►
Description
wasmCloud is a platform for writing portable business logic that can run anywhere from the edge to the cloud, that boasts a secure-by-default, boilerplate-free developer experience with rapid feedback loop.
B
A
Cloud
wednesday
for
september
the
first
this
week
we
don't
have
a
demo,
so
I'm
gonna
go
and
hand
it
off
to
steve
and
we
can
go
ahead
and
take
a
look
at
where
we
are
on
the
board
for
the
otp
release.
Steve.
C
There
we
go
look,
everything's
got
everything's
done
all
right,
so
we've
been
working
on
the
otp
release,
which
we've
called
the
dot
15.50.
C
We
also
call
it
the
mvp
and
that's
the
first
release
that
has
the
the
wasm
cloud
host
implemented
in
elixir
and
new
smithy
based
cogeneration,
a
new
web
dashboard
and
a
javascript
post
that
runs
in
a
browser
right
now,
so
we're
using
zen
zenhub
here
to
to
organize
the
issues.
The
stuff
that's
left
is
really
tidying
things
up,
there's
some
documentation.
C
C
I
need
to
move
some
of
these
zoom
windows
out
of
the
way.
So
I
can
scroll.
C
All
right
well,
so
this
is
one
of
the
sort
of
overview
that
has
all
of
the
different
repos,
where
we
need
to
update
the
github
actions
to.
C
Automate
automate
things
there's
also
one
for
documentation,
something
I
I
read
wrote
about
in
the
slack
posting
in
western
cloud.
General
last
night
was
about
the
the
new
lattice
controller
that
kevin
just
started.
Working
on
it's
a
a
great
piece
of
technology.
That's
going
to
help,
make
the
whole
wasm
cloud
lattice,
more
scalable
and
more
reliable.
C
So
I
don't
do,
does
anybody
have
any
questions
about
any
part
of
this
or
what?
What
I
could
say
just
just
to
summarize
this
week
and
next
week,
we'll
be
finishing
up
the
documentation
and
the
testing
and
the
automation.
C
We're
also
work
working
on
a
big,
some
tutorials
getting
started,
tutorials
that
are
going
to
be
on
wesomcloud.dev,
so
you'll
start
seeing
that
roll
out
in
the
next
few
days
as
well.
So
we're
getting
pretty
close
to
to
telling
to
opening
the
gates
and
saying
please,
please
jump
on
it.
We
love
feedback.
I
know
smu
are
already
playing
with
it
and
we
love
to
get
your
the
feedback
and
hear
about
what
you're
doing
and
be
happy
to
offer
assistance
to
make
sure
you
have
a
successful,
getting
started.
A
Yeah,
we're
we've
got
some
brainstorming
time
carved
out
later
today,
but
with
all
the
new
capabilities,
we're
really
trying
to
think
through.
What's
the
demo,
we
can
give
that
really
drives
the
aha
and
oh
wow
moments
with
the
new
capabilities,
so
some
of
the
early
script
ideas
we
have
are
you
know,
starting
with
a
qr
code
that
lets
people.
You
know
open
this
up
on
browsers
or
a
copy
here
link
so
that
they
join
a
piece
of
the
network.
A
It's
intended
to
be
part
of
an
interactive
demo
that
we
would
do
and
then
proceed
into.
You
know
showing
that
this
code,
that
they're
now
running
independently
as
a
web
browser
host,
has
joined
this
broader.
You
know
distributed
application
and
how
it
can
participate.
A
So
if
anybody
has
any
conceptual
ideas,
I
think
that's
wonderful,
honestly,
david
and
stuart
for
the
demo
that
you
guys
are
doing
you
guys
have
put
so
much
effort
into
it.
It's
already
open
source.
I
would
ask
about
the
possibility
of
pulling
this
in
as
a
formal
demo.
You
know
into
the
into
wasn't
cloud
core
that
we
can
build
around
and
that's
probably
an
idea.
