►
Description
From the OpenShift Commons Gathering in Seattle on Nov 7 2016, OpenShift Commons Community Leadership panel moderated by Diane Mueller (Red Hat) with SIG chairs as panelist talking about road ahead and building more community engagement and diversity.
A
C
Openshift
Commons
has
been
very
virtual.
I
mentioned
that
in
a
welcome
speech
early
this
morning
we've
been
doing
virtual
briefings
and
cigs
and
back
in
the
early
days
when
I
first
came
on
board
at
Red
Hat,
I
was
doing
community
meetups
and
such
like
that.
But
that
was
more
about
corralling
code
contributions
and
I
talked
about
that
a
little
bit
so
and
the
meeting
times
that
we
do
for
these
virtual
things
are
very
North,
American
centric
all
right.
So
there's
a
lot.
We
can
improve
in
the
fall
on
fall.
C
We
were
in
fall,
but
post
khoob
Khan
will
be
launching
some
regional
user
groups
which
will
help
to
get
some
localized
engagement
and
we're
going
to
start
in
the
Nordics,
because
for
some
reason
the
Nordic
folks
really
want
to
have
user
groups,
so
you'll
be
seeing
that
roll
out
sometime
soon
and
will
also
be
hosting
more
gatherings
like
this
one
and
it
to
coincide
with
the
upcoming
coupons
in
Berlin
and
Austin
and
at
Red
Hat
summit.
So
we're
going
to
do
more
of
the
same
right
stuff
that
you've
seen
before.
C
So
what
I
wanted
to
hear
from
the
cig
group
leaders?
Was
they
each
come
from
different
aspects
of
the
open
shift
community?
We
have
OpenStack
big
data
net
and
gov
showing
and
is
Chris
Crippler
here,
nope,
okay!
Well
we're
going
to
have
an
edu
person,
but
hey
that's
all
right
everybody's
around
somewhere,
but
you
may
be
starting
a
few
minutes
early,
so
I
think
that
might
have
thrown
him
off
if
he
comes
he'll
put
him
on
the
stage,
but
each
each
market
niche
each
technology
in
each
has
different
ways
of
interacting
with
different
communities.
C
D
Hi,
my
name
is
jon
moulton
principal
engineer
at
Dell
and
I'm
on
our
OpenStack
team.
Dell
has
for
the
past
34
years,
been
focusing
on
writing
reference
architectures
for
OpenStack
on
our
gear
to
help
you
scale
up
really
massively
in
a
way
that's
been
validated
through
all
our
gear,
from
the
networking
to
the
the
storage
we,
our
reverence
architecture
can,
if
you
want
to
include
SEF
or
me
to
Korra
and
finally,
over
the
past
year,
to
even
focusing
on
workloads
and
I'm.
D
The
open
shift
guy
for
the
past
year
and
a
half
I've
been
deploying
open
shift
to
an
open
shift,
three
pretty
much
on
a
weekly
basis.
As
long
as
my
my
stamp
or
my
hardware,
configuration
is
up
and
running.
Openstack
I've
been
deploying
openshift
on
it,
I've
committed
upstream
to
the
open
shift
on
OpenStack
heat
templates
and
ansible
projects
and
I
don't
get
out
in
front
of
customers
enough.
They
don't.
E
C
E
I'm
Erin
Boyd
I'm
a
principal
engineer
for
red
hat
and
started
within
the
Big
Data
emerging
tech,
we've
kind
of
settled
down
into
more
of
a
storage
role
within
open
shift,
and
our
goal
is
to
provide
a
good
user
experience
with
storage,
and
that
doesn't
mean
you
I.
Typically,
when
you
say
user
experience,
people
immediately
think
that
you're
talking
about
a
user
interface.
But
the
purpose
of
what
we
do
is
to
actually
take
storage
which
Red
Hat
offers
SEF
cluster
container
native
storage
and
make
that
work
well
with
an
open
shift
matter
of
fact.
B
B
We
are
also
supporting
some
of
the
backward
compatibility
with
previous
images
using
mono
and
Boris
is
here
from
Microsoft,
so
we
are
helping
some
of
the
team
in
Microsoft
to
bring
sequel
on
on
the
Linux
site,
so
they
are
trying
with
you
go
to
centos
and
as
well
as
the
rail
software.
