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From YouTube: Road Ahead OpenShift, Kubernetes & Beyond Brian Gracely, Red Hat OpenShift Commons Gathering Seattle
Description
The Road Ahead: OpenShift, Kubernetes and Beyond | Brian Gracely
https://commons.openshift.org/gatherings/Seattle_2018.html
A
A
So
we
did
this
thing,
so
here's
the
thing
we've
been
doing
this
event
for
two
years
now,
right,
ninth
event,
when
we
first
got
started
I
shop.
Let
me
put
this
in
historical
context,
so
we
first
got
started.
We
we
knew
koukaon
was
going
to
be
a
big
event.
Let's
be
like
a
thousand
people
and
kubernetes
or
open
ship
was,
you
know,
kind
of
gaining
traction,
and
we
said
we
really
we'd
love
a
forum
to
talk
about
open
shift
because
I
know
we're
gonna
talk
a
lot
about
kubernetes
and
Diane.
A
Had
this
idea-
and
she
said:
I
have
kind
of
a
crazy
idea:
I
want
to
rent
a
room
the
day
before
and
I'm
gonna
charge
people,
money
and
I'd
like
them
to
show
up,
and
we
were
like
you're,
crazy
Diane.
But
that's
fine.
You
have
lots
of
crazy
ideas,
we'll
let
you
do
that
and
we
so
we
charged
folks
like
100
bucks
or
60
bucks
or
I,
don't
know
what
it
was,
but
it
was
something
and
you
had
to
come
the
day
before
the
event,
and
we
got
a
hundred
people
to
show
up
right.
A
So
I
think
the
room
was
not
much
wider
than
this
thing
and
it
was
real
dark,
as
you
can
see
in
the
picture,
and
the
focus
was
really
on.
It
was
a
little
bit
of
focus
on
customers.
You
know
we're
not
such
customers,
but
like
communities
of
people
that
were
using
it.
That
happened
to
be
customers,
but
then
we
also
had
to
have
a
reason
to
get
people
to
show
up,
and
so
we
had
to
bring
a
bunch
of
really
smart
kubernetes
people
right.
A
So
in
this
picture
for
those
of
you
that
don't
know
all
of
them,
starting
from
the
left,
that's
that's
Brandon
Phillips!
He
was
one
of
the
co-founders
and
CTOs
of
core
OS.
We
liked
his
talk
so
much.
We
acquired
his
company,
the
gentleman
next
to
his
brendan
burns.
He
was
one
of
the
sort
of
three
people.
That's
he
works
for
Microsoft.
A
Now,
at
the
time
he
worked
for
you
just
liked,
literally
that
David
four
had
gone
from
Google
to
Microsoft
was
one
of
the
original
like
three
people
that
with
Joe
bata
and
Craig
McKee
lucky
that
sort
of
started
kubernetes
at
Google.
The
gentleman
next
to
them,
who
I'm
sure
will
see
this
week
is
Kelsey.
Hightower
always
gives
demos
sort
of
kubernetes
the
hard
way.
People
should
know
him,
and
then
the
guy
on
the
right
is
Clayton
Coleman
and
we
all
know
he
talks
too
much
so
anyways.
A
I,
don't
want
that
to
be
the
forefront
of
my
thought
process,
which
is
kind
of
cool,
because
at
the
time
we
were
like
the
forefront
of
your
thought
process
needs
to
be
kubernetes
like
that
should
be
what
you're
thinking
like
pods
are
interesting
and
all
that
sort
of
stuff.
Now
of
all
the
folks
that
are
on
there,
we
talked
about
Brandon,
we
acquired
his
company
Brendan,
they
run
kubernetes
over
at
at
Microsoft,
but
they
decided
that
they
enjoyed
open
shift
so
much.
A
They
want
to
do
managed
service
with
us,
so
lots
of
closeness
with
him
Clayton
still
works
for
Red
Hat,
so
that's
cool
and
we
couldn't
get.
