►
Description
In this briefing, Red Hat's Diane Mueller, Jen Madriaga, Chris Short and Josh Berkus give tips and tricks to surviving and making the most of Kubecon/NA 2020 and the OpenShift Commons Gathering week and share some stories of past swag dashes and more.
@Pythondj @JenInnovate @ChrisShort @FuzzyChef
#transformationfriday
#kubecon
A
Whenever
I
I
think
about
kubecon,
I
kind
of
have
this
this
this
sense
of
that
I'm
playing
buzzword,
bingo
in
a
massively
large
bingo
card
that
is
incredibly
hard
to
fathom
and
figure
out
where
to
do
anything.
So
I
thought
that
I
would
rather
than
try
and
play
this
game.
A
I
may
play
this
game
during
kubecon
myself
and
send
out
some
sheets
here,
because
I
did
found
a
great
website
for
doing
this,
so
I'm
yeah,
buzzword,
bingo,
call
sheets
print
them
boom,
we're
in
there,
but
so
I
kind
of
wanted
to
start
off,
though,
rather
than
diving
into
what
your
favorite
session
is,
is
to
make
everybody
do
something
fun,
because
the
fun
part
of
these
conferences
is
besides
the
hallway
conferences
and
seeing
chris
and
jen
and
josh
in
person
is
schwag,
and
I
what
I
loved
about
the
definition
of
swag
here
is
one
of
the
definition
was
money
or
goods
taken
by
a
thief
or
a
burglar.
A
You've
ever
staffed
a
booth
at
red
hat
or
any
other
vendor
booth
or
anything
else
like
even
in
the
open
source
section
where
they
have
stickers
galore.
It
is
crazy.
The
people
who
come
through
with
the
bags
and
just
all
their
stuff
in
there.
So
I'm
gonna
give
everybody
a
few
minutes
here,
who's
on
here
chris
and
jen,
and
I'll
stop,
sharing
the
screen
for
a
minute
and
make
you
go
off
and
find
your
favorite
piece
of
swag
and,
if
you're,
watching
following
along
here
somewhere.
A
Please
share
in
the
chat
what
your
favorite
swag
is
and,
while
they're
doing
that,
I
am
going
to
unpack
the
swag.
I
got
from
kubecon
for
being
a
speaker
this
time
around.
I
don't
know
if
you
can
see
this,
but
I
thought
the
best
part
of
it.
A
A
I
think
this
is
remains
to
be
guessed,
but
nobody
thinks
that
some
sort
of
strange
cat
toy
no
it
well.
It
is
a
supposed
to
be
a
back
thumper,
so
yeah,
so
there
it
there.
It
is
yep,
that's
not
what
I
thought
it
was
and
you
got.
A
Brains,
little
slinky,
like
toy,
but
a
bag,
that's
totally
reusable
for
other
swag.
So
yes,
slinky
toy
and,
let's
see
guys,
are
all
I
hope,
you're
all
gathering
your
stuff,
and
there
was
another
thing
in
here:
oh
I
don't
know,
I
might
have
already
put
it
away.
Oh
this
was
the
best.
There
was
a
little
pin
speakers
pin,
which
has
already
been
absconded
with
by
some
teenager
who
came
over
the
other
day,
but
this
this
is
handy
all
right.
This
is
like.
Did
you
get
when
you
go
to
the
hotel.
C
A
On
the
outside,
so
that
when
I'm
doing
a
talk
like
this
one
with
y'all-
I
I
don't
get
interrupted
by
ups
or
the
garbage
man
or
anybody
else.
So
I
was
thinking
that
would
be
a
interesting
thing
to
do
so.
B
C
B
D
I
realize
that
my
kid
has
all
the
cool
swag,
but
I
did
find
this
guy,
so
this
is
from
openstack
summit,
I
think
from
sydney,
australia,
which
was
three
years
ago,
and
I
think
this
was
at
the
I'm
guessing.
Well,
it's
one
of
the
chinese
vendors.
I
can't
read
what
it
is,
but
anyway
this
was
a.
This
was
the
closest
thing
I
could
find,
but
I
have
a
collection
of
really
cool
swag
pins.
I
realized
my
son
has
them
all
in
his
backpack
yeah.
A
What's
that,
what's
the
what's
your
favorite
one
that
you've
ever
gotten.
D
D
Collection
of
rdo
ducks
those
are
up
in
the
bathtub
where,
because
my
son
actually
uses,
I
shouldn't
tell
him
because
he's
11.
he's
going
to
be
humiliated.
D
A
It's
okay,
yeah!
You
don't
get
it
so
josh!
What's
what's
your
favorite
swag
and
what
did
you
find
nearby?
Well.
C
A
couple
of
things
I
I
mean
the
the
nearest
buy
thing-
is
these
little
flashlight
metal,
cubicle
flashlights.
We
had
made
for
the
release
of
metal
cubes,
one
of
the
pieces
of
swag
that
we
actually
had
produced
that
I
kept
one
of
because
it's
really
useful
for
looking
for
things
under
my
desk
best
piece
of
speaker,
swag
I
ever
got.
Is
this
thing
from
gophercon?
B
A
A
So
what
is
the
strangest
thing
that
you've
ever.
C
Yeah,
I
don't-
I
didn't
have
time
to
dig
through
my
because
it's
like
anything
I
don't
actually
want,
goes
in
boxes
to
get
out
of
the
meetup
which
I
have
quite
a
bit
of
since
we
haven't
been
able
to
meet
up
in
person
for
a
while,
and
I
didn't
have
time
to
dig
through.
I
was
trying
to
think.
C
Oracle
has
been
giving
out
these
little
dancing
robots
for
a
while
and
like
at
every
conference,
and,
what's
really
amusing
about
them,
is
they
fall
over,
which.
F
A
I
was,
I
was
telling
everybody
before
we.
We
went
on
the
air
what
my
favorite
or
the
strangest
swag
I
ever
got
was,
and
I
have
to
do
the
clean
version
of
it.
I
was
at
an
openstack
summit
years
ago,
I'm
pretty
sure
it
was
in
boston
and
I
can't
remember
the
vendor's
name,
but
I
got
a
pair
of
black
boxer
shop
shorts
with
maximum
uptime
printed
on
them.
Yeah.
A
But
trust
me,
I
kept
them
for
a
long
long
time,
but
some
some
partner
of
mine
disappeared
them
at
some
point.
So
she's,
probably
hopefully,
they've
got
them
somewhere,
but
I
think
justin's
run
out
of
the
room
now
that
I've
said
maybe
he
has
a
pair
of
them.
