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From YouTube: Community in Action: Making Connections Across the Cloud Native Ecosystem - Diane Mueller (Red Hat)
Description
OpenShift Commons Gathering
Milan Italy 2019
Speaker: Diane Mueller (Red Hat)
Title: Community in Action: Making Connections Across the Cloud Native Ecosystem
A
I'm
gonna
talk
a
little
bit
to
kick
us
off
today
about
what
OpenShift
Commons
is
and
why
we
call
it
Commons
and
not
foundation
or
meetup,
or
anything
else
like
that.
So
I'm
just
going
to
try
and
explain
how
this
group
of
people
here
these
peers
that
you're
in
the
room
with
are
going
to
be
some
of
the
most
important
people
you
meet
all
year.
A
So,
as
I
said,
this
is
going
to
be
talking
about
making
all
those
connections
across
the
cloud
native
ecosystem.
So
what
is
open
shift
Commons?
It's
a
slightly
different
variation
on
open
source
communities
in
the
past.
Communities
were
really
in
for
open
source
projects,
we're
all
about
trying
to
get
you
to
contribute
code
to
my
repo,
not
tanja
repo,
but
the
repo,
and
what
we
had
to
do
when
we
shifted
to
kubernetes
when
were
UV
architected
openshift
on
top
of
kubernetes.
Is
it
changed
everything?
A
Because
now
Red
Hat
was
contributing
code
to
kubernetes
and
lots
of
other
upstream
projects,
so
our
relationships
exploded?
Numbers
of
you
know
the
number
of
people
we
were
in
connection
with,
and
the
change
in
architecture
meant
we
had
to
re-educate
everyone
who
was
already
using
openshift
to
understand
what
this
thing
kubernetes
was,
and
that
was
like
a
firehose
of
new
information,
so
we
created
a
new
communications
channel.
So
if
you
haven't
seen
them
yet
we'll
show
you
how
to
find
them.
A
But
we
do
two
briefings
a
week,
usually
when
I'm
home
or
somewhere,
where
I
have
a
good
Wi-Fi
connection
and
I
do
briefings
and
all
kinds
of
stuff
to
reach
out
to
the
over
500
members
organizations
of
the
openshift
Commons,
and
these
are
people
who
are
users,
service
providers,
cloud
hosts
upstream
project
things.
You
can
go
to
the
website,
openshift
commons,
dot,
org
and
see
a
whole
list
of
people,
and
you
should
recognize
yourself-
and
many
of
you
are
already
met,
part
of
that.
So
it's
really
a
new
community
model.
It's
not
a
foundation.
A
We
didn't
set
up
a
foundation
for
OpenShift,
thank
goodness
because
there's
CNC
F
now,
but
we
do
Commons
briefings.
We
do
gatherings
like
this.
We
do
three
major
ones
a
year
at
coop
cons,
the
CNC,
F
koukin
events,
and
we
do
briefings
every
week.
There
are
a
lot
of
special
interest
groups.
So
if
there's
a
topic,
you're
interested
in
talk
to
me
during
the
breaks
and
I'll
hook,
you
up.
A
If
you
join
we'll
put
you
right
into
the
slack
channel
and
on
the
mailing
lists
and
there's
always
code
contributions,
because
we
never
say
no
to
that.
But
there
is
a
Red
Hat
Channel,
that's
all
things
OpenShift
and
all
things
OpenShift
commons,
all
the
briefings
are
there
I
think
I've
talked
to
over
200
people
now
and
done
200
briefings.
So
it's
lots
of
stuff
Amadeus
who's
talking
is
in
there.
All
the
briefings
from
today
will
be
there.
We
have
again
a
slack
channel.
A
We
have
an
upcoming
event
so
again,
Commons
openshift
org
is
where
you'll
find.
All
of
that
and
I'd
highly
encourage
you
to.
If
you
haven't
joined
yet-
and
you
may
have,
your
company
may
have
joined,
and
you
might
not
have
noticed
yet
so
go
to
the
participants
list
and
if
you
are
just
fill
out
the
form
and
will
automatically
add
you
to
the
mailing
list
in
the
slack
Channel.
