this
into
and
say,
I'm
not
going
to
try
to
argue
they're
the
most
popular
because
they're
typically
known
for
data
science,
but
it
actually
worked
out
to
be
kind
of
wild
that
the
topics
were
so
broad
around
that
so
yeah.
I
joked
earlier
about
picking
a
favorite
kid.
E
I'm
not
gonna
pick
a
favor,
but
I
will
say
that
the
first
talk
was
on
kopf
or
he
actually
just
said
it
cops
the
python
based
operators,
framework
sdk.
I
don't
know
exactly
what
to
call
it,
but
kubernetes
operator.
Python
framework,
I
think,
is
what
it
stands
for,
because
operators
are
have
been
a
big
deal
for
me
for
the
past
year
and
a
half
or
so
and
having
them
available
in
python.
When
the
operator
sdk
focuses
on
go
and
helm
and
ansible
was
particularly.
E
To
me
kind
of
combining
the
two
streamlabs
damn
I
guess
chris,
did
you
push
a
button
or
did
that
just
auto
react
to
me
saying
operators
and
drop
that
in
there.
E
Automated
exactly
yes
where's
it
go
at
this
so
yeah,
so
I
saw
him
talk
last
year
at
kubecon
and
was
really
excited
to
reach
out
to
him
and
be
like
hey.
You
don't
know
me,
but
I
really
want
you
to
come
talk
about
this.
Then
there
was
a
talk
about
micro,
pip,
env,
wait.
I
screwed
up
the
name
of
this.
No,
I
think
that's
the
full
name.
We
have
notes
hang
on
hang
on.
I
know
the
premise
of
the
yeah
yeah
yeah
yeah
yeah
micropip.
E
So
what
was
really
interesting
about
this
talk
is
that
I
have
been
one
of
those
people
who
kind
of
I
joked
earlier
about
build
tools
and
they
should
kind
of
disappear
and
I've
stagnated
a
bit
on
moving
past
my
kind
of
pit
based
approach
to
python-
and
I
haven't
really
looked
into
a
lot
of
the
alternatives
that
he
talked
about
in
here,
poetry
and
pyenv,
and
all
this
other
stuff
that
is
absolutely
probably
should
have
adopted,
but
it
was
one
of
those
when
I'm
at
the
point
where
I'm
using
it.
I'm
like.
E
I
don't
have
time
to
figure
that
out
right
now.
Let's
just
go
with
what
works,
so
that
was
that
was
really
interesting,
especially
the
way
he
painted
the
background
leading
up
to
this
micropip
envy
project,
which
is
a
facade
on
top
of
a
number
of
different
underlying
build
systems
or
dependency
managements.
There's
there's
a
lot,
I'm
blurring
the
terms
here,
but
it's
a
lot
about.
How
do
I
get
and
install
a
python
project
and
manages
dependencies
and
libraries
and
whatever
and
whatnot.
E
To
be
perfectly
honest
with
you,
because
I
kind
of
wondered
the
same
thing,
but
it
ultimately
has
nothing
to
do
with
that
kind
of
thing.
And
honestly,
if
you
have
pit
in
your
image,
you've
probably
done
something
wrong,
because
that's
a
build
level
tool.
It's
like
having
make
on
your
image,
where
you
probably
don't
need
it
there
right
yeah,
because
that's
much
more
of
a
build
time.
Dependency.
E
Third
talk
running
a
self-service,
ai
ml.
Okay!
This
is
open
data
hub
team.
This
one
was
cool
for
me
because
I
had
an
intern.
Four
years
ago,
three
years
ago
now
named
anish,
he
came
back
to
red
hat
works
on
the
open
data
hub
team,
and
I
was
like
cool.
I
still
have
this
friendship
with
them.
E
I'm
like
hey,
you
know,
come
on
and
speak
with
us,
so
open
data
hub
is
a
collection
of
aiml
projects
that
red
hat
has
been
incubating,
is
not
the
right
word,
but
this
kind
of
collecting
into
this
open
data
hub
and
oh,
I
was
leading
up
to
something
I
can't
actually
say,
but
we
really
like
open
data
hub,
so
I'm
going
to
leave
it
at
that.
Yeah,
the
good
news
is,
I
don't
fully
understand
the
announcement
on
my
let's
us
say
so.
E
The
best
way
this
is
one
of
those
all
right,
I'll
get
tangent
real,
quick.
You
only
got
five
minutes
to
screw
it
and
I
used
to
do
we.
H
E
But
I
used
to
do
I
just
have
government
clearance
at
like
doing
consulting
and
everyone's
like
cool.
