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From YouTube: An Overview of CNCF Incubated Projects
Description
On this livestream from KubeCon + CloudNativeCon NA, we’ve got an exciting overview of CNCF Incubated projects. We explore the impact this has had upon recent incubated projects such as Rook, and how the incubation process moves forward.
A
B
Name
is
jarred
watts.
I
am
a
senior
maintainer
on
the
rook
project,
which
is
hosted
by
the
CN
CF
and
I've
been
involved
with
the
Brooke
project
since
the
very
very
beginning,
so
I've
kind
of
got
me
really
started
into
the
open-source
communities
and
really
broadened
my
horizons
of
other
open-source
projects.
After
that
cool.
C
A
D
A
D
That's
a
very,
very
good
question,
and
so
maybe
I
can
talk
about
that.
The
journey
of
us
building
your
commercial
SAS
offerings
within
the
VMware.
So
internally
we
actually
did
take
on
prime
solution
that
we
built
internally
and
decided
to
take
that
stack
and
transform
that
into
a
SAS
offering
and
when
we
built
a
stack
from
day
zero.
We
want
to
use
the
technology
that
actually,
if
we
can
use
open
source
community
that
be
the
best
outcome
for
the
company
as
well
for
the
open-source
community.
D
So
internally,
when
we
pick
the
SAS
control
plan
for
managing
to
deliver
this
manager,
community
service
experience,
we
actually
specific
picking
the
open
source
technology.
I.
Think
one
of
the
technology
that
within
the
VM
is
also
owned
by
VM,
is
this
open
source
project
is
called
light.
Wave
light
wave
is
a
identity
stack
is
a
full
stack
of
identity,
provides
identity,
management
certificates
and
so
on,
and
so
forth
is
not
that
well
known.
So
the
project
itself
is
actually
it's
open
source,
but
it's
not
awesome
open
source
project.
D
So
that's
also
one
of
the
initiative
I
want
to
learn
from
this
community.
How
I
can
take
that
project
converting
that
into
actual
open
source
project
rather
than
open
source
code?
So
we've
take
all
this
technology,
we're
actually
making
sure
that
we
can
convert
these
innovations
so
that
we
can
deliver
this
business
outcome
for
the
company,
so
I
think
it's
a
it's
a
quite
a
journey
for
us
taking
a
long-term
solution
coming
in
SAS,
there's
a
lot
of
operational
learnings
that
we've
gone
through
throughout
this
journey.
So
that's.
D
In
the
VMware,
the
managed
in
the
vemma
kubernetes
offering
there's
the
speakers,
which
is
the
own
prime
solution
that
actually
commercial
solution
from
VMware
which
actually
specifically
using,
for
instance,
the
open
source
project
13,
which
is
incubation,
the
harbour
project.
So
the
harbour
project
has
been
really
critical
feature
lecture
exit
demanded
by
the
enterprise
customers
from
the
VMware.
Because,
if
you
look
at
the
application
lifecycle,
there's
this
desert
a
one,
build
application,
application
application
and
the
next
step
is
deployed
application
by
deploying
the
application.
D
You
have
to
use
this
container
registry
image
resolution,
how
you're
dealing
with
the
registry?
How
you
secure
the
registry,
how
you
make
sure
the
authenticity
of
the
registry
so
harbor
actually
brings
a
lot
of
enterprise,
great
user
experience
to
the
directly
delivered
to
the
enterprise
customer
that
we
ever
has,
and
also
Harper
from
day
zero
one
when
the
creator
Henry
Chang
in
Beijing
crate.
This
is
open.
Source
project
is
really
just
solving
the
province.
Engineering
has
in.
A
D
A
Interesting
because
it
shows
kind
of
like
how
the
you
know,
it
shows
why
there
are.
You
know
why
software
development,
an
open
source
project,
really
our
global
efforts
right.
You
know,
and
the
needs
are
the
same
right
and
there's
a
need.
You
know
for
that
project
and
so
I'm
curious
from
you
know:
Jared
you
developed
your
you're
one
of
the
first
to
be
involved
in
the
rook
project.
What
motivated
to
be
involved
in
that
project?
What
was
it
that
drew
you
to
that
project
itself?
Yeah.
B
That's
a
good
question,
so
it
was
a
team
of
us
actually
that
founded
that
project.
We
were
all
currently
at
that
time
in
a
company
called
quantum
corporation,
a
storage
company,
and
so
we
saw
a
need.