A
I
should
have
socialized
with
you
privately
before
trying
to
put
you
on
the
spot,
so
we
can
talk
about
it
later
or
if
you
want
to
comment
now,
we
can,
you
know
kind
of
discuss
it
now,
a
bit.
D
Definitely
up
for
that
for
sure
yeah,
the
the
the
talk
that
we've.
The
synopsis
includes
the
declarative
like
declaration
of
lattice
configuration,
but
if
we
get
there,
we
get
there
that's
great,
but
if
we
don't
we,
we
can
always
pull
it
back
to
the
demo
that
we
did
to
the
client,
which
is
great
in
its
own
right.
So
but
for
sure
we
contribute
that
definitely.
A
Okay,
that
would
be
incredible,
I
think
you
know
the
the
better
together
story
with
you
know,
like
wasn't
cloud
and
web
assembly
running
inside
of
kubernetes
is
such
a
great
starting
point,
because
it's
the
bridge
to
what's
next,
which
is
running
it
outside
of
kubernetes
as
well,
and
it
sort
of
gets
people
on
the
path
to
you
know
using
their
existing
infrastructure,
their
existing
tests.
So
those
are
things
that
when
I've
talked
to
people
about
hey,
how
could
we
get
a
poc
going?
A
That
is
seems
to
be
a
fertile
starting
point
there.
So
we
could
definitely
pick
that
up
offline,
stuart
and
david
and
team.
So
I
just
I've
been
following
the
progress
on
it
and
obviously
it
really
you
guys
drove
the
prioritization
of
the
of
the
new
repo
that
I
just
added
you
guys
to
the
wasm
cloud
kubernetes
operator
and
you
guys
are
both
maintainers
on
that.
A
If
you
need
admin,
just
let
me
know
I'll
just
bump
you
up
there
as
well,
so
that
we
can
continue
to
leverage
kevin's
work
around
the
lattice
controller
and
the
new
declarative
states
and
all
that
and
all
the
design
on
that
work.
So
you
know
we're
towards
the
tail
end.
We
are
scheduled.
A
We
are
thinking
about
scheduling,
a
launch
party
for
the
third
week
of
september
and
do
a
pr
I'd
love
to
do
it
as
a
combined
team,
bourbon
tasting,
so
I
likely
will
just
put
that
out
with
some
invites
and
try
to
schedule
it
at
a
time.
A
So
it's
not
too
late
for
the
folks
in
the
uk
or
too
early
for
the
folks
on
the
west
coast,
but
I
think
one
of
you
are
going
to
so
you're,
both
going
to
end
up
either
drinking
early
or
late
and
I'll
maybe
try
to
drink
it,
the
right
time.
You
know
we
could
be
the
goldilocks
of
bourbon.
You
know
this
one's
too
late,
this
one's
too
early,
this
one's
right
at
five
o'clock,
so
watch
for
an
invite
there
and
our
plan
is
to
roll
out
and
do
a
demo.
A
You
know
this
kind
of
grab
your
attention
demo,
where
we
start
in
the
web
browser
and
sort
of
slide
people
down
the
stack
here
for
that
that
would
likely
be
some
of
the
similar
demos
that
we
do
for
our
kubecon
talk.
We
have
a
main
main
talk
and
a
wasm
day
presentation
as
well,
so
roadmap
does
that
kind
of
cover.
What
the
next
few
weeks
look
like
here
from
team
steve
kevin?
Are
there
other
things
we
should
highlight.
A
All
right,
I
think,
that's
a
pretty
good.
What's
next
jennifer
did
you
want
to
do
a
quick
intro?
I
know
you
were
a
little.
You
were
getting
to
a
new
location,
a
little
unbreakable
under.
E
Prepared
hi,
my
name
is
janita.
I
got
introduced
to
this
because
I
was
curious
about
so
I'm
working
at
the
current
role.
I'm
actually
doing
some
extensions
to
kubernetes
and
to
istio
and
to
do
the
extensions
to
sdo
is
actually
looking
at
proxy
wasm,
and
I
saw
that
that
it
is
a
new
standard,
that's
available
for
seo
and
writing
stuff
in
through
the
event
handlers,
and
I
saw
that
the
ecosystem
was
a
little
bit
weak.