So
our
company
has
created
a
way
where
you
can
pull
the
image
for
sequel
server
and
actually
deploy
it
on
openshift,
with
few
clicks.
C
A
There
can
everyone
hear
me
all
right,
I'm,
a
bit
of
a
soft
talker,
so
I
want
to
make
sure
that
we're
good
okay,
my
name
is
Todd
Wilson
and
I'm,
with
the
government
of
British
Columbia,
just
a
little
bit
up
the
road
and
across
the
wall
we
are
soon
soon
to
be
well.
We
are
in
the
midst
of
trying
to
reinvent
how
we
engage
with
both
the
tech
sector
and
the
developer
community
and
government
developers
to
come
up
with
new
collaboration
models,
to
make
of
better
make
the
tech
sector
better
and
really
make
bc.
A
Just
a
more
awesome
place
to
be
than
it
already
is,
so
the
open
shift.
Part
of
that
story
is
one
of
the
things
that
we
ran
into
was
the
playing
field
for
us
to
work
with
all
of
these
different
developers
and
all
the
different
tech
sector
industries
was
very
uneven.
The
data
center
that
we
use
for
government
is
behind.
A
F
My
badge
but
you'll
have
to
take
my
word
for
it.
I'm
representing
the
edu
sig
which,
as
far
as
I
know
here
today,
is
just
me.
So
if
there's
anyone
else
there,
please
come
up
and
introduce
yourself
I'd
like
to
beat
you
I'm,
the
de
facto
product
project
manager,
for
an
implementation
project
of
open
shift
at
the
University
of
Michigan.
And
what
we're
trying
to
solve
there
is
that
we're
central
IT,
we're
focused
on
large
monolithic
applications,
typically
operating
in
gartner's
mode,
one
form
of
bimodal
IT.
F
But
what
we're
trying
to
do
is
help
researchers
who
have
grant
money
and
they
have
to
develop
rapidly
changing
applications
to
meet
the
needs
of
data
analytics
across
medical
automotive
engineering.
And
what
we
see
an
open
shift
is
the
ability
to
provide
a
platform
to
those
users
that
is
secure
but
is
also
able
to
meet
their
needs
for
rapid
change.
C
So
the
use
cases
from
both
edu
and
gov
a
pretty
convincing
from
for
most
of
our
parts,
but
how
the
other
Edu's,
who
aren't
here
in
the
room
and
I,
know
some
of
that
had
to
do
with
budget
and
getting
people
to
fly
to
come
to
things
like
this.
But
what
sort
of
way
should
we
be
looking
at
trying
to
engage
other
folks
in
edu
to
come
into
this
community?
What
is
what's
missing
and
what
else
can
we
do
better
I
think.
F
Some
of
the
key
business
cases
are
data
analytics.
So
whenever
you
need
to
have
rapid
change,
you
think
about
the
edu
model,
so
I
started
off
in
commercial
world
and
they're
a
lot
of
the
decision-making
is
top-down,
so
you
know
you
have
a
CEO
or
CIO
who's
able
to
make
technical
decisions,
but
in
edu
you
have
researchers
who
have
grants
they're
the
people
who
make
all
the
decisions
in
university.
So
you
need
to
be
able
to
support
their
needs,
they're
doing
research,
and
so
we
need
to
be
able
to
provide
a
secure
platform.
F
I
think
it
needs
to
be
cost-effective.
It
needs
to
needs
to
work.
You
know,
Kelsey
was
talking
about.
What
is
the
problem
that
you're
trying
to
solve
and
I?
Don't
think
lift
and
shift
is
a
good
idea
there,
but
what
people
are
expecting
out
of
open
shift
is
a
platform
that
they
can
deploy
their
applications
on
that
they
can
count
on
and
I
think
we
need
to
be
able
to
administer
it
in
a
common
way,
but
also
meet
the
needs
of
those
people
who
are
trying
to
push
out
applications
rapidly.
C
So
from
a.gov
perspective,
I
know
because
I'm
I'm
from
bc,
I'm
on
the
other
side
of
that
wall
too.
