 Hey everybody, I'm Jen and welcome to the open source calm weekly top five Every Friday, we bring you the top five articles from the past week. So let's jump right in All right at number five We have the future of open source as a better user experience Nick Yeats writes that his favorite open source software survey is the annual one by black duck software that asks What is the future of open source software to Nick to be the future? Open source needs to move from scratching an inch to better user experience Read more about how open source can do this in this timely article at number four We have being responsible open source user new contributor to open source comm Jason van gupster talks about what it means to be a Responsible open source user really because aren't we all in this together? open source communities thrive on Collaboration and communication so we the users are the quality control documentation and marketing departments, for example So Jason tells us how we can be better and all three in this article At number three the open source projects that transformed Hadoop Jonathan Buckley the interim chief marketing officer at Kubole a platform for big data analytics takes a look at how three open source Projects have transformed the Hadoop ecosystem. They are Hive spark and Presto At number two why large companies use open source ERP? Hans Baker tells open source ER talks about open source ERPs or enterprise resource planning systems Open source ERP systems He says are great for large organizations because a new interface shell is created outside of the core system Whereas with commercial systems the existing interface is customized which makes upgrades difficult He also says it's valuable to own your own system. You can do it yourself in the end or hire a provider Finally at number one Google shares GRPC as Alternative to res for microservices Luis Ibanez a software engineer at Google goes into detail in this article about the recently released Google remote procedure call for servers called GRPC GRPC is based on the recently finalized HTTP to standard that enables new capabilities and provides libraries for multiple languages Find the source code on GitHub, which includes extensive documentation and a main web page All right, everybody. That's it. Thanks so much for joining me find the articles in the notes below as well And the article that we publish every Friday, and I'll see you next time. Thanks