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From YouTube: The OpenShift Profiles: Eric D. Schabell
Description
The latest entry of the OpenShift Profiles brings you Eric D. Schabell, Red Hat Technology Evangelist.
Eric will tell us a lot about his background and the intricacies of his current role. He will also give us a great idea of why OpenShift was a great tool for a developer like him.
You can follow Eric on twitter, @ericschabell (https://twitter.com/ericschabell ) to be up to date with many OpenShift related topics.
A
B
B
C
A
C
Started
out
for
three
years
in
Europe
as
a
solutions
architect
doing
like
the
technical
sales
role
moved
over
to
the
Middle.
Where
be
you
have
a
pretty
strong
background
in
BPM
rules
processes.
Things
like
that
did
this
in
the
financial
world
before
a
joint
Red
Hat
continue
to
work
on
that
in
the
Middle.
C
Where
be
you,
and
most
people
know
me
from
from
a
lot
of
stuff
I've
done
around
the
the
jboss
prms
product
and
later
the
jboss
BPM
suite
so
big,
a
pivot,
F
development
background
and
I've
just
recently
transitioned
into
something
called
the
integrated
solutions,
business
unit,
that's
kind
of
a
business
unit
on
top
of
all
the
other
ones.
We
now
look
across
the
entire
red
hat
portfolio
or
solutions
that
make
sense
for
our
customers.
Oh.
A
Thank
you
for
dad,
really
really
cool
and
I
wanted
to
ask
you
like
how
is
it
to
work
with
within
redhead?
Like
do
you
think
it
makes
the
friends
that
were
so
close
involved
like
with
open
sores
like
because
it's
so
more,
like
you,
think,
about
redhead
and
immediately,
you
think
about
open
source.
So
how
is
it
I
I?
That's
something
that
I
usually
ask
people
that
come
to
the
show
to
the
opposite
profiles,
because
they
think
it's
so
important
that
people
understand
that
side
of
red
head
and
open
shift
as.
C
I'm,
a
big
fan
always
have
been
since
the
early
days
of
my
you
know:
IT
career
development,
career
like
having
access
to
everything
and
and
not
being
stopped
by
proprietary
stuff.
That
doesn't,
let
me
dig
deeper
if
I
know
why
it's
not
working
or
why
I
can't
do
what
I
want
to
do.
I
think
having
that
kind
of
openness
is,
has
now
been
proven
in
the
market,
with
a
company
like
red
hat,
there's
a
lot
of
companies
to
see
a
lot
of
value
in
that
and
I
think.
C
Having
that
background
of
being
able
to
dig
into
what's
going
on
into
assistant,
to
help
and
to
provide
feedback
or
already
know
whether
that's
documentation,
feedback
or
code
feedback,
that's
up
to
you
at
the
higher
level.
It's
it's
really
fascinating
to
watch.
How
customer
feature
requests
actually
happen
right
and
even
in
between
major
releases,
special
special
patches
are
sent
out
with
their
fixes.
For
that
specific
customer.
This
does
happen.
I
think
that
makes
all
the
difference
in
the
world
and
I
really
can't.
C
A
Okay-
well,
that's
that's
great,
and
so
I
saw
that
one
of
your
blog
post-
you
were
talking
about
like
cdk,
so
like
I'm,
trying
to
bring
the
conversation
a
little
bit
towards
the
like.
The
open,
shipside
I
know
that
you're
not
part
of
delfin
openshift
team
but
I.
I
I've
seen
that
you
do
like
a
lot
of
like
blog
post
and
things
like
that
and
you're
talking
about
the
CD
case
of
how
does
like
the
cdk
help
you
in
your
day
by
day
how
like,
if
you
are
a
developer,
using
often
shift?
C
The
open
sea
of
stuff,
so
when
/
ship
got
acquired
the
way
back
when
I
was
one
of
the
first,
you
know,
I
saw
value
right
right
away.
You
know
you
go
tinker
with
some
of
our
new
acquisitions
and
see
what
it
is
and
I
was
completely
fine
with
the
whole
platform
as
a
service
kind
of
idea.
That
was
very
quickly
integrated
into
our
own
tool.
C
In
your
own
own
stuff,
you
pretty
much
find
everything
that
I've
blogged
and
put
out
there
and
whether
that
anything
to
do
with
overshift,
not
presentations,
workshops,
I,
host
everything
on
openshift
right,
absolutely
everything,
I'm
done
you
can.
You
can
find
online
and
it's
running
on
an
open
ship
instance.
I
came
awful
close
to
becoming
an
evangelist
way
back
in
those
days
for
them.
I
didn't
work
out.
I
went
into
it
the
role
in
the
middle.
C
Where
be
you
instead,
but
I've
always
kept
close
ties
with
what's
going
on
and
watching
it
very
closely
and
doing
pretty
much
everything
I
do
in
it
or
on
it,
and
and
and
watching
the
transformation
between
what
was
cartridges
at
the
time
now
is
going
to
be
docker
images
or
images
containerized
stuff.
It's
it's
really
fascinated
to
see
where
it's
going
and
to
watch
the
adoption
curve.