You
know
as
kubernetes,
the
community
was
growing
to
provide
a
persistent
storage
solution
that
actually
runs
in
the
cluster,
because
most
people
were
meant.
You
know
relying
on
an
external
storage
solution
that
has
to
be
set
up
and
managed
and
runs
somewhere
else.
B
A
B
So
there's
a
you
know:
the
the
original
vision
is
still
something
where
we're
finding
to
be
ringing
really
true,
with
a
lot
of
the
users
where
you
know
it,
you
can't
always
depend
on
a
cloud
provider
as
a
manager
service.
If
you're
running
on
premises,
you
know
you
don't
have
EVs,
you
don't
have
Google
persistent
disk.
So
what
do
you
do
for
storage
there?
You
could
rely
on.
B
You
know
expensive
third-party
vendors
appliances
or
you
know
other
external
storage
solutions,
or
you
can
just
use
the
commodity
hardware
that
you're
already
running
your
kubernetes
cluster
on
and
a
hyper-converged
second
scenario
where
you
have
your
compute
and
you
have
your
storage
all
in
the
same
machines,
and
you
can
end
up
running
a
fair,
really
reliable,
high
performance.
You
know,
pool
up
storage
directly
inside
that
kubernetes
cluster,
so
you
know
really
I
think
we're.
Rook
shines
is
providing
storage
on
premises.
B
You
know
on
or
running
the
hardware
at
bare
metal
yourself
and
the
way
I
think
that
it's
growing,
though,
is
that
you
know
storage
of
kubernetes.
It's
amazingly
done.
It's
done
a
very
good
job,
with
abstracting
storage
to
a
volume
level,
but
there's
so
many
more
types
of
storage
that
aren't
just
volumes.
B
A
Brooke
I
was
just
looking
to
organize
and
rook
was
the
15th
hosted
project
you
know
for
for
the
CN
CF
and
now
today,
or
just
a
bunch
of
awards
today
but
Etsy
D
was
announced,
that's
the
thirty-third
project.
So
then
the
project
is
actually
but
the
number
of
projects
have
doubled
more
than
doubled
in
the
past
year.
A
A
C
A
C
There
is
a
lot
of
work,
but
it's
much
more
work
happening
inside
a
communities.
So
again,
as
I
mentioned,
one
of
the
biggest
benefits
of
being
a
project
within
same
CF
is
that
if
here
donated
the
project
to
C
and
C,
if
you
are
still
a
project
owner
you're
still
managing
this
project
like,
for
example,
was
through
critic,
and
you
can
tell
the
destroyer
like
absolutely.
It
was
like
the
company
and
group
of
people
who
have
developed
this
project
originally
before
C
and
C
F
before
it
was
donated.
C
The
C
and
C
F
still
like
this
one.
The
same
people
probably
are
still
managing
this
project,
as
as
the
contributors
as
the
project
leaders
and
so
on.
So
I
would
say
that
it's
it's
a
great
opportunity
for
us,
as
for
CN
CF,
to
host
so
many
projects,
but
it's
still
so
great
to
see
so
many
people
within
these
communities
that
are
managing
themselves.
So.
A
C
I
would
submit
if
my
job
is
distributed
in
our
fans
like
I
can
I
can
tell
about
it
for
a
long
time,
I'm
mostly
focused
on
kubernetes
related
efforts
at
CN
CF.
So
if
gen
CN,
CF
I've
started
contributing
to
communities
around
three
years
ago
and
I
started
doing
that
before
I've
joined
CNCs,
so
I'm
working
with
kubernetes
so
closely,
like
mostly
for
historical
reasons
and
I've,
been
one
of
the
cofounders
of
6:00
p.m.
C
to
Banaras
community,
which
is
focused
on
the
product
management,
related
efforts
and
program
management
related
efforts
within
the
urban
areas,
community
working
closely
with
see
contributor
experience,
which
is
focused
on
unburden,
the
new,
the
new
contributors
and
given
them
some
instruments
to
to
contribute
to
given
areas.
At
the
same
time,
I'm
also
focused
on,
like
some
foundation,
white
foundation,
white
initiatives,
for
example,
with
the
ambassador's
program,
the
CN
CF
ambassadors
program,
Ian's
meetups
program.
We
also
have
a
few
a
few
thoughts,
a
few
areas
how
to
enhance
the
general
general
way.
C
How
can
you
get
started
as
a
contributor
to
CN
CF,
not
to
not
the
foundation
itself
but
to
the
cnc
of
projects?
And
that's
again,
that's
that's
initially.
That
was
the
great
job.