A
Remember
who
that
was
because
I
just
first
of
all
it's
completely
inappropriate,
but
it
was
hilarious
and
it
was
the
hottest
hotcake
thing
schwag
at
the
event,
but
I'm
sure
like
now
with
all
the
dni.
That's
that
had
to
been
yeah
six.
D
D
A
I
kind
of
think
now
in
the
virtual
world
that
one
of
the
hardest
things
is
to
to
deliver
swag
right,
so
you
know
trying
to
get
a
t-shirt
across
an
international
border.
I.
B
C
B
A
Yeah
all
right
all
right,
so
I'm
going
to
share
my
screen
again
and
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
schedules.
So
that's
the
swag
dash.
I
figured
that
was
be
a
fine
thing
to
do
so.
If
we
go
to
here,
I
have
redhat.com.
We
have
a
bunch
of
sites
here
that
make
it
really
super
easy.
If
you're
trying
to
find
red
hat
things,
so
I
thought
I
would
share
that
if
you
wanted
to.
A
Let
me
see
if
you
present
mode
here,
so
let's
get
a
big
big
there,
so
you
can
qr
code
that
and
veronica
cooley
and
jen
and
the
whole
team
have
done
a
wonderful
job,
making
this
happen,
and
so
there's
that
I'd
be
remiss
if
I
didn't
say,
give
a
shout
out
to
on
day
zero.
This
is
going
to
be
a
long
week.
Okay,
this
is
tuesday
all
right.
A
I
don't
know
about
the
rest
of
you,
but
there's
kubecon
and
there's
I'm
talking
at
one
other
conference
on
thursday,
some
canadian
academic
master
class
on
cloud
computing
and
on
monday
the
whole
week
is
lesbians,
who's
tech
week.
So
they
kind
of
collide.
My
two
favorite
conferences
so
I'll
be
on
like
multiple
terminals
all
week
so
but
day
zero,
which
is
tuesday.
I
will
be
at
the
openshift
commons
gathering
hosting
and
moderating
that
and
my
good
friend
chris
short
here
is
going
to
be
doing
a
variation
on
that
called.
A
B
No,
no,
we
definitely
intend
for
it
to
be
very
cordial
and
polite.
Unlike
some
of
the
mystery
science,
theater
3000
of
old
right,
like
it
might
have
been
cutting
or
kind
of
you
know,
stabbing
at
the
the
bad
production
potentially,
but
this
will
be
a
enlightening
mystery
science,
theater
kind
of
event.
A
So
so
that's
that's
kind
of
the
big
thing
for
me
on
tuesday,
the
last
day
I'm
going
to
be
hosting
the
okd
working
group
meeting
too,
but
what
I
thought
I
would
make
everybody
do
is
kind
of
show
us
your
schedule
and
by
what
I
mean
by
that
is,
if
you
I
see
if
I
have
mine
up
here
correctly,
I'm
trying
to
use
I'm
trying
to
be
better
about
this,
because
if
you
try
and
manage
your
way
through
this
whole
thing
that
is
here,
let's
see
if
you
can
go
to,
I
can
go
to
my
schedule
and
pick
out.
A
I
have
a
few
friends,
that's
nice
to
know
people
who
are
my
friends,
that's
interesting.
I
never
noticed
that
part
of
it
before
so.
There's
the
openshift
commons
gathering
and
there's
a
whole
tons
of
things
that
you
know
that
I
want
to
go
to
some
that
I
have
to
go
to.
I
am
giving
a
keynote
on
that.
I'm
like
five
minutes
of
the
fastest
talking
I've
ever
done
on
wednesday.
A
So,
but
what
I
really
highly
encourage
people
to
do
is
especially
if
it's
a
project
there
they're
interested
in
don't
know
a
lot
about,
is
to
go
to
the
meet
the
maintainer
sessions.
Those
are
great,
I'm
definitely.
A
I've
got
a
kind
of
sporadic
group
of
things
in
here
at
different
times,
but
I
think
there's
what
I
try
and
tend
to
do
is
go
to
as
many
of
the
end
user
talks
as
I
could
find,
and
I
was
a
little
surprised
at
how
few
end
user
case
studies
there
were
on
the
menu,
and
so
that
was
kind
of
kind
of
interesting
is
a
lot
more
technical
focus
and
there's
a
few
I'm
going
to
go
there.
This
one,
I
thought,
was
really
cool
the
high
schoolers
guide.
A
We
always
have
somebody
there
who
makes
you
feel
like
you
should
be
a
grandparent
now
and
this
one.
This
guy
has
been
doing
a
lot
of
work
around
kubernetes.
I
so
I'm
definitely
gonna
tune
in
and
see
what
he's
doing
here,
but
there's
a
ton
of
stuff
here.
So
what
I
thought
I
would
do
is
I'll
go
back
and
my
slides
here,
because
I'm
gonna
make
make
josh
go
first,
and
this
was
the
couple
of
slides
that
he
was
talking
about
so
josh.
C
Yeah,
so
I'm
gonna
be
spending
a
lot
of
my
conference
time
off
campus
because,
among
other
things,
chris
and
I
are
going
to
be
running
these
office
hours
sessions,
so
one
of
the
things
that
the
main
coup
con
program
doesn't
really
permit
you
to
do
is
have
sessions
that
have
high
interactivity
with
the
project
maintainers
and
it's
just
because
of
the
platform
required
to
do
video
broadcast
to
so
many
people.
C
So
we
thought
we
would
hold
a
few
sessions
where
we
would
bring
project
maintainers
for
projects,
that
red
hat
sponsors
and
or
you
know
other
experts
and
have
them
there
to
answer
your
questions,
and
so
you
can
get
to
this
from
the
red
hat
landing
page
you
can
get
to
this.
These
are
all
going
to
be
an
open
shift
tv.
C
So
this
is
also
on
the
openshift
tv
schedule
all
of
these
sessions.
You
know
we're
going
to
start
with
members
of
the
k
native
team.
Talking
about
answering
your
questions
on
serverless
applications
followed
by
members
of
a
saf
team,
answering
questions
about
rook
I
and
then
the
kubert
folks,
I'm
going
to
talk
about
using
kubernetes
to
run
your
vms
and
actually
that
particular
session,
because
this
is
what
they're
looking
at
they're
going
to
spend
a
lot
of
time.
C
Talking
about
and
answering
your
questions
about
getting
to
cooper
1.0,
which
is
where
the
project
is
right.
Now,
red
hat
agile
team
is
going
to
be
talking
about
implementing
get
ops.