So
I
kind
of
reached
out
to
somebody
that
I
knew
who
was
ali
owens.
E
I
guess
at
some
point
in
time.
She'd
actually
worked
on
this
team
before
and
she
said
hey.
Why?
Don't
you
talk
to
these
guys
and
see?
What's
actually
going
on?
So
I
think
I
think
what
you
I
don't
actually
have
a
very
good
feel
for
exactly
like.
I
know
awesome
cloud
is
like
everybody's
actually
kind
of
in
it
and
from
what
I
see.
Actually,
there
isn't
too
much
of
an
overlap
between
proxy.
Wasn't
man
and
wasn't
cloud,
but
still
is
curious
and
I'm
interested
to
hopefully
contribute.
E
I
think
it's
an
interesting
space
because
I
think
it's
kind
of
a
strong,
competitive
idea
to
kubernetes
and
for
doing
stuff
in
well
cloud
virtual
cloud,
whatever
you
actually
want
to
call
it
from
there
yeah.
I.
A
I
think
the
embedded
use
case
for
wasm,
as
you
know,
like
basically
a
embeddable
host
to
run
other
people's
untrusted
code,
is
an
obvious
slam.
Dunkin,
I
think
in
the
kukan
eu
keynote
that
I
gave,
that
was
actually
one
of
the
things
that
highlighted
was
not
just
you
know,
envoy,
but
other
projects
looking
at
adopting
it
it's
what
the
the
folks
out
of
germany
coup,
what
are
they?
What's?
A
The
name
of
their
they're
doing
they've
got
a
new
open
source
project
where
they're
doing
mission
controllers
in
you
know
using
webassembly
as
the
execution
engine.
So
that
would
be
another
good
reference
point
for
you
as
well,
and
so
I
think
it's
a
great
it's
an
incredible
use
case
and
I've
often
thought
about
how
we
could
help
facilitate
wasm
cloud's
use
there
if
we
feel
like
it's
a
good
fit
and
something
worth
pursuing,
so
I'll
make
sure
if
you
can
geneva.
A
If
did
I
pronounce
it
correctly,
if
jeannie
said,
if
you
can
drop
your
email
address
to
me
privately
as
a
dm
I'll,
add
you
to
our
slack,
and
maybe
we
can
pick
up
the
discussion
there
around.
A
You
know
some
ways
that
we
could
collaborate
if
it
works
out
and
if
not
we'd
love
to,
we
also
spent
some
time
after
call
just
you
know
introducing
wazing
cloud
to
you
and
you
know
where
we
see
our
fit
and
stuff
like
that,
I'm
good
great,
so
quick
community
news,
so
the
tentative
bourbon
tasting
otp
launch
third
week
of
september
yesterday.
There
was
an
event
out
of
germany
called
wasm
day.
I
will
link
it
in
the
notes.
A
Much
of
the
content.
The
content
was
mixed,
german
in
english,
but
it
looked
like
there
was
some
great
talks
there.
We
did
a
big
announce
through
last
week.
I
think
everybody
saw
about
wasm
cloud
joining
cncf,
so
there's
about
a
dozen
or
so
articles
I'll,
also
link
in
the
notes,
the
folks
who
want
to
review
those,
but
the
two
articles
on
the
new
stack
were
pretty
representative
mary
branscombe
and
the
other
ones
there
was.
A
We
were
on
the
washington
club
or
the
new
stack
podcast
last
week
for
an
hour
a
little
over
an
hour
which
was
a
great
as
a
roundtable.
So
if
anybody
wanted
to
check
that
out,
I
think
it
was
worthwhile.
Matt
butcher
was
there
and
a
handful
of
other
folks
from
the
community
and
then
looking
ahead,
we've
got
wasm
day
and
kubecon
n
a
both
scheduled
for
the
week
of
october.
11Th
wasn't
cloud,
is
posted.
Wasn't
cloud
day
is
posted.
