►
From YouTube: TGI Kubernetes 100: All host retrospective
Description
Notes: https://github.com/vmware-tanzu/tgik/blob/master/episodes/100/README.md
Join us for a very special TGIK!
We are going to work to get all of the hosts together on one call and talk about Kubernetes, TGIK, the future and more. Join us live and we'll be taking questions and comments from the comment stream.
A
C
We
are
live,
welcome
everybody
to
a
very
special.
It's
like
I
grew
up
with
the
world
of
broadcast
TV
and
every
like
Christmas
episode
was
a
very
special
episode
for
daddy's
episode,
100
and,
and
we
decided
to
do
something
a
little
bit
different
this
time
around,
where
we
collected
all
the
hosts
and
put
them
in
boxes
on
a
screen
and
and
then
we're
gonna
do
a
little
bit
of
a
sort
of
live
panel
hanging
out.
You
know
talking
to
each
other
type
of
thing.
C
E
Sweat
dance
I,
just
got
back
home
I've
been
at
the
hospital
since
about
6:00
a.m.
so
yeah
I
made
it
in
time
for
TGI,
K
and
I
figured
what
a
great
opportunity
for
me
to
see
everyone
and
share
some
of
the
exciting
after-effects
of
my
time
at
the
hospital
earlier
today,
but
just
a
quick
update,
I'm
doing
fine
we're
trying
to
figure
out
some
stuff.
E
That's
been
going
on
with
me
and
just
something
unexpected
happened
and
I'm
back
and
it
looks
like
everything's
taken
care
of,
and
also
I
have
two
very
important
people
with
me
who
took
me
to
the
hospital,
or
they
are
stay
here
in
the
room
that
are
gonna,
be
hanging
out
and
they're
gonna
probe.
Some.
C
A
E
C
C
D
C
B
Cloud
native
architected,
VMware
and
I,
you
know
I
I,
think
I
actually
remember
when
my
first
episode
was.
That
might
be
another
awesome
like
trivia
question,
it'd
be
harder
when
to
figure
out,
but
yeah
I've
been
doing
this
for
a
little
while
now
I've
got
a
I've
got
I've
been
doing
this
series
called
rocking
TGI,
K
and
I've
really
been
enjoying
that,
like,
as
we
go
through
the
names
in
the
chat,
the
seeing
you
all
like
you
know,
tune
in
to
us
every
week
is
one
of
the
things
that
I
think
amazes.
B
C
D
C
C
F
Yeah
I'm
Christian
I'm
a
principal
engineer
at
VMware
new
to
kubernetes.
Well,
I
was
a
year
ago,
I
guess
it's
you're
already
and
I've
only
done
one
episode
but
I
eat
to
make
more
turns
out.
You
need
a
lot
of
bandwidth
in
a
really
good
gear
and
I.
Don't
have
it
so
I,
don't
only
get
to
do
it
when
I'm
in
the
office
and
Palo
Alto
and
it
just
didn't
work
out
afterwards,
so
I'm
hoping
in
the
new
year
I
will,
you
know,
be
more.
B
E
C
E
C
G
Alright,
Josh,
hey:
what's
up
everyone,
I'm
Josh,
similar
to
Duffy
I
work
in
the
field,
helping
people
be
successful,
building
platforms
and
things
like
that
on
top
of
kubernetes
I've
been
kind
of
like
the
filler
person
as
well
between
Duffy
and
Joe.
In
the
early
days,
I
actually
tried
to
do
a
TGI
K
pretty
early.
She
was
helping
me
out.
I
was
also
having
to
recompile
OBS,
but
we
quickly
found
out
that
my
1
megabit
per
second
upload
speed
was
just
not
going
to
fly,
but
eventually
I
moved
into
a
place.
G
G
C
A
And
today,
I
will
be
giving
away
tons
of
t-shirts.
So
the
way
it's
gonna
work
is
every
10
minutes
or
so,
or
any
host
discretion,
I'll
be
giving
away
a
t-shirt
or
so
and
then
I
am
putting
my
Twitter
handle
and
email
address
in
the
chat,
and
after
we
mentioned
that
you
want
to
share
just
let
me
know,
and
then
we
will
ship
out
the
fabulous
t-shirt
that
Joe
is
modeling
for
you
today.
Our
first
two
winners
are
going
to
be
Walid,
since
he
figured
out
where
what
the
first
episode
was
and.
A
E
A
A
C
A
A
We're
gonna
cover
the
news
and
instead
of
just
having
one
person
cover
than
use,
you're
gonna
get
opinions
on
the
news
from
that,
and
then
I've
got
a
pre-selected
question
and
also
the
audience
as
well
feel
free,
like
there's
got
to
be
some
burning
questions
you
have
about
how
TGI
caves
put
together
or
Joe's
favorite
bourbon,
or
what
exactly
isn't
Joe's
fridge
so
feel
free
to
start
typing
those
in
the
chat
along
with
where
you're
from
and
then
we
will
start
the
conversation.
So.
C
A
I
do
that
I'm
gonna.
Do
the
save
the
date
for
the
kubernetes
contributor
summit
since
I
sent
that
email
yeah
so
the
day
before
cube
con
cloud
made
of
con
traditionally
there's
a
kubernetes
contributor
summit.
This
is
divided
into
two
tracks,
one
for
new
contributors
and
one
for
current
contributors.
So
if
you're
interested
in
starting
your
contribution
journey
to
kubernetes,
you
can
sign
up
for
the
new
contributor
workshop
you'll
bring
your
laptop.
You
know
you
open
it
up.
A
We
have
little
instructions
before
you'll
figure
out
how
to
learn
github,
how
the
repos
are
organized
and
all
the
good
stuff
that
you
need
to
learn.
