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Description
Road Ahead at OpenShift - Diane Mueller @OpenShift Commons Gathering Helsinki 2018
A
I'm
gonna
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
road
ahead
for
OpenShift
and
some
of
the
stuff
I'm
gonna
go
through
quickly
because
I've
talked
about
it.
I've
gotten
the
opportunity
to
talk
about
it
at
in
the
panel
and
a
few
people
have
talked
about
some
of
it
already.
So
we
really
talked
a
lot
about
okd
today.
We
really
to
reiterate
this,
but
it
is.
This
is
how
we
deliver
OpenShift.
We
we
build
it
from
that
open
source
upstream
project
and
we
push
it
out
into
there.
A
Hopefully,
the
conservative
folks
are
not
we're
even
seeing
in
the
banking
and
finance
industry.
Some
of
those
folks
are
really
taking
kubernetes
on
an
open
shift
as
well.
So
what
we've
really
tried
to
express
today
and
is
that
open
shift
now
is
the
kubernetes
platform
for
your
big
ideas.
It
really
has
matured
from
platform
as
a
service
and
containers
as
a
sir,
and
it's
really
taken
that
multi-cloud
thing,
but
it's
really
I
was
to
joke
about
HTML.
A
A
Think
that's
what
makes
your
stories
interesting
is
that
no
two
of
you
are
completely
the
same,
but
there
is
a
common
thread
through
them
all
around
going
cloud
native
and
using
containers
and
taking
that
new
cultural
shift
and
making
that
effective
for
you
all
and
it's
not
just
one
specific
industry
or
one
set
of
groups
of
people,
it's
lots
of
people.
So
one
thing
you
should
never
feel
is
that
you're
alone
in
this,
the
big
news
this
year
really
has
been
the
open
shift,
core
OS
integration
and
and
I
hope.
A
You
all
are
aware
that
this
happened,
because
it
happened
in
January.
It
was
a
big
wonderful
acquisition
and
the
core
OS
folks
have
been
really
amazing.
People
to
work
with,
and
collaborate
with
and
they've
brought
some
really
interesting
innovations
to
bring
into
the
team
and
one
of
the
you
know
we
talked
a
little
bit
about
it.
I
just
wanted.
Nobody
really
mentioned
this,
but
as
we've
people
have
heard
of
atomic
and
container
Linux,
those
two
things
are
being
brought
together
and
that's
what
will
be
core
OS
and
will
be
our
minimal
Linux
distribution?
A
We
didn't
talk
a
lot
about
Red
Hat
quai,
but
there
are,
as
always
say,
wonderful,
openshift
commons
briefings
on
quay
the
container
registry
that
that
was
a
case
of
the
big
fish
eating
the
next
fish
eating
the
smaller
fish,
the
core
OS
acquired
Quay.
So
in
the
acquisition
of
core
OS
Red
Hat
got
Quay,
it's
a
wonderful
platform
for
all
for
hosting
container
registries
and
scanning
them
them
it's
very
full-blown.
A
And
then
this
new
thing
that
we
call
operators
and
I
really
I
think
that,
for
me,
is,
is
the
game
change
the
next
game,
changer
for
automating,
all
of
the
infrastructure
and
there's
and
we've
we've
had
a
couple
of
slides
about
this.
You
can
come
I,
really
highly,
encourage
you.
If
you
are
thinking
about
operators
or
wanted
to
use
one
or
if
there's
one,
that's
missing,
please
let
us
know
or
come
to
the
operator
sig.
A
You
can
find
it
on
Commons
on
openshift
org
under
the
interest
and
just
click
through
and
you'll,
find
it
there's
lots
of,
is
fees
that
are
working
with
us
to
get
their
operators
certified
on
rel,
but
there's
also
lots
of
community
ones.
If
you
go
to
the
operators
repo,
you
can
find
this
thing
called
awesome
operators
and
there's
a
list
of
about
fifty
to
sixty
community
operators
that
are
out
there
already
and
we'll
be
moving
some
of
that
onto
a
the
landing
page
for
the
operators
saved
shortly.
A
So
there's
you
know,
there's
lots
of
things
coming
together
and
some
of
the
stuff
from
tectonic
that's
getting
integrated
in
the
next
and
the
coming
releases
Merrick,
who
has
had
to
leave
us
a
little
early
today
and
unfortunately
covered
a
lot
of
some
of
the
new
features
that
are
in
310.
There
are
some
great
briefings
that
I
again
on
310
and
there'll,
be
some
upcoming
with
the
next
release.
A
We'll
have
an
open
ship,
Commons
briefing
from
the
product
managers
on
311,
if
you're
all
trying
to
take
pictures
of
this
and
the
fine
print
is
too
small.
Don't
worry,
I'll,
post
the
link
to
the
slides
and
to
their
roadmap
stuff,
but
there's
a
lot
of
synergies
between
what
the
core
OS
folks
have
we're
doing
and
where
we
wanted
to
go.
