►
From YouTube: wasmCloud Community Meeting - 19 April 2023
Description
Welcome to the wasmCloud community! Tune in live where we discuss the latest developments in the wasmCloud ecosystem, WebAssembly standards, and break out sweet demos.
Agendas for wasmCloud community meetings can be found at: https://wasmcloud.com/community
A
Wasn't
even
I'm
gonna
do
it
for
a
second.
We
did
a
couple
of
talks.
Taylor
and
I
both
had
talks.
We
we
talked
together
and
then
Taylor
did
a
talk
at
Cloud
native
rejects,
which
was
a
few
days
ago,
which
is
fun.
A
I
did
a
talk
yesterday
at
wasm
day,
which
was
a
lot
of
fun.
I'm,
not
gonna,
not
gonna
spoil
anything
about
it.
All
of
the
reportings
are
gonna
be
out
here
in
a
few
days,
so
you'll
be
able
to
see
it,
but
I
had
a
lot
of
fun,
putting
it
together
and
then
Bailey
had
one
of
the
basically
keynote
talks
in
the
beginning.
So.
A
This
Friday,
it's
gonna,
be
on
like
events
listing
in
Wazoo
Valley,
so
all
the
stuff
that
he
demoed
about
importance
and
all
those
things
like
he's
going
to
be
doing
that
live
on
stage,
which
is
that's
gonna,
be
pretty
fun.
I'm
excited
to
see
how
that
one
turns
out.
A
Also
hello,
everyone
who
may
be
tuning
in
on
the
streaming
platforms.
We're
just
doing
a
quick
community
meeting
today
live
at
live
at
kubecon,
so
just
want
to
be
able
to
check
in
and
keep
the
street
going,
having
a
lot
of
fun
conversations
over
here.
A
So
if
you're
in
Amsterdam
actually
doing
coupon
feel
free
to
come
by
either
the
watsonpod
project
booth
in
the
cncf
Pavilion
or
you
know,
some
of
us
are
going
to
be
hanging
out
at
the
cosmonic
booth
at
su-36
or
whatever
area
so
I
guess:
I
I,
of
course,
I
didn't
plan
anything
for
this
meeting
because
then
it
would
be
you'd
be
pretty
relaxed.
Does
anybody
have
anything
they
wanted
to
chat
about
here,
while
we're
hanging
out.
B
A
Oh
yeah,
well,
you
know
we
got
a
lot
of
kubernetes
stuff
which
I
didn't
go
to
any
of
the
talks
today.
A
I've
mostly
been
at
the
booth,
but
it
wasn't
day
we
got
to
see
a
pretty
exciting
demo
coming
out
of
fastly
and
VMware
I
think
my
brain
is
kind
of
turned
to
Mush
at
this
point,
but
it
showed
a
JavaScript
webassembly
component
and
a
rust
webassembly
component,
interacting
with
each
other,
which
is
pretty
awesome
to
see,
had
a
really
cool
talk
on
interpreted
languages,
so
one
of
the
guys
or
two
guys
who
were
talking
about
getting
Python
and
PHP
and
Ruby
to
really
work
efficiently
with
interpreted
languages
which
was
pretty
exciting
because
we're
lack
of
a
better
way
of
saying
it.
A
A
Let's
see,
Kelsey
Hightower
did
the
keynote
or
the
the
first
keynote
for
Lawson
day
yesterday,
which
there
were
certainly
people
walking
around
trying
to
see
what
he
was
talking
about
with
webassembly,
but
he
had
some
fun.
He
had
some
fun
insights.
He
opened
the
talk
with
my
favorite
lines
to
open
a
talk
ever,
which
is
I.
A
Don't
really
know
that
much
about
walzing
but
and
then
kind
of
went
into
the
rest
of
his
Spiel,
but
he
he
did
some
really
good
I
think
he
has
a
really
good
grasp
of
what's
going
on
in
the
wase
industry
right
now,
I
did
take
kind
of
live
commentary,
while
all
the
talks
were
happening
during
wasm
day
yesterday,
and
so,
if
you
guys
wanted
to,
let
me
see
if
I
can
navigate
there.
He
all
wanted
to
see.
A
Actually
what
that
looks
like
I
put
that
it's
on
the
cosmonic
log,
because
that's
what
that's
what
we
posted
there
from,
but
I
actually
took
notes
from
every
single
talk.
So
if
you
wanted
just
like
a
quick
tldr,
what
the
day
looked
like,
that
is
a
that's
a
great
like
little
little
tldr,
there's
a
I
love.
I
know
little
to
nothing
about
was
in
just
the
real
quote:
that's
the
that's!
The
Insider
scoop
to
only
other
thing
that
I
think
was
really
exciting.
To
mention.
A
Is
I
I've
been
to
a
few
coupons
now
talking,
AS,
cosmonic,
Slash,
watching
cloud
and
over
time
the
ratio
of
people
when
I
ask
have
you
heard
of
webassembly
before
just
goes
up
and
up
and
up
almost
everyone
that
I
talked
to
today
has
heard
of
webassembly,
even
if
they
haven't
been
using
it
and
that's
you
know,
maybe
10
percent
of
the
people
when
I
talk
to
them
at
kubecon
and
Valencia
knew
what
webassembly
was
so
it's
really
exciting.
Actually,
somebody
said
back
to
me
who
hasn't
and
that's
a
that's,
a
cool
response.
A
It's
it's
really
starting
to
hit
that
buzz
and
I
think
with
the
component
model,
wrapping
up
and
I'm
getting
reaching
Wazi
later.
