►
From YouTube: 01 The Search for Connections across the OpenShift Ecosystem - Diane Mueller (Red Hat)
Description
OpenShift Commons Gathering @ Kubecon/NA San Diego November 18 2019\
Welcome to the Commons intro with Julio Tapia (Red Hat)
The Search for Connections across the OpenShift Ecosystem - Diane Mueller (Red Hat)
A
Good
morning,
everyone
hi
and
welcome
to
the
San
Diego
I've
got
the
privilege
of
doing
the
the
welcome
segment
of
our
session.
My
name
is
Julio
Tapia
and
part
of
the
cloud
platforms
business
unit
here
at
Red,
Hat
and
I
manage
a
couple
of
different
functions:
the
partner
ecosystem
and
the
community
efforts
of
which
open
chef
Commons
is
a
part
of
so
delighted
to
be
here
today.
A
This
marks
the
seventh
OpenShift
gathering
of
the
year.
We
have
had
them
in
Barcelona
in
Milan,
in
London,
bueno
scientists
also
San
Francisco,
Santa,
Clara
and
now
San
Diego.
So
we're
really
excited
to
have
these
events
and
we
couldn't
do
it
without
the
support
of
our
community.
So
thank
you
so
much
I'm
gonna
go
ahead
and
kick
things
off
and
invite
Diane
Muller
our
master
of
ceremonies
and
Diane.
Please
come
on
up
here.
A
B
First
I
would
be
remiss
if
I
didn't
say.
Thank
you
very
much
to
all
of
our
sponsors.
This
is
a
community
event,
it
doesn't
happen
without
them,
and
so,
when
you're
on
the
breaks
and
you're
going
anywhere
for
a
coffee,
bio
break,
walking
off
the
boat
for
some
sunshine,
make
sure
you
say
hi
and
meet
and
greet
with
them.
They
really
make
this
thing
happen.
B
We've
got
an
incredibly
packed
schedule
and
we're
already
10
minutes
late.
So
I'm
gonna
talk
really
fast
for
my
little
intro,
and
so,
if
you
need
any
more
details,
just
come
and
find
me
during
the
breaks,
but
it
is
a
very
deep
long
day.
So
the
boat
will
never
leave
the
stick,
the
dock.
So
if
you
thinking
we're
gonna
take
off
and
you're
trapped
here,
that's
not
what's
gonna
happen.
B
You
are
here,
I
felt
the
boat
moved
just
a
tiny
little
bit
this
morning,
I'm
not
sure
where
that
was
tied,
adjustment
or
nothing,
but
it
it
should
be
pretty
stable.
All
day.
We've
got
a
lot
going
on.
I'm
gonna
kick
off
into
my
usual
opening
talk
here,
which
I
call
the
search
for
connections
across
the
open,
shipped
ecosystem,
and
this
is
we
do
like.
Like
Julio
had
said,
we
do
this
many
times
during
the
year
and
its
shape
shifts
a
little
bit
for
each
each
audience.
B
We
just
did
a
wonderful
one
on
artificial
intelligence
and
machine
learning,
and
all
of
that
content
was
recorded
and
uploaded
to
YouTube,
and
all
of
this
content
will
be
uploaded
and
in
YouTube,
hopefully
in
two
days
or
so
and
as
well.
It's
all
streaming
live
on
Facebook.
So
if
you're
out
there
on
Facebook
land,
hi
mom
will
well,
you
can
join
us
in
and
ask
questions.
We
probably
won't
be
monitoring
it,
but
we
do
have
one
person.
Who's
will,
can
try
and
answer
any
of
your
questions.
Ryan
jarvan
and
is
our
host
on
Facebook
today.
B
So
today
is
really
and
I
say
this
every
time-
and
this
is
not
like
a
stalky
thing-
is
all
about
facial
recognition,
and
this
is
facial
recognition
before
AI.
This
is
the
human
connections
that
you
need
to
make
in
order
to
do
your
day
to
day
jobs
to
work
on
it
within
the
community
in
your
organization
and
today,
what
I'm
really
gonna
ask
you
all
to
do
is
make
sure
whomever
you're
sitting
next
to
introduce
yourself
to
them,
say
hello.