That
was
a
huge
job
that
was
done
by
kubernetes
community
and
how
can
you
get
started
with
contributing
to
key
Banaras
and
now
I'm,
just
like
migrate
in
some
of
this
or
some
of
these
ideas
from
kubernetes
community
itself
to
do
CN,
CF,
Y
and.
C
A
It's
a
way
so
when
you
hit
you
managed
engineering,
team,
I'm
sure,
there's
dozens
or
hundreds
of
engineers
who
are
you
work
with
in
some
capacity
and
increasingly
you
know,
you
know,
as
we
well
know
you
know,
software
is
increasing
in
the
core
of
a
business.
An
open
source
is
really
becoming
really
kind
of
the
foundation
for
software,
so
so
what
we're
almost
seeing
is
open
source
software
practices
being
used
inside
businesses
right
and
you
know,
and
so
how
do
you?
A
D
I
think
that's
a
very
good
question.
I
think
that's
a
very
challenging
question
as
engineering
leaders,
so
at
any
given
time
you
only
have
bounded
a
resource
that
resource
has
to
be
sliced
up
into
three
buckets,
usually
especially,
why
you
running
running
SAS,
the
DevOps
is,
is
being
evitable,
so
you
have
to
actually
bear
the
cost,
but
that
that's
number
one
and
you
have
to
also
the
PM-
is
always
we
want
to
deliver
the
features
to
the
market
fast
faster
than
anybody
else.
D
The
quor'toth
a
feature
is
the
second
packet
and
engineer,
often
time
which,
in
a
big
box,
so
essentially
this
three
packets
actually
eats
up
most
of
the
engineering
time.
So
how
to
balance
in
is
in
between
all
of
this
is
actually
requires
a
lot
of
thoughtful
thought
through
process.
So
essentially,
I
think
the
technology,
the
approaches
that
you
do,
how
you
do
how
you
do
engineering
is
very,
is
very,
very
important.
So
actually
I
want
to
actually
go
back
to
kind
of
the
question
touch
based
on
the
CN
CF.
D
What
is
CN
CF
does
for
the
cloud
native
space,
in
my
opinion,
is
that
CN
c,
where
c
NC
of
organization
itself
is
actually
following
this
micro,
sir,
is
a
concept.
If
you
look
at
the
projects
all
over
the
place,
it's
really
its
many
projects.
Yes,
it's
very
hard
to
manage.
However,
each
project
does
one
thing
very
well,
so
they're
Microsoft
concepts
is
really
resonating
very
well,
even
within
the
ciencia
itself.
D
There's
many
project
they
all
does
one
thing
very
well
and
the
CMC
provides
is
framework
for
them
to
work
together
so
that
we
deliver
one
solution
to
the
end
and
to
the
customers
to
the
communities
eventually
generally
to
make
it
a
society
better.
So
another
day,
it's
all
about
applications,
you
run
the
application.
You
have
these
endpoints
that
allows
the
business
to
connecting
with,
with
with
the
end
user,
so
really
that
I
really
appreciate
CNC
I've
just
take
Harper,
for
instance,
ever
since
July
27
this
year,
jus
like
wow,
was
like
a
while.
D
A
D
Providing
cloud
a
native
environment
to
deliver
and
confidently
deliver,
distribute
images
for
the
end-user,
so
that
that
is
really
sets
the
stage
for
everything
so
and
very
the
team
did
a
lot
of
work
with
the
community's
help,
which
gets
the
project
into
incubation,
so
I.
Think
a
lot
of
methodology
is
what
really
driving
the
engineering
efficiency.
If
you
do
things
right,
if
you
follow
the
right
architecture
in
this
coordinated
environment
and
fallen
in
the
right
conference,
cube
comfort
for
sure-
and
you
can
balance
these
three
buckets
very
well.
C
Only
C&C
of
projects
are
making
this
ecosystem,
but
take
a
look
at
the
CN
CF
landscape,
where
we
have
a
few
hundred.
A
few
hundred
different
projects
and
social
sold
in
different
needs
that
definitely
not
all
of
them
are
a
part
of
C&C.
Are
there
cnc
of
projects,
but
they
are
those
projects
they
are
making
this
ecosystem
so
successful
as
its
today.
So.
B
B
Benefits
there's
two
that
I
can
think
of
and
I
constantly
run
into
them,
so
they're
reinforced
for
me
very
often
is
one
is
you
know
the
CN
CF
has
done
an
amazing
job
at
that
you
know
technical
vetting
and
kind
of
it's
a
that's
a
stamp.