So
that's
a
save
the
date
next
week
we'll
have
on
this
kubernetes
dev
mailing
list,
we'll
have
more
information
on
how
you
can
register
and
all
that
good
stuff.
This.
B
C
B
G
But
if
you
want
an
entry
point,
that's
different
than
just
a
typical
like
development
standpoint,
sig
Docs
and
the
docs
group
is
really
interested
in
bring
more
people
on
to
help
you
technical
writing
right
for
all
kinds
of
personas
like
me,
especially
as
someone
who
does
typically
write
a
lot
of
code.
I'm
super
interested
in
doing
this
in
2020,
sick
doc.
S--
has
been
on
my
agenda
just
because,
like
I
want
to
be
better
at
stating
or
articulating
technical
concepts,
that's
readable
by
everybody
right.
C
So
I
think
you
know
the
one
of
the
interesting
things
here
is
that
I
think
part
of
what
we're
trying
to
do
with
the
kubernetes
community
as
a
whole?
Is
we
value
all
the
people
that
are
contributing
to
the
community,
regardless
of
whether
it's
code
or
Doc's,
or
helping
to
run
meetings
or
help
me
to
do
releases,
there's
all
sorts
of
ways
for
folks
to
roll
up
their
sleeves
to
get
involved?
C
F
I
just
say
like
it's
amazing,
the
I
probably
three
times
a
day:
I
google
kubernetes
something-
and
you
know
the
official
documentation,
always
pops
up
and
asks
my
questions
too,
like
I,
don't
even
know
which
Doc's
are
missing
at
this
point
because
it's
been
awesome.
So
thank
you
to
anybody
watching
who's
actually
contributed.
B
So
I
put
this
one
on
the
list
actually
from
the
reason
I
put
it.
There
was
because
there
was
actually
a
big
Twitter
exchange
recently
about
kind
of
user
experience.
That
is
somewhat
counter
to
a
Christians
experience
and
I.
Think
it's
you
benefit
from
actually
knowing
what
questions
to
ask
sometimes,
but
a
lot
of
people,
don't
really
have
that.
You
don't
know
what
questions
to
ask
and
they
run
into
trouble.
B
So
what
has
what
surfaced
from
this
is
that
there
are
very
few
people
very
few
entities
out
there
that
are,
you
know,
actively
contributing
to
to
Doc's
and
we
need
more
of
them,
and
so
that's
why
I
was
raising.
It
was
because
we
just
it's
a
call
to
action.
You
know
like
if
you
work
for
who
work
for
our
organization
that
is
working
heavily
with
kubernetes
and
you
feel
like
there's
an
opportunity
for
you
to
either
contribute
to
Docs
or
even
just
you
know,
promote
that
within
your
company.
Please
do
so.
C
B
Go
to
the
sig
Docs
page
that
I
linked
in
the
in
the
notes
right
they
just
like
every
other
sig
do
you
have
do
have
a
meeting
where
they
hate
where
they
get
together
and
chat
about,
what's
happening
in
there.
They
will
also
have
labels
within
the
TCR
within
the
TGI
Kiwi,
but
within
the
Cooper
Neda's.
We
both
that
are
going
to
be
things
like
good,
first
issue
or
needs
these.
E
A
B
Every
time
I
see
something
like
this
I'm
like
that
person
is
brave.
You
know
like
there's
a
ton
of
there's
a
ton
of
value
you
get
out
of
having
an
infrastructure
and
service
underneath
and
when
you
start
getting
into
some
of
the
on
Prem
models,
it's
hard
to
replicate,
but
they
call
out
like
some
of
the
gaps
you
know
in
our
communities
here
now.
B
C
I
think
this
is
we're
just
a
guidance
in
terms
of
like
hey,
if
you're
not
running
on
the
cloud
here,
the
pieces
that
Cooper
doesn't
provide
that
you're,
probably
going
to
want
to
consider
and
yeah
it's
a
storage
block,
storage,
object,
storage,
load,
balancing
using
metal
lb,
node
level
metrics
with
Prometheus
and
crow
fauna,
cert
manager
for
doing
some
of
the
certificate
lifecycle,
stuff,
they're,
suggesting
github
for
CI
CDE.
But
it's
interesting
sort
of
do
that
gap.
Analysis
of
if
you're
gonna
run
on
from
you
know
where
the
other
they.
C
F
And
I
think
this
is
sort
of
my
angle
to
kubernetes
right,
like
I'm
I've
been
doing
storage
at
VMware
for
a
while-
and
you
know,
I
I
was
saying
this
just
this
week
like
koobideh.
This
is
one
thing,
but
on
Prem
you
you
want
to
have
it
all,
and
so
that's
actually
what
brought
me
to
this
whole
thing
all.
B
B
C
B
And
what
they've
written
here
is
actually
pretty
cool
because
it's
basically
a
combination
of
decks,
cuboid,
EC,
proxy
gangway,
a
few
other
tools
and
they're,
basically
trying
to
provide
a
way
such
that
you
can
consistently
use
or
IDC
tokens
created
by
this
great
created
using
this
method
across
multiple
clusters.
So
solving
this
single
credential
login
problem,
and
then
you
still
have.
B
Of
course
you
still
have
our
back
to
solve
at
each
cluster,
but
at
least
from
the
perspective
of
like
whether
your
token,
whether
your
token
allows
you
to
authorize
in
we're
sorry
authenticate
in
would
be,
would
be
useful.
So
I
thought
that
was
a
pretty
cool
article.
It
might
be
kind
of
fun
to
to
do
an
epic
to
do
an
episode
on
this
and
just
see
if
we
can
get
it
working
with
kind
or
across
a
couple
of
different.
The.
C
B
Did
they
think
about
the
fact
that
you're
sort
of
like
that
Oh
IDC
proxied
now
is
a
high-value
thing
right
like
so
wherever
that's
hosted
it
has
to
be.