So
if
git
ops
is
something
that
you
have
heard
of,
but
you
don't
really
know
what
it
is
or
you
know
what
it
is,
but
you
don't
know
how
it
relates
to
your
actual
production
environment
at
work.
Then
that
would
be
a
great
session
to
come
to.
C
You
can
ask
questions
about
it,
because
we
get
a
lot
of
questions
about
certifications
at
these
conferences,
the
red
hat,
certifications,
team
gonna
be
holding
a
q
a
so
if
you're
interested
in
getting
your
openshift
certification
or
even
your
rel
certification,
and
you
had
questions,
that's
the
place
to
come
and
then
going
to
wind
up
with
our
developer
advocates.
Talking
about
the
fee
and
answering
questions
about
the
features
in
4.6,
so
if
anything's
interesting,
please
come
and
please
bring
your
questions,
I
mean
these.
A
Yeah,
I
think
one
of
the
hardest
things
is
to
have
that
sort
of
interactivity
too
there'll
be
chat,
rooms
and
the
booth
and
all
kinds
of
other
fun
stuff.
Inside
of
the
platform
that
they're
using,
I
think
it's
in
trotto
again,
but
what's
been
really
difficult,
is
fig
finding
great
ways
to
host
workshops
and
hand
it
on
and
really
have
some
high
interactivity.
So
this,
I
think,
will
be
a
great
opportunity
for
for
folks
if
you're
interested
in
these
topics.
A
So
that's
that
oh.
E
C
Answer
it
on
air,
then
we
will
also
send
you
a
t-shirt.
Assuming
that
you
live
in
a
country.
We
can
send
t-shirts
to
right,
there'd,
be
a
yeah
the,
but
but
for
for
anybody
else
we
will
mail.
You
a
t-shirt.
C
So
this
is
just
this
is
a
list
of
a
bunch
of
the
sessions
that
are
being
led
by
red
hatters
hold
another
page
of
ones
that
are
maintainer
sessions.
I
actually
realized
that
a
couple
of
one,
no,
no
they're,
not
missing.
Okay.
These
are
there's
two
different
programs
of
kubecon
right,
there's
the
regular
sessions
and
there's
the
maintainer
sessions.
C
So
the
regular
sessions
are
the
ones
that
go
through
the
normal
submission
process
and
are
chosen
for
being
appropriate
presentations
and
everything.
There's
the
maintainer
sessions
and
basically
every
kubernetes
sig
every
cncf
project.
Every
cncf
sig
is
entitled
to
one
of
those
and
they
put
together
a
presentation
about
something
that
they
have
going
on
right
then,
and
because
red
hatters
are
involved
in
so
many
of
those
groups,
they're
involved
in
so
many
of
those
presentations.
C
I
don't
have
that
the
maintainer
session,
just
kind
of
assume
that
if
you
go
to
maintainer
session,
there's
probably
going
to
be
a
red
hatter
on
the
panel
the,
but
we
actually
have
a
lot
of
cool
stuff.
So
in
the
stuff
we're
presenting,
we
ended
up
with
a
lot
of
sort
of
day,
two
stuff
or
this
kubecon
and
fun.
Stuff
too,
like
the
one
that
starts
off,
there
is
jeffrey
sika,
and
at
least
one
of
his
collaborators
are
going
to
do
honk,
ctl
or
honk
cuddle.
C
Again,
this
is
a
live
hack,
kubernetes
contest,
you
know.
So,
if
you're
into
it,
you
download
a
kind
image
and
then
you
try
to
meet
a
challenge
that
requires
hacking
kubernetes
through
it.
The
the
name,
hulk
cuddle
comes
from
the
untitled
goose
game,
and
then
we
have
a
lot
of
day
two
things
like
ryan
talking
about
emission
control,
the
rooks
folks
talking
about
how
storage
can
fail.
C
The
performance
group
for
kubernetes,
actually
our
performance
group
within
red
hat,
talking
about
scale,
and
you
know
how
they
test
scale
and
performance
on
an
ongoing
basis.
So
a
lot
of
really
useful,
like
for
for
a
lot
of
for
any
people
here
who
have
already
adopted
kubernetes
in
their
environment
or
adopted
other
cloud
native
technologies
in
their
environment.
C
A
These
are
we're
talking
about
the
red
hat
stuff,
so
I
just
want
to
quickly
jump
over
and
just
show
you
that
all
of
this,
I
believe,
is
set
up
really
a
lot
of
it
here
on
this
red
hat
page,
and
so,
if
you
just
google
that
there's
oh
yeah
quick,
go
past
that
all
of
these
things
yeah,
I
have
avoided
doing
a
a
keynote
at
kubecon
successfully
until
this
year,
because
I
had
no
excuse
because
it
was
virtual
and
I
couldn't
say
anything
about
it-
so
hey
this
is
but
there's
a
ton
of
them
there's
also
maybe
jen.
A
You
want
to
talk
about
finding
the
raffle
and
doing
the
booth.
D
Yeah,
so
we're
going
to
be
promoting
this
landing
page,
which
of
course
has
a
list
of
all
the
information
about
the
red
hat
presence
at
kubecon
next
week,
and
so
I
just
have
to
make
clear
that
if
you're
a
hatter
or
you
work
for
the
government,
unfortunately
you're
not
eligible
to
enter
this
raffle.
But
we
do
have
a
bunch
of
amazon
gift
cards.
We're
going
to
be
handing
out.
D
If
you
go
to
the
red
hat
booth
within
the
platform
itself,
we
will
be
giving
out
red
hat
swag
and
the
swag
that
we're
going
to
be
giving
out
it's
a
cool
red
hat
so
so
be
sure
to
do
the
landing
page
to
be
eligible
for
the
amazon
gift
card
and
then
come
to
the
booth
itself
within
the
platform
for
kubecon
and
then
you'll
be
eligible
to
win
a
it's,
and
it's
a
really
nice
scarf
and
we've
got
a
bunch
to
give
out.
A
Yeah
so
there
I'm
going
to
stop
sharing
I'll,
throw
the
link
to
that
landing
page
in
the
chat,
and
we
can
surface
that
through
the
rest
of
the
universe.
Here
I
think,
that's
the
right
page
or
that
gets
you
to
the
arcade
at
least
so
I
I
think,
that's
you
know
this.
I
think
that's
the
really
going
to
be
the
interesting
navigation
thing
through
the
ui
of
the
platform
trying
to
find
the
booth
and
all
of
that
so
chris.
What
did?