B
If
you
already
know
that
person
move
or
turn
to
the
other
side
today
is
really
you're
gonna
go
into
a
coupe
con
and
there
are
12,000
people
showing
up
this
week,
and
this
is
a
smaller
event.
We
had
600
people
register
they'll,
be
coming
in
and
out
all
day
long.
We
have
stuff
happening
all
the
way
up
until
8
o'clock.
We
have
a
wonderful
evening,
reception
on
the
roof
deck,
so
it'll
be
a
lot
of
opportunities
to
meet
new
people,
and
that
really
is
the
key
to
our
community
and
openshift.
B
Commons
is
the
openshift
ecosystem
community
and
that's
really
what
this
day
and
these
days
are
all
about.
The
whole
community
model
is
based
on
having
all
the
code
in
the
open
source.
All
of
our
community
efforts
are
in
the
open
and
we
are
collaborating
in
the
open.
You
can
see
issues
all
kinds
of
wonderful
things
on
github,
whether
it's
in
the
kubernetes
repos,
the
ok
d,
repos
or
any
of
the
ancillary
projects.
B
Everything
is
out
in
the
open,
and
this
is
why
it's
so
key
to
make
sure
that
we're
all
connected
and
we
all
playing
well
with
each
other,
because
if
you've
ever
been
to
a
Red,
Hat
event,
you
see-
or
you
hear
someone
say
open
sources
in
our
DNA
and
they
show
this
wonderful
double
helix
diagram
and
we
talk
about
the
million
plus
projects
that
are
out
there,
that
we're
involved
in
and
I
think
this
is
kind
of
old.
It's
like
2018.
B
So
we
are
not
standing
here
alone,
though
I'm
standing
here
alone
with
all
of
you,
but
the
way
that
I
like
to
think
about
this
is
that
a
healthy
community
is
a
community
with
really
strong
connectivity
to
other
communities.
So
the
health
of
an
open-source
community
is
really
most
accurately
measured
by
the
connections
with
members
to
other
upstream
and
downstream
project
communities
within
its
ecosystem
and
probably
within
other
ecosystems
as
well
so
and
the
jellyfish
metaphor
is
kind
of
near
and
dear
to
my
heart.
B
I
have
some
wonderful
tools
that
I
use
to
manage
all
of
the
communities
that
come
within
the
open
source
ecosystem.
That
is,
and
if
you
look
at
these
diagrams
that
are
up
here
right
now,
every
one
of
those
dots
represents
a
person
and
the
very
center
of
those
dots
is
a
little
blue
dot.
That
is
the
and,
if
I
did
this
live
over
the
Wi-Fi,
it
probably
would
take
forever.
So
I'm
got
some
screenshots
here,
but
this
is
really
about
how
the
connections
are
made
between
projects.
B
So
this
is
really
today
and
every
day
outside
of
this
day
is
about
creating
more
connections
and
nurturing
them,
and
that's
really
what
open
shift
Commons
is
about.
It's
a
slightly
different
tilt
on
OpenShift
common
OpenShift
community
models,
we're
not
about
trying
to
get
people
to
contribute
code
just
to
our
project
or
a
my
code
base,
because
if
you
look
at
it
right
now,
almost
not
all,
but
a
large
majority
of
the
work
that
goes
on
inside
of
Red
Hat
around
OpenShift
is
really
a
contribution
to
kubernetes
or
one
of
the
CN
CF
projects.
B
So
our
goal
is
really
just
to
promote
all
the
peer-to-peer
interactions,
whether
it's
through
gatherings
like
this
or
briefings.
We
have
a
really
fun
YouTube
channel
where
I
get
to
get
people.
Tell
me
everything
and
teach
me
everything
about
new
technology
or
new
releases.
It's
like
having
your
own
private
tutor
and
that's
all
up
on
YouTube.
There's
a
lot
of
working
groups
and
SIG's
you'll
hear
from
some
of
the
leaders
of
those
today
and
we
have
an
active
slack
Channel
and
if
you're
not
on
the
slack
channel,
join
Commons.
We'll
get
your
email.
B
So
today,
we'll
hear
about
a
few
of
them,
but
I'm
sure
this
week
at
coop
con
we're
going
to
hear
a
lot
more.