It
is
now
like
the
keys
to
the
kingdom.
You
know
you
have
to
make
sure
the
thing
is.
It
has
a
high
availability,
it's
not
going
to
go
down.
Otherwise
you.
C
D
Something
else
that
I
want
to
highlight
it
didn't
make
it
to
our
list.
Is
that
if
you're,
a
native
Turkish
speaker
Ockman,
actually
has
like
a
cloud
native
YouTube
thing
on
on
a
video
series
now
and
the
reason
I
like
it
is
because
you
know
I'm
I'm
I
was
born
in
the
United,
States
I
think
and
I
speak.
English
is
my
first
language.
You.
D
You
know
there's
there's
words,
but
it's
neat
to
see
that
that
some
of
this
data
are
some
of
this
information
could
be
shared
in
other
languages,
because
if
you
speak
Turkish
and
you
don't
really
speak,
English
guess
what
you're
missing
out.
So
it's
good
to
see
when
people
are
taking
this
information
that
we
take
for
granted
and
send
it
out
in
other
languages.
So
what
do
people
can
handle
it
because
they
definitely
can
do
this,
but
what
I
really
like
about
this
is
Ocwen
has
really
stayed.
D
D
D
C
The
line
is
there's
an
example
here:
a
cubical
tree
being
used
against
AK
a
native
service,
and
this
ready
thing
here
is
interesting,
because
the
the
key
native
folks
have
a
standard
way
to
represent
certain
conditions
in
a
way
where
you
can
generically
represent
whether
something
is
sort
of
quiescent
right,
and
so
so
you
know,
being
able
to
sort
of
you
know,
build
on
top
of
that.
I
think
is
actually
pretty
cool.
Yeah.
D
C
F
A
D
F
A
D
One
thing
is
really
important
and
it's
the
fifth
one,
one
two
three:
four:
five
from
the
bottom
of
the
keynote
speakers,
58%
identified
as
men
and
42%
as
women
or
nine
very
binary
or
other
genders
its
2020
now
and
I
will
tell
you
you
do
not
understand
how
hard
it
was.
I
had
to
go
toe-to-toe
with
execs
I
had
to
tell
someone
you're
just
not
going
to
do
this
and
they
fought
me
for
about
a
month,
but
I
won.
D
C
E
Another
thing
that
we're
doing
this
this
round
at
Q
Khan
is
we've
been
working
on
redoing,
the
the
women's
empowerment
and
just
for
bringing
that
a
little
more
like
closer
to
people
and
actually
getting
people
hands-on,
Keys
a
little
more
similar
to
the
diversity
lunch,
trying
to
actual
make
a
difference
for
people
who
may
not
have
an
opportunity
to
attend
some
of
the
other
diversity
events.
So
we're
trying
in
a
lot
of
different
ways
to
try
a
lot
of
different
things,
and
it's
just
really
cool
to
see
everybody
coming
together
and
hope.
F
E
Basically,
as
with
most
things,
yes,
it's
very
loose
process,
that's
very,
very
poorly
defined,
but
we
do
the
best
we
can,
and
so,
let's
kind
of
give
sleeves
an
idea
of
where
it
came
from
and
where
we
are
today,
the
first
diversity
scholarship.
There
was
five
of
us,
it
was
like
myself
and
I,
don't
know
if
L
know
Lucas,
who
did
a
lot
of
work.
E
Beauty
Badman
both
of
us
won
and
that
has
grown
over
the
past
couple
of
years
and
now
we're
you
know:
we've
raised
$80,000
one
year
for
Microsoft
Google
and
that
money
comes
together
and
that
allows
us
to
basically
go
through.
We
ask
questions
from
folks
and
we
put
together
a
scale
of
over
five
attributes.
E
The
whole
philosophy
here
is:
we
try
to
pick
people
who
wouldn't
have
an
opportunity
to
go
who
have
never
been
before
and
that
we
think
because
of
their
situation,
they
would
actually
get
a
lot
out
of
what
impacts
them
the
most
and
we
we
sit
down
and
we
try
to
score
folks.
Even
then,
we
take
the
averages
of
those
scores,
and
then
we
look
at
our
budget
and,
however
many
people
we
can
bring
in
that
we
go
through
the
we
start,
the
actual
process
of
reaching
out
to
them
talking
to
them
about
their
situation.
E
There's
a
lot
of
work
of
just
like
you
know.
Some
people
have
never
even
flown
before
some
people
are
having
problems
getting
it
into
a
country
or
out
of
a
country,
and
it's
just
kind
of
this
long
process
of
doing
everything
we
can
to
get
people
there
to
make
cute
cotton
once-in-a-lifetime
experience
for
them.
F
E
C
E
C
All
right
cool,
so
I
get
to
do
one
now,
I'm
gonna
do
what's
he.
What
do
we
have
left?
I'm
gonna
do
Oh
Brennan's,
config
EULA.
C
This
is
so
Brendan
just
announced
on
Twitter
this
morning,
this
new,
this
new
project
that
he
did
called
config,
EULA
and
number
one
I
love
the
name.
It
reminds
me
of
funicula
I,
think
we've
heard
about
it
earlier,
for
those
who
you
know
have
read
that
book
when
you
were
small.
So
the
fascinating
thing
here
is
that
I
think
this
is
really
really
cool
he's
essentially
taking
some
of
the
ideas.
If
you've
done
react,
programming
with
JSX,
it's
this
essential,
javascript,
preprocessor
sort
of
dialect,
where
you
can
embed
HTML
directly
in
JavaScript.
C
So
it's
like
it's
like
JavaScript
with
each
EML
literals
in
it,
and
so
he
did
the
same
thing
with
Python
and
yeah
Mille,
and
so,
instead
of
actually
doing
like
all
the
wacky
stuff,
with
curly,
braces
and
stuff,
like
that,
you
can
just
take
the
yeah,
Moe
and
embed
it
anyplace,
where
you
would
use
essentially
a
dictionary
type
of
thing.