Do
you
know
cool?
I'm
like
I
don't
know
what
I'm
looking
at
so
like.
I
don't
care
how
cool
it
is.
It
was
the
same
thing
with
this
thing
I
almost
spoiled
like.
I
didn't
actually
know
what
the
announcement
was.
I
just
know
it
was
about
open
data.
That's
all
anyway,
keep
an
eye
out
for
that.
When
someone
who's
a
little
more
intelligent
than
me.
D
E
E
Is
awesome,
she
fulfilled
my
mohawk
quota
that
paul
mori
left
me
lacking
if
you've
never
met
paul.
What
I
love
about
him
is
that
when
you're
at
a
conference
you're-
like
oh
talk
to
paul
about
that
now,
like
who's
paul,
you
just
say
this
because
he's
got
the
spectacular
mohawk,
which
usually
some
kind
of
gradient
of
colors,
and
I
joked
in
chat
because
early
he
gets
into
the
call
he's
got
a
hat
on
and
I
was
like,
like
irrationally
pissed
off,
then
super
dye
shows
up.
E
E
No,
she
talked
about
flask,
which
is
a
flask
and
django,
or
the
two
big
python
based
frameworks
for
web-based
stuff,
and
it
was
a
really
interesting
talk.
I
like
her
style,
it
was
the
closest
to
that
kitty,
litter,
where
you
get
someone
who's,
not
taking
a
not
that
she
wasn't
taking
attack
but
she's
a
personality
like.
G
E
Got
that
bright,
pink
mohawk,
you
can
kind
of
expect.
She's
gonna
have
some
real
personality
behind
her
talk.
It
was
very
excellent.
It
was
mind-blowing
to
me
that
burr
actually
asked
a
python
question
in
there
and
I
was
sure
I
was
like
yeah
look
at
you
trying
to
learn
something,
but
it
was
very
cool
to
actually
be
open
to
that
and.
B
Then
I
definitely
agree
on
she's
a
great
person
to
follow
online.
If
you're
not
already
following
her,
you
gotta
consider
it.
E
E
Hopefully
he
can
dig
that
up.
I
got
it
amazing,
just
an
awesome
personality
to
be
talking
about
stuff
and
one
of
those
that
just
gets
you
just
kind
of
interested
in
what
she's
got
to
say
and
then
we
ended
the
talk
on
a
very
light
topic,
just
quantum
computing
which,
between
red
hat
and
ibm-
and
you
know
I
said
I
was
not
equipped
to
talk
too
much
about
open
data
hub
in
this
announcement.
E
E
E
Never
sure
how
to
pronounce
it,
but
I
had
done
some
work
a
couple
months
ago
about
getting
that
enabled
in
a
jupiter
notebook
running
on
openshift,
and
then
our
ai
center
of
excellence
has
picked
it
up
from
there
and
kind
of
run
with
it.
So
there's.
H
E
E
My
god,
I'm
so
glad
you
brought
that
up,
because
I've
been
meaning
to
follow
up
with
you
because
that's
been
on
our
our
list
of
stuff
to
do-
and
I
know
I
was
kind
of
tag
teamed
on
that
so
to
read
it
with
brian
said:
learn.openshift.com
our
catacotta
scenarios
parole-
who
was
one
of
the
speakers
she
reached
out
to
us-
I
guess
about
two
months
ago
at
this
point
saying
hey,
you
want
to
get
a
catacota-based
scenario
around
this
quiz
kit
and
from
the
sound
of
it.
E
It's
it's
very
close,
keep
an
eye
on
learn
that
open
shift
for
what
I
suspect
will
be
a
brand
new
category,
either
titled
quantum
or
just
crazy,
futuristic
or
something
between
there.
So
we
can
actually
keep
it
a
little
bit
open
for
new
content,
but
that's
awesome.
I'm
really
excited
that's
managed
to
manifest
and
with
two
minutes
left
I
will
shut
up
there.
B
Yeah
yeah
we
gotta
wrap
it
up.
Thank
you
all
for
hanging
out
with
us
today,
thanks
for
the
questions
in
chat
for
for
folks
in
the
stream
with
us,
thank
you
to
edson
for
joining
us
congrats
on
your
first
time
on
the
on
the
stream.
Here,
it's
great
to
have
you
and
hope
to
see
you
all
next
week
at
the
next
developer
experience
office
hours
coming
up
next
on
the
channel.
We
have
the
open
shift
commons
hour,
so
stick
around
for
that.
B
If,
if
that's
something
you're
interested
in
thanks
again,
all
chris
yep.