►
From YouTube: Cross-Community Collaboration in Action - Diane Mueller @OpenShift Commons Gathering Helsinki 2018
Description
OpenShift Commons Update: Cross-Community Collaboration in Action - Diane Mueller @OpenShift Commons Gathering Helsinki 2018
A
To
get
started
welcome
to
the
first
ever
Helsinki
Finland
OpenShift
Commons
gathering.
If
you
don't
know
what
open
ship
Commons
is
by
the
end
of
my
speech,
you
should
it
is
the
community
side
of
all
things
open
shift
and
my
name
is
Diane.
Mueller
I'm,
the
director
of
community
development
I've,
been
with
Red
Hat
for
five
years,
so
I've
gotten
to
see
the
arc
of
open
shift
going
from
me,
Ruby
on
Rails
MongoDB,
talking
about
gears
and
cartridges
to
kubernetes
and
containers
and
now
operators
and
all
kinds
of
stuff.
A
So
it's
been
really
a
privilege
to
be
part
and
part
of
this
community
and
to
have
all
of
the
Nordic
folks
come
here
today
and
share
their
stories
and
to
meet
more
of
you.
So
I'm
really
looking
forward
to
this
so
I'm,
going
to
just
give
a
little
brief
interview
in
a
overview
of
where
we
are
in
terms
of
the
community
and
the
contributions
that
people
are
giving
to
it
and
where
we're
going
with
OpenShift,
Commons
and
I'm
just
going
to
get
right
into
it.
A
This
is
if
right,
following
this
event
today,
there's
a
day-long
Red
Hat
forum.
How
many
of
you
have
been
to
a
Red
Hat
forum
before
a
number
of
you
there's
one
in
Stockholm
last
week?
So
lots
of
you
have
been
to
that
and
when
you
go
to
those
things,
you
see
lots
of
amazing
corporate
slides.
They
have
bigger
budgets
than
I
do
and
they
have
wonderful,
graphics
and
stuff,
and
this
is
one
of
my
favorite
slides
that
they
do.
A
We
talk
about
why
open
openshift
is
the
best
choice
for
your
organization
or
for
your
service
provider
or
your
hosting,
and
we
talk
about
the
code
and
we
talk
about
customers
and
we
talk
about
all
the
clouds
that
OpenShift
runs
on
and
we
talked
about
how
comprehensive
our
solution
is,
and
we
call
it
the
four
C's
and
it's
true
these.
All
these
things
are
real,
but
I.
Think
one
of
the
secret
ingredients
is
the
fifth
C.
It's
the
community.
A
One
of
the
things
is,
you
know
it's
wonderful,
that
the
project
is
out
there
and
the
code
is
out
there
and
it's
open
source
and
anyone
can
use
it
and
it's
got
the
right,
apache
license
and
all
of
that
good
stuff.
But
one
of
the
things
that
we've
really
done
with
OpenShift
is
take
it
to
another
level.
In
my
humble
opinion,
which
is
should
be
the
name
of
my
blog
should
be
IMH
high,
IMHO
or
whatever
it
is
yeah
abbreviation.
But
we
really
talk
about
from
an
open
shift
perspective.
A
How
much
we
collaborate
with
other
communities
and
how
much
collaboration
and
contribution
comes
from
other
communities
into
open
shift
and
we'll
talk
a
little
bit
about
how
that
collaboration
gets
done
and
how
we
are
really
trying
to
almost
change
the
model
of
how
open-source
projects
work.
With
each
other
and
the
new
evolution,
I
think
that's
coming
in
open
source
and
an
open
source
collaboration
and
really
what
it's
been
able
us
enabled
us
to
do
is
to
drive
what
we
call
continuous
innovation.
A
A
There's
lots
of
conversations
that
go
on
and
github
and
I
like
every
year.
Github.
Does
this
wonderful
state
of
the
October
soar,
their
github
numbers
and
every
year
openshift
comes
up
in
one
of
the
many
categories,
and
this
year
it
came
in
and
one
of
the
top
10
most
or
they.
Oh,
it's
always
for
the
prior
year,
kubernetes
an
open
shift.
A
Origin
were
some
of
the
most
talked
about
things
in
all
of
github
in
terms
of
issues
and
projects
and
comments,
and
things
like
that
and
I'm,
I
think,
that's
really
telling,
because
openshift
is
kubernetes
right.
It
is
based
on
we
upstream
we
have
a
distribution
of
kubernetes.
That
is
what
openshift
is
if
we're
built
on
top
of.
So
if
you
really
combine
those
two
really
the
most
talked-about
thing
in
the
developer's
conversations
that
are
going
on
out,
there
is
really
is
the
stuff
that
we're
doing
with
open
shift
and
with
kubernetes.