Let's
see
so
Rory
has
it
right,
hung
15
in
the
Palace
Hotel.
You
don't
have
a
date
there,
but
was
that
no
wasn't
2013
Tomiko
the
prizes
is
a
t-shirt
that
you
already
have.
C
C
C
Right
cool,
so
yeah
so
anyways,
so
the
config
EULA
thing
is
essentially
embedding
ammo
into
into
Python
and
then
having
the
ability
to
essentially
then
take
that
thing
and
then
render
it
on
out,
and
so
it's
a
Python
first
with
yam
all
in
the
middle
type
of
thing,
which
I
think
is
kind
of
interesting
and
I.
Think
it's
fascinating
to
like
compare
and
contrast
that
to
ytt,
because
ytt
is
yeah
mo
with
embedded
Python,
whereas
this
is
Python
with
embedded
yam.
Oh
well,.
C
D
C
So
now
the
interesting
thing
that
I
think
is
missing
from
this
is,
and
it's
probably
a
solvable
problems,
but
the
thing
that
I
like
about
Q
and
and
some
of
the
stuff
we
kind
of
started
to
do
with
with
Jay
sonic
with
guess
on.
It
was
essentially
being
schema
aware
so
that
you
can
validate
this
because
it's
so
easy
as
you're
building
these
things
to
actually
produce
something
that
looks
right.
What
is
it
yeah.
D
B
C
For
those
not
aware
so
there's
this
there's
configuration
language
called
JSON
it
one
of
the
first
projects
that
we
did
it
helped
do.
Was
this
thing
called
case
on
it
and
sort
of
we
sort
of
attacked
this
from
a
couple
of
different
angles?
We
ended
up
stepping
back
from
it
just
because
we
weren't
seeing
the
sort
of
uptake
that
we
liked
and-
and
we
decided
to
put
you
know
some
of
our
efforts
into
building
tools
like
octant,
but
in
true
open
source
fashion
and
other
folks
took
these
ideas
and
ran
with
it.
C
I
think
that's
really
cool
to
see,
and
so
the
great
Anna
Griffin
Oh
folks
sort
of
did
a
rewrite
of
it
called
tonka,
tanka,
tonka
yeah
and
some
of
the
things
that
are
interesting.
They
some
of
the
stuff
is
the
same
but
like
they
actually
step
back
from
some
of
the
stuff
here,
like
the
components
prototypes
and
and
went
back
to
something
that
was
a
lot
more
focused
for
them
and
so
I
think
it's
really
cool
to
actually
see
the
see
the
evolution
here.
D
Yeah
and
just
one
quick
thing
they
were,
they
were
on
I
mean
they.
They
they
hopped
into
I,
think
they
really
hopped
into
the
case
on
a
project
before
we
shut
it
down
and-
and
they
were
been
doing,
some
crazy
JSON
of
things
for
a
while,
so
I
knew
whenever
they
Kingsley
after
a
case
on
a
product
project
down
that
this
was.
This
was
coming
so
I'm
glad
to
see
that
they
say
they
stuck
with
it.
D
C
B
E
C
B
A
D
They
and
in
that
screenshot
it
it
was
kind
of
like
a
copy
of
what
the
the
G
cloud
sold,
but
they
called
it
cloud
and
said
alright.
C
A
A
subject
so
this
is
the
contributor
survey
related
related
to
those
of
you
that
I've
are
contributing
or
have
tried
to
contribute
and
fail.
We
send
out
regular
surveys
as
part
of
the
contributor
experience
to
kind
of
see
how
people
are
consuming
our
tools,
consuming
our
documentation
and
places
pain,
points
and
stuff
that
we
can
fix.
So
we
would
really
help
us
out
if,
if
you've
contributed
or
are
interested
in
contributing
to
check
that
out
and.
A
So
these
are
switching
pneumophila
cadence,
really
nothing!
Nothing
too
earth-shattering
here
for
those
of
you
who've
never
heard
of
this
meeting,
though
this
is
a
really
good
meeting.
It
meets
once
a
month
where
you
get
updates
from
SIG's
from
across
the
project.
So
it's
a
good
play.
It's
kind
of
like
a
good
comments
area
where
you
can
get
an
overall
view
of
what's
happening,
kubernetes,
as
opposed
to
you
know,
having
to
decide
one
of
the
57
meetings
that
we
have
throughout
the
week
for
easy.
A
B
They're
recorded
this
is
definitely
one
of
the
I
recently
recorded
him.
I
recently
recorded
a
podcast
on
like
how
to
keep
up
with
stuff
like
this
and
I
think
that
this
is
definitely
a
great
great
way
to
do
that,
because
it's
not
you
know
like
keeping
up
with
stuff
is
really
difficult,
especially
if
you
realized,
you
know
what
keeping
up
means.
It
means
different
things
to
different
people
like
some
people
are
really
focused
on
what's
happening
with
the
codebase
or
with
the
architectural
design
stuff.
B
C
A
E
A
A
Actually
do
have
a
question
from
La
Matty
who
I'm
gonna,
send
the
t-shirt
to
no
matter.
What,
because
he's
always
here
and
always
supported
the
show
so
ping
me
out
I,
will
send
you
a
t-shirt.
Ask
host
what
is
what
is
a
surprise,
fun
thing
that
you
learned
during
TGI
K
that
you
weren't
expecting.
Oh.
D
I'll
go
because
I
did
it
one
time,
but
do
you
all
can
see
watch
YouTube
you
watching
YouTube
and
you
watch
whoever's
talking
you're
like
oh,
that's,
cool!