So
I've
gotten
to
to
work
with
the
gov
folks
you're
doing
a
lot
of
work
with
creating
the
developer
exchange
and
doing
outreach
to
the
community
trying
to
pull
people
in
and
and
how
is
that
working
for
you
and
how
can
we
use
that
sort
of
model
as
well
sure.
A
Yeah,
we
created
a
construct
that
allowed
us
to
sort
of
take
off
our
government
hat
and
reach
out
in
sort
of
a
very
Ungava
kind
of
way,
to
meet
developers
and
tech
sector
entrepreneurs
and
vendors
on
sort
of
a
more
even
playing
field.
So
we
have
a
couple
of
constructs
that
we
invented
to
sort
of
allow
that
to
happen
in
as
natural
away
as
possible.
One
of
them.
A
We
call
discovery
days
where
we
sort
of
set
up
a
panel
of
you
know,
tech
leaders
who
have
at
least
some
kind
of
common
problem
statement,
there's
an
issue
that
they're
trying
to
solve.
We
invite
everyone
from
students
to
community
developers
to
other
vendors
and
entrepreneurs,
into
the
room,
to
listen
to
the
problem
statements,
and
then
we
kind
of
just
let
them
talk
amongst
themselves
about
what
potential
solutions
could
be
there.
A
We
don't
try
to
force
a
solution
out
of
the
room,
we
have
stickies
and
we
have
things
lying
around
in
case
people
want
to
quickly
jot
some
ideas
out,
but
what
we
find
happens
is
that's
that's
step
one
into
getting
the
barriers
down
and
getting
Communications
started
across
some
of
these
lines
that
are
very
difficult
normally
to
bring
together
and
so
the
next
one
that
we
do,
and
this
is
on
our
own
team.
We
do
a
collaboration,
effort
that
we
call
that
design
sprint.
A
So
we
really
tighten
the
scope
down
on
what
do
you
think
we
could
do
in
two
weeks
to
solve
this
problem
or
at
least
to
get
moving
on
this
problem
and
we
throw
sticky
zone
on
the
tables
and
just
let
people
go
and
there's
a
bit
of
pizza
and
if
we're
lucky,
some
beer
and
what
we
find
that
we
get
out
of.
That,
too,
is
sometimes
there's
really
good
ideas
that
come.
Sometimes
the
ideas
are
things
we
sort
of
already
thought
of,
and
not
okay
yeah.
A
We
thought
of
that,
but
we
can't
for
XYZ
reason,
but
just
that
sort
of
community
leverage
that
we
get
in
those
relationships
that
are
forged
are
really
the
valuable
part
that
keep
giving
back.
So
these
are
the
people
that
comment
on
our
github
issues.
These
are
the
people
that
are
really
excited
about
the
tweets
that
we
put
out
and
retweet
them,
and
so
these
are
the
things
that
really
start
to
get
that
momentum
going
so.
C
That
actually
speaks
to
crossing
ecosystem
boundaries.
You
know
different
user
communities,
different
technology
sectors
and
it's
a
wonderful
thing.
I
love
to
brag
about
it
in
bc.
But
when
we
talk
about
crossing
open
source,
community
boundaries,
I
know
there's
microsoft
net
and
I
can't
believe
how
wonderful
it
is
to
be
saying
that
openshift
is
supporting
that.
But
prashant
from
your
perspective,
what
can
we
do
better
in
terms
of
outreach
to
the
dotnet
community
to
getting
them
to
come
in?
B
The
biggest
announcement
of
Microsoft
loves
Linux
was
the
best
thing
to
happen,
because
we
had
a
very
hard
time,
convincing
customer
that
Linux
is
supported
and
we
have.
We
are
supporting
dotnet
on
openshift
to
dot
0
and
everybody
will
come.
Where
is
the
motherly
ship
so
now
I
feel
like
this
load
in
that
process,
where,
like
Microsoft
loss
Linux,
and
we
get
the
byproduct
low
out
of
it
now
coming
to
the
Microsoft
users,
the
interesting
part
of
their
very
lazy.
B
They
get
scared
as
soon
as
you
sail,
unix
linux
or
with
any
real
product,
and
when
you
start
talking
or
build
config,
pod
scaling
or
environment
variable,
they
lie
good.
So,
basically,
what
we
try
to
do
there
is
we
try
to
simplify
that
whole
process
by
integrating
the
whole
workflow
of
creating
container
I
zap
using
the
visual
studio.