A
We
have
renamed
openshift
origin
to
reflect
the
kubernetes
shift
that
we've
done
about
three
years
ago,
we
pivoted
we
made
a
big
decision-
architectural
II,
to
go
with
the
kubernetes
project
as
the
underpinnings
for
openshift,
and
we
left
behind
sort
of
the
MongoDB
Ruby
on
Rails
application
and
gears
and
cartridges,
and
we
made
the
shift.
We
didn't
do
it
with
the
name,
and
we
really
have
had
a
lot
of
conversations
and
a
lot
of
thought
about
this,
and
we've
tried
to
make
sure
now
with
the
rebranding
of
it
and
we
head
of.
A
If
you
look
at
the
sticker,
you'll
see
the
Panda
is
on
it.
That
is
one
of
the
original
logos
that
we
had
for
our
OpenShift
origin,
and
we've
brought
that
back
too,
because
we
really
want
to
reflect
on
and
make
sure
that
the
project
is
really
clearly
identified.
As
kubernetes-
and
this
is
really
one
of
the
the
efforts
we're
doing
so,
if
you
have
bookmarked
open
shipped
org,
it
will
take
you
to
a
new
website
now
called
okd
I/o.
So
that's
a
little
bit
of
news.
A
How
many
of
you
actually
had
heard
that
I'd
written
one
blog
post
they?
This
is
good.
The
word
gets
out.
This
only
happened
about
a
month
ago,
and
there
is
a
blog.
It
happened
with
the
310
release,
so
all
the
information
is
there.
The
repo
stayed
exactly
the
same,
so
you
don't
have
to
worry
about
that.
If
you,
if
you
wrote
scripts
or
things
that
pulled
stuff
from
openshift,
slash
origin,
it's
all
in
the
same
place
so
that
stays
nice
and
tight,
and
so,
if
anything
you
were
building
will
still
there.
A
When
you,
you
think
about
how
we
build
and
how
we
deliver
OpenShift,
because
it
is
a
distribution
of
kubernetes.
It
has,
you
know
more
than
a
hundred
different
integrations.
The
folks
from
Black
Duck
are
here
there's
a
number
of
other
folks
here
who
have
written,
wonderful,
integrations,
Microsoft
and
other
folks
have
done
some
great
work,
making
an
open
shift
there.
A
So
there's
lots
of
folks
who
are
doing
wonderful
work
with
us,
and
so
we
like
to
talk
about
how
we
take
all
of
that,
an
upstream
that
into
okd
build
that,
and
that
is
what
powers
open
shift
and
both
open
shift.
The
container
platform,
which
is
the
enterprise
offering
and
dedicated
and
online,
as
well
as
a
myriad
of
managed
service
providers
who
are
out
there
today
hosting
open
shift
as
well.
A
So
it's
not
just
Red
Hat,
that's
using
the
bits,
but
when
we
talk
about
who
is
open
shift,
often
if
you
are
an
open
source
community
manager
for
your
work
on
a
project
really
what
you're,
looking
for
and
historically
would
be
trying
to
get
people
to
contribute
to
your
project.
So
if
you
were
my
manager-
and
you
know
10
years
ago-
and
you
were
trying
to
manage
me
as
a
community
manager,
I
would
get
paid
by
how
many
contributors
there
were
to
my
project.
A
And
so
my
whole
job
would
be
to
try
and
get
all
of
you
by
the
end
of
today
to
commit
to
committing
and
making
a
pull
request
and
doing
adding
code
to
my
code
base.
But
I
would
have
that
the
entire
model
of
open
source
has
changed
because
of
the
fluid
nature
of
services.
Because
of
the
way
we
do
integrations
the
operators
and
the
what
the
collaboration
that
we
do
with
the
folks
that
are
using
our
software,
who
are
making
pull
requests
and
logging
issues
and
helping
us
develop
the
project
itself.
A
So
it's
really
sort
of
a
two
two
flows
in
and
into
the
okd
distribution.
So
this
is
kind
of
the
way
that
we
look
at
the
world
down
instead
of
openshift
origin,
where
the
OpenShift
okd
stuff,
and
so
what
we've
created
in
order
to
make
that
happen
is
something
called
OpenShift
commons
it
is.
We
have
over
I,
think
I
took
this
was
415
members.
These
are
different
organizations,
and
these
organizations
have
multiple
players.
I
met
the
gentleman
from
Cybercom
here
at
today's
the
first
time,
I've
met
somebody
in
person
from
Cybercom
I.