This
fall.
That's
going
to
be
a
really
exciting,
inflections
point
for
webassembly,
so
it's
just
always
cool
to
meet
other
people
in
person
who
are
excited
about
the
same
stuff,
and
you
know
all
those
things.
A
A
You
know
there
is
a
booth.
Here
is
a
booth
here
that
the
tagline
says,
chat
GPT
for
developers,
and
so
that's
already
hidden
companies
and
stuff
I
didn't
go
over.
Maybe
I
should
go
over.
I
should
see
what
they're
about
before
I'm
in
judgments,
but
anyways
guys
well,
I.
Think
that
that
that's
probably
what
I've
got
the
bandwidths
for
we're
kind
of
doing.
The
booth
boost
crawl
right
now,
so
I'll
get
back
to
chatting
with
folks
and
we'll
come
back
in
full
course.
A
Next
week,
with
some
of
the
some
of
the
insights
and
fun
stuff
coming
out,
oh
I
I
can't
believe
I
I
almost
didn't
leave
it
with
this.
If
there's
anything
that
I
have
to
mention
from
the
Lawson
Cloud
side,
it's
that
we
actually
wrapped
up
a
big
effort
and
huge
credit
to
Taylor
who's
been
pushing
a
lot
of
this
forward
and
implementing
the
core
logic
here
on
Autumn.
So
just
the
other
day
we
cut
the
zero
four
zero
Alpha
One
tag.
A
This
marks
the
kind
of
redesign
and
rewriting
autumn
in
Rust
and
kind
of
reaching
feature
parity
with
the
previous
version.
Alongside
with
a
lot
of
new
features
like
a
persistent
thing
in
jet
stream,
and
we're
going
to
be
bundling
this
simple
wash
here
soon
enough,
so
I
guess
I
can
go
ahead.
I
already
have
this
all
set
up.
A
I
might
as
well
show
you
the
demo
that
I'm
doing
at
the
booth,
but
what
we
have
here
is
Echo
is
just
my
my
thing
on
its
own,
but
I
have
the
animal
image
downloader
sample.
This
is
one
actor
and
then
three
capability
providers
and
the
links-
and
this
is
actually
all
being
supervised
by
water.
So
it's
it's
instructed
to
keep
at
least
one
instance
on
this
host.
If
I
drop
the
number
of
instances
down
to
zero,
you
can
see
that
hopefully
I'm
running
water
still,
maybe
I'm,
not
of
course
I'm.
A
Not
there.
We
go
cool,
so
I
can
do
the
same
thing
with
the
capability
providers.
If
I,
if
I
delete
the
provider,
a
lot
of
them
will
say:
oh
there's
less
than
or
required
so
I'll
start
that
one
again
same
thing
all
the
way
across
the
system.
If
I
delete
a
link
depth,
it's
actually
really
hard
to
see,
but
you
can
see
a
flash
for
a
second,
but
Autumn
is
actually
watching
all
these
resources
and
making
sure
that
they're
still
running.
So
that's
a
pretty
pretty
exciting
thing
to
put
out.
A
We've
got
some
basic
documentation
in
there
now,
but
we're
looking
to
add
more
to
the
wasmo
cloud
site
as
soon
as
we
can
get
over
kind
of
the
conference
craziness,
so
yeah
I'm
glad
that
I
caught
that
right
at
the
end,
it's
pretty
exciting
and
we'll
be
able
to
give
a
more
in-depth
bottom
demo.
We'll
probably
do
it
next
week,
it's
a
it's
a
pretty
exciting
we'll
do
it
end
to
end
with
launching
everything
wash
and
all
of
that.
A
Justin,
oh
okay,
now
Advanced
to
answer
your
question:
what
was
it
written
in
before
it
was
actually
written
in
Elixir,
we
were
using
some
Elixir
libraries
to
monitor
the
state
of
the
lattice
and
there
is
actually
an
RFC
that
I'll
pull
up
really
quick
for
why
he
decided
to
rewrite
it
and
Russ,
and
it's
it's
multi-pronged.
There
were.
A
There
were
a
couple
of
different
reasons,
not
to
mention
the
fact
that
we
needed
to
tidy
it
up
and
productionize
it,
but
we
wanted
to
make
sure
that
we
could
bundle
it
in
with
our
our
wash
CLI.
We
wanted
to
make
it
something
that
is
safe
and
secure,
has
The
Primitives
of
rust
and
as
something
that
people
can
contribute
to,
and
you
know
as
as
Justin
said,
to
be
completely
honest
in
our
ecosystem.
A
There's
a
lot
of
thrust,
especially
like
in
the
webassembly
space
and
overlap
between
Elixir
and
webassembly,
is
kind
of
small,
and
we
want
to
have
something.
That's
that
feels
really
good,
especially
something
like
a
deployment
manager.
We
want
people
who
have
experience
creating
deployment
managers,
reconciliation
with
some
sense
of
algorithm
yeah.
He
was
contributing,
but
that
issue
a
lot
of
an
issue.
40
has
a
lot
more
information.
A
All
right,
everybody
well
I,
think
this
is
probably
gonna
call
the
end
of
the
meeting,
but
we'll
we'll
see
you
next
week
that
really
and
for
anybody
who's
watching
live
I,
definitely
started
this
like
40
minutes
late.
So
really
big
props
to
you
all
for
hanging
out
for
a
little
bit
all
right
thanks.
Everyone.