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From YouTube: OpenShift Commons Gathering Seattle 2016: The Future is Collaboration - Opening Remarks
Description
Opening Remarks by Diane Mueller (Red Hat) from the OpenShift Commons Gathering in Seattle on Nov 7, 2016 - includes community growth stats, discussion of upstream project contributions and an introduction to OpenShift Commons.
A
Alright,
for
those
of
you
who
don't
know
me,
my
name
is
Diane
Mueller
I'm,
the
director
of
community
development
for
red
hat
for
the
open
shift
origin
project.
Most
of
you
have
been
tapped
on
the
shoulder
to
do
a
briefing
or
contribute
code,
or
do
something
like
that.
So
a
lot
of
you
I
know
virtually.
So
thank
you
all
for
coming
and
being
here
today
and,
let's
see
if
we
can
advance
a
slide
and.
A
Alright,
so
welcome
everybody.
Welcome
to
the
beginning
of
Coober
Nettie's
cloud
native
week
here
in
Seattle,
we're
going
to
take
over
the
city.
Hopefully
it'll
be
a
non
violent
takeover,
we're
here
to
talk
about
collaboration
across
communities
today,
so
you're
not
going
to
hear
product
pitches
from
us,
we're
not
going
to
try
and
sell
you
anything.
What
we're
going
to
try
and
do
is
sell
you
on
each
other
on
connecting
as
a
community
and
collaborating
together.
So
the
things
that
I
really
want
you
to
take
home
today
is
that
openshift
is
open
shift
origin.
A
It
is
an
open
source
project.
It
up
streams,
a
number
of
other
projects.
Many
of
you
are
in
the
room
that
we
work
with
the
Ku
benetti's.
The
docker
there's
rocket
folks
here
at
CD
folks,
Prometheus
folks,
lots
of
people
in
the
room
who
are
working
on
other
projects
that
become
part
of
the
open
shift,
origin
story,
and
so
what
we
are
really
trying
to
promote
with
the
open
shift.
Commons
is
a
lot
more
cross
community
collaboration
and
doing
it
in
the
open.
A
So
everybody
probably
has
seen
me
do
a
presentation
at
some
point
with
this
wonderful
picture-
and
it
is,
you
know
there
are
myriad
of
open
source
projects
that
get
pulled
into
open
shift
and
we
turn
them
out
at
red
hat
into
through
origin
into
openshift
enterprise,
open
ship
dedicated
and
open
shift
online,
and
it
runs
anywhere
on
any
platform
bare
metal
whatever.
So
there's
lots
of
things,
but
you
should
really
think
about
today.
A
More
as
as
this
is
two
sets
of
balloons
as
we
pull
in
all
of
the
services
and
the
offerings
and
the
containerized
things
that
you
guys
are
building
as
service
providers.
We
are
working
with
folks
like
get
up
cloud
who'll,
be
speaking
in
the
afternoon
to
help
them
raise
up
their
public
paws.
On
Azure
lots
of
tools
are
here
and
there
isn't
enough
room
here
for
all
the
balloons
that
I
should
have
on
this
picture.
A
One
of
the
things
that's
pretty
astounding
is
that
we're
in
Seattle-
and
most
of
you
are
very
North
American
centric.
There
are
some
folks
from
China
Italy
Brazil
here
represented
today.
A
lot
of
Canadians,
like
myself,
came
down
across
the
border
to
watch
this
election
happen,
which
is
going
to
be
we're
really
happy.
You
can
all
come
home
with
us.
A
There's
no
wall,
but
if
we
do
build
a
wall,
you'll
have
to
do
it
so
and
we'll
do
it
with
an
open
collaboration
with
you,
but
you'll
be
doing
the
work.
So
today
there
are
over
235
member
organizations
in
the
open
shift
Commons
and
that's
pretty
phenomenal
for
something.
That's
a
pretty
virtual
effort
and
we're
in
over
50
countries,
the
latest
of
which
the
University
of
banging
ham
joined
from
Nigeria
and
they're.
Not
here.
Today,
though,
he
offered
so
in
the
room
today,
40
of
those
member
organizations
are
represented.