C
You
know
growing
up
so
steeply,
and
and
that
brings
us
around
to
things
like
you
know-
the
images
that
you
have
all
in
one
image
on
openshift
that
also
wrote
about
it
was
playing
with
and
tinkering
with.
In
my
current
role,
one
of
the
product
solutions
we
have
is:
it's
called
the
Red
Hat
Cloud
suite,
which
will
be
coming
soon.
This
is
taking
the
product
portfolio
from
the
operating
system,
virtualization
and
OpenStack
layers
up
through
containerized
atomic
Enterprise
layers,
including
openshift
enterprise,
on
top
of
that
and
cloud
forms
for
the
management,
orchestration
and
monitoring
right.
C
So
what
is
the
interface
for
an
application
developer
from
my
world
to
this
stack
or
to
a
cloud
sweet
like
that,
and
that's
pretty
much?
The
open
shift
is
going
to
be
the
the
face
of
what
we're
working
with
what
we're
looking
at
and
so
I
started
digging
a
little
bit
into
that
because
part
of
my
job
and
part
of
what
I
do
is
you
don't
speak
at
conferences
or
large
groups
or
or
putting
videos
together
or
doing
webinars
right?
It's
pretty
hard
to
put
a
data
center
on
your
laptop.
C
That's,
basically
what
we're
talking
about
some
really
heavy
duty,
stuff
right
and
that
doesn't
scale
out
on
a
laptop.
It's
it's
not
the
way
it
works.
So
the
interface
you
what
you
can
talk
to
a
stack
like
that
and
explain
all
that
maybe
show
a
video
of
someone.
That's
done
something
a
data
center
with
it,
but
that's
not
really
how
you
want
to
do.
C
So
I
play
a
little
bit
with
the
open
shift.
All
in
one
image
and
then
I
stumbled
upon
a
relatively
new
project
is
the
cdk
container
development
kit.
That's
been
going
on
here,
red
hat
and
and
they're
doing
a
big
push
right
now
of
some
of
the
beta
releases
or
what
you're
seeing
me
write
about
are
tying
this
into
the
to
the
IDE,
so
the
jboss
developer
studio
and
giving
us
some
kind
of
integrated
experience
where
you
can
install
a
quick
leak
is
fun
up
quickly
and
have
some
some
pre
canned
stuff
ready
to
go.
C
One
of
them
happens
to
be
the
open
shift
to
enterprise
sort
of
all
of
one
image,
then
inside
the
JDK
that
k
the
cdk.
So
that's
what
I
tied
together
their
little
rough,
of
course
they're,
not
finished
and
not
you
know
publicize.
This
stuff
is
GA
yet
so
the
install
process
wasn't
exactly
easy,
so
I
went
around
and
you
know
put
that
into
my
demo-
template
which
I've
done
for
all
my
demos
and
I
got
a
lot
of
attention
and
you
know
it'll,
probably
a
little
bit
different
when
they
release
it.
C
I,
don't
expect
it
to
continue
to
be.
You
know
my
my
little
demo
template,
but
it's
just
something:
I
don't
want
to
have
to
repeat
that
install
process,
so
I
buy
everything.
I
do
I
put
out
there.
You
know
it's
about
teach
and
share,
and
then
you
know
share.
We
go
and
yeah
I
think
this
is
going
to
be
something
that's
going
to
get
people
spun
up
a
lot
quicker
that
that's
the
whole
idea
behind
it.
A
Well,
thank
you.
I
appreciate
that
you
gave
us
like
old,
add
background,
so
quite
likely
lot
of
people
are
going
to
be
interested
in
the
ad,
like
that's
the
kind
of
thing
that
you
don't
really
see
like
on
the
blog
or
like
on
documentation,
that's
kind
of
like
the
experience
that
you
are
living
working
with
with
same
red
hat
I,
wanted
to
ask
you
a
little
bit
more
about
what
you
do
like
day.
A
C
A
role
that's
internally
recognized
as
a
technical
marketing
manager,
but
externally
we
call
these
a
JBoss
technology,
evangelist
or
red
hat
technology
evangelist.
So
there's
a
deviation
from
just
the
pure
community,
evangelist
that
you
see
like
I,
think
your
previous
one
of
your
previous
interviews
with
mark
Mark's
easel.
He
is
one
of
the
developer
evangelist
right
so
that
there's
a
very
large
focus,
more
so
on
community
projects,
open
source,
community,
stuff
kind
of
kind
of
generating
interest
and
digging
into
those
pieces.
C
What
I
tend
to
focus
on
or
what
I
do
focus
on
is
everything
to
do
around
the
products.
So
once
the
ova
source
project
has
been
turned
into
a
product,
you're
missing
the
kind
of
noise
that
you're
seeing
in
the
community
with
evangelism
out
there,
so
we
use
technical
marketing
managers
for
that.
So
what
is
my
day?
Look
like?
Where
do
I
go?
That's
a
pretty
tough
question
or.
C
C
It's
strongly
assisting
the
solution.
Architects,
who
you
know
are
told
today,
tomorrow
you're
going
to
be
talking
with
a
customer
about
a
certain
product
or
a
certain
technology,
and
they
may
not
have
a
lot
of
time
to
get
prepared
for
it.