So
this
has
become
a
really
wonderful
relationship
and
it's
been
great.
A
Thank
you
very
much
for
sharing
your
stories.
There
are
still
a
lot
of
people
who
are
working
on
this.
There's
a
lot
of
dynamics
in
this
landscape.
There's
people
who
still
are,
who
are
doing
it
themselves,
there's
still
some
traditional
pauses
out
there
or
passes,
depending
on
what
your
accent
is.
There's
a
number
of
startups.
A
We're
not
going
to
say
that
OpenShift
is
the
end-all
answer
to
everybody
solution,
but
we
are
all
going
to
work
together
on
lots
of
different
platforms
to
help
solve
these
problems
for
you
and
to
roll
them
out
and
incorporate
the
lessons
and
the
things
we
learn.
We
saw
today
Tony
talking
about
the
wonderful
things
that
Microsoft
and
Red
Hat
are
doing
together.
There's
lots
more
to
come.
If
you
come
to
ku
Khan,
North,
America
they'll
be
even
more
because
it's
downtown
Seattle,
so
I'm
sure
the
Microsoft
and
Red
Hat
team
will
be
there
in
force.
A
Where
you
know,
people
like
Red,
Hat
and
IBM
have
been
doing
a
lot
of
stuff,
and
a
lot
of
great
partnering
is
going
on.
So
there's
tons
of
information
out
there.
If
you're
looking
for
stuff
like
WebSphere
and
db2
or
MQ
reach
out,
we
can
connect
you
with
the
people
at
IBM
as
well
and
get
them
moving.
So
you
know:
I
started
the
whole
day
with
this
market
tech.
Chure
slide.
A
You
know
with
a
four
C's
and
I
think
really
what
we've
proven
today,
with
your
participation
and
with
the
feedback
we've
gotten,
that
it
really
is
the
four
C's
plus
community
that
are
really
making
the
difference
for
openshift
and
for
kubernetes
and
for
all
of
you,
and
so
we're
really
pleased
that
you've
joined
us
here
today.
I
know:
there's
beer
out
there,
but
I'm
going
to
ask
you
one
more
time
and
remind
you
one
more
time
to
join
OpenShift
Commons
so
that
you
can
share
your
stories
and
learn
from
other
folks.
A
A
The
other
thing
that
I
was
going
to
say
and
about
openshift
Commons,
that's
different
than
other
open-source
communities
is
that
we
really
ask
you
not
to
be
anonymous,
and
one
of
the
things
that's
really
helped
us
is
that
everyone
who
signs
up
signs
up
using
their
organizational
name
or
their
corporate
sponsors
name
or
the
corgin
is
the
company
that
they
work
for
his
name
in
their
email
and
in
their
slack
profiles.
So
everybody
knows
who
you're
from
so.
If
you
have
an
agenda
or
you,
you
know
you
have
something.
A
So
it's
and
it's
kind
of
interesting,
because
github
is
really
anonymous.
Almost
everybody,
including
myself,
signed
up
for
github
with
their
Gmail
account,
or
you
know
some
of
you
with
hotmail
or
if
you
still
have
that
or
something
like
that,
but
the
Commons
is
really
about
I
depth.
You
know
self
identifying
in
a
very
positive
way.
We
know
when
we're
talking
to
someone
who's
a
vendor.
A
We
know
when
we're
talking
to
someone
who
has
an
agenda
or
a
point
of
view,
but
we
as
long
as
you're
open
about
it
and
honest
about
where
you're
coming
from
it's
makes
the
conversation
a
whole
lot
richer
and
it's
also
easier
to
go
and
find
somebody
who
knows
about
a
domain
if
you
know
where
they're
working
or
you've
heard
a
story
from
them.
So
now
you
know
how
to
track
down
the
people
from
ELISA
easily,
so
you
can
go
into
slack
and
find
them
if
you'd
like
to
join
this
black.
A
Let
me
know-
and
I
will
sign
you
up
for
that
today
too,
I
want
to
just
one
more
time
thank
all
of
our
sponsors
without
arrow
and
Microsoft
and
New
Relic.
This
would
not
have
happened
today,
and
it
really
makes
a
huge
difference
to
have
participation
from
these
Commons
members.
If
you
are
ever
on
the
road
somewhere
and
you
want
to
get
connected
with
someone,
let
us
know
we'll
definitely
make
sure
that
happens,
because
it
is
really
all
about
the
peer-to-peer
network
even
more
than
it
is
about
code
contribution.
A
It's
about
connecting
you
to
your
peers
and
that's
what
openshift
Commons
is
all
about,
so
I
invite
you
to
come
and
have
a
beer
with
your
peers
and
with
the
Red
Hatters
who
are
here
and
all
of
you
who
did
not
ask
a
question
during
the
Q&A
because
you're
you
know
you
have
that
thing
going
on
in
Finland.
Please
ask
those
questions
at
the
booth
and
thank
our
sponsors
for
us.
So
thank
you
very
much.