►
From YouTube: The Search for Connections Across the OpenShift Ecosystem with Diane Mueller (Red Hat)
Description
Welcome to the OpenShift Commons
Talk: The Search for Connections Across the OpenShift Ecosystem
Speaker: Diane Mueller Director, Community Development, Cloud Platform Group, Red Hat
The OpenShift Commons Gathering was held on Jan 29th, 2020 in London, UK, and featured guest speakers from local customers and users. The OpenShift Commons Gatherings brought together 300+ experts from all over the world to discuss container technologies, best practices for cloud native application developers and the open source software projects that underpin the OpenShift/Kubernetes ecosystem.
https://commons.openshift.org/gatherings/London_2020.html
A
A
Hope
so
we're
gonna
get
started.
We
have
a
really
jam-packed
agenda
today,
so
I'm
gonna
try
and
keep
us
on
time.
It
never
works
out
that
way
for
community
events,
but
welcome
to
the
third
London
open
shift.
Commons
gathering
the
second
time
we've
been
here
at
the
beautiful
Savoy
IET
with
this
very
posh
atmosphere.
A
It
feels
for
an
open-source
community
gathering,
it's
pretty
upscale
I
must
say,
and
so
I'm
really
grateful
that
you've
all
chosen
to
join
us
here
today
and
spend
a
day
with
us
hearing
about
all
the
things
that
are
going
on
across
the
OpenShift
ecosystem.
So
come
in,
grab
a
seat
and
I
can
see
a
few
other
people
wandering
so
there.
So
my
name
is
Diane.
Mueller
I
am
eternally
grateful
to
all
of
the
sponsors
who
are
here
today.
This
is
unlike
other
RedHat
events.
A
It's
a
community
event,
so
everything
is
sponsor
driven
and
we
couldn't
do
it
without
folks,
like
aqua,
sex,
6,
Stig
and
prolific
sand
storage,
OS,
Accenture
port
works,
NYX,
crunchy
data,
UK
cloud,
IBM,
Z
or
Z,
depending
on
where
you
from
and
Couchbase.
So
please
during
the
breaks,
take
a
wander
around.
Have
a
cup
of
coffee
chat
with
them?
We
are
incredibly
grateful
for
the
work
they
do
within
the
ecosystem.
A
lot
of
them
have
built
operators
which
are
going
to
hear
about
today.
A
lot
of
them
have
open
source
versions
of
their
products.
A
A
If
you
come
in
late
to
come
over
and
sit
down
here
and
we'll
just
grab
you
and
throw
you
on
stage
and
hopefully
you're
miked
up
appropriately,
so
that's
going
to
be
a
nice
long
pack
daily
promise,
coffee
breaks
and
food
up
again
where
you
registered
on
the
third
floor.
So
don't
rush
the
elevators,
but
there
will
be
food
and
plenty
of
time
to
network
today.
A
So
I
like
to
start
off
all
of
the
Commons
gatherings,
with
really
trying
to
help
people
understand
what
open
shift.
Commons
is
all
about,
and
I've
done.
This
talk
a
few
times
about.
As
I
call
it
the
search
for
connections
across
the
OpenShift
ecosystem
and
often
when
you're
working
with
a
vendor
or
an
open-source
project,
you're
doing
it
remotely
or
you're
doing
it,
and
your
cubicle
and
you're
working
with
lots
of
people
who
they
you
never
see
their
faces.
A
So
a
few
people
here,
I've
seen
for
the
first
time
Wayne
there
who
I
just
met
for
the
first
time,
has
the
same
name
as
the
mayor
in
my
town
and
now
I
know:
I've
actually
met
him
and
I
know
in
LinkedIn
he's
not
my
mayor.
So
there's
lots
of
great
ways
to
connect
and
I
think
really
having
these
smaller
gatherings.
A
You
know
300
or
so
people
where
you
can
spend
some
time
on
the
coffee
breaks
really
meeting
and
connecting
with
people
is
probably
the
most
wonderful
thing
you
can
do
in
order
to
move
forward
your
adventure
with
OpenShift
and
delivering
your
infrastructure.
So
today
is
really
about
facial
recognition.
I
know
you
didn't
come
to
an
m/l
or
an
AI
event,
but
my
goal
for
all
of
you
today
is
to
meet
people.
You
don't
already
know
so.