All
the
dotnet
developers
traditionally
want
to
see
that
create
open
existing
project,
create
a
new
project.
I
should
hit
the
f5
button,
all
the
logs
should
appear
and
it
should
go
to
the
destination.
B
B
We
picked
up
the
same
idea,
that's
kind
of
like
very
useful,
now
another
constraint
about
all
the
people
like,
of
course,
this
whole
announcement
with
dotnet
core
is
great,
but
everybody
has
to
move
to
the
Nugget
packages
and
upgrade
their
source
code
and
all
those
things,
so
it's
kind
of
like
a
blocking
factor
for
them
and
the
question
for
most
of
the
enterprise.
The
two
interesting
Enterprise
are
already
here
like
edu
and
the
government,
and
we
come
across
telecom,
banking
and
insurance.
B
We
come
across
energy
sector
and
we
also
come
across.
Basically,
they
like
or
like
all
the
six
of
seven,
so
normally
entertainment
and
media.
The
interesting
part
about
these
companies
are
these
are
in
business
either
for
centuries
or
four
decades.
That
means
they
have
tons
of
work
load
running
both
on
Microsoft,
as
well
as
on
linux
and
they're
in
there
ask
is
like
how
do
I
make
sure
that
I
am
able
to
run
this
in
a
in
a
proper
manner,
and
my
IT
and
ops
is
able
to
deal
with
this
problem.
B
So
we
see
a
lot
of
traction
coming
from
that,
we
also
see
like
great
efforts
from
Microsoft
like
dotnet
foundation,
that
is
coming
up.
At
least
there
is
a
community
based
culture
that
is
coming
up
little
bit
more,
but
I
think
it
will
take
its
own
course
of
action.
We
are
trying
to
bridge
the
gap
in
that
whole
love
equation.
B
The
whole
Sikh
community
is
helping
a
lot
from
the
education
perspective
to
the
end.
Customers
I
mean
the
previous
videos
that
we
talked
about
how
to
get
the
dotnet
application,
and
we
saw
some
interesting
customers
like
very
fortune
hundred
to
fortune
500
customer
reaching
out
after
watching
those
videos.
C
So
I
know
big
data.
Sig
has
got
lots
of
red
hat
people
working
in
it
and
will
Benton
gave
up
a
wonderful
speech,
but
we
are
it's
still
very
early
days
for
spark
on
openshift
and
working.
We
have
T
systems
is
doing
some
stuff
and
Germany
around
apache
spark
cuz.
They
have
customers,
but
where
are
you
seeing
the
biggest
uptake
and
where
should
we
be
doing
more
education?
Well,.
E
In
big
data,
when
we
started
off,
we
were
really
kind
of
two
teams.
We
were
analytics
and
we
were
storage
and
I
represent
storage,
met
fairly
who's
sitting
back
there
he's
he's
more
than
analytic
side
of
it,
and
you
know
with
big
data
the
two
go
hand
in
hand.
You
know
because
you
can't
run
analytics
on
nothingness,
so
you
know
I
see
it
growing
I
mean.
Is
you
mentioned
with
an
edu?
I
mean
that
is
really.
E
The
crux
is
that
you
know
we
can
store
as
much
data
as
we
want,
but
if
we
want
to
answer
the
questions
that
are
being
asked,
we
really
need
the
analytics
to
enable
that.
So
I
mean
I
only
see
that
growing
and
I.
Think
storage
is
a
wonderful
support
model
for
that
because
were
able
to
you
know
within
Red
Hat
itself
have
the
storage
tools
necessary
to
be
able
to
go
out
to
this
brownfield
and
you
know
systems
and
connect
to
them
through
open
shift
through.
E
C
I
know
we
have
lots
of
reference
architectures
that
have
come
out
over
the
past
couple
of
days
from
GCE
to
vmware
and
at
dell
you
wrote
one
reference
architecture,
so
a
lot
of
the
work
that
the
judd
and
has
been
doing
to
and
the
community
has
been
doing
to
get
that
the
documentation
done.
Can
you
talk
a
little
bit
about
how
important
it
is
to
have
those
reference
documents
and
get
that
content
going
sure.
D
D
Customers
are
kicking
the
tires
asking.