So
this
jellyfish
metaphor,
bear
with
me,
is
very
important
to
the
health
of
any
community,
and
you
being
here
today
are
helping
us
grow
this
network
of
connections,
so
I
also
want
to
give
a
shout
out
to
our
IBM
an
IBM
cloud
for
again
they
are
our
headline
sponsors
today
and
we're
really
grateful
for
them
stepping
up
and
contributing
their
funds,
so
they're
upstairs.
B
But
it's
also
the
tools
that
I
I
get
to
use.
We
start
to
see
some
of
the
overlaying
of
where
there
are
people
who
are
working
on
projects
with
us
from
IBM,
as
we've
now
been
acquired,
so
we
get
to
learn
where
our
compatriots
are
doing.
So
it's
been
a
really
interesting
thing
and
there
are
some
where
we
haven't
been
working
in
at
all.
So
these
are
the
kind
of
things
that
today
we'll
probably
try
and
drive
there.
B
Other
companies
have
different
personas
and
we
we
try
and
draw
them
out
and
Amadeus
is
a
good
example.
They've
been
with
openshift
and
doing
great
things
and
they'll
be
giving
briefings
on
regular
cadence
about
cool
stuff
they're
doing
they
did
a
talk
on
their
use
of
Kafka,
and
but
they
work
on
lots
of
things,
not
just
OpenShift,
and
so
really.
This
today
is
not
just
about
open
shift.
It's
about
everything
you
do
with
openshift
the
downstream
project.
B
The
upstream
projects
that
you're
working
on
the
workloads
that
you're
deploying
on
there,
we
kind
of
are
probably
going
to
focus
today,
mostly
on
the
graduated
and
I,
probably
should
have
updated
this,
but
probably
those
and
not
all
the
graduation
announcements
that
coupe
con
have
been
made
yet
so
there's
a
few
more
that
have
graduated
but
the
core
things
here
and
not
all
of
them,
so
we'll
try
and
make
it
easy.
Today
we're
also
going
to
talk
today
about
the
operator
framework.
B
You'll
see
right
after
lunch,
we
have
a
talk
from
Rob's
Tomsky
who's,
going
to
walk
you
through
the
operator
framework,
and
we
have
some
wonderful
people
here
today,
we're
going
to
be
in
a
panel
this
afternoon
talking
about
having
built
operators
the
lessons
that
they've
learned
and
the
operator
maturity
model
and
all
the
goodness
from
the
operator,
lifecycle
management.
So
there's
a
lot
of
content
operator
hub.
If
you
haven't
been,
there
has
a
ton
of
supported
and
maintained
operators
now
and
these
pushed
in
to
operate
our
hub
within
OpenShift
itself.
B
I'm,
not
gonna,
steal
any
of
the
thunder
from
Rob.
But
it's
it's
a
really
important
pattern.
That's
coming
up
now
within
the
entire
kubernetes
ecosystem,
and
so
we
launched
operator
hub
with
AWS
and
Microsoft
and
group
Google,
and
what
the
goal
is
is
really
to
help
people
discover
and
be
able
to
install
additional
services
and
applications,
whether
they're,
upstream
or
downstream,
and
work
with
our
partners
to
make
sure
that
they
support
them.
Maintain
them
not
just
things
that
we
have
to
do
at
Red,
Hat,
so
there's
a
really
kind
of
vibrant
community.
B
B
What's
in
there,
their
stack
that
they're
running
with
open
shipped
on,
but
also
some
of
the
what's
in
their
workloads
and
their
stories
of
how
they've
come
to
embrace
this
new
transformative
world
that
we
live
in
there
I
avoided,
saying
digital
transformation
didn't
I,
I
did
damn
and
I
said
it
afterwards.
We're
gonna
talk
a
lot
about
day
2.
We
spend
a
lot
of
time
getting
stuff
installed
and
then
it's
up
there
and
then
we
have
to
patch
it.
B
We
have
to
do
some
lifecycle
management,
so
there's
a
lot
of
work
going
on
behind
the
scenes
to
make
that
easy
and
seamless.
So
that's
what
you're
gonna
hear
a
lot
about
that
today
and
for
us
now
that
we've
kind
of
we've
got
a
mature
and
stable
OpenShift,
four
out
there
and
the
universe.
