►
Description
Diane Mueller provides the welcome at the OpenShift Commons Gathering held in London, UK on January 31, 2018.
A
A
Welcome
everybody
I'm
totally
thrilled
to
be
here
in
London
today
doing
another
open
shift,
Commons
gathering.
This
has
been
one
of
those
very
last-minute
serendipitous
kind
of
events.
There
were
a
collision
of
wonderful
conferences
that
are
all
happening
in
Europe
that
got
a
number
of
our
engineering
team
from
Red
Hat
and
people
who
are
contributing
to
open
shift
and
Commons
members
who
corralled
me
at
Austin
at
the
Austin
gathering
and
said
hey.
A
You
know
we
should
do
something
in
London
and
the
London
Red
Hat
solution,
architects
and
other
folks
said
they'd
back
me
up
and
so
within
30
days.
I
think
we
pulled
this
one
together
and
you're
all
here
in
the
room,
so
I
am
totally
thrilled
that
we
could
do
this
as
a
community
event,
and-
and
so
thank
you
for
coming
this
morning
on
a
beautiful
day
in
London,
which
is
I,
guess
a
rarity.
A
I'm
gonna
talk
a
little
bit
about
open
ship.
What
open
ship
Commons
is
and
why
you're
here
I
threw
this
slide
in
because
it
came
across
my
desk
at
the
last
minute
the
other
day
and
what
was
really
amazing
to
me
is
we've
been
doing
or
I've
been
doing
cloud
stuff
for
the
past
five
years?
If
you
don't
know
me,
my
name
is
Diane
Mueller.
A
But
to
me
the
thing
that
was
astounding
that
this
was
2018.
This
wasn't
2020
2024.
This
is
this
year
and
this
year,
I
feel
not
just
for
the
open
shift
community
but
or
the
cloud
native
community
and
all
of
the
other
assembled
and
upstream
communities
is
a
real
big
tipping
point,
and
you
may
have
heard
a
little
bit
of
news
that
came
across
the
wires
late
last
night
about
Red
Hat,
acquiring
core
OS
and
we'll
talk
a
little
bit
about
that
in
the
next
presentation.
If
you
hadn't
heard
about
that
surprise.
A
So
this
is
really
a
matter
of
that
tipping
point
where
the
community,
around
kubernetes
around
the
cloud
native
tooling,
that
we
use
an
open
shift
and
open
shift
itself
really
has
gone
to
the
next
level.
And
it's
it's
astounding
to
me
because
now,
at
this
juncture,
I
think
everybody
realizes
that
digital
transformation
is
just
a
given
and
we
talk
about
it.
A
lot
of
red
hat.
This
slide
gets
used
by
everybody
in
marketing
at
Red,
Hat
I'm
not
going
to
talk
about
digital
transformation.
A
A
A
Everything
is
done
with
open
communities
with
the
kubernetes
community,
with
the
docker
community,
with
OSI
I
CN,
CF
and
you'll
be
hearing
from
some
of
those
folks
today
as
well,
and
we
are
trying
very
hard
to
do
all
of
this
collaboration
in
the
open,
and
it
is
that
capabilities
that
makes
us
able
to
do
the
continuous
innovation.
That
is
what
has
made
open
shift
the
success
that
it
is
today.
So.
A
Open
shift
is
a
as
a
repository
in
github.
You
can
go
there,
you
can
download
it,
but
it
also
pulls
in
I
like
this
diagram,
because
it
pulls
in
all
of
these
other
projects.
Some
some
of
them
Red
Hat,
some
of
them
not
Red
Hat,
and
we
push
them
out
into
our
three
flagship
product
products
in
our
business
unit,
OpenShift
container
platform,
open,
shifted,
digital
and
open
shift
online,
and
now
open
shift.
Io
I
need
to
update
that
slide,
just
a
little
bit
and
I'm
sure
we'll
have
another
update
of
it
too.
A
But
it's
really
been
more
of
an
interesting
thing.
We're
pulling
in
from
lots
of
different
areas.
So
you'll
see
some
of
the
sponsors
that
are
here
today
and
thanks
again
for
your
support
and
lots
of
other
companies
are
adding
services
to
our
ecosystem
are
adding
the
feedback
into
the
OpenShift
engineering
and
the
open
shift
contributors
so
that
we
make
this
project
the
success
that
it
is
so
if
Commons
is
came
about
for
an
interesting
reason.
So,
typically,
someone
like
myself
who's
a
community
manager
for
an
open-source
project,
whether
it's
at
Red,
Hat
or
elsewhere.