A
I'm
gonna
ask
you
all
to
make
sure
that
maybe
you
move
around
your
chairs
during
the
break,
introduce
yourself
to
someone
else
who's,
not
from
your
company,
because
we
had
over
a
hundred
and
eighty
different
companies,
not
including
Red
Hat
and
IBM,
now
people.
So
there
are
a
lot
of
a
good
mix
of
people
from
every
kind
of
part
of
the
market
sectors,
from
banking
to
edge
to
telcos
to
all
kinds
of
fun.
Folks,
and
we
had
500
individuals
register
for
today.
So
I
know
it
was
a
free
event.
A
So
what
we've
tried
to
do
is
create
a
new
community
model
which
is
much
more
peer-to-peer
network
networking
interactions
and
we
have
events
like
today.
We
have
open
chef,
Commons
briefings.
We
have
a
very
long
catalogue
of
YouTube
videos
where
you
get
to
see
me
introducing
people
and
getting
you
guys
to
talk
about
your
talk.
You
know
whatever
is
near
and
dear
to
your
heart.
So
if
you
want
to
speak,
we
have
plenty
of
podiums.
We
have
SIG's
on
just
about
every
topic,
a
number
of
working
groups
that
we
host
under
the
open
chef
Commons.
A
A
So
just
trying
to
keep
all
of
those
projects
across
that
so
that
we
can
sync
up
our
release,
schedules,
feature
requests,
and
you
know
people
know
each
other.
So
that's
really
the
the
goal
of
Commons.
It's
really
about
creating
those
connections.
I've
done
a
little
bit
of
research
on
github
contributions
and
you'll.
See
these
and
whenever
I
talk
you
can.
A
Google,
it
and
I
do
a
lot
of
I
call
these
the
jellyfish
diagrams
each
one
of
these
dots
represents
a
person
who's
made
some
contribution
or
a
pool
request
or
issue
logged
in
github
or
in
one
of
our
bug,
zillah's
for
the
projects,
so
you
can
see
kubernetes
up
there
and
you
can
see
OpenShift
and
it's
just
some
of
them.
If
I
picked
all
of
the
new
CN
CF
projects
and
all
of
the
projects,
it
would
be
a
big
blur
of
that.
But
it's
the
way
you
can
start
to
see.
A
A
All
of
you
create
a
lot
of
connections
because
really
the
way
that
I
measure
the
health
of
our
communities
is
about
the
number
of
connections
that
we
create
and
how
interconnected
is
with
the
upstream,
the
down
streams
and
all
the
vendors,
because
at
the
heart
of
everything,
is
open
source,
the
open
communities
and
trying
to
make
all
of
the
collaboration
that
we
do
come
out
in
the
open.
So
that
is
what
makes
innovation
in
the
open
source
world
work.
So,
as
I
said,
open
source
is
the
source
of
everything.
A
There's
millions
of
projects
out
there
and
github.
There's
lots
of
them.
There's
no
way.
I
could
put
them
all
up
here,
because
again
it
would
be
a
blur,
but
we
have
to
really
recognize
the
interconnectedness
and
interdependence
ease.
So
I
like
to
say,
if
you
don't
know,
the
the
name
of
the
open
source,
repo
and
the
open
source
project
for
OpenShift
is
okd
and
I.
Jokingly,
say
that
means
ok
Diane,
but
it
is
a
function
of
kubernetes
plus
everything
else.
A
So
it
really
and
you'll
see
the
pan
to
pop
up
a
little
bit
and
okt
is
really
an
interesting
in
the
it's
in
an
interesting
spot.
Right
now
and
you'll
hear
a
talk,
hopefully
this
after
mid
morning
from
christian
glenn
beck
on
where
we
are
at
with
releasing
okd
for,
but
it's
a
collaboration
with
the
Fedora
core,
OS
community
ignition
and
a
number
of
other
projects
as
well
to
bring
openshift
onto
the
Fedora
core
OS.
So
we'll
have
a
pure
open
source
play.
A
So
there's
lots
of
ways
we
collaborate,
but
the
interesting
thing
is
is
like
for
all
the
millions
of
projects
and
all
the
hundreds
of
them
that
I
actually
know
about
there's
tons
of
undiscovered
ones
and
I-
probably
overdo
the
jellyfish
metaphor
too
much.
But
it's
there's
so
many
different
things
that
pop
up
on
our
radars
that
it's
very
hard.