We
could
never
get
Kelsey
to
come
work
for
us.
We
tried
right,
but
we
got
this.
This
was
Kelsey's
quote
of
the
day,
you're
going
to
build
your
own
platform
if
you're
lucky
you'll
end
up
with
something
like
OpenShift,
probably
doesn't
love
that
we
keep.
A
This
quote
laying
around
all
the
time,
but
it's
kind
of
a
fun
quote
to
have,
because
the
market
sort
of
proved
out
that
you
want
to
build.
This,
maybe
is
yours
to
do
with
Obon
ship.
Now.
I
point
all
this
stuff
out,
because
we're
back
in
Seattle
and
fundamentally,
if
you
listen
to
today
today,
was
very
little
about
open
about
kubernetes
right.
We
started
the
day
with
Clayton
and
Derek
and
Mike
going.
You
should
care
less
about
kubernetes
we're
going
to
try
and
make
it.
A
So
you
don't
care
that
much
about
kubernetes
and
what
we
want
to
highlight
is
all
the
stuff
that
comes
to
the
forefront
right.
What
are
customers
doing
with
this?
What
are
the
use
cases
that
people
have
with
this
mike
barratt?
Who
was
up
here
as
well?
It
was
kind
of
our
lead
product
manager.
He
has
this
thing.
He
tells
us
all
the
time
he
goes
look
folks,
I
know
you're,
I
know.
You're
talking
to
companies.
I
know
you're
build
an
interesting
technology.
A
You
made
a
PowerPoint
slides,
you
think
it's
cool
the
people
that
are
putting
their
trust
in
OpenShift
aren't
betting
on
a
technology,
they're
betting
on
their
company
or
they're
betting,
their
future
on
this
stuff
right.
So
do
a
good
job
right,
build
good
code,
do
a
good
job,
helping
them,
listen,
really
well
and
I!
Think
that's
what
we
tried
to
make
today
about.
We
tried
to
make
it
about
bringing
the
stuff.
That's
not
kubernetes
forward
right.
How
do
we
make
it
more
interesting?
A
You
know
I
used
this
analogy
all
the
time
I
think
I
looked
at
my
Delta
thing.
It
might
get
about
a
hundred
and
ten
flights
this
year,
which
I'm
not
proud
of
what
I
did
the
airline
I
fly
on
uses
open
shipped
the
credit
card
that
I
use
to
book?
All
those
flights
uses
open
ship,
the
hotel
that
I
use
pretty
much
most
of
the
time
uses
open
ship.
The
ride
company
that
I
use
doesn't
use
openshift,
but
they
contributed
back
this
really
interesting
technology.
The
kubernetes
community,
which
eventually
becomes
into
part
of
open
ship.
A
This
stuff
becomes
part
of
your
day-to-day
life,
which
is
very
cool
because
it
means
you
guys
want
to
come
help
us
with
that.
We
want
to
help
you
with
that,
but,
more
importantly,
each
one
of
you
are
helping
each
other
right
like
two
years
ago.
Nobody
in
the
customer
section
said
like
hey:
let's
talk
about
multi-tenancy,
they
were
just
like
hey.
We
made
something
work
right.
This
week
we
literally
had
people
go
we're
interested
in
this.
A
If
you
would
like
to
work
with
us
on
that,
come
find
me
right
that
wasn't
them
telling
red
hat
that
that
was
telling
you,
if
you're
interested
in
multi-tenancy
or
security
or
insurance
use
cases
or
whatever
go
work
together
on
that
stuff.
That's
how
fast
the
steps
of
all
which
is
very
cool,
now
I
use
this
I
use
this
slide
a
little
bit.
A
But,
more
importantly,
like
Diane
said,
we've
had
nine
of
these
events
and,
as
you
can
see,
those
those
red,
openshift
logos
aren't
all
over
the
world.
So
all
I'll
offer
you
this.