Look
at
them
go
through
this
view
and
then
go
through
this
view
and
go
to
the
title.
Let
me
tell
you
something:
Franken
configuration
that
we
have
to
actually
make
this
thing.
Go
would
drive.
You
want.
D
A
C
Let's
see
I
think
I
mean
going
meta,
I
think
you
know
the
thing
that
surprise
me
that
I
learn
is
that
people
enjoy
it
when
they
see
the
real
deal
of
people,
sort
of
learning,
stuff
and
operating,
and
so
you
think,
as
you're
presenting
that
you
have
to
have
everything
totally
down.
Pat
no
mistakes
like
this
very
linear
sort
of
exploration,
of
something
and
I
think
the
the
big
lesson
for
me
from
doing
TGI
K
from
the
beginning
was
that
you
know
those
detours
making
mistakes
being
human
looking
stuff
up
on
Google.
G
G
Think
I
really
like
doing
TJ
case,
t
GI
case
selfishly
because
I
like
to
learn
from
the
audience
right,
yeah,
it's
hilarious
like
every
single
episode,
I've
done,
someone
hops
and
chatez
like
oh,
we
implemented
it
this
way
or
hey.
Have
you
looked
at
this
project?
So
you
know
I
just
want
to
do
them
so
that
you
all
can
teach
me
rather
than
me,
teaching
you
right.
C
B
Surprised
me
recently
was
I
was
doing
a
deep
dive
on
one
of
the
kubernetes
components
and
I
thought
that
I
knew
where
to
find
the
piece
of
code
that
I
was
looking
for,
so
I
could
talk
about
it
and
I'm
like
nope
I
got
no
idea
where
it
is
and
somebody
from
the
audience
was
like.
Oh
here,
that's
awesome,
you
know
to
your
point.
You
know
there
are
no
experts.
We
are
all
together
an
expert
like
that's
what
it
takes
it
takes.
It
takes
a
community
and.
E
B
E
A
C
I'll
start
with
that,
one
cuz
I
think
that's.
Definitely
the
top
of
my
list
and
and
I
I
feel
bad
I.
Don't
want
to
name
the
project
because,
like
it
was,
you
know,
half
my
fault
but
I
was
trying
out.
This
is
a
server
list
project
in
an
episode
and
I
had
a
cluster
up
and
running,
and
and
it's
one
of
those
things
where
I
was
running
on
AWS,
but
a
lot
of
times,
people
develop
locally
with
something
like
mini
cube
and
I'm
like
well.
C
I
need
to
get
to
this
thing
so
that
I
can
hit
the
webpage
and
all
that
there
was
a
line
in
there.
So
you
could
just
expose
it
to
the
whole
world
and
you'll,
be
you
know,
good
to
go
and
I'm
like
like
that's
a
little
dangerous.
How
bad
could
it
be
and
so
I
like
I
did
it
and
the
author
was
actually
in
the
chat
encouraging
me
to
do
that
so
I
did
it
and
then
somebody
from
the
audience
ran
a
sort
of
a
Bitcoin
miner
on
the
cluster,
and
normally
that
would
be
okay.
C
So
it
essentially
ended
up
killing
the
cluster
and
made
the
whole
thing
go.
Wonky
it
showed
the
project.
Poorly
I
felt
super
bad
about
it,
and
so
now
I'm
a
lot
more
paranoid
about
like
any
time
when
I'm
exposing
something
not
making
it
something
that
people
can
hit
right
away.
I
figure,
if
it's
like
a
really
long
string
and
then
people
can't
type
it
in
maybe
I'll
be
safe
but
like
if
it's
something
that
you
know
somebody
could
actually
type
in
and
muck
with.
You
know,
there's
a
good
chance
somebody's
going
to
do
it.
E
E
E
E
D
D
You
don't
see
it
yeah
if
they
get
up
and
leave,
they
don't
see
it,
but
back
in
November
we
I
was
doing
a
project
on
and
a
cute
card
and
I
think
it
was
going
okay,
but
the
problem
is:
is
that
the
room
was
so
loud.
You
could
not
hear
anything
so
I
couldn't
hear
myself.
I
couldn't
hear
people
talking
to
me.
It
was
super
crowded
and
I
was
struggling
with
this
software,
because
I
assumed
the
docks
to
be
better
than
they
were
and
I
mean
if
I
could
actually
turn
red.
D
C
Think
always
make
sure
that,
like
I
read
through
at
least
I
have
a
tutorial
that
looks
like
it
should
converge
before
I
do
a
project
I
mean
if
you
know,
but
most
projects
know
that
they
have
to
have
something
like
that.
But
it's
it's
interesting
that
you
know
you
didn't
even
have
that
prior
yeah.
So.
E
E
C
That's
an
interesting
thing:
Christian
because,
like
it
feels
like
you're
coding
when
you're
doing
coop
TGI
Kenny,
because,
like
you
kind
of
get
into
a
zone,
you
get
into
a
mode
and
then
you
look
up
and
you're
like
holy
crap.
It's
been
an
hour
and
a
half
right
and
like
it
tends
to
move
pretty
fast
when
you're
doing
it,
at
least
for
me,.
A
A
Speaking
of
the
tools,
the
things
that
you've
covered
each
of
you,
what
was
the
favorite
coolest
thing
that
you
covered
this
year
and
then
the
second
part
is:
what
do
you
want
to
cover
next
year?
Are
there
any
I
know
people
file
github
issues
for
stuff
that
they
want
to
see
covered?
Do
you
have
any
anything
on
the
top
of
your
mind
where
you're
like
oh
I,
cannot
wait
to
cover
that
on
TGI
K,
so.
D
I'm
gonna
break
the
mold
here:
yeah
I
only
covered
one
thing,
something
I
wrote,
I
covered
octant
back
in
the
summer,
I
believe
I
was
late
summer
when
I
covered
that
and
I
really
enjoyed
getting
it
out
there,
but
I
actually
wanted
to
think
of
something.