A
B
So,
like
I
always
go
and
watch
my
friends
talk
right
and
I
like
to
cheerlead
my
friends,
I'm
sorry
y'all
are
going
to
deal
with
that
right,
like
cheerleading.
Virtually
is
a
lot
harder
than
sitting
in
the
front
row
and
kind
of
just
being
there
being
that
calming
presence
for
my
buddies
so
like
I
will
go
to
a
lot
of
talks
from
my
friends
at
apple
that
have
gone
over
there
recently.
B
Definitely,
my
friends
at
cncf
people
like
steven
augustus,
if
he's
doing
a
talk
but
gfe
right
like
he
lives
in
michigan,
george
castro,
eliza
michigan,
bob
bob
killen
lives
in
michigan
and
then
like
those
talks
I'll
go
to.
But
then
caslin
fields
is
part
of
the
upstream
marketing
team
and
that's
the
team
that
I'm
working
with
right
now
in
the
kubernetes
community
extensively
and
they're
doing
a
talk
about
like
how
we
have
all
these
tools
to
help.
B
A
D
Oh,
no,
I
didn't
I
didn't
do
I
didn't.
I
didn't
submit
a
talk
for
this
one,
but
I'm
going
to
be
be
bopping
all
over
the
place.
I
mean
I
actually
haven't
filled
out
my
skid,
because
I'm
procrastinating.
Of
course,
I'm
going
to
check
out
your
super
awesome
keynote
and
I
do
like
the
end
user
stories
and
I'm
going
to
look
at
the
hatters.
D
You
know
I'm
going
to
try
to
get
to
everybody's
session,
even
if
I
have
to
go
after
the
fact
and
check
out
the
recordings,
but
there's
always
super
cool
content
that
I
love
to
attend
at
kubecon
and
I'm
going
to
try
to
check
out
some
office
hours.
So
I
don't
know
like
I'm
a
procrastinator.
D
Maybe
I
shouldn't
say
that
because
I'm
an
event
planner,
but
I
procrastinate,
but
we've
got
some
really
really
cool
stuff.
I
always
love
checking
out
the
community
talks
right,
like
you
know
my
my
lubs
for
the
upstream,
so
I
enjoy
kind
of
seeing
what's
going
on
in
those
projects,
so
I'll
definitely
probably
check
out
a
bunch
of
those
talks.
A
Yeah,
I
think
this
this
one
of
the
things
that's
amazing
about
this
is
I
I
kind
of
feel
like
if
I
don't
know,
if
I
see
some
a
project,
a
maintainer
project
that
I
don't
know
anything
about,
I'm
more
likely
to
go
to
that
like
what
is
it
chub,
chub,
os
or
whatever
or
chobetfest,
or
you
know
like
there's
these
new
things
popping
up
all
the
time
and
if
and
for
the
most
part,
it's
the
incubated
and
graduated
ones
that
got
named
sessions.
A
But
on
monday
there
were
38
things
in
the
sandbox
and
then
on
tuesday.
I
got
an
email
and
we
I
had
to
add.
A
I
have
a
trello
board
that
I
track
everything
cncf
that
I'm
involved
in
or
that
I
should
be
paying
attention
to,
and
I
think
I
added
six
more
proj
sandbox
projects
and
I
don't
think
all
of
them
like
both
or
whatever
42
or
43.
A
There
are
now
have
any
called
out
slots,
but
I
look
for
the
people
who
are
leading
those
in
some
of
this,
like
the
sig
talks
and
other
places
to
try-
and
you
know
just
catch
up,
because
it's
just
this
fire
hose
of
information
that
we
have
to
wrap
our
heads
around
and
stuff
and
I
don't
know
justin.
I
can
see
your
face
on
the
screen
here.
Did
you
have
anything
that
you
were
you
were
interested
in
going
to,
or
are
you
speaking
at
kubecon
this
time?
I
think
that's
just.
E
Heck,
no,
no
I'm
going
to
listen
to
you
all!
No!
No!
I
I'm
just
on
because
I
signed
up
for
the
booth
babe
duty
for
for
the
chat
room,
all
right.
A
A
Commons,
all
right,
yeah
commons
is
going
to
be
an
interesting
animal
this
year,
because
kubecon
is
there's
just
so
many
we're
doing.
The
rosa
launch
that
open
shipped
on
amazon,
serverless
1.1
launch
announcement.
We
have
some
great
talks.
Stephanie
cheers
whom
chris
interviewed
a
while
back
on
openshift
tv
is
going
to
do
our
opening
talk.
A
We
coerced
matt
hicks
to
give
us
10
minutes
of
his
time
and
the
4.6
and
beyond
talk
with
live
q,
a
with
folks
like
clayton
coleman
and
derek
carr,
and
mike
barrett
and
annette
kluett
and
paul
mori
and
reese
oxham
will
be
there
and
theoretically,
even
though
a
lot
of
the
talks
are
pre-recorded.
A
All
of
the
speakers
have
asked
I've
been
asked
and
are
are
willing
to
be
there
for
the
the
interactive
chat
bits
so
that
you
might
not
see
their
faces
or
voices,
but
they're
all
there
to
answer
your
questions
during
the
talk.
So
it's
really
an
interesting
thing,
trying
to
figure
out
how
to
how
to
make
things
engaging
in
this
virtual
world,
and
I
was
wondering
if
each
of
you
had
like
a
little
thoughts
about
what
what
you
like
to
see
in
conferences
like
how
you
like
to
connect
with
people
and
different
things.
A
B
Yeah
I
mean
there's
always
that
common
interest
right
and
you
have
to
figure
out
like
who
are
those
people
that
are
there
with
the
common
interest
of
you
at
the
same
time
right
and
it's
harder
now
in
the
virtual
landscape
right.
But
I
think
I
think
tncf
is
doing
the
slack
channels
again
right,
so
that
kind
of
makes
it
a
little
bit
easier
to
kind
of
figure
out
like
okay.
B
These
people
had
similar
technical
interests,
but,
like
my
technical
interests
are
so
like
wide
and
like
not
very
deep,
so
like
I
like
to
network
with
as
many
people
as
possible,
and
that
is
kind
of
easier
on
the
virtual
side.
But
yeah
I
mean
you've
got
a
volume
of
people
there
that
you
can
like
ping
and
talk
to
and
like
you
can
walk
into
a
chat
room
and
be
like
hey.
I'm
super
interested
in
this
and
people
will
chime
in,
but
they
have
to
be
the
chime
man.