If
you
enjoyed
the
event
I
hope
you
did
I
hope
you
got
something
out
of
it
and
you'd
like
one
of
these
somewhere
else.
Please
let
Diane
know
because
these
things
are
becoming
more
than
just
us,
telling
you
about
our
roadmap
they're
becoming
about
us
getting
communities
of
people
together
and
in
some
cases
these
are
big,
broad,
horizontal
things.
A
In
other
cases
like
in
Germany,
we
have
a
bunch
of
the
auto
manufacturers
and
their
supply
chains
and
so
forth.
Who
want
to
do
these
because
they
want
to
go
solve
automotive,
specific
issues
right.
We
have
these
in
parts
of
the
world
where
you
know
could
be
in
Detroit
and
automotive.
It
could
be
in
New,
York
and
financial.
It
could
be
in
Austin
and
talking
about
barbecue,
it
could
be
about
whatever,
but
we
want
to
do
these
events
more
and
more.
A
A
Now
we've
been
very
lucky
over
the
nine
things
that
we've
done
in
that,
while
the
Red
Hatters
talk,
we
really
love
to
get
users
to
come
up
and
talk
as
well
and
I
highlight
a
few
of
these.
These
are
some
of
the
companies
that
have
spoken
just
at
open-open
ship
Commons
over
the
last
nine
sessions
and
I'll
say
this,
because
we
bug
every
single
one
of
the
people
that
come
every
one
of
our
customers
that
come
because
we
go.
A
We
would
love
to
hear
your
story
and
a
lot
of
the
people
here
would
love
to
hear
your
story
now.
How
many
of
you
heard
how
everybody's
story
ended?
We're
hiring
right,
every
story,
we're
hiring!
So
I'll
leave
this
with
you
with
this
thing.
If
you
are
a
company
that
competes
with
anybody,
that's
on
this
list
or
anybody
who
spoke
today
and
you
go
I'm,
not
sure
if
our
legal
department
is
gonna.
Let
us
do
that.
A
They
may
also
be
a
year
to
two
years
ahead
of
you
in
the
we
have
technology
that
will
take
your
customers
so
I,
don't
say
that
in
any
sort
of
derogative
way.
This
is
a
great
place
to
come.
Tell
your
story
and
get
people
that
may
be
interested
in
working
for
your
type
of
company
to
come.
Do
it
and
you'll
notice
it's
in
every
sort
of
industry
in
every
part
of
the
world.
Okay,
real,
quick,
can't
Mississippi
your
thing.
Whatever
you
have
yeah!
That's
fine
fine!
This
is
my
little.
A
We've
been,
we've
been
doing
cube
cons
now
for
about
three
years,
three
or
four
years,
we've
lucky
we've
been
very
lucky
to
be
involved
with
kubernetes,
since
almost
the
end
of
2014-2015
and
I
think
we're
really
doing
what
you're
gonna
see
this
week
and
what
you're
gonna
see
over
the
next
couple
of
years
is
really
kubernetes
is
moving
into
sort
of
the
third
generation
of
its
of
its
evolution
right.
The
first
generation
was
Google
said
we
have
some
code,
we
all
went
well,
you're,
really
smart,
I'm,
sure,
that's
cool.
A
Sometimes
you
guys
don't
follow
through
on
projects
and
there's
really
no
governance,
but
it's
cool.
Let's
try
and
open-source
this
thing,
and
that
was
cool.
It
was
fun.
We
were
very
lucky
to
be
involved
with
that
we
tried
to
help
bring
that
to
the
enterprise
right.
The
second
generation
of
that
was
okay
cool.
We
did
a
few
hello
world
and
we
made
the
few
things
work.
Let's
try
and
get
more
applications
on
here.
A
Right
we've
made
stateful
sets
and
we
made
you
know,
IOT
work
and
we're
starting
to
see
server
listeners
up
the
third
generation
of
this,
which
is
what
was
just
really
beginning
and
I,
think
you
saw
some
of
this
all
day
today.