How
do
I
do
a
POC
where
what
how
do
I
even
get
started?
So
I've
spent
a
lot
of
time
very
meticulously,
documenting
everything
that
lays
on
top
of
our
OpenStack
infrastructure
and
in
our
just
our
very
initial
sort
of
sig
meeting
over
lunch
today,
there
were
two
major
questions
that
came
up,
which
is
integration
points
OpenStack
is
huge.
It
has
all
these
different
products.
D
D
Why
would
I
worry
about
persistent
volume
claims?
Why
would
I
worry
about
reinvent
implementing
this
Orion
coming,
not
in
an
open
shift
when
I've
already
done
all
the
work
in
OpenStack?
So
that's
a
lot
of
the
question
and
a
push-pull,
that's
probably
happening
more
in
the
Cooper
Nettie's
on
OpenStack
cig
then,
would
be
happening
on
sort
of
the
pure
deployment.
What
kind
of
gear
am
I
going
to
need?
What
kind
of
networking
am
I
going
to
need?
How
am
I
going
to
get
a
solution
set
up
for
my
for
my
users?
C
The
other
thing
is,
there
are
tons
of
other
open
source
projects
out
there
that
we've
all
been
listening
to
and
hearing
about
core
OS
was
here.
We
should
have
asked
them
more
about
etsy,
etsy
d
operators,
and
so
what
are
from
your
perspectives,
some
of
the
other
open
source
projects
that,
upstream
that
we
should
be
looking
at
for
your
different
areas.
Is
there
anyone
who'd
like
to
take
that
I.
A
So
if
you
go
to
their
org
18f
and
look
at
some
of
the
stuff
they're
doing
it's
very
innovative,
they
have
lots
of
toolkits
if
you're,
trying
to
instantiate
any
kind
of
agile
or
DevOps
transformation,
some
of
their
documentation
that
they
have
on
github
is
very
valuable
for
making
those
cases
or,
if
you're,
putting
a
slide
deck
together
that
you
need
to
present
to
a
customer.
That's
all
solid
gold.
That's
there!
So
we
mined
their
github
org.
C
F
Writing
want
to
consume
data,
that's
admitted
by
those
type
of
standards,
and
so
this
probably
falls
more
under
the
realm
of
image
builders,
but
being
able
to
easily
stand
up
applications
that
emit
those
type
of
data
streams
being
able
to
leverage
some
type
of
an
application
that
will
queue
and
potentially
store
that
data
like
no
sequel
or
MongoDB,
or
something
like
that
and
then
being
able
to
write
applications
that
adhere
to
the
regulatory
standards
that
want
to
consume.
That
data
like
FERPA
in
the
United
States,
for
example.
F
D
D
What
I'm
hearing
everybody
I
talked
to
about
open
shift
in
OpenStack
is
we
need
Keystone
or
identity
management
integration
first
thing:
cinder.
Integration
works,
just
fine
kind
of
leave
it
the
way
it
is
it'll,
it'll
be
okay
as
long
as
the
identity
management
and
the
authorization
allows
users
to
mount
cinder
so
open
sac.
Is
this
enormous,
open
source
project,
that's
kind
of
hard
to
say,
yeah
integrate
more
with
OpenStack,
especially
you
know.
What
actually
wasn't
mentioned
today
on
our
sig
round
table
was
databases
of
service.
D
There
are
several
companies
are
putting
a
lot
of
effort
into
creating
an
open
source,
abstraction
layer
for
databases,
sequel
databases,
non
sequel,
databases
and
being
able
to
clue
in
apps
that
are
deployed
on
openshift,
like
you
can
find
your
database
resources
here,
where's
Cassandra
in
the
back
end
or
in
the
back
end
or
any
one
of
the
are
in
dbms
is
like
this
is
where
you
go,
find
it
and
your
integrated
with
Keystone
identity
or
LDAP
identity.
You
should
be
able
to
get
there
and
get
the
resources
you
need.
So.
C
There
was
also
a
table
today
on
identity
management,
so
we
do
know
that
that's
one
of
the
big
hot
topics
for
open
ship
so
I
think
that's
something
we'll
be
doing
more
of
in
the
future
and
making
sure
that
there's
more
content
around
that.
