►
From YouTube: The OpenShift Profiles: Diane Mueller
Description
Our first guest is Diane Mueller, Director of Community Development for OpenShift. You may have seen her before leading the conversation in the many OpenShift Commons briefings (http://commons.openshift.org/briefings.html) or, perhaps, had the chance to start a conversation with her in one of the many tech conventions she attends every year.
If you want to know more about her role in our incredibly active community, check this video and participate in the OpenShift Commons.
A
A
B
A
B
A
fun
one,
I
I
have
Python
DJ,
which
takes
a
little
explaining
I.
As
I
said,
I
was
I'm
a
Python
programmer
and
developer
from
way
back
and
I
was
a
DJ
at
college,
so
there
was
a
little
bit
of
that
in
there,
but
also
when
I
am
when
Twitter
came
on
started
back
in
the
day
like
for
how
many
years
ago,
now,
four
years
ago,
I
was
also
deeply
in
love
with
pythons
framework
for
web
web
sites
and
then
at
called
Jango.
A
Okay,
I
see
well
that's
perfect,
so
everyone,
but
is
watching
this
video
can
find
the
link
here.
So
you
can
check
Dan's
Twitter
account
and
you're
going
to
be
able
to
share
a
lot
of
her
information
about
openshift
about
a
bunch
of
comments
and
all
the
projects
that
she's
working
on
also,
you
mentioned
something
really
important
and
that's
kind
of
like
the
core
of
why
we're
having
this
conversation.
That
was
open
shift
comments.
So
for
anyone
who
has
not
any
previous
idea
about
what
is
open
shift
comments,
can
you
tell
us
what
it
is
so.
B
Commons
is
basically
it's
a
new
model
of
open
source
community
and
what
we've
done
is
created
a
space
and
collaboration
where
users
of
open
shift
and
partners,
customers
and
contributors
and
developers
can
come
together
and
collaborate
and
work
on
openshift
and
the
projects
that
we
upstream
into
open
shift
like
kuru,
titties
and
docker
and
I'll
work
on
the
ansible
scripts.
But
it's
also
a
step
beyond
you're
the
old
school
model
for
community
open
source
communities
where
it
was
really
focused
on
just
code
contribution.
B
You
know
what
we're
trying
to
do
is
get
the
whole
feedback
loop
and
best
practices
leave
and
everybody
in
talking
across
the
different
open-source
projects
that
that
up
screen
into
openshift
is
specifically
openshift.
Three
was
a
big
culture
shift
from
a
ruby
rails,
mongrel
base
MongoDB
with
based
application
platform
to
a
new
sort
of
cloud
application
platform
based
on
containers
and
using
uber
Nettie's.
What
we
had
was
this
huge
shift,
yeah
I,
think
using
worship
shift
in
our
architecture,
but
also
in
the
scale
at
which
our
platform
now
could
host
and
deploy
and
manage
application.
B
So
we
decided
that
we
had
to
do
something
different,
because
the
ecosystem
was
expanding
rather
rapidly
and
we
couldn't
do
one-on-one
briefings
for
everybody
and
we
couldn't,
you
know,
did
do
skin
scrapings
and
clone
all
of
the
Evangelist
teams
and
the
product
managers.
We
needed
to
really
have
a
very
strong
virtual
connection
with
the
entire
community.
So
Commons
is
a
bit
about
how
to
build
those
connections
and
how
to
do
that
collaboration
and
how
to
make
sure
that
we
have
a
strong
communication
line
to
all
the
different
parts
of
the
ecosystem.
B
A
B
Dopant
it
to
anybody,
it's
really
the
focus
is,
has
been
on
organizations
joining
so
like
open
source
projects,
partners,
organizations
that
have
deployed
open
shift,
some
of
the
bigger
one
being
like
NASA
semantics,
just
joined
last
week.
They
did
an
awesome,
OpenStack
presentation
that
OpenStack
Tokyo
and
they
have
been
deployed,
openshift,
origin
and
unbeknownst
to
us.
That's
also.
B
Some
of
the
reasons
for
Commons
existing
is
is
that
what
we're
trying
to
do
is
reach
out
to
all
the
people
who
have
just
downloaded
and
started
using
OpenStack
openshift
origin
so
that
we
can
get
them
in
connection
with
folks,
like
the
people
who
are
running
openshift
online
behind
the
scenes
and
share
some
of
the
best
practices
back
and
forth.
So
there's
anyone
can
join
it's
all
about
building
connections
across
the
communities
and
the
projects
and
all
the
different
stakeholders.
B
We
really
have
right
now,
I
think
we
have
a
hundred
and
sixty
members
organizations
and
you
only
have
an
organization
only
has
to
join
once
and
then
everybody
from
that
organization
can
participate
in
the
Commons.