A
Think
someone
came
in
to
red
hat
summit
at
one
point,
but
a
lot
of
these
folks
are
there
spread
all
over
the
world.
Some
of
them
are
service
providers.
A
lot
of
them
are
customers
and
they're
all
collaborators
and
people
who
integrate
and
use
the
software
and
give
feedback.
So
it's
a
bit
of
a
new
common
community
model
because
it
incorporates
everybody
from
across
the
ecosystem.
It's
not
just
about
trying
to
get
code
contribution
to
the
project.
A
It's
about
getting
your
feedback
and
getting
your
stories
getting
your
input
into
the
next
releases
and
it's
also
communication
channel
and
we
talk
a
lot
and
we
really
try
and
promote
what
I
call
peer
to
peer
interactions
and
you'll
see
some
of
that
happening
today,
and
so
what
I'd
really
like
to
see
today
is
during
the
breaks
and
during
the
conversations
and
the
AMA
panels,
is
that
you
ask
the
questions
you
don't
have
to
worry.
If
they're,
not
nice
or
you're
asking
you
know,
you
have
feedback,
we
want
to
hear
all
of
it.
A
This
is
the
community
side
of
things.
We're
not
trying
to
make
everything.
Look
perfect.
We
have
lots
of
things
that
we
do
to
give
you
channels,
we
try
and
do
a
lot
of
this
stuff.
Virtually
we
have
a
very
active
slack
channel.
So,
if
you're
not
on
that,
yet
see
me
by
the
end
of
the
day
and
we'll
sign
you
up
and
get
you
on,
we
have
lots
of
mailing
lists.
We
have
SIG's
on
all
kinds
of
topics,
from
machine
learning,
to
operations,
to
operators
to
OpenStack
and
I.
A
Think
there's
even
an
azure
Microsoft
one
floating
around
stilt
in
edu
meets
every
month
too.
So
there's
an
end.
Gov,
there's
lots
of
stuff
I
do
at
least
three
podcasts
video
podcast
briefings
a
week
on
all
kinds
of
different
topics
ranging
I'm
gonna
keep
talking
about.
As
your
stack
was
last
week's
topic,
then
it's
coming
next.
A
Every
release
we
do
when
the
311
release
comes
out,
we'll
have
a
an
update
from
the
PMS
on
openshift
311,
but
we'll
also
have
a
release
update
on
kubernetes
when
it
comes
out
to
so
we
get
a
lot
of
the
folks
from
the
cig
leads
talking.
So
there's
a
lot
of
different
ways
to
get
access
to
this
information.
All
of
it,
including
today,
is
recorded,
and
it
is
up
on
YouTube
on
on
YouTube,
our
H
openshift
really
easy
to
find
I.
Try
not
to
talk
too
much.
A
A
A
But
all
of
this
information
is
available
as
public
it's
open
and
it's
not
they're,
not
sales
pitches.
Ever
they're,
really
talking
about
how
people
journeyed
from
two
became
cloud
enabled
or
cloud
native
their
stories
mom,
they
try
really
hard
to
get
them
to
tell
their
entire
stack
so
where
they
started
from
what
their
legacy
apps
were.
What
they're
doing
now
and
where
they're
going
and
there's
some
really
great
content
there.
A
So
you
don't
feel
like
you're
alone,
there's
always
somebody
and
you
market
sector
trying
to
do
this
to
talk
to
and
connect
with,
and
it's
pretty
global
there's.
Probably
this
is
so
out
of
date.
This
these
little
things
on
the
Google,
Calendar
I.
Think
I
did
this
when
we
were
at
about
200
people
and
I
haven't
had
time
to
update
the
Google
map,
but
we're
in
now
over
55
countries
and
we're
we're
tracking
really
fast
to
be
over
500
organization.
A
But
the
side
effect
of
all
of
this,
of
all
this
virtual
and
all
this
talking
and
sharing
and
storytelling,
is
that
the
thing
that
we
used
to
get
measured
on
the
metrics
on
the
contributions
to
the
project
have
been
rising
at
an
exponential
rate.
It's
just
been.
You
know
it's
amazing
and
it's
very
gratifying
to
see
like
the
number
of
organizations
that
are
actually
making
pull
requests
and
logging
issues
against
the
OpenShift
project,
and
it's
it's
humbling.
Sometimes,
when
you
see
someone
from
CERN
making
a
request
and
doing
something,
it's
like.
A
You
can't
quite
believe
that
someone
there
is
actually
using
your
project
and
adding
stuff
to
it.
It's
really
it's
really
pretty
amazing
and
and
but
really
for
me,
that's
not
the
best
part
they're
really.
