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From YouTube: GS1 Japan 2020 OpenShift Commons Gathering | Welcome Diane Mueller (Red Hat) with Subtitles
Description
OpenShift Commons Gathering Japan 20200
December 10, 2020
https://commons.openshift.org/gatherings/Japan_OpenShift_Commons_Gathering_2020.html
GS1 Original Japan 2020 OpenShift Commons Gathering Welcome Diane Mueller Red Hat75 1209
A
Hello,
everybody
and
welcome
to
the
openshift
commons
gathering
here
today,
virtually
in
japan
and
I'm
gonna
talk
today
a
little
bit
about
how
to
make
the
most
of
today's
event
and
afterwards
about
continuing
to
make
connections
across
the
openshift
ecosystem,
because
that's
really
what
the
openshift
commons
is
all
about.
A
For
me,
connections
are
the
lifeblood
of
open
source
collaboration
and
innovation
and
about
making
sure
that
you
all
are
successful
in
all
of
your
endeavors,
whether
you're
partners,
end
users
upstream
project
leads
red,
hatters,
external
folks,
working
with
us.
It's
all
about
figuring
out
ways
to
be
stay
in
connection,
and,
if
you
think
about
it,
a
lot
of
what
we
do
is
in
the
upstream
is
in
the
cncf
and
in
kubernetes
these
days.
I
love
this
diagram
with
all
the
little
pink
dots
over
here.
A
Working
on
another
project,
and
so
for
me,
even
at
the
open
source
coding
level,
it's
really
about
how
all
of
these
projects
that
make
up
the
openshift
ecosystem,
whether
it's
the
underlying
linux
kernel
or
the
over
top
workloads
that
we're
sharing
and
using
and
leveraging
open
source
technologies
in
how
all
of
us
are
really
connected
and
how
to
make
the
most
of
those
connections
is
what
today
is
all
about.
A
So,
if
you
think
about
the
cloud
native
computing
foundation
foundation,
there's
tons
of
projects
that
they're
incubating
and
nurturing
through
the
incubation
projects
that
have
some
that
have
graduated
some
that
are
still
in
the
sandbox,
I
think
yesterday,
I
counted
there
were
42
sandbox
new
projects
in
the
cncf,
so
from
an
open
source
perspective.
On
the
openshift
side,
we
have
the
project
that
is
okd
the
open
source
sibling
of
openshift.
A
We
have
openshift
openshift
folks
who
are
working
on
okd
and
openshift
are
also
working
on
kubernetes
they're,
also
working
on
yeager
and
open
tracing,
for
example,
or
in
prometheus,
or
upstream
and
ncd,
as
well
as
a
ton
of
other
things.
So,
by
remaining
connected
to
this
network
of
people
and
making
connections,
today
you
benefit
from
our
experience
and
our
ability
to
help
you
navigate
through
this
wonderfully
crazy
landscape
as
well.
A
We
have
a
huge
partner
ecosystem
and
many
of
them
are
here
today
and
a
lot
of
them
are
already
and
are
part
of
the
openshift
commons,
and
you
know
they
come
from
all
different
aspects
of
the
ecosystem,
whether
it's
ai
and
ml
or
financial
services,
or
if
they're
devops
tools
and
database
or
storage
partners.
There's
a
ton
of
people
to
figure
out
how
we're
all
connected
together
and
that's
really.
A
A
All
of
those
foundations
work
all
connected
together,
and
so
the
thing
that
I
like
to
think
about
commons,
as
is
the
place
where
we
can
do
that,
peer-to-peer
networking
and
there
are
today
there
are
over
600
organizations
that
are
participants
in
the
openshift
commons
github
just
joined
the
other
day.
We're
really
pleased
to
have
them
as
well
as
a
ton
of
end
user
organizations.
A
So
this
is
really
the
place
for
you
to
engage
with
connect
with
and
helpful,
hopefully
make
the
connections
that
will
help.
You
make
your
decisions
and
share
your
your
own
best
practices
and
lessons
learned
with
each
other,
because
that's
really
the
openshift
commons
community
model,
it's
always
ecosystem
based.
A
So
we
really
like
to
think
of
ourselves
not
as
trying
to
get
you
to
contribute
to
okd
or
openshift
or
even
just
kubernetes,
but
to
all
of
the
projects
to
get
you
not
just
to
contribute
but
to
use
and
to
give
feedback
to
these
projects,
and
we
do
that
by
promoting
that
promoting
different
open
source
projects,
different
product
offerings,
new
initiatives,
new
releases
and
openshift
commons
briefings
and
at
gatherings
like
this,
virtually
or
in
person.
Hopefully
soon
we
can
all
meet
together
all
of
the
content.
A
We
do
we
put
on
youtube
and
it's
all
up
there,
so
we
try
and
be
really
really
open
about
and
make
this
stuff
accessible.
So
if
there's
a
topic
that
you
haven't
heard
about
that,
you
need
to
hear
something
about,
there's
probably
someone
else,
so
let
me
know
and
I'll
try
and
get
that
a
briefing
on
that
for
you.
There
are
also
special
interest
groups
by
market
sector
by
technology
by
role
that
are
also
on
the
commons
website
that
you
can
join.