B
B
B
Right,
like
I
think
lastcubecon,
I
did
a
lot
of
posting
on
twitter
kind
of
like
early
in
the
morning
to
kind
of
preface
kind
of
like
how
my
day
was
going
and
are
going
to
go
and
what
I
would
be
doing
so
I'll
be
doing
a
lot
of
that
again,
so
that
I
can
like
hopefully
get
people
to
the
right
place.
The
right
time,
kind
of
thing.
C
Okay,
first
first
best
tip
is
turn
on
your
mic
and,
I
would
say,
you
know,
make
use
of
of
session
chat
where
it's
available,
because
the
advantage
of
session
chat
is
obviously
you
have
something
in
common
already
with
everybody
else
in
the
audience
right
because
you're
interested
in
the
session-
and
you
know
to
the
extent
that
various
people
involved
with
kubecon
are
offering
sessions
or
extra
activities
that
that
offer
more
interactivity
than
the
sort
of
main
program
sessions
do
take
advantage
of
those,
because
interactivity
means
not
just
interactivity
with
speaker
but
also
interactivity,
possibly
with
the
other
attendees.
C
I
think,
there's
another
security
competition,
that's
team
based
somebody
is
running
yeah,
and
so
obviously
that
would
be
a
good
way
to
to
sort
of
connect
with
people.
The
other
thing
is,
I
believe,
jennifer.
They
confirmed
that
that
they'll
be
using
cncf
slack
for
the
conference.
C
C
A
Yeah,
I
think
that's
that's
the
thing
that
that
I'm
noticing
is
like
I'm
pretty
sure.
This
kubecon
and
and
openshift
commons
are
both
inside
of
the
entrado
platform,
which
is
you
know,
you
have
to
register
and
log
in
and
be
there
and
you're
there
for
the
day.
But
then
afterwards
it
it.
You
know,
rarely,
I
don't
think
any
of
the
chats
available
or
anything
like
that.
A
It
all
gets
turned
off
and
that
you
you
lose
that
you
can
watch
the
you
know
the
talks
again
and
repeat
that,
but
both
openshift
commons
and
I'm
pretty
sure
all
of
the
cncf
stuff
is
going
to
get
uploaded
to
youtube
afterwards
as
well
so,
the
morning
after
openshift
commons,
hopefully
everything
will
work
out
well
and
miles
synced
up
everything,
but
then
I'll
make
all
of
the
content
available
on
youtube
for
people
to
share
and
from
all
the
talks,
and
I
think
I
have
15
talks
in
one
six
hour
day.
A
So
there's
there's
a
lot
of
binge
watching
that
could
go
on
afterwards,
so
like
if
you
miss
something
look
for
it
in
youtube
afterwards
or
the
night
before
a
talk.
Look
for
the
old
ones
is.
What
I
tend
to
do
is
cheat
to
see
if
I've
seen
it
before
so
yeah,
there's
a
lot
of
good
content
up
on
on
youtube,
both
on
rh
openshift,
our
channel
and
on
the
cncf
channel
as
well
so
jen.
What's
your
tip
for
connecting
online
virtually
anything.
D
I
mean
I
would
concur
with
josh
to
do
the
session
chat.
I
I
find
that
the
session
chats
are
probably
among
the
most
interactive
places.
I've
seen
to
be
honest,
and
I
mean
the
upside
of
the
session
chat
is
a
lot
of
speakers
are
watching
themselves
forever.
D
So
you
can
actually
ask
questions
of
the
speakers
as
they're
watching
their
awkward
subs
present,
but
I
I
find
that
that
interactivity
is
probably
highest
there
and
you
know
I'll
just
say
it's
just
really
hard
to
replicate
the
kind
of
serendipity
that
you
have
with
like
you
know.
Crystals
are
referring
to
going
down
the
hallway
and
seeing
some
of
the
t-shirt
or
even
talking
at
the
booth,
and
you
know
it's
hard
to
have
those
casual
conversations.
D
You
know-
and
you
know-
and
you
know
that
those
casual
conversations
are
sometimes
you
know
kind
of
springboard
to
larger
conversations.
So
I
mean
I
miss
that
part
of
events.
We
still
get
it
sometimes
like.
Sometimes
if
I
go
into
a
chat
like
a
general
chat,
someone
will
recognize
me
and
then
we'll
have
a
you
know
nice
little
virtual
love
fest,
where
everyone
recognizes
each
other.
D
So
I
do
enjoy
those
moments,
so
I
mean
part
of
it
is
just
engage
if
it
looks
like
there's
not
a
lot
going
on
feel
free
to
bump
the
chat.
There
are
probably
people
hanging
out
there
in
the
background
you
know
like
we
try
to
encourage
folks
on
the
red
hat
side
like
if
they
see
someone
enter
the
room
to
say
hey.
How
are
you
we
see
that
you'd
come
in,
but
sometimes
you
know
folks
aren't
always
super
vigilant
about
that.
D
A
Yeah,
well,
that's
that's
the
thing.
I
think
it's
between
the
slack,
the
openshift
tv,
the
the
chat
rooms
with
the
sessions,
the
chat
rooms
without
the
you
know
outside
and
the
booth
and
that
there's
a
ton
of
places
to
to
go
back
and
forth
between
and
I
think
I'll
have
three
laptops
set
up.
A
I
don't
know
how
many
you
guys
are
each
going
to
have,
but
I
know
chris
has
multiples
here,
but
I'm
going
to
have
one
one
for
commons,
one
for
kubecon
with
a
different
email
address,
because
you
have
to
have
different.
You
can't
have
two
entrato.
A
At
the
same
time
is
what
I've
I've
been
told
now.
So
just
so,
you
know,
because
I
I
would
guess
it's
because
entrato
was
using
the
video
that
it
would
just
we
couldn't
and
so
anyways
that's
an
interesting,
but
I
think
the
other
aspect
that
I
really
like
about
this
is,
and
I'm
going
to
use
the
word
I
was
teasing
somebody
yesterday
about
this,
and
this
is
where
the
bingo
cards
came
up.
A
Was
it's
sort
of
the
democratization
of
access
to
this
content,
because
where
commons
we
used
to
get
between
five
and
seven
hundred
people
to
an
openshift
commons
gathering
that
was
side
by
side
with
kubecon
or
red
hat
summit.
We
have
five
just
under
5000
people
who
have
registered
for
the
commons
event
now
and-
and
I
think
the
same-
the
similar
exponential
growth
in
registrations
for
kubecon-
I
don't
know
jen
if
you
know
how
many
people
have
registered,
they
kind
of
never
tell
us
that
really.
D
Yeah,
I
I
haven't
heard
yet
they're
pretty
clea.