A
But
if
you
haven't,
please
do
fill
out
the
form
today
at
Commons,
let
OpenShift,
org,
hashtag
or
pound
sign,
join
and
join
us
and
join
in
these
conversations,
because
that's
one
of
the
ways
that
you'll
all
stay
connected
with
each
other
after
today,
so
today
is
all
about
facial
recognition.
You
didn't
know
you
were
going
to
an
AI
or
an
machine
learning
summit.
No,
this
is
all
about
you
looking
at
the
person
next
to
you
meeting
them
shaking
their
hand
talking
to
them
and
finding
something
in
common.
A
This
is
about
me
being
on
the
community
development
side,
not
being
able
to
remember
all
of
your
names
and
all
of
your
faces,
but
trying
to
make
some
human
connections
with
each
other.
So
today
is
really
about
peer-to-peer
networking.
So
it's
different
than
your
ordinary
corporate
event.
What
we
really
want
you
to
do
is
make
10
News
friends
today
and
I'll.
Explain
why?
A
Because
it
RedHat,
if
you
get
into
any
corporate
event
over
the
past
few
years,
you've
heard
someone
say
open-source
is
in
our
DNA
and
you'll,
see
this
nice
little
diagram
and
there
are
over
96
million
repositories
and
github
and
I
think
that's
2018
and
there's
probably
another
hundred
thousand
more
at
the
rate.
They're
expanding
and
lots
of
them
are
part
and
DNA
is
a
nicely
structured
thing.
We
can
decode
it
and
do
all
that
stuff
and
figure
it
out,
but
communities
are
much
more
like
jellyfish
or,
as
someone
told
me
in
Italian,
they're
called
Medusa.
A
Is
that
correct,
Medusa,
yeah
kind
of
scary,
a
little
bit
I
think
I.
Think
of
the
scary
goddess
I'll,
explain
what
I
mean
it's
all
about
our
relationships
to
other
projects
and
other
people.
So
some
of
the
work
that
we
do
on
the
community
development
side
allows
me
to
have
access
to
all
of
the
github
contributions
all
of
the
Stack
Overflow.
All
of
that
wonderful
information
and
what
we
are
able
to
do
is
clean
all
that
up
and
do
some
identity
mergers
and
create
these
beautiful
I
call
them
jellyfish
diagrams.
A
That
show
us
how
people
who
are
working
on
open
shifts
are
connected
and
also
contributing
to
kubernetes
how
they're
connected
to
other
projects
like
Yaeger
and
open
tracing
or
link
or
D,
and
promote
the
previous
each
one
of
these
pink
dots
represents
a
person
and
the
connections
in
between.
So
you
start
to
see
how
all
of
these
other
projects,
besides
just
open,
shift
and
kubernetes
impact,
and
how
we
can
find
in.
We
have
this
idea
of
six
degrees
of
separation.
There
aren't
even
six
degrees
of
separation
in
this
diagram.
A
They
are
like
the
tentacles
of
the
jellyfish.
There
are
amorphous,
they
float
people
move
from
one
project
to
another.
It's
really
been
a
very
interesting
thing
to
go
from
being
one
project
centric
to
multiple
projects
that
we
have
to
collaborate
with
there
we
go
so
when
we
talk
about
it,
we're
talking
about
open
source.
We
do
have
core
products.
A
Of
course,
we're
talking
about
lots
of
open
communities,
tons
of
them
that
we
have
to
do
and
a
lot
of
collaboration
that
we
have
to
do
in
the
open
and
I
would
have
that
those
connections
between
people
and
those
jellyfish
tentacles
are
really
the
connections
that
drive
the
innovation
into
all
of
these
projects.
So
if
I
need
a
new
feature,
a
net
CD
I
need
to
have
a
relationship
to
that
project.
A
So
let
me
step
back
a
little
bit.