A
A
So
if
we're
Red
Hatters,
we
admit
it
proudly,
if
you're
with
hazel
cast
or
weave
or
kinfolk
or
any
of
the
other
folks
that
are
here,
we
ask
you
to
proudly
wear
those
colors
and
introduce
yourself
to
everybody
as
as
whom
you
are
and
who
you
are
representing,
because
it's
really
about
getting
you
all
to
be
able
to
connect
with
each
other.
So
really
this
in
this
room
is
really
what
I
think
the
future
looks
like
for
open
source.
A
So
open
source
in
the
past
has
really
been
a
lot
about
about
me
as
a
community
manager
trying
to
coerce
you
as
developers
and
coders
into
contributing
code
to
my
project
right.
So
I
joke
earlier
about
herding
cats
in
the
past
and
still
in
a
lot
of
open
source
communities.
That's
really
the
role
of
the
community
person
and
that's
changing.
What
we
see
in
the
room
here
today
is
is
v's
core
project
leads
customers,
end
users
host
operators.
A
All
kinds
of
people
here
are
in
the
room,
people
from
different
the
different
standards
organizations
we
have
folks
from
CN
CF
represented
I,
don't
think
the
oci
guy
I
think
he
ended
up
going
to
Europe
or
something
for
another.
One
Vincent
was
going
to
come,
but
really
what
openshift
Commons
has
been
to
date.
Is
this
new
community
model
about
bringing
people
from
all
different
parts
of
the
ecosystem
together?
A
And
it's
been
really
a
very
virtual
thing,
I
kind
of
think
of
myself
as
running
a
TV
channel,
not
Fox
News,
but
you
know
something
something
a
little
bit
more
interesting
than
that
I
think,
and
so
we
do.
Every
week
we
I've
probably
reversed
coerced
most
of
you
in
the
room
into
doing
the
briefing
if
I
haven't
I
will,
by
the
end
of
this
day
and
schedule
something
trying
to
give
people
a
podium
to
stand
from
so
that
they
can.
You
know,
talk
about
their
give
feedback
on
new
projects,
showcase
beta
projects.
A
Alpha
projects
talk
about
things
and
features
that
are
missing,
that
they
want
and
talk
about,
the
projects
that
they're
working
on
and
the
products
that
they've
made
from
those
projects.
So
it's
been
very
virtual,
but
really
what
I
see
Commons
is
is
a
way
of
promoting
community
collaboration
as
a
new
model,
and
you
are
here
today
to
test
that
out
with
me
outside
of
the
virtual
world.
A
So
what
I
asked
you
all
to
do
is
make
sure
today
that
you
introduce
yourself
to
the
person
next
to
you
and
behind
you
and
around
you
and
don't
sit
with
the
same
people
all
day,
long,
okay,
just
really!
This
is
not
about
us
redhat,
influencing
your
decision
on
what
you're
going
to
buy
for
the
next
six
years
or
whatever
yeah.
That's
not
what
this
is.
A
This
is
really
about
connecting
each
of
you
with
each
other,
and
hopefully,
if
we
do
this
right
and
do
it
well
we'll
be
able
to
do
that
because
that
kind
of
collaboration
we
have
lots
of
contributors
and
anyone
who
wants
to
sit
down
with
me
at
lunchtime
at
one
of
the
tables
I'll
be
there,
and
I
can
run
through
the
statistics
on
who's
contributing
to
my
code.
We.
What
we
found
is
that
commons
participation
really
does
lead
to
that
contribution.
A
So
by
having
unova
here
or
crunchy
DB
here
and
there
working
on
things
that
to
make
sure
the
container
eyes
there
program,
there
are
different
databases.
Yes
thank
you,
it
works
and
is
containerized
and
all
the
services
are
there,
the
learning
that
they
do
make
to
make
their
offering
work
they
share
with
other
people
the
features
and
the
functions
that
are
missing
or
the
bugs
we
find
get
fed
back
and
often
they're
the
ones
that
contribute
to
it.
A
A
Today,
I
took
one
other
graph
here.
I
took
red
hat
out
of
here,
no
one's
going
to
say
that
red
hat
isn't
the
biggest
contributor
to
open
shift
origin,
but
when
you
take
red
hat
and
all
the
anonymous
people
out,
there
are
a
whole
lot
of
organizations
already
I
think
there
are
over
55
organizations
that
are
contributing
to
open
shift
origin.