A
You
have
until
september
3rd
to
register
for
your
speaker,
badges.
If
you
haven't
done
that,
yet
I
don't,
I
can
go
in
and
check
stuart
and
david.
I
know
you
guys
have
a
talk,
but
just
make
sure
you
get
that
registration
done
or
it
drives
another
process
on
on
our
side.
Right
now,
the
plan
is,
is
that
wasm
that
kubecon
is
open?
I
just
said
we
had
the
marketing
call
earlier
today
for
all
of
kubecon.
A
There
are
approximately
a
little
over
100
talks,
scheduled
about
half
of
which
are
scheduled
to
be
in
person
right
now.
They
they
don't
think
that
california
or
the
city
of
la
will
shut
down
the
event,
and
so
they
are
expecting
around
4
000
attendees,
I
think
most
of
the
4
000
attendees
will
be
vendors
or
people
that
are
there.
A
So
I
don't
expect
the
floor
to
be
busy
on
our
side,
we're
going
to
try
to
double
down
and
invest
on
the
online
presence
and
the
online
booth
and
the
online
experience
we're
still
working
on
a
plan
for
live
talks
if
they
need
to
go
virtual,
how
those
presentations
will
happen,
which
is
something
that
kind
of
worries
me
a
little
bit.
But
we
still
got
lots
of
time
to
see
it
six
weeks
before
showtime.
On
that
any
questions
on
community
events.
A
B
B
You
know,
writing
a
little
bit
of
code
here
and
there
you
know
right
now,
I'm
just
sort
of
juggling
the
work
on
the
lattice
controller,
with
the
work
to
you
know,
button
up
all
of
our
documentation
stuff
and
get
the
the
dot
5.0
release
out
the
door.
C
If
are
there
any
particular
demos
people
would
like
to
see-
and
I
know
liam
asked
about
demos,
but
I'm
referring
to
sample
code
in
any
particular
areas-
you're
really
interested
in
or
capability
providers
that
you're
struggling
with
or
thinking
about
that
would
be
useful
to
add
to
our
collection
of
sample
code.
D
We
contributed
a
to
do
actor
which
we're
gonna
rewrite
for
the
otp
release
and
resubmit
back.
So
that
would
be
one
one
actor,
but
yeah
that's
what
they
all
need
doing
really.
A
Okay,
steve,
I
think,
we'll
you
know,
I
think
we're
gonna
be
driving
a
bit
of
the
demonstration
stuff
and
we've
kind
of
broken
it
down
into.
I
think
three
buckets
of
themes.
You
know,
there's
the
new
wash
work,
there's
the
new
webassembly,
a
washboard
work,
I'm
sorry
the
web
assembly
host
and
then
all
the
new
capabilities
that
otp
brings
to
the
table,
which
is
pretty
extensive.
But
those
are,
I
think,
the
three
buckets
of
things
that
we'd
highlight
from
the
release
perspective
kevin.
A
A
Okay,
well,
I
guess
the
open
floor
for
any
other
issues
that
we'd
want
to
discuss
today.
I
think
we're
all
kind
of
heads
down
on
really
trying
to
get
the
otp
release
out
the
door.
Khao
shiki.
Anything
you
want
to
raise.
Oh
captain,
do
you
want
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
the
react
stuff
that
you
were
pulling
together
in
the
web
script
on
the
javascript
host
yep.
F
Apps,
the
only
caveat
is
you
need
to
use
webpack,
five
or
like
es,
build
pretty
much
one
of
the
modern,
modern
bundlers,
and
I
put
that
note
in
there
in
the
inside
the
readme
and
that's
just
because
the
there's
a
web
assembly
file
that
needs
to
get
copied
over
to
the
final
distribution
output,
but
otherwise
yeah
I've
got
I've
even
got
like
a
simple
example
in
there
now
so
feel
free
to
use
it
test
it
out
open
up
issues.
F
Let
me
know
of
any
feedback,
and
I
can
I
can
continue
to
add
more
features
to
it
too.