They
keep
that
pretty
close
to
the
vast
I
mean
you
know
for
the
for
eu.
I
know
that
they
had,
I
guess,
or
around
the
20
000
mark.
I
think
yeah.
D
It
was
like
yeah
yeah,
so
so
it's
slightly
higher,
I
mean
kubecon
does
charge
for
their
registration,
so,
like
yeah,
you
can't
really
benchmark
it
like
against
summit.
Earlier
this
year
we
had
a
crazy
number
of
registrations,
partly
because
summit
was
free
and
also
it
was
one
of
the
very
first
virtual
large-scale
events
and
the
trend
that
we've
been
seeing
is
that
you
know
there's
kind
of
a
drop-off.
I
think
there's
a
lot
of
virtual
fatigue,
like
that's
very
real,
so
people
aren't
going
to
every
single
event
that
they
can
possibly
get
to.
D
A
But
it's
also
a
really
good
opportunity
for
things
like
people
who
are
very
new
to
kubernetes.
So
I
think
there's
some
there's
a
quite
a
few
things
on
the
menu
and
the
agenda
for
kubecon.
For
for
new
folks
getting
just
getting
involved.
Is
there
a
sig
contributor
series
of
sessions
josh,
you
know,
onboarding?
E
C
We've
been,
we've
been
working
on
making
the
new
contributor
workshop
into
a
self-service
online
resource,
but
between
the
various
things
that
have
happened
in
2020
everybody.
You
know
there's
like
30
people
working
on
that,
but
everybody
contributing
to
it
is
running
behind.
So
we're
hoping
to
have
something
online
by
the
end
of
the
year,
but
we'll
see.
A
C
No,
a
combination
of
videos
and
text
content,
not
not
anything
particularly
complicated,
the
so
because
it's
not
it's
not
about
using
kubernetes,
about
contributing
to
kubernetes
and
getting
involved
in
the
community,
which
catacomb
is
not
really
set
up
for
right.
The
and,
although
one
part
of
it,
the
technical
part
of
it,
the
local
build
and
test
is
being
put
together
by
the
folks
in
new
zealand.
C
So
hippie
hacker
and
his
crew
is
putting
it
together.
Based
on
this
interactivity
platform
that
they
developed
for
packing
on
kubernetes
and
so
that
one
we
will
actually
have
some
also
scheduled
one-on-ones
being
offered
once
we
get
it
up
and
running.
C
Because
that
way,
you
can
actually
go
through
it
with
a
mentor
and
share
screens
even
intercontinentally
the,
and
this
is
actually
something
we
talked
about
for
a
while,
even
before
coveted
shut
everything
down,
because
yeah
due
to
the
amount
of
schedule,
conflicts
the
people
who
really
wanted
to
who
we
really
wanted
to
attend.
The
new
contributor
workshop,
weren't,
necessarily
the
people
who
were
showing
up
because
it
was
competing
with
30
other
events
and,
and
so
we
were
talking
about
moving
it
online.
Even
before
we
had
to
move
it
online,
but.
C
So
there's
this
whole
cncf
maturity
process
where
you
get
in
as
a
sandbox
project,
become
an
incubating
project.
You
become
a
graduated
project
and
there's
these
thresholds
of
things
you
need
to
have
for
your
project
to
reach
each
of
those
levels,
and
so
we
are
doing
a
sort
of
micro
workshop
to
help
project
leaders
whether
they
are
looking.
They
have
a
cloud
native
project,
they're
looking
to
get
it
into
sandbox
and
cncf,
or
they
have
one
that
say
in
the
incubating
and
they're
looking
to
get
to
the
graduated
level.
C
I
mean
it's
one
of
the
big
things
that
we
do
as
a
sig
and
so
we'll
be
doing
it
with
a
live
q
a
during
the
conference.
So
if
anybody
listening
actually
is
a
project
leader
or
organizer
community
manager,
pro,
you
know,
product
manager
at
a
company
that
has
cloud
native
products
and
you're
interested
in
that.
Please
dial
in
for
that
we'll
have
about
10
minutes
of
presentation
and
the
rest
will
be
your
questions.
A
That
that'll
be
awesome
yeah.
I
think
that
I
this
I've
got.
This
idea
in
my
head,
though,
is
that
there
ought
to
be
a
way
to
set
up
a
catacota
lesson
that
makes
walks
you
through
doing
your
first
pull
request
on
a
piece
of
documentation
on
a
project
and
I'm
sure
github
or
get
get
get
lab,
or
one
of
the
companies.
B
B
C
C
Just
runs
on
github
basically,
and
it's
a
it's
a
mock
repository
in
kubernetes
cigs,
but
it
has
all
the
bots
enabled,
which
is
one
of
the
things
that
you're
learning
there
right
and
so
every
time
we've
had
people
holding
these
at
meetups
where
they
hold.
You
know
their
own
mini
new
contributor
workshop
at
meetups,
and
so
they
create
a
folder
there
with
its
own
approvers
and
owners
and
stuff,
and
people
can
learn
how
that
part
of
the
process
goes.
C
B
A
No,
that's,
I
think,
that's
that's
actually
that's.
I
wish.
I
would
hope
that
there
had
been
more
of
more
of
a
kubernetes
101
talk
or
something
I
didn't
find.
One
like
that,
like
the
very
very
basics
for
very,
very
new
people
did
anything
like
that,
get
in
the
door
through
the
cfp.
I
know
you
were
on
the
committees.
B
F
C
It
has
not
been
a
goal
of
the.
It
has
not
been
a
goal
of
the
conference
chairs
to
have
that
kind
of
content.
Maybe
it
should
be.
Maybe
there
should
be,
but
that
would
honestly
require
the
creation
of
an
explicit
beginner.
You
know
newbie
whatever.
D
Will
yeah,
I
will
just
say
just
from
having
been
to
almost
every
single
kubecon,
that
the
demand
for
kubernetes
101
content
has
increased
massively,
and
that
was
actually
one
of
the
biggest
pieces
of
feedback
that
I
got
from.
Attendees
that
came
by
was
a
desire,
a
really
strong
desire
for
a
kubernetes
101,
and
so
I
don't
know
if
there
needs
to
be
recognition
that
there's
a
shift
in
some
of
the
attendee
demographics,
especially
as
interest
in
kubernetes
continues
to
rise.