So
that
brings
from
a
from
a
storage
point
of
view.
We
have
stuff
in
the
room,
I
think
there's
some
people
from
Gloucester.
What
is
the
next
thing
that
we
should
be
watching
for
and
trying
to
work
into
creating
images
and
things
for
pass
on
we'll
pass.
A
E
Okay,
I'm
mistaken
you're
dreaming
about
right
storage.
Oh
no,
don't
do
that
I'm!
Actually,
security
is
one
of
the
big
topics
with
storage
and
and
how
we
provide
the
identity
management.
You
know
down
to
the
actual
physical
asset.
You
know
if
you're
dynamically
provisioning
data
and
it's
block
storage,
it's
pretty
easy
with
an
open
shift.
E
But
when
we
talk
about
shared
stores
or
any
sort
of
legacy
storage,
you
know
we
have
the
means
to
do
that
with
an
open
ship,
but
we
don't
necessarily
do
it
as
eloquently
as
we
could
so
I
think
the
integration
and
cross
collaboration
with
teams
like
identity
management
with
storage,
you
know,
will
really
be
an
asset
to
make
it
work
well
and
work.
It
make
it
nice
and
make
it
secure.
So
I
think
that's
one
of
our
top
priorities.
Prashant.
B
I
can
think
a
lot
of
thing
right
now,
but
I
will
try
to
be
as
much
politically
correct
here.
Don't
worry
about
that.
So,
basically,
you
will
see
lot
of
cross
workloads
running
between
as
your
open
shift
those
kind
of
scenarios
as
it's
becoming
more
and
more
popular,
like
people
running
using
cloud
and
another
as
pass
so
security
is
a
bigger
thing.
Ldap
and
Active
Directory
Integration
could
come
to
me
immediately
when
I
see
the
users
that
are
going
to
use
the
cross-platform
class
enablement
kind
of
scenario.
B
There
are
other
features
with
like
source
to
image,
which
has
a
very
powerful
way
of
deploying
your
workload
on
on
a
cross
platform
technology
where
you
can
literally
do
the
lift
and
shift
kind
of
a
scenario,
those
kind
of
integration
project.
If
there
is
a
pointers
in
that
area,
that
would
be
an
interesting
way
to
look
at
it.
B
I
think
Microsoft
has
already
done
quite
a
bit
of
open
sourcing
work
in
the
recent
past
so
which
is
helping
community
a
lot
to
to
build
on
top
of
whatever
they
are
providing,
for
example,
mono
images
looking
to
Windows
Server
2016,
the
whole
doctor
integration
and
containerisation
will
see
that
what
comes
out
as
a
as
a
guideline
coming
further
in
next
year.
So
that
is
something
to
look
forward
to
sequel
on
Linux.
So
far,
what
are
the
other
integration
on
siss
siss
iris
package?
B
Of
course
it
goes
across
the
board
not
only
from
the
data
but
security,
also
from
the
basically
the
logs
and
the
whole
capability
to
manage
those
tools.
Most
of
them
will
be
coming
from
Microsoft's,
but
I
think
there
are
areas
which
can
be,
which
can
be
treated
as
an
open
source
project
for
the
cross
collaboration.
So.
C
C
Maybe
some
of
the
features
and
functions
that
you'd
like
to
see
enhanced
and
I
know,
there's
a
lot
of
work
going
on
around
the
Service
Catalog
and
that
the
service
broker
API
and
things
along
that
line
of
that
nature
that
you're
looking
for
from
not
just
from
the
community
but
from
the
engineer
engineers
who
are
in
the
room
and
the
product
managers?
Is
there
something
on
your
wishlist
you're
nodding
there?
He
is
a
wish
list.
There
are
product
managers
in
the
house,
yeah.
A
One
of
the
things
that
we're
finding
and
and
sort
of
there
was
a
slide
that
resonated
really
early
on
this
morning,
we're
sort
of
there's
the
different
layers
of
operations.
So
there's
that
infrastructure
offer
operations,
cluster
operations,
platform
operations,
application
operations
and
then
the
application
devs
and
all
of
those
concerns
along
there.