A
A
There
there's
lots
of
other
events
that
we
do
each
year,
but
it's
really
about
trying
to
bring
all
of
you
together
in
more
of
a
peer-to-peer
network
to
promote
peer-to-peer
interactions
with
each
other,
because
if
Red
Hat
has
to
be
in
every
conversation
with
every
single
person,
it
just
doesn't
work,
it
doesn't
scale,
I,
don't
scale
the
Evangelist
team,
some
of
whom
are
here
today
we
don't
scale
the
PM's
don't
scale.
This
has
to
be
a
community
driven
thing,
and
so
today,
what
I'm
going
to
ask
you
a
lot?
A
It's
we've
specifically
built
this
day
around
having
longer
breaks
so
the
longer
lunch
and
put
you
at
round
tables
so
that
you'll
connect
with
each
other
and
talk
to
each
other
and
coach
each
other.
If
you
go
on
our
slack
channel
now,
you
probably
find
Greg
arguing
with
Larry
or
somebody
else
about
what
monitoring
tool.
That
was
the
argument
on
the
slack
channel
this
morning.
You
know
what
was
the
best
way
to
monitor,
oh
but
yeah
so,
and
none
of
those
people
work
at
Red,
Hat,
and
actually
none
of
them
are
real.
A
What
traditionally
would
be
called
a
contributor
to
open
shift?
They
are
just
people
like
yourselves
who
are
using
open
shift
in
production
or
adding
services
or
providing
services
or
hosting
open
shifts
somewhere,
who
all
have
this
common
network
that
they're
using
to
leverage,
and
it's
very
virtual,
which
is
kind
of?
Why
I
like
to
do
these
gatherings
and
get
you
physically
in
the
same
room
with
each
other,
because
I
think
the
physical
face-to-face
stuff
is
really
what
binds
us
together
as
well.
A
We
can
do
a
lot
virtually,
but
we
do
need
to
have
these
connections,
so
we
do
the
Commons
briefings.
Events
like
this
one
gatherings.
We
have
special
interest
groups
that
I
encourage
you
to
join.
We
just
launched
one
for
machine
learning
on
open
shift.
The
next
meeting
for
that
is
February
9th.
There's
lots
of
mailing
lists,
I'm,
not
going
to
say
you
shouldn't,
do
code
contributions
because
we
love
that
too,
but
we
have
a
very
active
slack
channel.
A
A
A
But
many
of
you
there's
one
new
member
here
was
it
informatics
matters
there
we
go
one
new
one
just
joined
it
handed
me
is
sign-up
sheet
today,
so
there's
tons
of
folks
out
there
who
are
in
similar
companies,
tangental
companies,
service
providers
that
you
may
use
that
will
really
kind
of
help
you
on
your
journey
with
OpenShift.
Besides
the
engineers
and
the
contributors
that
are
working
on
it.
A
So
at
the
moment,
we're
around
330
plus
give
or
take
a
few
silent
people
who
couldn't
get
permission
to
be
public
about
it,
and
some
of
you
are
in
the
room
today
and
I
won't
call
you
out,
but
I
will
make
you
get
on
stage
at
some
point.
There
are
over
50
countries.
So
wherever
you
are
in
the
world
there
is
somebody
probably
doing
the
Meetup
and
probably
deploying
openshift
in
that
region.
A
So
it's
there's
a
lot
of
people
everywhere
and
I
try
and
keep
this
slide
up
to
date,
but
it's
almost
impossible
for
us,
though.
The
the
real
crux
of
the
matter
is:
all
of
this
collaboration
happens
with
the
upstream.
It's
very
important.
We
all
know
that
kubernetes
is
under
the
hood
at
OpenShift
and
we
do
a
lot
of
work
in
the
kubernetes
world
and
in
other
ancillary
upstream
projects
we
I
don't
really
care
whether
we're
number
one
number
two
number
three
or
number
16
in
total
number
of
contributions
to
to
any
of
these
projects.
A
What
it
is
is
we're
there
and
we're
trying
to
support
all
of
the
tooling
that
you
need
to
make
your
production
deployments
work
and
all
of
the
tooling.
We
need
to
help
support
that
as
well,
because
we
are
hosting
two
clouds.
Basically
open
shipped
online
is
on
AWS
and
OB.
Ship
dedicate
is
on
Google's
cloud
and
we
are
using
it
ourselves.
So
we
have
a
good
vested
interest
in
making
sure
all
of
these
things
work
like
we
mentioned
the
other
day
or
yesterday
was
the
other
day.
It
was
so
soon
10
o'clock.