Okay,
D,
if
you
didn't
know,
is
then
we
rebranded
open
shipped
origin,
the
open
source
project,
okay,
D,
it
doesn't
stand
for
anything
specifically
because
of
lots
of
reasons,
but
legally
kubernetes
is
a
brand
that's
owned
by
the
cnc
F.
So
you'll
see
things
like
G,
KS
or
PKS,
or
all
other
things.
We
all
have
to
just
say
that,
but
basically
OpenShift
has
become
a
function
of
kubernetes
plus
a
lot
of
other
things.
A
So,
okay
D
is
basically
a
community
distribution
of
kubernetes
and
it's
the
one
that
powers
openshift.
Everything
is
still
in
a
repo
called
origin
and
the
participation
today
is
what
really
has
been
driving
actual
contributions.
So
even
though
I
say
I,
don't
really
care
about
whether
you
contribute
to
ok
D
itself.
A
Surprisingly,
there
have
been
a
there's,
a
huge
uptick
in
people
contributing
and
organizations
contributing
to
it.
So
the
majority
of
the
work
on
openshift
origin
and
ok
d,
as
it's
now
call
has
been
done
by
Red
Hatters
and
now
most
of
those
Red
Hatters
are
contributing
in
the
upstream
to
kubernetes.
So
anyone
who's
using
kubernetes
gets
the
benefits
of
that,
but
we
do
have
still
a
very
viable
okd
working
group
that
still
is
making
efforts
and
christian
glom
back
here
today.
He
hasn't
probably
arrived
yet
he's
coming
from
the
Berlin
office.
Hopefully
he
shows
up.
A
A
So
not
only
are
we
pulling
stuff
in,
but
we're
also
pulling
feedback
in
and
integrations
in
from
our
partners
like
crunchy
data
or
NetApp
or
in
video.
All
kinds
of
people
are
contributing.
So
it's
a
two-way
street
that
meets
in
the
middle
around
okd,
and
this
is
really
how
we
end
up
delivering
openshift
itself.
The
product
is
taking
things
from
the
community
sharing
back
with
them
and
pushing
it
into
our
product
offerings.
But,
as
I
said,
we
do
a
lot
of
contribution
now
not
into
that
codebase.
A
We
do
it
in
all
kinds
of
places
and
I.
This
gets
updated
and
changed
all
the
time,
but
we
really
are
now
at
Red
Hat,
focusing
on
contributing
into
the
upstream
and
there's
I,
think
40
groups,
special
interest
groups,
different
topics
and
kubernetes.
So
if
you're
interested
in
contributing
my
first
call
would
be
think
about
it.
If
you
can
contribute
that
into
the
kubernetes
project
directly,
then
everyone
benefits,
and
then
we
get
the
maintenance
cycle
of
open
source
being
maintained
by
the
entire
community,
and
it's
really
across
all
the
different
streams.
A
A
The
operator
hub
bo,
is
the
open
source,
repository
or
registry
for
all
the
operators.
If
you
haven't
seen
that
yet,
please
take
a
visit
if
you've
written
an
operator,
how
many
in
the
room
have
written
an
operator
just
a
few
of
you
good.
This
is
virgin
territory.
Yeah
we're
gonna
get
a
few
more
of
you
to
do
that.
We
are
hoping
that
you
will
share
them
with
the
rest
of
the
world.
If
you
can,
some
of
them
are
probably
Enterprise
specific.
A
So
behind
your
firewall,
but
if
you're
writing
something
first
look
here
to
see
if
there's
one,
if
you're
doing
Kafka
or
that
use
one
of
those
otherwise
take
a
whirl
at
finding
the
community
that
is
also
working
on
it
and
see
if
you
can
build
it
together,
so
I
have
as
a
community
developer
a
very
rich
data
set
to
dive
into
and
I
do
a
lot
of
diving.
This
is
a
very
scary
Medusa,
but
if
you
think
about
all
of
these
projects
here,
I'm
just
going
to
explain
a
little
tiny
bit
about
this
and.