Different
like
tjk
is
a
is
a
really
good
output
format,
but
really
what
I
would
like
to
do
is
do
some
more
longer,
some
more
longer
term.
Think
things
and
I
don't
know
what
that
is.
D
So
let
go
in
deep
on
a
topic
for
a
while,
so
something
I've
been
doing
at
conferences
recently
is
doing
a
kubernetes
troubleshooting
primary
and
I'll
go
for
two
hours
and
I'll
say
it's
Friday
afternoon
and
you
did
a
deploy
and
it
doesn't
work
and
then
we
work
through
it
backwards,
so
I
would
love
to
actually,
instead
of
just
going
through
a
project
would
actually
just
show
the
opposite
side
now
you
know
it's
hit
the
fan.
What
do
I
do?
What
do
I
look
at?
D
D
C
The
projects
that
I
wanted
to
give
you
too
I
want
to
dig
deeper
into
the
Argo
project.
You
know
we
did
an
episode
early
early
on
on
Argo
workflows,
but
it's
sort
of
like
bloomed
into
sort
of
an
umbrella,
they're
merging
it
with
some
of
the
the
tools
from
weave,
and
so
that's
a
really
interesting
project.
C
F
C
C
You
know
when
you're
running
compute
systems,
it's
like
you
can
reboot
things
and
sort
of
smooth
it
over
and
everything
comes
back
with
storage.
If
you
screw
up,
it's
like
you're
screw
up,
is
there
forever
and
so
like
it
takes
a
level
of
like
attention
to
detail
in
paranoia,
successfully,
administer
and
run
a
storage
system
that
I'm,
not
sure
I
personally
am
well
suited
to,
and
so
I
like
I
have
a
hard
time
sort
of
like
trying
to
talk
smart
about
storage.
C
F
Like
the
question
was
what
you
do
more
off
like
that's.
Definitely
what
I
want
to
do
in
the
new
year
or
like
I
guess
the
new
year
started
already,
but
you
know
more
storage
of
things,
because
there's
lots
of
them
out
there
I
think
last
year,
a
lot
of
projects
develop
operators
and
really
made
them
run
well
on
kubernetes
and
automation
and
I
definitely
want
to
dig
more
into
that.
Well,.
D
B
C
B
G
C
A
G
A
A
A
B
I
suspect
it'll
be
like
two
more
before
the
API
server
is
done,
but
I
definitely
am
looking
forward
to
like
finishing
that
out
just
in
time
for
all
the
stuff
that
I
talked
about
to
be
deprecated
and
start
playing
with
this,
but
I
think
you
know,
it's
I
think
it's
good
fun
the
fun
way
of
learning
to
explore
all
this
stuff.
You
don't
like.
D
C
F
A
C
Right
so
yes,
I,
think
like
okay
and
then
and
then
cpp
for
life
is
like
do
sort
of
a
survey.
Compare
and
contrast,
I
think
we've
done
that
with
series
where
we'll
do
like
one
tool
and
then
another
tool,
another
tool
and
do
a
little
compare
and
contrast,
but
I,
don't
think
we've
done
sort
of
like
an
overview
of
like
let's
go,
look
at
all
the
configuration
tools
and
talk
about
pros
and
cons.
That
might
be
a
good
episode.
C
C
A
C
G
Things
where
that
I
have
like
every
time,
unfortunately,
I
guess
you
all
don't
usually
see
this
one
is
every
time
I
start
I
feel
like
I'm.
Getting
this
echo
back
at
me
and
I'm
like
aw,
my
audios
messed
up.
They
were
like.
Why
don't
my
hearing
myself
again?
Can
anyone
guess
why
I
always
hear
myself
at
the
start,
because
you're
playing
it
because.
G
B
C
F
A
B
Know
one
that
got
me
was
here
in
the
so
I'm
we're
kind
of
the
office
and
severance
of
the
VMware
office
in
San,
Francisco
and
there's
the
wireless
network
and
there's
the
wired
network.
The
wired
network
does
not
allow
me
to
send
out
via
the
where
the
RTMP
protocol
or
whatever
to
youtube
so
I
have
to
do
it
via
the
wireless
I
opened
an
issue.
I
chased
it
down
nothing
and
so
because
of
that,
I've
actually
had
failures
where
for
some
reason,
Wireless
being
what
it
is
right.
B
C
Brian
informs
us
that
he
has
other
stuff
he
has
to
get
to
so
he
needs
mercy.
Thank
you
so
much
for
joining
us
Brian
and
we're
gonna.
Have
you
doing
more
episodes?
Don't
worry
yeah!
That's.
D
A
I
accidentally
blew
perd
Nova
during
a
show,
so
I
always
collect
cool
things
from
around
the
internet
that
are
related
and
Nova
always
does
things
that
you
know
she'll
cover
something
and
go
or
something
you
know
like
outside,
so
you
were
doing
cool,
UNIX
tools
or
something,
and
you
know
how
everyone
loves
little
hit.
Sir
power
line
go
props
that
go
in
your
terminal.
I
was
like.
Oh,
this
is
a
cool
one.
E
E
C
We
had
we
had
an
employee
early
on
who
brought
in
this
absolutely
enormous
Gong
and
and
it's
like
the
only
place
we
could
store.
The
thing
was
in
the
room
that
we
did,
t
gik
and
like
and
so
like.
It
was
always
in
the
background
in
the
early
episodes
and
I
think
I
hit
it
on
on
on
screen
months,
just
to
show
it
off,
but
then
we
would
like
when
we
had
like
milestones
or
like
big
sales
or
whatever
like
we
would
hit.