A
So
this
has
really
been
this
change
in
the
model
for
us
from
chasing
people
down
to
create
do
code
contributions
to
giving
people
the
opportunity
to
connect
has
been
very
successful
model
for
us
and
today
we're
going
to
try
and
push
the
envelope
from
virtual
to
ality
here.
So,
if
you're,
not
in
commons,
and
many
of
you
in
the
room
are
not,
there
is
40
organizations.
A
What
I've
asked
is
for
all
of
the
speakers
who
are
coming
is
to
spend
the
day
with
us
and
the
evening
and
drink
beer
with
us
and
that
way
going
forward
through
kook
on,
if
you're
here
for
the
rest
of
the
week,
you
can
you
know
peg
Chris
or
someone
else
or
mark
la
marine
or
one
of
the
other
folks
and
grab
them
in
the
hallway
at
KU
con
and
ask
them
even
deeper
questions.
So
this
is
really
about
making
connections.
So
that's
my
welcome
we're
going
to
hear
from
next.
A
A
Craig
McLuckie,
who
I
don't
think
he's
come
yet,
but
he's
a
local
he's,
probably
stuck
in
traffic,
is
now
an
ex-googler
is
supposed
to
be
showing
up
and
giving
us
a
talk
on
Cooper
Nettie's.
In
the
next
chapter
for
cloud
natives,
then
we're
going
to
hear
from
Clayton
Coleman
who's
our
lead
architect,
who
is
going
to
talk
about
features,
futures
features,
functions
and
futures,
and
then
we'll
have
a
big
data
conversation
before
we
go
into
lunch,
and
then
we've
got
a
lot
of
panels
planned
for
the
afternoon.
A
A
There
are
six
things
that
we
have
image:
builders,
open
shift
on,
OpenStack
edu
and
gov
two
separate
ones:
microsoft.net.
The
folks
from
click
to
cloud
have
done
all
that
work
are
here
in
the
room
and
run
that
cig
big
data
and
core
contributors.
Our
contributions,
big
data,
is
a
bunch
of
big
group
of
people,
so
I
gave
them
their
own
room.
A
So
there'll
be
signage
out
there
to
direct
you
to
find
the
room
for
the
big
data
folks,
because
there's
a
lot
of
them
here
and
the
cork,
if
you're
interested
in
contributing
to
that
there's
another
room
set
up
to
eat
lunch.
Now.
That
said,
if
you
don't
want
to
talk
about
these
things,
the
chairs
for
most
of
the
cigs
are
here,
I,
think
and
a
couple
of
Subban's
for
the
ones
that
couldn't
make
it.
You
don't
have
to
you'll
see
on
the
stanchions
topics
like
clustering
and
identity
management,
and
things
like
that.
A
So
you
can
swap
those
cards
out.
Okay,
just
because
Diane
said
you
had
to
talk
about
identity
management
doesn't
mean
you
have
to
okay,
but
what
I
do
want
you
to
do
is
find
a
group
and
a
commonality
today
and
connect
with
those
folks
over
lunch
and
then
in
one
of
the
panels.
In
the
afternoon,
the
community
leadership
panel
I'll,
come
back
on
in
the
sig
chairs,
will
get
to
give
us
some
of
your
feedback
on
them
all.
Right
and
above
a
word
about
beer.
A
I
do
like
beer
at
five-thirty
today
over
in
the
redwood
room,
we're
hosting
a
local,
wonderful,
Seattle
brewery
called
optimism
because
we
like
the
name
and
they
also
have
a
beer
called
hello
world.
So
they
had
me
at
that
and
if
he
hasn't
signed
all
of
his
books,
grant
Shipley
will
be
signing
more
of
the
open
ship
developer
books.
So
get
a
copy
of
that
and
we'll
go
and
we'll
do
that
until
seven-thirty
tonight.
A
So
we
have
a
full
day
set
up
for
you
and
we
have
QA
time
built
in
and
we'll
see
how
we
run
run
over
or
not
and
there's
a
microphone
in
the
middle.
So
please
use
it,
and
the
one
last
thing,
I
would
say,
is
I
hired
an
espresso
cart
for
the
entire
day.
Okay,
please
use
it
so
that
I
don't
drink
all
of
it
and
then
come
back
and
have
beer
with
us
and
we'll
be
here
all
day.
So
thank
you
for
coming.
It's
all
about
you
guys!
It's
not
about
us!