The
best
part
is
about
the
collaboration
that
goes
on
right
now
between
the
Open
umber
of
the
OpenShift
engineers
and
Red
Hat
engineers
from
you
know
all
different
parts
of
from
Red
Hat
and
the
contributions
that
they're
making
and
the
participation
they're
doing
in
all
different
parts
of
kubernetes
I
mean
and
we're
just
looking
at
kubernetes
here.
A
But
there
are
so
many
Red
Hatters
working
with
other
companies
with
coopertition.
You
know
competitors
and
in
open
collaboration,
and
the
kubernetes
community
has
been
one
of
the
most
wonderful
and
engaging
in
open
communities
to
work
with
so
I'm,
not
asking
you
actually
to
just
contribute
to
open
shift.
I'm
asking
you
to
share
the
stories
that
you
share
with
OpenShift
get
shared
with
the
entire
kubernetes
community
as
well,
and
your
contributions.
There
are
gratefully
accepted
in
the
side,
projects
from
kubernetes
and
Prometheus
and
other
ones.
A
All
of
that,
for
me
shows
the
health
and
the
vibrancy
of
the
ecosystem
that
is
OpenShift,
so
I
will
not
ask
you
directly
to
contribute
to
openshift.
Today,
I
will
just
say
thank
you,
because
you
probably
already
are
in
a
way
that
you
don't
realize
that,
if
you're
contributing
to
any
of
these
other
projects,
so
this
is
really
what
and
what
I
was
mentioning
a
few
of
them
and
I.
Think
there's
a
few
few
more
since
I
made
this
slide.
A
A
There's
you
know,
as
I
mentioned,
there's
a
lot
of
upcoming
gatherings.
We
just
had
the
one
in
Buenos
Aires,
there's
the
one
here
today
in
Helsinki,
we'll
do
another
one.
That's
there's
some
experiments
going
on
a
little
bit
with
gatherings.
We
do
three
big
ones
a
year
the
day
before
every
coop
con
and
the
day
before
Red
Hat
summit
and
those
usually
have
around.
A
You
know
five
to
seven
hundred
people
at
them
and
they're
really
pretty
mind-bogglingly
fun,
but
we're
also
trying
to
do
some
that
are
themed
and
regional,
smaller
ones
like
this
one
here
today,
so
we're
going
to
do
a
small
version
of
a
machine-learning
one.
We
have
a
very
active
if
you're
interested
in
machine
learning,
open,
share
machine
learning
special
interest
group
that
you
can
sign
up.
If
you
go
to
coincide,
OpenShift
org,
we
also
have
a
great,
very
active
edu
and
gov
ones,
and
so
we're.
A
You
know,
as
these
topics
come
up,
we're
trying
to
create
spaces
like
today
for
people
to
share
their
stories
on
specific
topics,
so
we're
trying
to
balance
out
the
big
ones
with
some
topic,
specific
ones
and
smaller
regional
ones,
so
that
we
make
sure
that
what
we
really
are
cognizant
of
is
that
being
virtual
is
not
enough.
You
have
to
have
the
face-to-face
time
and
actually
meet
people
and
know
you
know.
You
know
this
is
the
gentleman
for
Cybercom.
This
is
the
person
from
Black
Duck.
This
is
the
person
from
arrow.
A
This
is
the
person
from
Microsoft,
and
so
you
get
a
face
to
do
with
to
talk
to
someone
with
and
be
able
to
reach
out
with
them.
So
if
you
haven't
already,
this
is
my
one
sales
pitch
and
it's
not
much
of
one
because
it
doesn't
cost
anything
is
go
to
OpenShift
Commons
sign
up
today,
if
you're,
not
already
member.
A
So
today
we
know
what
you
want
to
hear
about
is
beer,
and
so
later
today,
at
five
o'clock
we
will
be
uncorking
or
on
popping
a
special
brew
of
openshift,
and
hopefully,
we
and
I'm
I'm
not
going
to
even
try
and
pronounce
the
name
of
the
brewery
Mustang
they're
on
pond,
apparently
very
good,
so
that
you
we
can
help.
You
share
your
stories
with
each
other
and
during
the
breaks
and
at
lunchtime,
try
not
to
sit
with
just
your
work.
A
Colleagues
that
you
came
here
sit
with
strangers
and
introduce
yourself
really
take
advantage
of
this
opportunity
and
there's
a
number
of
Red
Hatters
who
are
going
to
be
talking
today.
My
colleague,
Marek
Gellin
is
up
next
and
he
and
a
number
of
other
Red
Hatters
are
here
to
answer
your
questions,
to
be
peppered
with
your
feedback
and
take
those
notes
back
and
work
on
making
OpenShift
even
better.
So,
let's
get
started.