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From YouTube: OpenShift Commons Gathering Red Hat Summit 2018 Community Collaboration in Action Diane Mueller
Description
OpenShift Commons Gathering Red Hat Summit 2018
Diane Mueller - Community Collaboration in Action
Opening speech with Community Statistics and introduction to the OpenShift Commons community model; setting the stage for the day and for Red Hat Summit
Community Collaboration in Action Diane Mueller
A
I
like
to
call
this
speed-dating
for
open
shifters,
so
you
will
see
a
lot
of
really
fast
transitions.
We
have
over
40
speakers
today.
Some
of
them
are
jam-packed
on
two
panels.
So
there's
a
lot
to
go
through.
If
you
don't
know
who
I
am
yet
and
I'm,
probably
the
only
person
without
a
badge
at
the
moment,
because
I
was
too
busy
to
go
over
and
register
at
Muskaan.
A
A
A
So
it's
a
jam-packed
day,
there's
things
that
we're
gonna
tell
you
over
the
next
few.
A
few
days
we're
gonna
tell
you
over
and
over
again
that
your
applications
are
workloads,
are
moving
to
the
cloud.
You're
gonna
hear
a
lot
about
numbers
and
Gartner
reports,
and
things
like
that.
It's
true,
and
you
all
know
it,
because
you're
here
and
you're
gonna
hear
lots
of
folks
from
Red
Hatters
to
partners
say
why
open
shift
is
the
best
choice
for
you.
Some
of
you
have
already
chosen
open
shifts.
Some
of
you
have
already
deployed
it.
A
Some
of
you
are
thinking
about
it
and
the
people
that
are
in
the
room
with
you
here
today
are
your
peers
and
the
people
who
can
help
you
figure
out
what
the
best
road
ahead
is
for
you.
So
we
talked
about
the
four
C's.
Why
it's
the
best
code,
the
B,
are
like
the
top
contributors
are
the
second
contributors
to
kubernetes.
A
We
are
actively
participating
in
lots
of
the
upstream
projects.
A
lot
of
the
upstream
project
leads
are
here
today
in
the
room:
there's
a
lot
of
Engineers
and
product
managers
here
in
the
room
today
and
they're,
looking
forward
to
hearing
your
feedback,
because
that's
what
today
is
about
there's
also
a
lot
of
customers.
A
A
But,
as
you
see
we're
a
little
busy,
but
really
what
it
is
too
is
there's
a
ton
of
partners
here
in
the
room
too,
and
we
pull
those
services
and
those
offerings
into
openshift
through
the
service
broker
and
service
catalog
work
and
integrations
at
all
different
levels
of
the
platform.
So
there's
a
lot
of
you
in
the
room
from
seiyya
the
house
too
and
they're
listening
as
well.
A
So
what
is
OpenShift
Commons
now
there
are
lots
of
open-source
communities
out.
There
are
lots
of
foundations
out
there.
What
I,
like
to
think
of
it
is,
is
a
new
community
model
kind
of
turning
our
head
around
flipping
the
model
of
what
we
think
of
as
community
and
as
a
communication
channel.
When
we've
switched
over
to
kubernetes,
we
had
a
lot
of
customers
that
we
had
to
update
and
bring
along
with
us
with
this
new
technology,
and
so
that's
where
the
impetus
came
for
creating
this
firehose
of
communication.
A
All
right,
so,
if
you
think
about
it
usually
historically,
a
community
manager's
job
is
to
course
all
of
you
into
contributing
code
to
my
project.
That's
when
I
get
metric
doubt
on
and
we
in
the
past,
but
now
really
what
we're
really
about
is
trying
to
create
these
peer-to-peer
connections
with
each
of
you
get
RedHat
in
some
cases
out
of
the
way,
so
you
could
have
conversations
with
you
at
each
other.
So
you'll
hear
me
at
the
break.
Give
you
a
challenge
as
part
of
our
speed-dating
thing.
A
We
host
and
I
host-
and
some
of
you
have
listened
in
and
thank
you
for
your
feedback
on
it.