So
we
do
like
to
keep
people
up
to
up
to
date
as
best
as
we
can
and
it's
we
like
them
to
self
identified
by
the
organization
that
there
with
so
that
everybody
knows
who's
talking
to
who,
because
we've
got
lots
of
different
customers
from
all
different
parts
of
the
liquid
markets
like
telcos
and
banks
and
government
agencies.
B
So
yes,
there's
a
good
mix
of
people
in
there,
then
there's
also
a
good
mix
of
hosts
and
ISVs
people
who
are
using
openshift
enterprise
or
openshift
origin
to
host
the
public
cause.
So
we've
got
really
some
very
interesting
conversations
that
are
happening
and
it's
pretty
much
open
to
anyone.
Who's
interested
in
open
shift
to
deploying
openshift
doing
a
POC
on
openshift
and
as
well
as
to
anyone
who's
working
on
some
of
the
projects
that
we
upstream
like
to
benetti's
and
docker
into
the
film
project.
B
A
Thanks
there
is
something
that
that
kind
of
like
pop
several
times
when
you
were
talking
and
I,
think
perhaps
it's
quite
important
that
everyone
that
is
in
checking
this
video
kind
of
like
know
about.
Can
you
tell
us
a
little
bit
about
what
is
opening
shift
origin?
You
mentioned
it
several
times
and
you
mention
open
sores,
and
so
we
have
open
shift.
You
have
open
shift
comments.
You
have
open
shift
origin.
What
is
already
so.
B
Origin
is
the
name
of
the
open
source
project
that
is
coping
ship,
so
Commons
is
the
name
of
the
community
that
is
built.
What
other
people
will
have
talked
about
a
foundation
or
some
other
organization?
We
we
decide
to
call
what
we
do
commons
on
be
felt
a
little
bit
more
open
and
let's
get
Keith
Currie
and
open
shift
origin
there.
B
We
talk
about
three
flavors
of
open
shift,
open
ship
origin,
being
the
open
source
project
open
online,
on
being
the
hosted
red
hat
on
that
public
platform
as
a
service
offering
that
we
have
and
over
just
enterprise
being,
of
course,
the
flagship
product
that
Red
Hat
has
that's
based
on
openshift
origin.
So
the
thing
to
remember
is
that
the
code
goes
into
origin.
First,
it's
an
open
source
community
and
it's
apache2
license,
and
we
do
everything
out
in
the
open
and
very
transparent.
B
You
can
check
out
Trello
roadmaps
for
all
the
new
features
and
the
hopeful
features
and
the
things
that
that,
if
we're
working
on
right
now,
you
can
see
pretty
much
every
pull
request
merge
right
in
github
openshift
origin.
So
if
you
go
into
github
at
openshift,
/
origin
you'll
get
all
of
the
v3
or
the
latest
version
of
open
shift,
as
we
call
it
off
chip
three,
but
it
is
definitely
lead
one
of
the
premier
transparent
of
open
source
projects
out
there
for
cloud
applications,
platforms.
A
B
I
already
mentioned
that
NASA
joined
the
open
shift
comments,
a
while
back,
which
was
really
cool,
and
you
know
we
have
lots
of
longtime
members
like
get
up
cloud,
that
of
running
a
public
paws
down
in
Brazil,
but
we
also
have
folks
like
seagate
and
netapp
and
jiu-jitsu
and
what's
what's
the
name
of
the
Swiss
railway
company
is
using
SPD
I
think
that
their
acronym
there's
lots
of
folks
that
I
probably
should
be
mentioning.
We've
had
some
great
commons
briefings
up
over
the
past
year.
B
It
was
a
great
talk,
a
few
weeks
before
that
six
fusion
did
a
great
session
on
metering
and
monitoring
containers
that
I
really
liked
a
lot,
and
one
of
my
favorite
ones
marked
ran
ski
did
a
wonderful
one.
He
was
on
storage
and
networking
on
openshift
and
he's
a
red
hat
ER
and
in
he
and
there's
always
an
Clayton
Coleman
comes
on
and
talks.
Everyone
listens
because
he's
deep
in
the
doctor
and
humanities
world
and
has
been
really
key
to
the
open
shift
team.
B
B
You
know
this
past
couple
of
years
working
with
this
project,
because
we've
gotten
to
go
I
think
the
guys
are
doing
a
road
show
in
Moscow
this
week
there
was
a
30-city
Roadshow
tour
and
they
took
him
poking
ship
free
around
the
world
and
every
every
venue
that
they
went
to
every
city
they
like
to.
There
was
another
openshift
origin
story,
and
you
know
I
know
red
hat.
B
You
know
loves
to
tout
the
commercial
side
of
things
over
ship
enterprise,
but
as
the
community
development
person,
I'm
always
pleasantly
surprised
when
openshift
origin
shows
up
in
some
some
of
the
bigger
venues.
You
know
I'm
sure
read
that
likes
to
think
of
it
as
the
gateway
drug
to
openshift
enterprise
or
two
now
openshift
dedicated
notes,
which
is
open,
ship
free,
running,
hosted
and
managed
by
red
hat.