A
We
have
a
very
active
slack
channel,
there's
a
mailing
list
for
announcements
and
releases
for
upcoming
events,
and
you
know
we
will
take
your
code
contributions
and
your
pull
requests
and
your
issues
please
keep
sending
them
along
too,
but
really
this
is
about
creating
connections
and
fostering
engaged
conversations,
because
what
we're
really
seeing
here
and
I'm
so
pleased
that
we
have
today
with
us,
mitsubishi
and
ntt
sharing
their
journeys
and
their
workloads
and
their
case
studies
as
f
as
end
users
today
on
the
podium.
A
What
but
what
we've
been
really
seeing?
Is
this
amazing
emergence
and
involve
evolution
of
the
level
of
engagement
with
end
users
in
the
upstream?
So
in
the
past
we
might
have
just
gotten
given
you
might
have
just
given
feedback,
told
us
about
use
cases,
logged
an
issue
or
a
bug
or
requested
a
new
feature,
and
then
slowly,
we've
been
growing
this
so
that
more
and
more
companies
are
making
actual
code
contributions
directly
into
kubernetes
or
prometheus.
A
So
this
is
like
a
really
amazing
evolution
in
the
way
that
end
users
upstream
project
leads
product
developers,
product
managers,
partners
all
work
together.
We're
really
seeing
this
new
enlivening
of
the
innovation
pipeline
through
end
user
participation,
and
it
is
one
of
the
most
exciting
and
amazing
things
that
is
happening
today.
So
I
really
look
forward
to
seeing
you
all
actively
participating
in
this,
this
new
evolution
of
end
user
participation.
A
So
please
reach
out.
If
you
need
help
asking
your
management
to
allow
you
to
participate,
let
me
know
we'll
make
sure
we
can
hook
you
up
and
and
give
you
some
advice
on
how
to
make
that
happen,
because
really
the
what
I
like
to
say
is
the
health
of
an
open
source
community
is
most
accurately
measured
by
the
connections
with
members
of
other
upstream
and
downstream
project
communities
within
its
ecosystem.
A
The
healthiest
ecosystems
and
the
ones
that
will
are
the
most
stable
and
mature
are
the
ones
where
the
connectivity
and
the
communication
between
end
users
upstream
projects,
product
developers,
product
managers,
all
have
good
lines
of
communication
and
clear
communication
paths.
So
please,
I
definitely
want
to
encourage
you
to
get
involved
because
really
at
its
heart,
red
hat's
dna
is
all
about
open
source
and
we
truly
believe
that
open
source
is
the
source
of
all
technology
innovation,
whether
it
comes
from
end
users
from
our
partners,
from
internal
red
hat,
to
collaborations
with
cloud
hosting
providers.
A
People
who
you
might
have
thought
were
competitors
you're,
going
to
see
all
of
them
here
today
talking
to
you
and
it
is
a
fire
hose
of
information.
If
you
look
at
github
today,
I'm
sure
there's
more
than
96
million
repos
there's
a
ton
of
technology
out
there.
That's
coming
at
you
so
use
today
to
hear
the
best
practices.
A
The
lessons
learned
from
end
users
from
people
on
the
on
the
ground,
floor
of
doing
open
shift
deployments
and
deploying
their
workloads
on
openshift
on
kubernetes,
on
multiple
clouds
and
take
that
distill.
It
use
it
yourselves
and
then
move
the
conversation
forward.
Come
back,
we'll
share
the
podium
with
you.
We
would
love
to
hear
your
stories
as
well.
A
I
am
a
fan
of
jellyfish
and,
if
you
think
about
it,
there
are
a
species
list
of
2,
000
jellyfish
out
there
and
what
it's
been
speculated
that
there
are
as
many
as
300
000
species
that
have
yet
been
seen
by
the
human
eye,
so
think
of
those
300
species
as
those
bazillion
github
repos
that
have
yet
to
be
seen
by
folks
that
are
all
out
there
having
some
cool
innovation,
some
new
aspect
so
somewhere
there's
someone
connected
to
each
of
those,
and
today
we're
going
to
hear
about
some
of
those,
because
really
it's
all
about
open
source,
open
communities
like
this
one,
open
collaboration
with
lots
of
other
open
source
communities
and
ecosystems,
and
it's
really
today
and
days
like
today
in
virtual
events
and
face-to-face
events.
A
That
will
eventually
happen
again.
We're
making
those
connections
and
those
are
the
connections
that
are
going
to
drive
continuous
innovation
into
your
infrastructure,
your
organizations,
the
technology
and
just
make
cloud
computing
that
much
better.
So
really.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
Today,
I'm
going
to
hope.
Today
you
get
some
virtual
facial
recognition.
A
You
can
meet
some
of
the
over
600
organizations
that
are
part
of
openshift
commons
or
maybe
meet
some
one
of
one
or
more
of
the
3
000
individuals
who
are
part
of
the
openshift
commons,
and
if
you
don't
meet
them
today,
we
highly
encourage
you
to
join
openshift
commons
and
get
connected.
We
can
add
you
into
our
slack
channel.
Put
you
on
our
mailing
list
and
someday
put
you
on
the
podium
too.