A
A
So
you
could
run
you
know,
wasmcloud
in
the
wasmcloud
admin
panel
or
possibly
in
the
future,
even
have
the
run,
the
host
and
the
host
and
the
host
that
that
sort
of
recursive
nature
there.
So
I
asked
brooks
to
just
think
about
that.
A
little
bit
steve
had
an
idea
about
having
an
interactive
debugger.
Maybe
in
washboard
would
be
a
neat
a
thing
so
that
if
you
wanted
to
debug
something
you
could
pull
it
into
the
washboard
admin
panel
and
kind
of
step
through
something
or
something
along
those
lines.
A
So
I
like,
I,
love
all
those
ideas
and
it
feels
like
we're
really
thinking
about
the
developer
experience,
but
we'll
try
to
get
some
of
that
stuff
curated
out
into
a
backlog
of
maybe
roadmap
ideas.
F
A
All
right
all
right!
Well,
I
mean
I
think
we
may
want
to
think
about
what
else
we
can
do
with
the
konami
code.
You
know
in
washboard,
you
know,
maybe
this
unlocks
a
new
set
of
capabilities
or
the
ability
to
order
a
t-shirt
or
something
along
those
lines.
I
don't
know
you
know
all
sorts
of
things
that
we
could
potentially
potentially
do
with
with
washboard
now
as
its
own
separate
host,
while
it's
managing
otp
hosts.
So
I
like
that.
A
Jordan,
I
plan
to
hit
you
up
about
the
training
stuff.
Again,
all
the
things
you
did
with
katakota
last
time
with
the
new
otp
release,
but
I'll
follow
up
with
you
with
that
offline,
any
other
issues
or
david
stewart.
Anything
you
guys
want
to
bring
up
around
the
work.
You
guys
are.
You
know,
driving
through.
D
Only
that
we
recognize
it's
lower
priority
than
the
current
release,
work
that
you're
doing
which-
and
we
totally
get
that
so
we
really
don't
want
to
get
in
the
way
of
that.
So
we'll
always
take
a
backseat.
A
Well,
the
from
our
deadlines
perspective.
You
guys
have
the
10th
for
it
to
turn
in
your
talk
right,
you're,
recording,
yeah.
A
And
we
don't
have
to
get
the
the
on-prem
talks
in
until
the
first
and
we
only
have
to
give
copies
of
the
decks.
So
I
don't
have
a
I'm,
I'm
fine.
If
we're
you
know,
if
we're
doing
some
stunt
hacking,
wait.
Hacking
stunts
stunt
hacking.
That
was
that
the
term
used
to
try
to
get
this
out
the
door
from
a
priority
perspective
on
our
side.
You
know
I
mean
I
because
I
want
your
demo
to
be
amazing,
because
it's
coming
from
it's
being
driven
by
a
big
end
user.
So
that
feels
like.
A
No,
no
disagreement,
so
I
think
I
think
you
guys
are
top
priority.
Let's
get
you
guys
out
the
door
and
get
that
demo
awesome
for
the
recording
on
the
10th
and
even
if
we
slip
dates
back
a
week.
We
got
plenty
of
time
to
do.
You
know
an
announcement
before
kubecon
and
then
sailing
into
kubecon
with
you
know
a
new
version,
that's
out
and
probably
give
us
a
little
more
time
to
get
documentation,
policed
up
and
think
about
updating
the
interactive
tutorials.
A
I
I've
always
been
impressed
with
how
many
people
go
through
those
you
know,
but
we
have
regular
engagement
of
you
know.
You
know
20
to
up
to
100
hours
a
week
of
people
just
clicking
through
those
tutorials,
and
actually
you
know
learning
how
to
use
it,
and
you
know
it's
evidenced
by
you
know
people
just
showing
up
on
slack
and
you
know
other
talks
and
things
like
that
that
people
are
actually
using
this
stuff.
A
So
I
think
the
investments
in
the
stuff
that
scales
independent
of
our
efforts
are
totally
worth
it
from
from
a
priority
perspective.