You
know
being
admitted
into
the
CN.
Cf
means
that
you've
gone
through
this
rigorous
process
of
you
know
a
technical
venting
of
the
project
of
the
vision
of
it,
the
execution,
the
community
and
its
makes
a
statement
that
the
project
has.
B
You
know
met
this
set
of
criteria
to
be
something
that
you
can
the
community
as
a
whole.
A
water
of
wider,
broader
audience
can
start
using,
and
so
when
I
look
at
the
CN
CF,
specifically
the
hosted
projects,
every
single
one
of
those
are:
oh
yep,
that's
a
good
project.
That's
a
good
project,
they're,
all
very
high
quality
projects
that
a
bar
has
been
met,
invented
and
then
another
thing
I
think
is
the
that
we
really
saw
in
the
Brooke
project.
B
Was
that
the
just
the
messaging
of
the
scope
of
which
you
can
reach
new
people?
It
was
much
bigger
than
when
we're
doing
it
on
our
own.
When
we
got
admitted
into
the
CN
CF.
You
could
just
look
at
that.
You
know
history
of
our.
You
know
stars
on
github
and
it
was
you
know,
kind
of
going
up
going
up,
and
then
we
got
admitted
to
the
CN
CF,
and
it
was
just
this
giant
leap
of
you
know.
C
A
C
To
us
like
a
bit
less
than
a
year
ago,
but
before
the
before
sentence,
we
had
inception
level
so
yeah.
Originally
at
ciencia
we
had
three
levels.
It
was
inception.
The
three
levels
of
project
was
inception,
incubation
and
graduation.
Today
we
have
sandbox
that
replaced
conceptually
and
like
replacement
actually
conceptually
inception.
So
today
we
have
sandbox
incubation
and
creation
like
related
projects,
some
projects
like
again
like
Kruk,
like
horrible,
the
Jersey
and
CF
as
the
sandbox
projects
and
at
the
same
time
they
showed
like
they
really
meet.
C
The
criteria
of
of
the
incubation
bar,
so
they've
been
promoted
to
the
incubation
and,
like
example,
with
envoi
that
was
announced
today,
that
anyways
created
project
enjoy
and
kubernetes
and
primitives.
That,
given
is
the
CN
CF
graduated
project.
So
it's
again
it's
yet
another
level
of
community
recognition,
yet
another
level
of
of
the
end-user
recognition,
so
the
credit
projects
they
have
the
huge
amount
of
tribute
errs.
They
have
huge
amount
and
users
and
being
aggregated
means
that
you
satisfy
this
dis
demand.
C
B
C
B
B
Is
that
you
know
you
need
to
follow
up
with
that
and
make
sure
that
you're
giving
the
project
the
proper
attention
that
it
does
you
know
requires,
but
then
I'm
also
incredibly
fortunate
as
well,
where
you
know
upbound
my
startup
company
is:
we
want
to
invest
in
these
open
source
communities
and
these
open
source
projects,
because
that
helps
with
our
our
vision
as
well.
So
it's
you
know
completely.
B
You
know
promoted
and
encouraged
by
you
know
my
company
and
my
employer
to
be
involved
involved
in
open
source
projects.
We
just
open
sourced
another
project,
look
at
the
called
cross
plain
on
Tuesday.
So
that's
just
one
week
old
today,
and
so
almost
100%
of
my
time
is
spent
on
open
source
projects,
which
I
am
very
fortunate
and
grateful
to
be
able.
B
So
thankfully
I'm
not
the
only
person
at
the
company,
but
we
also
these
are
we
true.
They
do
see,
though,
these
open
source
projects,
as
not
only
opening
new
scenarios
and
enabling
you
know
new
new
things
for
a
community
in
general,
but
also
pushing
our
business
forward
as
well.
So
it's
you
know
it's
it's
good
for
the
community.
It's
also
good
for
our
business
as
well.
One.
A
Isn't
there
there's
still
a
lot
of
projects
that
are
gonna
need
to
emerge
to
help
kind
of
solve
all
them
all
the
number
of
use
cases
that
we
can't
even
possibly
dream
of?
Really
that
might
be
here
in
five
years
or
something
so
what
is
VM?
What
is
it
that
you're
trying
to
like
what
is
it
they?
You
know
the
approach
that
VMware
it's
taking,
so
you
can
scale
out.
You
know
your
own
engineering
efforts
for
these
open
source
projects
that
will
continue
to
be
core
to
the
business.