A
Last
night,
Dan
Texas
me
guess
what
we
bought
core
OS
I'm
like
oh,
no,
how
am
I
supposed
to
get
to
sleep
now,
but
one
of
the
things
that
that
does
is
it
actually
brings
a
whole
nother
group
of
wonderful
engineers
into
the
fold
to
work
on
OpenShift
and
all
of
the
related
technologies
at
Red,
Hat,
and
so
there's
going
to
be
a
whole
lot
more
people
doing
it
a
whole
lot.
More
of
us
will
be
working
in
the
different
SIG's
on
kubernetes.
So
there's
a
lot
of
leadership
in
the
kubernetes
world.
A
It's
open
collaboration!
It's
the
connections
you
make
in
the
room
today,
and
hopefully
in
the
futures
and
in
the
room
today
and
I
apologize
if
I
missed
a
few
are
a
lot
of
folks.
Besides
the
sponsors,
there's
I
think
we
had
over
50
different
companies
who
were
signed
up
to
come
today.
Hopefully
all
of
you
show
up,
but
it's
that's
pretty
amazing
to
me,
because
when
you
think
about
where
we
started
in
the
beginning
four
and
a
half
years
ago,
it
was
a
much
smaller
crew
and
it
was
a
much
more
Red
Hat
crew.
A
There
are
a
lot
of
Red
Hatters
here
today,
so
if
your
Red
Hat
or
raise
your
hand,
so
there
one
of
the
things
about
Commons
that
I
really
liked
it
was
sort
of
an
extra
thing.
That
happened
was
that
a
lot
of
the
internal
folks
started
joining
the
Commons
conversations
too,
and
that's
led
to
a
lot
of
eternal
education
and
education
between
the
the
different
projects
as
well.
A
So
it's
really
please
do
connect
with
these
folks,
because
even
though
my
job
is
not
to
drive
contributions
into
the
codebase,
we
have
one
of
the
most
active
and
we're
continuing
to
attract
new
developers
to
work
on
the
project.
So
you
may
do
that
and
when
I
started
four
and
a
half
years
ago
there
were
five
external
companies
contributing
to
OpenShift,
and
now
there's
over
70
company
organizations
contributing
to
open
shift
and
that's
without
trying
to
lasso
you
or
beg
you
or
whatever.
A
I
have
to
do
grovel
to
get
you
to
contribute
your
codes
and
your
fixes
and
your
patches,
that's
just
organically
from
having
this
network
and
having
you
talk
to
each
other
and
give
us
feedback,
make
pull
requests.
Log
issues
bug
fixes
come
to
save
meetings.
It's
really
pretty
awesome
and
I'm
very
grateful
for
this.
So
this
is
really
what
the
future
looks
like
to
me.
It's
very
apt
way
out
there
and
I
apologize
if
I
didn't
get
your
logo
on
there,
too.
A
There's
a
lot
of
you
and
it's
even
though
we
have
open
shipped
at
the
center.
That's
the
center
of
my
universe.
Really
this
you
guys
are
the
center
of
the
universe,
and
hopefully,
today
you'll
get
to
meet
a
lot
of
your
things.
I'm
talking
a
little
fast
because
we
have
a
lot
on
the
agenda
today.
So
this
was
my
10
minute.
Welcome
did
I.
A
And
then
what
I've
asked
is
all
of
our
wonderful
sponsors
I've,
given
them
five
minutes
to
give
their
pitch
afterwards,
just
before
lunch,
and
so
we're
gonna
have
them
come
up
on
stage
and
do
that
and
we
have
a
nice
long,
lunch
and
Paul
Mori,
who
some
of
you
will
recognize
that
you
will
recognize
him
as
soon
as
he
comes
into
the
room.
I
think
he's
still
sleeping
because
he
flew
in
from
the
States,
but
he's
the
one
with
a
red.
A
And
so
that's
really.
What
this
day
is
about.
It's
about
on
the
breaks
making
those
connections
with
everybody
again,
while
you're
down
there
on
the
breaks,
the
all
of
us,
wonderful
sponsors
who,
without
whom
this
would
not
have
happened,
have
tables
set
up
and
I've
invited
the
Red
Hat
open
innovation
labs.
They
have
their
tables
set
up,
I!
Think
the
Red
Hat
mobile
folks
are
going
to
come
as
well.
They
haven't
shown
up
from
Dublin
yet,
but
hopefully
they'll
get
here.
A
So
there's
a
lot
of
people
to
interact
with
at
the
lunch
breaks
in
the
coffee
breaks.
Please
do
so
they've
got
lots
to
tell
you
about
this
evening.
We're
gonna,
try
and
start
around
450.
If
I
don't
talk
too
long
and
we
think
we
have
the
room
until
6:30
7:00
o'clock
until
they
kick
us
out
so
or
you
finish
all
the
beer
that
we
bought
for
you.