A
What
we
find
is
that
there's
a
visibility
gap
or
a
management
gap
I'm
not
sure
how
to
best
put
it
in
that
sort
of
application,
ops
and
cluster
ops
layer
that
is
kind
of
difficult
for
us
to
penetrate
and
get
clarity
in
that
space.
You
know
we're
dealing
with
a
data
center,
that's
very
mature
in
their
processes.
They
have
the
infrastructure
baked.
They
know
how
to
handle
that.
What
we're
kind
of
struggling
with
is
that
middle
layer
between
app
and
infrastructure?
How
do
how
do
we?
How
do
we
manage
that
appropriately?
A
A
C
B
F
I
guess
I
have
a
business
requirement
rather
than
a
technical
requirement,
and
that's
given
the
amount
of
expertise,
that's
required
to
do.
Openshift
well,
I.
Think
the
open
ship
dedicated
offering
is
very
appealing
for
a
lot
of
died.
Ed
use
that
came
up
in
a
presentation
that
I
did
two
months
ago
and
I
think
a
couple
of
edu
echoed
that
if,
if
openshift
dedicated
is
going
to
be
an
easy
to
use
offering
for
the
daddy
to
use
than
having
easy
answers
to
the
federal
regulation,
questions
is
going
to
be
an
important
thing.
F
So
FERPA
is
just
bottom
line
standard
on
a
dot
edu.
If
you're
dealing
with
someone's
presence
in
a
class
and
their
identity,
then
it's
FERPA
data
and
you
can't
write
an
application
unless
it's
the
platform
is
for
/
meets
yet
phurba
certified,
but
our
engineering
department
is
doing
DoD
and
aight
our
work.
Our
medical
school
has
HIPAA
information,
and
so,
if
we're
going
to
be
offering
a
platform
to
them,
it
needs
to
be
able
to
meet
those
requirements.
C
So,
from
a
kubri
Nettie's
point
of
view,
from
what
the
work
you're
doing
at
Dell
or
in
on
storage,
is
there
something
from
in
the
Cooper
Nettie's
world?
That's
missing
that
you
would
like
or
not
in
the
next
release,
because
we're
here
come
I'm
trying
to
prep
you
for
what
you
should
go
forward
this
next
week
over
the
next
couple
of
days.
Well,
we
have
Cooper
Neddy's
here
and
kind
of
here.
C
C
Think
some
of
the
earlier
panels
and
talks
talked
about
the
brittle
under
fat.
You
know
what
is
the
foundation.
Where
is
the
brittleness
coming
from
and
more
education
about,
oci
and
the
standards
and
stuff
and
more
support
from
to
and
areas
in,
the.net
foundation
and
others
standing
up?
I
think
there'll
be
there'll,
be
a
couple
of
oci
talks
this
week
and
well
definitely
hear
more
about
that
emerging
standard.
So
there
any
questions
from
the
audience
for
these
guys
about
very
different
sectors
for
OpenStack.
Are
there
any
volunteers
to
head
up
new
cigs?
C
Was
there
a
cig
topic
that
was
missing
from
our
sigs
that
someone
wanted
that
we
didn't
have
yet
because
I
know
we
have
one
for
image
builders,
which
has
been
helping
people
understand,
source
to
image
our
whole
posts,
registries
and
containers.
So,
if
you're
looking
for
that,
the
backlog
of
all
that
that's
on
our
youtube
channel
at
openshift,
so
there's
been
a
number
of
briefings
on
that.
We've
got
some
stuff
on
ops
that
have
been
going
on.
C
C
So
I
really
encourage
you
to
join
a
cig
to
get
on
the
mailing
list,
and
if
there
is
a
topic
that
we
didn't
touch
on
in
the
lunch
room
or
in
other
places,
just
let
me
know
and
I
will
Kat
heard
you
into
volunteering
to
be
one
of
the
leaders
for
that
so
I'm
going
to
put
take.
Unless
someone
has
a
final
statement,
one.
D
More
time
I
get
so
many
questions
about
open
shifts,
relation
to
OpenStack
that
I'm
starting
a
faq,
I'm
starting
a
frequently
asked
question.
I
don't
get
Diana
hosted
somewhere,
because
I
keep
getting
questions
that
I'm
answering
over
and
over
again
from
like
what
is
a
pass.
Is
it
really
a
pass,
am
I
locked
in
to
all
the
way
down
to?