D
I
think
as
VMware
and
our
company
strategic
one
of
the
strategy
that
we
always
how's,
the
vision
is
that
the
world
is
is
going
to
be
cloud
based
and
it's
not
gonna
just
be
one
class.
So
this
multi
cloud,
hybrid
cloud
vision,
is
always
in
the
platform.
Well,
so
I
think
a
community
actually
does
provide,
as
you
mentioned,
the
nice
abstraction
for
the
VMO
to
actually
realize
materia
as
this
vision.
So
so,
essentially,
all
of
this
open
source
open
source.
D
The
efforts
such
as
that
conformance,
certified,
cubanelle
and
cost
ie
is
doesn't
work
as
of
today
or
actually
as
evidence
for
for
us
from
EMS
stands
for
a
stands.
Point
of
view
is
actually
the
evidence
for
this
technology
to
be
there
to
be
the
de-facto
abstraction
layer
to
for
our
structure
play
out
this
magic
card
technology
to
deliver
to
the
end
user
sure
the
journey
is
actually
still
very
long,
but
I
think
with
all
of
these
open
source
efforts
at
coming
from
community
actually
coming
from
the
customers.
A
Yeah
yeah,
so
so
here,
so
what
are
some
of
the
programs
you're
developing
now
to
help
keep
up
with
this
scale
of
contributors
that
are
entering
projects
to
help
kind
of
these
projects?
You
know
I
know
you're,
not
involved
the
management
of
them,
but
what
you
were
saying
before
is
you're
like
working
on
contributor
guidelines
and
efforts
such
as
those.
C
Would
split
your
question
through
parts?
First
of
all,
I'm
again,
I'm
involved
in
two
key
Banaras
community
festival
and
we
recently
released
a
non-coding
contributors
guide.
So
the
non
contributors
guide
is
the
great
sample
of
how
can
you
get
started
with
contributions
to
it,
an
open
source
project
be
not
a
software
developer?
So
my
personal
experiences
that
I
have
been
a
system
administrator
in
my
previous.
C
Engineer
and
so,
and
so
on,
but
I've
never
been
a
software
developer
and
I
don't
have
an
experience
in
developing
software
itself,
but
I
have
like
I,
have
some
PM
backgrounds
and
DevOps
engineer
in
the
ground,
and
so
on.
So
I
figured
out
that
I
can
be
available
for
kubernetes
community
a
few
years
ago
as
a
person
who
can
deliver
something
outside
of
the
codebase,
and
it's
why
we
are
actively
involved
into
the
cig
release.
C
For
example,
sig
PMC
contributor
experienced
all
these
groups
did
not
did
not
deliver
in
code
itself,
but
delivering
some
something
else
like
some
some
another
value
of
developing
some
part
of
the
project,
and
a
few
months
ago
we
released
a
weird
communities.
Community
were
released
in
encode
in
contributor
guide,
which
allows
you
to
understand.
How
can
you
get
started
with
contributing
to
key
Banaras
being
not
a
software
developer?
What
are
the
errors
that
could
Banaras
work
in
you
donate
your
time.
You
can
be
documentation
right
and
can
BPM
work.
It
can
be.
C
You
can
be
released,
team
and
so
on.
So
that
was
one
of
the
efforts
have
been
mostly
involved
in.
In
the
first
time
also,
we
are
currently
at
the
early
beginning
of
developing
some
slack
there
cnc
of
wide
contributors
guide.
We
don't
have
any
strong
guidelines.
How
can
how
can
you
contribute
to
these
projects
because,
again,
it's
projects
a
responsibility
on
developing
the
guidelines?
How
can
you
specifically
do
it
deliver
quote?
It
is
projects,
but
we
have
some
foundation
wide
efforts.
C
For
example,
again
ambassadors
program
need
a
program
that
these
are
all
the
contributions
to
the
community
space.
Then
other
they're,
not
the
coding
contributions,
but
their
contributions
to
community.
There
are
also
some
programs
like
CNC
of
participates
in
google
Summer
of
Code,
which
is
great
initiative
for
for
the
new
contributors
to
get
started
ways
with
contributing
Sampson
anyway,
as
far
as
I
remember,
there
was
a
rogue
student
this
year
who
delivered
some
projects
there
so
yeah
we
we
have.
We
have
enough
on
our
plate
on.