It's
really
about
focusing
I
think
now
on
making
sure
we
optimize
our
platform
and
kubernetes
itself
to
enable
the
workloads
and
enable
developers
and
to
really
get
that
return
on
investment
that
you
all
expect
and
that's
been.
B
You
know
really
the
crux
of
how
we've
built
out
OpenShift,
for
so
we've
got
a
long
talk
this
afternoon
with
some
of
the
leads
from
the
open
shift,
engineering
team
and
some
great
demos.
It's
been
an
evolution
if
you've
been
with
us
since
the
beginning,
I'm.
Sorry,
we've
done
a
lot
since
seven
years
ago
when
we
started
and
we
were
on
a
MongoDB
Ruby
on
Rails
platform,
as-a-service
we've
come
a
long
way
baby
and
we're
really
happy
to
see
this
new
evolution
operator
based
installs
and
all
the
cool
stuff.
B
B
So
there's
there's
going
to
be
a
lot
of
fun
today,
I
think
in
this
next
conversation
we
have
so
trying
to
keep
up
with
the
time
and
I'm
think
I'm
close
to
not
to
run
it
over
today
really
is
I'll
just
keep
repeating
it's
a
very
jellyfish
day.
I
really
want
you
to
connect
with
each
other
you'll,
see
a
lot
of
great
stuff
happening
on
stage.
Some
really
interesting
demos
are
gonna
occur
as
long
as
the
Wi-Fi
holds
out,
and
we
really
don't
just
be
a
spectator
come
in
grab.
Somebody
on
the
coffee
breaks.
B
Remember
that
anything.
So
please
that
and
that's
the
way
we
get
to
pack.
The
schedule
too
so
will
who
pretty
quickly
between
things
and
then
we'll
just
save
up
your
questions
for
the
end
or
during
the
breaks
so
again,
OpenShift
Commons
is
the
organization
it's
a
member
based
organization.
You
only
need
to
join
once
for
your
entire
organization,
so
you
may
already
be
in.
B
There
is
a
table
upstairs
in
my
European
counterpart
from
who's
here,
Tania
repo
down
in
the
front,
we'll
be
staffing
the
table
upstairs
and
can
get
you
signed
up
and
can
look
up
and
see
if
you've.
If
your
organization's
already
joined.
We'll
just
add
you
to
slack
into
the
mailing
list
and
if
you
haven't
we'll
help,
you
fill
out
the
form,
which
is
really
not
that
hard
and
make
sure
you
get
added
into
it.
Now
there
are
about
five
hundred
and
thirty
organizations
already
in
the
slack
and
in
the
channel.
B
So
it's
pretty
active
and
it's
really
the
place
where
we
like
to
stop
I
like
to
say
that
Red
Hat
come.
He
gets
out
of
the
way
and
lets
you
talk
to
each
other
amongst
your
and
it's
not
a
technical
support
line,
though
there's
a
little
bit
of
chatter
like
that.
That
happens
in
there,
mostly
it's
about
connecting
the
dots
connecting
with
each
other
and
giving
you
a
way
to
find
each
other.
B
The
other
key
to
to
the
open
chef
Commons
is
there's
no
anonymity.
We
ask
you
to
join
using
your
corporate
email
address
or
your
something
other
than
an
anonymous
one.
So
people
know
who
you
are,
and
that
has
really
helped
us
a
lot
to
build
trust.
So
people
know
where
you're
coming
from
and
what
your,
what
baggage
you're
bringing
with
you,
but
it's
also
been
a
really
great
way
for
people
to
connect,
and
so
I'm
gonna
really
hope
that
those
of
you
haven't
joined
OpenShift
Commons
will
do
so
today,
it's
free,
there's
no
charge.
B
B
Kick
us
off
right
away
because
they
have
to
move
from
this
dock,
so
just
be
aware
that
right
at
8:00,
we're
gonna,
they're
gonna
make
a
little
noise
and
you
got
15
minutes
to
get
off
so,
but
the
other
folks
that
are
up
there
have
been
many
of
them
have
been
supporters
of
the
Commons
and
other
events
for
the
past
couple
of
years,
and
we
really
appreciate
it.
So.
Thank
you
very
much.