D
C
Yeah,
I
think
actually
this
maybe
partly
this
may
be
significantly
changed
by
the
move
to
online,
because,
let's
face
it,
when
it
was
in
person,
you
had
to
buy
a
very
expensive
ticket
pretty
far
in
advance
to
get
in
and
as
a
result,
the
number
of
people
who
got
in
who
were
cloud
native
curious
was
not
huge
and
I'm
not
sure
that
anybody's
really
looked
at
shifting
the
content.
C
We
really
need
that
would
need
to
be
a
separate
track,
because,
if
you're
a
track
lead
for
the
storage
track,
yeah
you're
not
going
to
balance
a
what
is
cloud
native
storage
against?
What
are
the
latest
features
on
open
ebs?
It's
it's.
B
A
C
A
There's
a,
I
think,
it's
also,
and
I
we
you
can
go
to
try
openshift.com
or
learn
openshift.com,
there's
a
lot
of
vendor
stuff-
and
I
mentioned
at
the
beginning-
I'm
you
know
on.
I
think
it's
thursday,
it's
at
noon
or
one
one
montreal
time
like
there's
so
many
courses
out
there
already
I'm
going
to
be
part
of
a
master
class
on
cloud
computing
and
we
were
rehearsing
last
night,
but
the
very
basics
of
what
is
cloud
computing
right
that
track.
A
That
track
is
definitely
necessary
somewhere
along
the
line
you
know
and-
and
I
did
see-
I
have
to
say
it
in
san
diego,
which
is
where
the
joke
I
was
gonna
make
earlier
today-
is
that
we
first
we
did
gatherings
in
person
on
dry
land.
Then
we
went
to
the
ocean,
and
now
we
were
on
a
boat
in
san
diego
for
the
openshift
commons.
I
think
that
was
us
getting
transitioning
to
this
virtual
reality
that
we're
going
to
have
to
do
next.
A
We're
going
to
be
virtual
and
next
it's
all
going
to
be
with
my
oculus
rift
and
we'll
have
a
virtual
reality.
Openshift
commons
gathering
at
some
point
everybody
get
your
your
vr
gear
set
up,
for
that
is.
A
I
think,
especially
with
the
democratization
and
the
openness
and
the
lower
cost
there
and
that's
you
know,
I
think
that's
definitely
on
the
radar
should
be
on
the
radar
for
the
next
go
round.
So
I
wanted
to.
We
have
like
10
minutes,
left
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
staying,
healthy
and
sane
for
a
week
of
virtual
stuff
and
what
your
tips
and
tricks
are,
and
I'm
going
to
show
one
more
piece
of
swag,
and
I
don't
even
know
if
this
company
still
exists.
A
I'm
sorry
if
they
do
soylent.
A
They
still
exist
they're
around
it.
That
was
my
swag
from
I
don't
know
which
kubecon
probably
san
diego
but
stay
hydrated
drink
a
lot
of
water
and
the
other
tip
that
I
always
have
is
on
my
iphone
watch.
It
reminds
me
to
stand
up
every
once
in
a
while
and
stretch,
because
those
are
the
two
things
when
you've
got
multiple
screens
going
on
and
you're
going
crazy
for
me.
If
I
don't
remind
myself-
and
I
even
have
the
breeze
app-
which
I
think
is
hilarious
on
my
iphone-
it
tells
you
when
to
breathe
like
yeah.
A
D
Well,
definitely,
stay
hydrated
and
definitely
walk
around
a
little
bit
too.
You
know
I
mean
it's,
you
know
it
it's
funny,
because
the
time
can
go
by
pretty
quickly
and
I
you
know
I'm
still
guilty
of
this,
because
I
feel
like
my
virtual
meetings,
I
mean
I've
always
worked
to
remember.
The
virtual
meetings
have
gone
way
up,
but
definitely
walk
around.
Take
the
time
to
interact
with
people
around
you
like
go
ahead
and
interact
with
your
pets
and
your
family.
D
D
We
could
all
compare
notes
on
the
best
virtual
conference
food
that
we
have
on
twitter
again,
we'll
all
take
snapshots
of
our
food
that
we're
eating,
and
that's
probably
the
best
conference
food
that
we
will
have
eaten
in
quite
a
while.
You
know
it
won't
be
a
weird.
You
know
sandwich
and
wax
paper
with.
You
know
mystery
ingredients,
so.
D
A
Yeah
to
do
yes,
you
could
do
that.
That
would
be
good.
How
about
you
josh?
What's
your
tip
for
staying
sane
next
week.
C
Well,
aside
from
the
get
up
and
move
around
one
of
the
things
I
actually
have
is
I
have
an
exercise
bike
with
a
laptop
stand
attached
to
it
right
now,
but
that
actually
allows
me
to
get
some
activity
while
still
continuing
to
watch
sessions.
The
and
and
do
take
breaks
schedule
breaks
in
there.
I
mean
one
of
the
things
that
you
end
up
getting
tempted
to
do
and
cancel
some
of
your
regular
meetings
like
if
your
co-workers
haven't
done
it
already.
C
The
idea
that
you're
going
to
watch
and
participate
in
all
these
sessions
and
then
somehow
pack,
your
regular
meetings
and
other
work
in
between
it's
just
not
gonna
work
out
well
for
you
like,
like
you,
might
do
it
for
one
day,
one
and
a
half
days,
and
then,
after
that,
you're
gonna
bomb
out,
yep
and
you'll
end
up
missing
some
of
the
sessions.
C
You
were
the
most
looking
forward
to,
though,
and
and
the
other
advantage
of
it
being
an
online
conference
is
hey
if
there's
time
slots
that
there's
just
nothing
interesting
in
skip
those
time
slots.
Do
you
use
them
as
as
time
off.
A
Mm-Hmm-
and
I
was-
I
always
remind
people
after
the
fact,
if
you
missed
something
or
like,
if
someone
looked
at
my
schedule
right
now,
a
lot
of
the
sessions
are
in
competition
with
each
other.
Like
there's
three
in
one
hour,
and
I
don't
yeah,
I
know
you're
on
that.
I'm
not
gonna
rank
on
anybody,
but
it's
like
nobody
knows
what
particularly
my
interests
are
this,
but
oh.
A
Scheduling
just
know
that
you
know
go
to
the
one,
that's
interesting
and
know,
and
if,
if
you
have
three
friends
presenting
it
all
at
the
same
time,
make
sure
that
they
know
that
you're
gonna
watch
it
in
the
on
the
youtube
and
like
with
all
the
common
stuff,
it's
gonna
be
on
rh,
openshift
youtube
and
the
cncf
channel.
A
A
Do
that
thing
where
you
get
the
digital
nudge?
It
just
goes
to
the
next.