Unless
you
have
some
network
of
peers
and
ways
to
get
connect
with
people
to
really
validate
which
ones
are
the
ones
that
you
should
be
watching.
A
So
what
we
keep
trying
to
do
within
the
open,
shipped
ecosystem
is
build
strategies
so
that
you
can
figure
out
how
to
vet
and
validate
and
use
and
find
and
discover
some
of
these
new
projects,
so
whether
the
operator
hub
that
IO
is
the
open
source
side
of
things,
there's
another
one,
that's
built
in
and
baked
in
and
you'll
hear
about
that
today,
quite
a
bit,
there's
going
to
be
a
nice
talk
on
operators
and
some
demos.
We
have
the
author
of
the
recently
published
kubernetes
operators
book
jeido
bees.
A
So
we
look
at
make
trying
to
figure
out
the
interconnectedness
of
this,
and
some
of
the
research
I've
done
has
really
been
how
I,
as
the
the
head
of
community
development
and
the
person
whose
trust
tries
to
find
some
of
these
people.
So
these
three
little
dots
at
the
top
are
three
little
or
not
three,
but
three
folks
who
have
been
contributing
to
both
of
these
projects,
and
some
of
them
are
so
these
folks.
Some
of
these
folks
will
be
here
today
talking
to
you-
and
some
of
these
folks
will
be
online.
A
That
Greg
Swift
is
a
great
example
of
this.
He's
been
contributing
a
bit
to
Jaeger
a
bit
to
kubernetes
and
OpenShift,
and
he
was
working
at
Rackspace
and
it's
now
at
log
DNA,
and
if
you
go
on
our
slack
Channel
he's
like
a
massively
always
there
presence,
and
so
what
I'm
hoping
today
you'll
do
is
you'll
find
some
of
those
people,
whether
they're
Red
Hatters,
where
we
overlap
with
IBM
folks
or
they're
other
people,
maybe
from
Amadeus
or
Santana
or
Barclays
or
Deutsche
Bank.
A
Some
of
the
people
you're
going
to
hear
talking
about
this
stuff
today,
they're
here
in
the
room
they're
here
to
connect
with
you
they're
here
to
share
their
stories
and
their
best
practices.
You
can
ask
them
questions
if
they're
here
and
on
stage
they're
totally
willing
to
talk
to
you
and
connect
with
you.
So
take
advantage
of
that,
and
so
you
guys
are
the
audience
and
you're.
Maybe
looking
in
and
kind
of
looking
at
these
strange
jellyfish
we're
going
to
cup
on
the
stage,
but
I
promise
you
they
don't
sting
and
they
won't
entrapped.
A
You
I
might
entrap
you
and
try
and
get
you
to
come
and
share
your
story
at
the
next
London
event,
or
one
of
the
any
any
of
the
upcoming
ones
will
be
in
Amsterdam
at
Kubb.
Con
with
another
gathering
will
be
in
Red
Hat
summit
in
San
Francisco.
Any
of
those
events,
if
you
want
to
share
your
story
or
if
you
have
an
open
source
project,
that's
part
of
this
ecosystem
that
you
know
you
want
to
talk
about.
Please
come
find
me
on
the
break.
A
I
am
happy
to
stop
talking
and
to
give
away
the
podium
today
and
any
day,
so
trying
I'm
doing
pretty
good
keeping
us
on
time
here.
So
I'm
gonna
try
and
make
sure
that
each
of
the
speakers
is
available
during
the
breaks
everyone's
committed
to
staying
here,
who's
speaking
the
whole
day,
so
you
can
track
them
down
and
there's
a
reception
in
in
the
evening,
so
it
which
is
upstairs
again
in
the
third
floor
and
I've
seen
the
skyline
from
that
room
upstairs.
It
is
gorgeous
here
at
night,
so
come
be
jellyfish
with
us.
A
If
you'd
like
to
join
the
Commons,
there
are
I,
think
540
organizations,
it's
a
member
based
organization
community.
So
you
only
have
to
join
once
and
then
anybody
at
your
company
can
join
so
just
sign.
Sign
the
paper
sign
away
and
we'll
get
you
in
to
the
slot
channel
onto
the
mailing
lists
will
make
you
volunteer
for
SIG's
and
tell
your
story
and
we'll
get
you
connected
to
the
people
and
the
projects
and
the
engineers
and
the
other
contributors
across
the
ecosystem
and
help
you
on
your
journey
through
the
OpenShift
world.