C
The
gong
and
I
know
that
there
was
one
episode
where
I
was
doing
like
a
and
the
Gong
was
actually
out
in
the
hallway
and
they
hit
it
while
I
was
TJ
and
I'm
like,
and
that
thing
was
loud
it
was
so
loud
I,
don't
know
you
know
no,
but
you
heard
it
I,
don't
know
if
the
rest
of
you
were
ever
ever
heard.
It.
E
C
B
Can
say
tools
that
I've
used
in
my
time
at
tjk
that
I
found
to
be
incredibly
useful.
Are
things
like
DRM
and
kind
which
are
two
projects
dear
employee,
like
move
into
a
directory
and
set
environment
variables
which
sounds
like
it
was
simplest
thing
in
the
world,
but
is
incredibly
valuable
and
the
other
one
is
kind
which
is
a
way
of
running,
including
these
locally
using
Ducker.
So
my
simply
coober
need
is
a
Ducker
like
what
are
some
tools
that
you
all
have
used
that
are
just
stuff
that
you
keep.
E
G
Tool
that
I
am
100%
going
to
be
using
going
forward
for
what
it's
worth
I,
don't
know
if
you
all
have
been
following
this,
but
Red
Hat
I,
believe
they
they
published
like
a
yamo
language
server.
Have
you
all
seen
this
speaking
to
like
Brian's
point
about
schema
based
editors
and
stuff?
Maybe
yes,
I
just
had
this
forever
yeah
it's
sick,
an
instrumental
and
I
think
particularly,
is
his
name.
Gareth
I
see.
F
G
Was
saying
alright,
okay,
cool
they've
got
the
commodities
json
schemas
that
they
published
for
every
version
when
it
comes
out
and
it's
super
rad.
So
what
you
do
is
you
just
pump
those
schemas
into
the
am
a
language
server
and
then
boom
vim
has
complete
documentation
and
auto
completion
of
kubernetes
yeah
Mel
and
I'm
I'm
guessing
privy
s
code,
probably
the
same
model
under
the
hood,
so
I'm
psyched
about
that,
so
that
all
of
you
watching
can
stop
watching
me
figure
out
what
API
I.
A
So
you
are
out
to
that
in
the
notes.
Josh
handy
one
I
think
will.
B
Do
yeah
yeah
we
need
it.
We
need
to
like
a
little
episode.
We
need
like
a
little.
You
know,
quick
how-to
on
that
trick.
That
sounds
like
that
sounds
pretty
cool
yeah
Gareth
Ashley
has
a
ton
of
stuff.
I
will
definitely
shout
out
to
Gareth,
like
he's
one
of
the
people
behind
comp
test
and
a
lot
of
the
tools
to
actually
allow
you
to
do
some
validation
of
yamo
before
you
try
to
submit
that
to
kubernetes
and
get
kicked,
I
mean
it's
incredibly
cool.
B
B
Definitely
what
I
want
to
do,
especially
because
it's
starting
to
firm
up
like
dual-stack,
yeah
and
so
I
know
that
there's
a
lot
of
work
in
the
current
project
to
try
and
get
that
to
a
place
where
we
can
start
using
it.
There
there's
already
some
might
be
Zechs
capability,
but
I
think
the
dual
stack
stuff
is
kind
of
like
being
developed.
B
I
think
kind
is
one
of
the
first
project,
that's
actually
doing
testing
or
validation
of
ipv6
stuff,
and
so
I
definitely
want
to
do
more
of
a
deep
dive
on
that
show
how
that
works.
Talk
about
some
of
the
interesting
trade-offs
and
that
kind
of
stuff
I
just
saw
that
Valerie
just
landed
the
key
proxy
Edition
stuff
for
that.
So
that's
now
a
possible
thing.
Instead
of
iptables,
which
is
huge
thing
to
grow
up
your
head
around,
so
go
Valerie,
yeah
and.
C
C
C
A
Good
but
I
also
do
want
to
end
up
with
thing
you're
looking
forward
the
most
in
2020
in
kubernetes
or
kubernetes.
Ecosystem
kind
of
I
want
to
finish
off
on
a
speculative
give
us
a
call
thing,
but
we
do
have
time
for
one
more
question:
does
anybody
in
the
audience
have
a
question?
Let's
give
them
a
chance.
A
E
G
E
E
B
Mean
there's
a
couple
that
are
interesting:
I'm
really
interested
in
seeing
what
psyllium
has
in
store
for
2020
I
I
feel
like
there's
a
lot
of
potential
there
that
hasn't
yet
been
realized,
but
they're,
but
they're
on
the
on
the
fast
path
to
get
it
realize.
So
that's
pretty
awesome.
I
think
it's
gonna
be
interesting
because
in
2020
we're
probably
going
to
see
the
deprecation
of
pod
security
policies
within
the
project
and
something's
going
to
have
to
step
up
to
replace
that
and
so
I.
Don't
know
that.
B
C
Don't
think
there's
gonna
be
one
answer
there
and
I
think
what
I
do.
Hope,
though,
is
that,
as
people
provide
higher
level
experiences
on
top
of
kubernetes,
they
don't
try
and
hide
the
raw
stuff
altogether
right
in
sort
of
graduated
things,
so
that
you
know,
if
you
hit
a
roadblock
with
the
easy,
easy
mode
you
can
actually
sort
of
like
you
know,
play
it
on
more
difficult
mode
to
do
what
you
need
to
do.
C
F
I
think
this
this
match
is
something
that
I've
learned
in
the
VMware
over
the
last
10
years.
Every
time
that
we
decide
to
wrap
something-
and
you
know
I,
hide
stuff
underneath
there's
so
much
innovation.
You
know
maybe
for
six
months
you
this
is
a
good
idea
and
then
suddenly
everybody
underneath
innovates
and
suddenly
the
referee
is
it's
a
thing.