Lots
of
OpenShift
commons
breeding
briefings.
We
have
some
SIG's
everything
appear
is
out
in
the
open.
It's
on
Commons
open
shift,
org
you'd
find
it
find
it
there
if
you're,
not
a
member
of
Commons,
yet
there's
a
join
page
there
and
there
is
a
very,
very
active
slack
channel
as
well.
A
So
just
in
the
past
100
days,
we've
had
45
new
member
organizations.
So
if
you
join
open
shift
Commons,
you
only
have
to
sign
up
once
for
your
whole
organization.
That
means
anyone
from
the
executive
assistant
to
the
CTO
to
all
of
your
developers
from
that
company
could
get
on
the
mailing
list
or
come
into
the
slack
channel.
They
come
from
all
different
parts
of
the
industry.
Some
of
them
are
customers.
A
Some
of
them
are
partners,
that's
a
lot
of
edu
and
government
people
in
there
and
we
only
have
one
real
rule
and
it's
simple:
there
isn't
any
anonymity.
So
when
you
sign
up
you
use
your
corporate
masters
or
your
organizational
email
address.
That's
the
only
rule
we
really
have
other
than
good
conduct,
so
we
now
officially
as
a
Friday,
have
365
one
for
every
day
of
the
year
organizations
in
the
openshift
Commons,
and
actually
it's
quite
that's
a
bit
of
a
fudge,
because
two
more
came
in
over
the
weekend
and
we're
pretty
global.
A
A
And
the
way
it
is
is
that
instead
of
me
hunting
for
people
to
contribute
to
the
code
by
creating
this
networking
and
the
feedback
and
the
pull
request,
and
you
pushing
issues
in
and
making
statements
on,
Stack
Overflow
that
sometimes
irritate
people,
but
are
always
good
to
hear
it's
really
driving
contribution.
The
last
six
months
has
been
very
busy,
and
this
is
just
really
the
openshift
origin
dashboard.
It
doesn't
include
the
kubernetes
dashboard
of
participation.
It's
been
crazy,
been
crazy
out
there,
so
that
we
now
have
over
70
organizations
outside
of
Red
Hat.
A
There
are
contributors
to
OpenShift
origin
and
they
come
from
everywhere.
This
is
really
about
cross
community
collaboration
collaboration
with
the
upstream,
where
big
contributors
into
lots
of
the
upstream
projects,
there's
always
new
ones,
we're
doing
a
lot
of
work,
I'm
sure,
there's
more
red
things
here
now
that
core
OS
is
joined
but
I'm
not
going
to
take
any
thunder
from
them
because
they're
up
next
there's
a
lot
going
on
and
that's
why,
being
virtual
and
being
part
of
the
open
shift,
commons
community
is
really
important
to
keep
up
and
to
keep
up
with
the
firehose.
A
Truly,
everything
is
about
collaboration,
collaboration
across
streams,
collaboration
with
your
peers
here
today-
and
this
is
really
and
I'm
gonna-
do
good
here
with
time
what
the
future
looks
like
it's
a
new
universe
out
there
we're
not
Pluto,
we
didn't
get
kicked
out
of
the
solar
system,
yet
this
has
been
really
an
amazing
journey
that
we've
all
been
on
and
I'm
gonna.
Ask
you
to
do
me
a
favor,
because
this
is
part
of
the
rules
of
speed-dating.
You
have
to
have
a
couple
of
questions
so
during
the
break.
A
A
Everyone
here
is
coming
to
the
next
bunch
of
days.
You're
running
into
the
hallway.
Have
those
conversations
there's
a
lot
of
folks
how
many
Red
Hatters
are
in
the
room
right
now
raise
your
hand
a
lot
of
Red
Hatters
in
the
room
good,
because
the
other
thing
I'm
gonna
say
is:
we
need
to
feed
the
people.
We
opened
up
the
doors
here
and
let
a
lot
of
people
in
from
the
wait
list.
So
if
you're,
a
Red
Hatter
make
sure
you
maybe
wait
in
line
before
lunch
and
let
everybody
else
eat
and
then
eat
afterwards.