One
goes
to
the
next
one
in
that
and
netflix,
and
I
know
that
sounds
boring
to
other
people
outside
of
this
world.
But
it's
really.
I've
been
really
watching
a
lot
of
other
people
create
playlists
and
watching
them,
and
it's
you
have
it
on
the
back.
A
B
A
If
you
want
to
know
how
I'm
going
to
survive
next
week,
it
is
the
epoxy
whatever
it
say.
I
think
it's
a
british
columbia
is
that,
where
it's?
No
it's
california,
so
you
guys
can
get.
A
But
yeah
a
box
of
red
wine
is
always
handy
to
have
this
red
red
hat,
so
it's
all
in
there,
so
yeah,
that's,
definitely
that'll
be
empty
by
the
end
of
next
week.
A
A
Really
nice
little
happy
hour
things:
q,
a's
in
the
evenings,
priyanka
sharma's
hosting
a
number
of
them.
So
I
definitely
think
there
there's
lots
of
things.
You
can
do
to
stay
sane
and
not
be
overwhelmed,
and
you
know-
and
I
I
do
think
I'm
gonna
have
to
host
the
bingo
game.
A
I
think
I
might
be
printing
figuring
out
how
to
print
all
of
those
put
up
the
pdf
somewhere
and
commons
for
people
to
download
their
own
and
print
off
their
own
cards,
and
we
can
see
who
plays
bingo
there,
and
all
I
got
to
do
is
add
the.
A
Yeah
gathering
or
something
I
think
that
would
be,
but
there's
also
this
the
buzzword.
One
too,
I
mean,
besides
the
names
of
the
projects,
because
I
think
some
of
them
like
key
lime
or
porter's
porter's
in
there
there's
like
this
there's
so
many
sandbox
ones.
It's
like
trying
to
find
and
those
are
the
ones
for
me-
that's
really
key.
Like
argo,
I
know
you
know
thanos.
I
know
all
these
things.
You
know
I
know
generally
what
they
are
like.
A
You
were
saying
chris,
we're
like
we
know
just
enough
to
know
where
to
point
somebody
to
go
to
find
resources.
So
we
don't
look
like
an
idiot
too
often,
but
that's
it's
really.
I
think
one
of
the
things
the
key
things
is
just
to
stay
healthy
and
stay
safe
and
I'm
gonna
throw
up
the
the.
A
Now,
I'm
not
gonna,
no,
I'm
not
gonna
throw
up.
I'm
gonna
throw
up
the
red
hat
screen,
so
if
you're
you're
up
for
it,
you
can
scan
this
in
and
and
get
to.
You
know
the
guided
list
of
everything
red
hat,
but
I
would
say
really
think
about
you
know:
there's
lots
of
other
stuff
use
sketch.
A
I
use
it
because
otherwise
I
forget
to
go
to
things
and
yeah.
It's
gonna
be
gonna,
be
an
interesting
thing.
The
commons
is
gonna,
be
lots
of
fun,
I'm
so
looking
forward
to
having
chris
having
you
do
the
do.
The
the
science
mystery
theater
version
of
it,
and
and
hopefully
I
will
get
to
get
it
together
to
supply
you
all
the
urls
and
links
for
everything
so
that
you
have
them
handy
for
that
and
then
the
for
me,
the
okd
working
group
again
on
friday.
A
This
is
just
before
the
office
hours
that
we
scheduled
it.
So
you
could
go
to
the
open
source,
okd
working
group
and
then
the
open
shift,
4.6
office
hours
that
that
josh
was
talking
about,
will
happen
right
afterwards.
So
you
can
go
from
being
an
okd
fan.
I
just
found
out
yesterday
cern
is:
is
upgrading
theirs
to
4.6
as
soon
as
we
get
okd
for
4.6,
we
have
a
couple
little.
D
A
So
yeah,
I
was
really
that
made
my
day
yesterday.
I'll
have
to
get
them
to
come
and
do
a
talk
at
the
okd
working
group.
But
I
think
that's
you
know.
That's
kind
of
what
I
was
thinking
would
be.
The
great
thing
is
today
to
just
kind
of
do
this
and
you
know
I'm
going
to
stop
sharing
again
for
a
second,
but
one
of
the
things
I
think
is
that
I
miss
is
seeing
everybody's
faces.
A
So
I'm
like
incredibly
grateful
for
you
guys
coming
here
today,
hanging
out
with
us
and
for
everyone,
who's
been
hanging
out
in
the
chat
and
watching
online
I'll
put
this
up
on
our
youtube
channel,
but
I
do
encourage
you
really
make
the
most
of
kubecon
look
for
us
in
slack
on
twitter,
in
the
red
hat
booth,
try
out
for
some
of
the
red
hat
raffles
and
other
things
like
that.
But
I
think
we
should
have
a
recap.
One
of
these
after
kukan
like
a.
A
After
so
I
I'm
gonna
challenge
you
the
best
online
schwag
and
find
the
person
the
new
person
that
you
met.
What
what
new
person
did
you
meet?
That
really,
you
thought
was
a
great
connection
at
kubecon,
so
challenge
everybody
who's
out
there,
and
so
maybe
in
two
weeks
time.
A
We'll
have
another
one
of
these
sessions
and
recap
where,
where
what
happened
and
do
all
that-
and
I
would
be
remiss
to
say
if
I
I
can't-
I
have
to
say
that
I
really
wanted
to
give
my
condolences
to
dan
cohen's
family.
He
did
a
huge,
huge,
huge
thing,
lifting
up
all
of
the
cloud
native
projects
and
building
out
this
wonderful
community
and
he's
going
to
be
the
thing
that
I
missed
the
most
at
this
thing
is
connecting
with
dan.
So
somewhere
up
there
he'll
be
watching
us.
A
Hopefully
maybe
he's
singing
some
john
prying
songs
and
not
really
caring
too
much
about
what
us
but
unknowing
him.
He
probably
would
be
looking
down
on
us.
So
thank
you
dan
for
everything
you
did
and
putting
up
with
all
the
headaches
we
caused
you,
but
and
doing
it
so
graciously
so
cool
plus
one.
There
you
go
well,
it's
1001,
at
least
in
my
time
zone,
and
I
still
have
some
work
to
do
to
get
ready
for
the
commons
and
I'm
sure
everybody
else
here
has
stuff
to
do
so.
A
Thank
you
for
joining
us
and
we'll
see
you
next
week
at
commons
and
kubecon
and
okd
working
groups
and
office
hours
and
on
openshifttv,
so
take
care
all
and
thank
you
for
joining.