C
A
A
B
B
Hopefully,
next
time
we
can
get
a
much
bigger
room
for
the
massive
waitlist
that
we
had
to
have
600
people
on
that
waitlist,
so
yeah,
but
I
think
that
you
know
kind
of
something
getting
back
to
what
I
was
talking
about
before
so
rook
is
you
know
very
good
at
being
able
to
take
your
local
storage
on
premises,
bare
metal
and
turn
that
into
a
functional,
highly
scalable?
You
know
performance
storage,
cluster
in
those
types
of
scenarios,
but
what
I
see,
though,
is
you
know
when
we're
talking
about?
B
B
So
that's
where
I
think
that
there's
a
really
good
opportunity
here
to
extend
the
rook
project
and
also
in
kind
of
in
combination
with
some
other
projects
like
the
cross
plane
project
that
I
was
just
talking
about
there
a
little
bit
before,
where
you
know
in
a
given
scenario,
being
able
to
choose
the
best
place,
to
run
your
workload
and
meet
all
of
your
storage
needs
like
maybe
it's
a
database
and
you
can
use
Amazon's
RDS
or
a
Google's
cloud
sequel.
But
you
know
having
that
choice.
B
You
figured
out
at
runtime
in
a
portable
way,
so
the
application
author
doesn't
have
to
worry
about
those
details.
But
what
ends
up
happening
is
that
the
application
runs
and
the
best
you
know.
Location
at
runtime
is
just
a
great
place
to
get
to,
and
it
really
takes
advantage
and
unlocks
that
power
of
choice
that
you
get
from
multi
cloud
scenarios.
So.
B
We've
been
doing
that
work
so
with
the
release
that
we
just
put
out
a
couple
days
ago,
it's
been
a
very
busy
week.
I
must
say
that
when
I'm,
remembering
all
the
things
that
have
happened
but
yeah,
we
doubled
the
number
of
storage
support
storage
providers
in
Brooke.
We
went
from
three
of
them
to
six
of
them.
So
now
that's
doubled
and
whatever
was
talking
about
earlier.
Is
it
of
them?
B
The
NFS
network
file
system,
support
and
rook
was
done
by
a
google
Summer
of
Code
in
turn
our
students,
so
that
was
amazing
to
be
able
to
have
that
program
where
students
all
around
the
world
can
get
involved
in
open
source
and
contribute
something,
and
it's
a
real
feature
that
shipping
and
being
used
out
in
we
know
production.
So
it's
great
to
get
the
community
involved
with
wind
weights
like
that
great.
A
D
What's
ahead
so
I
think
as,
however
entering
since
you
have
as
I
mentioned
earlier,
the
mission
statement
is
more
clear
and
there's
this
broader
community
that
we
have
to
work
with.
So
one
of
the
things
team
actually
does
is
that
making
sure
the
harbour
is
more
is
even
more
open-source
printer.
So
essentially,
we
are
internet.
Doing
some
react
actually,
so
that
the
system
is
memorialized.
So
essentially
we
can
more
working
together
with
Mal
harbour
registry
service,
for
instance,
to
replicate
images.
D
That's
just
one
use
case
is
actually
coming
from
the
open
source
community,
so
all
of
these
requirements
least
from
the
open
source
community,
so
I
think
Harbor
released.
One
point
a
is
actually
already
in
flight
and
in
three
months
time
we
already
have
something
put
on
put
on
the
agenda
for
1.9,
so
the
least
go
homes
and
home.
So
essentially,
the
committee
actually
is
helping
a
lot
more
shaping
what
harbors
should
be
supposed
to
deliver
and
also
when
another
impact
vector
the
rooks,
the
region
about
Matic
crowd.
D
C
Dangerous,
in
fact
that
my
prediction
lost
here
about
the
current
year
was
some
big
progress
in
the
world
of
service
computing
and
machine
learning,
and
I'm
really
happy
to
see
that
there
are
projects
these
days
that
are
really
closing.
This
gap
in
the
market,
for
example,
keep
flow,
which
is
machine,
learning
framework
built
on
top
of
kubernetes
or
multiple
service
platforms
that
are
using
cuban
areas
like
open
fares
or
k
native
that
was
presented
today
at
the
keynote.
C
So
I
would
say
that
the
general
direction
of
the
community
and
the
industry
movement
will
not
will
not
change
a
lot,
but
we
can
definitely
see
more
projects
and
more
community
involvement
into
in
developing
them.
I'm
not
speaking
about
ciencia
project
specifically
around
like,
but
about
the
projects
at
all
that
exist
on
the
market,
like
about
the
number
of
projects
that
we
may
have
on.
Cn
CF,
landscape,
business.
Well,.