It's
really
going
to
be.
How
do
we
make
this
so
the
thing
drives
itself?
How
do
we
make
this
so
that
the
metric
that
you
measure
yourself
with
is
not
how
good
are
we
at
kubernetes,
but
the
kubernetes
is
good
enough.
Then
it
runs
itself.
You
know
how
to
scale
it.
A
The
application
scale
themselves
and
you
can
go
to
the
business
and
say
how
fast
do
you
want
that?
How
quickly
do
you
want
to
get
from
sort
of
idea
to
iteration
idea
to
execution,
spend
all
that's
going
to
be
enabled
by
it
being
fully
automated
the
operator
stuff
that
we
talked
about
it
being
able
to
run
wherever
you
want
to,
so
you
can
take
advantage
of
a
Google
ml
service.
A
A
The
other
part
of
this
that
I
think
you'll,
see
and
was
we've
gone
through
this
evolution
in
the
last
couple
years.
There
was
lots
of
approaches
to
get
there
our
approach,
our
belief
in
the
whole
kind
of
OpenShift
communities
approaches
you're
going
to
have
a
lot
of
challenges.
Your
business
is
going
to
want
to
put
a
lot
of
different
applications
on
top
of
this
building,
this
all
on
top
of
kubernetes,
as
opposed
to
silo
X
for
this
set
of
applications.
Silo
Y
for
a
different
set
of
applications
is
really
going
to
be
key
as
well.
A
Right.
We've
seen,
the
community
evolve
around
almost
every
single
use
case.
Every
single
development
pattern,
every
single
scaling
thing
runs
well
on
kubernetes
and
that's
what
we've
ultimately
be
trying
to
do
is
get
multiple
challenges,
whether
it's
about
enabling
developers,
it's
about
you
know
modernizing
and
integrating
applications,
whether
it's
about
end-to-end
automation,
whether
it's
about
a
path
from
sort
of
legacy
to
to
modernization.
All
that's
going
to
run
on
kubernetes
everything
from
bare
metal
to
virtual,
multiple
clouds,
serverless
all
those
types
of
things
so
I'm
not
going
to
talk
to
too
much
more
I'm.
A
Just
like
I
said,
I'm
sort
of
a
road
bump,
I
hope
you've
been
thinking
about
questions.
I'm
gonna
leave
you
with
two
slides
right.
The
first
one
is,
if
you
saw
D
this
stuff
and
you're
sort
of
new
to
this,
and
you
want
to
play
around
that
you're,
a
you're
somebody
who
likes
to
get
your
fingers
dirty.
You
want
to
go
play
with
this.
Go
out
to
learn.
A
Openshift
comm
right,
go
out
to
try
dot,
openshift
comm
as
well
to
play
with
the
four
sub
of
learned
on
obg
over
comm
great
set
of
learnings
for
basically
directed
guidance
training
right.
So
you
want
to
go
certification.
You
want
to
play
with
new
stuff,
totally
free,
totally
browser-based.
You
don't
have
to
have
any
toys
to
mess
with
this.
If
you
enjoy
learning
through
your
ears,
I
do
a
podcast.
Once
a
week
it's
called
pod
CTL
it's
about
mostly
about
kubernetes.
We
weave
in
some
open
ship
stuff
as
well.
A
It's
kind
of
what's
going
on
in
the
community
and
the
last
thing
I'll
leave
you
with,
and
this
really
depends,
if
you're
more
of
a
bird
learner
or
you're
more
of
I,
guess
a
game
of
Thrones
kind
of
learner,
but
these
are
all
basically
free
books
that
you
can
get
right.
Some
of
our
developer
focused.
Some
of
them
are
operations
focused
some
of
them
are.
These
are
all
written
either
by
folks
out
of
our
group
or
our
folks
in
the
field
who
do
this
all
day
long.