But
the
beauty
of
the
open
source
project
is
that
everything
happens.
B
First,
an
open
shift
and
the
contributors
are
coming
in
from
all
over
the
place
and
that
now,
with
the
new
container
based
approach
to
things,
extending
open
shift
has
gotten
even
easier.
You
basically
build
a
good
docker
image
of
reusable
one.
Hopefully
using
STI
are
a
framework
for
building
images
to
make
them
ready
to
run
and
easily
reproducible
reusable.
B
But
I
think
this
is
now
going
to
be.
The
new
frontier
and
bringing
in
six
million
developers
from
the
microsoft.net
world
into
the
Linux
world
will
be
wonderful
way
to
do
more
than
reach
a
150
member
organization
milestone.
So
we're
we're
really
counting
on
being
able
to
educate
and
bring
in
the
Microsoft
community
and
help
them
understand
how
open
source
communities
work.
This
is
going
to
it's
going
to
be
notable.
There's
lots
of
notable
things
happening
in
this
commons
area.
A
Yeah
I
can
tell,
and
well
it's
great
at
everything
is
like
it,
so
active,
and
so
so,
vibrant
so
I
think
it's
a
really
great
to
see
the
community
moving
in
that
direction
perhaps
have
like
two
less
questions
for
you
like
what?
If
a
partner
wants
to
collaborate
in
one
of
the
briefings,
what
what
do
they
have
to
do?
Well,.
B
Actually
that
the
real
push
is
the
first,
this
first
year,
we
I
think
we
had
a
preponderance
of
Red
Hat
toppers,
because
we
had
so
much
to
talk
about
in
terms
of
the
new
architecture
and
educating,
and
the
push
in
2016
will
be
to
try
and
get
is
closest
to
a
hundred
percent
of
those
three
things
being
done
by
partners
on
contributors.
People
with
interesting
use
cases
from
outside
of
Red
Hat
talking
about
their
projects,
talking
about
they're,
the
best
practices
for
deployments,
and
you
look.
B
If
you
have
a
new
project
coming
out
and
you'd
like
feedback
from
the
community
on
the
usability
of
it,
the
functionality
the
feature
set,
the
commons
briefings
is
a
great
way
to
present
it.
Even
if
it's
only
alpha
and
get
it
in
front
of
a
large
swath
of
people
and
get
that
feedback,
maybe
before
you
go
GA
was
something
that's
missing,
a
widget
that
everybody
wishes
was
there.
So
please
just
reach
out.
A
B
I
think
the
emphasis
on
is
that
this
is
a
pretty
vibrant,
open
source
community.
It's
a
new
model,
so
you
know
we're
testing
the
limits
of
it.
It's
a
pretty
huge
ecosystem
of
contributors,
developers,
engineers,
as
well
as
people
who
are
operators
and
hosts
of
open
ship
and
and
people
who
are
adding
value
on
top
of
it,
extending
it
with
their
services.
B
So
it's
an
amazing
network
to
get
involved
in
I
highly,
encourage
everyone,
who's
interested
in
doing
it,
whether
your
internal
to
read,
half
or
external,
to
red
hat
or
someone
who's
working
on
a
platform
as
a
service
offering
of
your
own
rather
than
reinventing
the
wheel,
come
join
us
and
build
one
together
with
us.
I
think
the
days
of
DIY
platform
architecture
is
inside,
of
enterprises
are
probably
over
and
that's
the
beauty
of
open
source.
B
If
you're
working
in
a
project
that
there's
probably
one
already
being
built
out
there,
you
want
to
probably
come
the
one.
That's
got
a
nice,
vibrant
ecosystem
and
group
of
developers
working
on
it
and
I.
Think
openshift
really
is
probably
the
best
place
to
be
working
on
cloud
application
platforms
and
this
whole
application
lifecycle
conundrum
how
to
do
it,
how
to
do
it
well
in
production
at
scale
and
make
it
so
that
it
is
manageable
and
that
operations
has
an
easy
task
and
it
makes
a
wonderful
smooth
workflow
for
developers.
B
So
this
has
been
a
great
opportunity
for
me
to
really
get
to
the
reach
out
and
to
connect
with
everybody
and
I'd
like
to
make
sure
that
everyone
gets
to
connect
with
each
other.
So
think
of
this
is
a
huge
open
source
peer-to-peer
network,
the
people
who
are
like-minded
about
how
application
should
be
deployed
in
the
pod.
Oh
that's.
A
Perfect
well,
thank
you
very
much
for
your
time
than
I
really
love
this
conversation
and
I'm
quite
certain
that
soon
we're
going
to
have
many
more
around
a
bunch
of
comments
about
open
source
and
many
other
topics
that
are
like
hot
right
now
inside
double
shifts,
community
and
well
the
technology
community
as
a
whole.
Thank.