So
it's
really
nice
if
you
have
some
stuff
and
it
can
have
a
little
video
explanation
around
it
or
a
couple
of
steps
and
they
can
get
spun
up
really
quick,
oh
yeah,
that's
how
that
works.
C
I
had
the
training
a
long
time
ago
by
just
haven't,
talked
about
it
for
six
months,
so
it's
kind
of
nice
to
support
that.
That's
one
aspect,
number
two
is
being
vocal
about
it,
so
you
have
to
get
out
there
and
you
have
to
own
stuff
in
social
media.
You
have
to
own
tags
categories
topics
or
at
least
get
your
voice
in
the
mix.
I
believe
consistency
in
writing
is
really
important.
C
I
usually
write
something
two
three
times
a
week
at
the
peak
of
my
you
know:
BRMS
BPM
time,
I've,
now
transition
to
a
new
role,
so
I'm,
building
up
a
base
on
that
and
foundation.
Where
I'm
comfortable
with
to
talk
about
you,
move
into
a
space
where
you're,
not
an
expert
you're,
not
you
know,
you're
not
going
to
be
an
expert
overnight
and
there's
there's
aspects
that
I'm
an
expert
of
that
I
bring
into
that
area.
C
That's
what
I
want
to
focus
on
another
part
of
it
is,
is
also
being
able
to
go
out
and
talk
about
this
stuff.
So
finding
the
right
places
it's
a
whole
lot
different
than
the
developer
evangelism,
and
that
I'm
not
looking
just
to
talk.
If
you
need
developer
conferences,
you
tend
to
target
a
little
bit
more
specifically
based
on
the
crowd
you're
trying
to
reach,
which
often
includes
customers
analysts
that
kind
of
thing
that
doesn't
preclude
me
from
showing
up
at
like
a
Java
user
group
or
something
like
that.
C
I
tend
to
back
load
my
visits
that
way.
So,
if
I
show
up
somewhere,
for
example,
something
I'm
working
on
right
now
is
code
motion
and
Amsterdam
submitted
a
bunch
of
stuff.
If
that
works
out,
I'll
probably
do
a
couple
of
user
groups
around
it
and
I'll
also
stopped
in
to
the
office
and
do
some
sales
enablement,
such
as
talking
to
our
colleagues
and
explaining
some
of
the
new
stuff
that's
coming
and
what
it
looks
like
that.
C
That's
my
life
right,
that's
really
how
it
goes
around
another
large
chunk
of
it
is
the
enablement
when
new
products
come
out.
For
example,
what
I
just
described
with
that
cloud?
Sweet
will
visit
the
regions
and
and
bring
some
training
and
get
some
hands-on
stuff
together.
So
they
can.
They
can
learn
that
same
thing
happened
with
the
the
jboss
product.
C
That
is
getting
to
the
point
now,
where
we're
growing
so
large
that
we
have
enablement
parts
of
our
organization
that
do
that.
So
then
my
role
has
been
more
assisting
to
make
sure
the
content
either
is
mine
that
they're,
using
or
what
we're
developing
right,
stuff
and
they'll
take
that
okay,
yeah!
That's.
A
Yeah
well
yeah.
It's
a
really
good
idea.
What
you
would
do
and
thank
you
for
dad,
so
I,
don't
take
tons
of
your
time.
I'm
just
going
to
ask
you
like
one
less
question
and
obviously
it
has
to
do
with
openshift
like
what
do
you
think
about
the
latest
version?
Have
you
been
able
to
try
it
any
features
that
you
would
like
to
see
like
in
future
updates
and
things
like
that.
C
C
Now,
it's
still
the
person
to
it's
coming,
it's
not
going
to
be
very
much
longer,
but
it
used
to
be
the
other
way
around
where
we
released
that
first
and
then
the
rest,
and
in
this
case
the
container
I
stuff,
they
did
it
to
first
enterprise
and
then
they're
gonna.
Do
it
online.
So
maybe
next
time
all
these
don't
come
back.
I
miss
nothing
able
to
just
spin
stuff
up
and
share
it
with
the
world.
You
know
Yeah.
A
Yeah
right
now,
I
know
that
the
entire
team
is
working
hard
on
that
and
they
just
want
to
do
it
like
the
right
way.
So
everyone
tries
to
be
happy
or
as
happy
as
we
can
make
everyone
which
is
almost
impossible
but
like
let's
say
that
we
try
our
best
any
parting
thoughts.
Anything
that
you
would
like
to
share
with
it
with
the
block
community
that
we
have
a
top
and
shift.
B
A
So
well,
here,
you're
going
to
see
on
the
screen
all
the
links.
I
think
you
have
been
seeing
them
during
the
video
to
contact
eric
his
blog,
his
twitter.
He
mentioned
he's
quite
active
so
and
I
think
in
the
following
weeks,
we're
going
to
have
at
least
one
of
or
two
of
these
articles
in
our
blog.
So
well,
thanks
for
that,
and
apart
from
that.
Well,
thank
you
for
your
time
and
have
a
great
day
user.