That's
that
prevents
you
from
using
the
value.
So
you
know
for
chameleons.
F
C
C
You
know
useful
for
load,
balancers,
kubernetes,
aware
the
topology
aware,
routing
sort
of
as
we
look
at
sort
of
bigger,
larger
topologies
I
think
that
that's
a
little
bit
of
an
advanced
move
and
I
think
it's
going
to
be
I,
think
you
know
users
who
are
really
trying
to
squeeze
out
the
late.
You
know
the
the
most
out
of
it
will
probably
use
that,
but
I
don't
think
it's
going
to
be
a
super
common
for
most
users
at
least
early
on
there's.
B
Polity,
stuff,
I
think
always
I'm
curious
about
it's
like
it
feels
like
when
you
get
into
topology,
where
stuff
you're
subdividing
a
fault
domain
in
ways
where
you
might
just
consider
the
fault
domain
to
be
the
entirety
entity
rather
than
you
know,
try
to
figure
out
how
to
subdivide
routing
with
some
particular
fault
domain,
so
that
you
have
like
different
failure.
Models
for
particular
types
of
traffic
right,
like
like
one
of
the
topology
models,
was
the
idea
that
you
could
actually
keep
traffic
within
an
availability
zone.
B
Even
though
the
cluster
is
spread
across
multiple
availability
zones
within
a
region.
All
right,
so
you
wouldn't
have
to
pay.
That
interval
is
own
cost
and
I'm
like,
but
why
not?
Just
have
the
cluster
being
and
an
availability
zone
and
bundle
the
entire
fault
domain
there,
and
so
it
I
think
it's
interesting
I
think
it's
an
interesting
study
and
trying
to
figure
out
what
the
right
line
for
that
is.
C
E
You
know,
integrations
and
finding
ways
or
reinstating
how
we're
describing
the
cluster
API
objects
and
then
later
enforcing
those
downstream
I'm
really
excited
about
seeing
the
cluster
API
in
like
a
non-print
scenario
and
watching
how
we're
solving
like
dealing
with
node
infrastructure
at
that
level.
When
you
don't
have
something
like
a
cloud
where
you
can
just
pull
it
from
like
give
me
the
credit
card
number
so
I
think
it's
just.
It's
gonna
be
cool.
A
Alright,
sorry
Evan
all
right
what
about
Suresh
visually.
A
A
Here
on
Twitter
or
my
email
address
and
I'll
have
extra
t-shirts,
so,
if
you've
gotten
something
valuable
out
of
TGI
K
mail
me
anyway,
who
knows
I
might
be
in
a
good
mood
to
send
out
way
more
t-shirts.
Oh,
we
definitely
love
to
spread
them.
Love
with
that.
So
do
we
want
to
close
it
up
to
one
outro
here.
Does.
C
A
C
Why
don't
you
start?
Let's
start
with,
let's
start
with
you,
George
I.
A
Just
I
appreciate
everyone
listening
and
helping
out,
especially
those
of
you
that
help
out
taking
the
notes
and
things
like
that.
It
just
makes
things
a
lot
easier
for
us
to
spread
the
love
and
spread
the
tools
and
things
like
that
and,
as
always
feel
free
to
continue
to
interact
with
us
on
github
of
things.
You'd
want
to
see.
E
I'm
fading
fast
to
your
folks.
It's
been
a
long
day
for
me,
but
I
think
the
first
thing
I'd
want
to
say
is
like
thanks
for
letting
me
be
a
part
of
it,
letting
me
come
back,
and
so
we
did
and
just
joining
this
you
know,
TJ
haze
helped
me
and
it's
helpful
lot
of
other
people.
So
just
a
lot
of
gratitude
here.
Well.
C
F
B
Thanks
thanks,
everybody
I,
say:
I
put
it
in
the
post.
I
said
you.
Yes,
you
listening
to
my
voice
or
reading
in
the
chat
or
just
watching
this
later.
Thank
you
for
being
a
part
of
this
I
mean
like
it's
incredible,
like
I'm,
really
glad
to
be
a
part
of
it
myself
and
I'm
really
glad
that
you're
here
and
you're
the
reason
we're
doing
it.
So
keep
being
you.
You
know
like.
G
Well
and
from
me,
thanks
for
awesome,
20:19
everyone
for
the
audience,
especially
thanks
for
being
so
welcoming
to
the
newcomers
coming
into
t
GI
k
like
it's
pretty
nerve-wracking
to
like
hop
in
front
of
a
big
audience
and
the
feedback
you
got
and
everything
is
just
so
encouraging
and
amazing.
So
I'm,
looking
forward
to
see
what
we
all
learned
together
in
2020
yeah.
C
Well,
I
just
want
to
say
you
know,
thank
you
to
the
community
I
think,
like
Mike
Duffy
says
every
time
we
log
on,
and
we
see
folks
from
you
know
all
over
the
world
joining
in
being
part
of
it.
That's
super
fun
and
I.
Think
there's
a
lot
of
folks
outside
of
you
know
that
can't
watch
it
live,
and
so,
when
I
go
to
conferences
when
I
run
into
people,
there's
there's
a
lot
of
folks
out
there
that
you
know
have
been
watched,
binge
watched
it
or
you
know,
watched
it
with
their
team
and
I.
C
Think
that
that's
great
and
so
and
then
beyond
that
I
mean
like
I
love,
you
know
being
able
to
turn
it
from.
You
know
just
me
to
finding
to
other
folks
who
are
sort
of
bringing
their
own
take
their
own
flavor
here
and
so
I
definitely
want
to
find
new
ways
to
expand
the
sort
of
set
of
faces
that
we
see
online
here
and
I
also
think
that,
like
finding
a
ways
to
have
it
more
be
interactive
versus
just
a
single
person
is
something
that
I
want
us
to.