A
How
this
all
works?
So,
if
you
just
take
one
project
like
Jaeger,
which
is
in
the
open
tracing
world-
and
you
can
see
here
and
I-
don't
think
I
have
a
laser
touch
here
doing
the
middle
pieces.
These
are
the
people
who
are
working
on
Jaeger
and
who
are
working
on
openshift
and
those
people
up
top
those
three
little
dots
up
top.
Those
are
three
human
beings.
They
actually
are
people
that
I
can
reach
out
to
who
are
connected
through
all
three
of
those
projects.
A
So,
if
I'm
looking
for
someone
to
talk
to
talk
to
stand
on
the
stage
because
I
to
share
the
podium,
I
can
ask
Jessie,
I
can
ask
Greg,
Swift
or
I
can
go,
find
Julius
and
they
ought
to
know
what
the
touch
points
are,
or
at
least
who
I
can
connect
with,
and
these
are
the
people
that
you'll
meet
today.
You
know
they're
not
in
the
room
today,
but
they're
easily
found
through
some
of
this
network
analysis
work
that
we've
been
doing
Greg
Swift.
A
A
There's
lots
of
folks
out
there
to
mate
and
met
and
they'll
meet
you
halfway.
They'll
help
you
and
reach
out
to
them
beat
them
today,
then,
there's
also
I
cut
them.
It's
not
an
ibn.
It's
IBM
slide
it
off
here,
but
then
there's
also
all
of
these
new
relationships.
Is
there.
Anyone
from
IBM
in
the
house
today
welcome,
or
you
should
be
welcoming
us
I
guess
that's
the
way
it
was
the
reverse,
but
it
feels
like
we're
welcoming
you
into
our
community,
so
there's
lots
of
connections
that
have
just
expanded
our
network
of
people.
A
So
we're
really
thrilled
that
you
all
came
today.
I
know,
there's
a
few
people
wandering
in
now
it
looks
like
we've
almost
run
out
of
seats.
So
if
you
haven't
steal
these
five
seats
up
front
and
fill
them
up,
because
today
is
going
to
be
a
very
interesting
set
of
talks,
we
hope,
by
the
end
of
the
day,
you'll
figure
out
at
least
ten
six-four
depends
on
how
network
EU
Italians
are,
but
hopefully
10
new
people.
A
So
that
should
be
your
goal
for
the
day
is
to
meet
people
not
just
from
your
own
company
but
from
other
from
Red
Hat
from
the
other
companies
here
and
make
a
connection,
because
that's
really
the
most
important
thing
to
come
out
of
today
is
building
community
here
in
Italy
and
across
the
globe,
because
it's
really
about
connecting
all
of
these
dots.
Adding
you
to
this
picture,
if
you're
not
already
here
and
figuring
out
as
we
like
to
say
in
Canada,
where
the
hockey
puck
is
going.
A
What
the
next
new
project
is,
because
we
can
see
as
people
migrate
into
new
things,
what
people
connect
to
and
what's
of
interest
to
them,
and
really
what
I
really
going
to
ask
you
all
today
to
do
is
be
open
to
making
new
connections
so
we're
gonna
get
started
today.
My
colleague
Brian
Grace
Lee,
is
here
to
give
us
a
talk
on
open,
hybrid
clouds
or
unified,
open,
hybrid
clouds,
depending
on
what
the
marketing
spiel
is
today.
A
So
I
really
want
to
encourage
you
to
come
and
join
us
today
and
we
will
get
started
and
I
think
I'm
almost
on
time,
or
maybe
it's
a
little
long,
but
quite
now,
I
think
that's
right
dead
center
on
time.
So
Brian
come
on
up
and
thank
you
all.
You
are
probably
the
most
well
dressed
Fashion
Week
people
that
we've
had
ever
at
a
community
event.
I'm
told
the
Italians
are
best
dressers
in
Europe,
so
you
have
not
proven
me
wrong.
So
here
we
go
Thank
You
Diane!