 Welcome to the second OpenShift Commons gathering here in Berlin. The last time we did this, it was in Seattle. There were 175 of you. It was the day before KubeCon again. And now there are, I think, 220 of you here, which is pretty amazing for just a couple of months. And a lot of good work has gone in from the whole OpenShift team and the Red Hat team here in Amia, so I want to thank them. There's a lot of them in the room, too. And I'm going to put the volume up a little bit more. Is it enough volume? Okay, I'm going to speak closer to the mic. So my name is Diane Mueller. Many of you have seen me sort of virtually on some of the OpenShift Commons briefings, and a lot of you have seen me try and coerce you into doing other things around the community. So the key for us is OpenShift Origin is the project that all of the OpenShift projects and products are based on. And it's really about creating the community and the connections today between you, your peers, the people who are the upstream project leads that are in the house, and trying to branch and connect all of the different communities, whether you're on the commercial side of the house or the open source side of the house, and get you all to connect and talk to each other and collaborate. What we're really looking for today is to change sort of the model of open source connectedness in a way so that you have the faces and the names to the people and the peers that you need to connect with to make sure that your jobs and your deployments of OpenShift or the work that you're doing on Kubernetes feeds into the OpenShift upstream projects. And today, what we really want to do is make sure that everybody participates. There'll be some Q&A, there's some microphones that we'll have that we'll be able to pass them back and forth and you can ask questions. There's a couple of good panels here that we've got lots of people who've volunteered to come and be there and be part of today. So make sure that you connect with the people that are sitting next to you, the people that are around you at lunchtime and in the breaks and the afternoon and the evening beer reception as well. So as you know, there's a ton of projects that feed into OpenShift origin. So I always put this sort of ubiquitous bubble here and there's really not even a third of the projects that feed into OpenShift origin and that make up the project. So we really know that we have a lot of dependencies internally to Red Hat to other projects that are being built out by Red Hatters and externally to the other projects there and they feed into the three main projects or products from OpenShift that many of you are using today, Enterprise, OpenShift Dedicated and OpenShift Online. And that's really... But really what I like to look at it is the balloon should be coming from both ways. There's a lot of you in the room that have got projects and products that run on top of OpenShift that help make OpenShift a more complete offering for enterprises. I'd like you all to feel like you're part of this community and that we really depend on you to make sure that it's a rich, wonderful experience of using OpenShift. And so when we do this every year we go through and we figure out who we should get to speak at these events and the reality of it is it's only one day and if I had three days I would make everybody come and speak but what we've tried to do is bring many of the project leads, some of the people that you'll see at KubeCon over the next couple of days, some of the vendors who will be up at KubeCon in the booths up there would sort of give you a head start on the next couple of days and a head start if you're not going to KubeCon on your implementations on who's who in the community. So one of the things that we really try and push from an open source perspective is that it's not just about contributing to OpenShift origin. It's more about where OpenShifters is a lot of engineers from the Red Hat teams here who are contributing into Kubernetes itself and into another, you know, Prometheus and to Docker and to the other pieces and parts, OCI and all of the CNCF projects that are going to be talked about today and over this the coming week. And we know that it's a two-way street so if there's feedback you have for us we want to hear it. If there's things on the roadmap that you want to hear about or see prioritized a little bit higher, ask us about it and we will try and turn off the volume on my phone here. So one of the things that we know is that there's at least four, five, six, seven projects now in the CNCF group under their umbrella being incubated, Container D and Rocket just got added into the mix so there's going to be folks later today coming in from the CNCF Alex Richardson who's going to give us a sort of a picture of what it means to be cloud native and where those things fit into the puzzle that is OpenShift and the projects that you're trying to build and deploy. And what we also know is that there are a huge amount of you from lots of different places across this globe in the room and from the registration bits that I went through as of like two days ago there were 25 different countries represented in the people who registered just for this event. We've been, we're in over 50 plus countries now we have meetups everywhere around the world so there's lots of ways to connect this community and to keep everything going. There are 50 member organizations here that are part of the OpenShift Commons and I'm just going to keep advancing because we so what the real future looks like and I'm going to keep running through here one more if I could click this is really to try and figure out how to create this model so that it works for everyone. Not everybody can be in the room, a lot of the stuff that we do is virtual so I do every week at least one or two virtual briefings and meetups for SIGs so you'll see my face opening meetings and things like that through blue jeans and if you're not part of the OpenShift Commons yet I'd really encourage you by the end of today to see me and sign up so we can get you on the mailing list. There is a Slack channel that we use, we try and use as many of the tools that we can to keep us connected virtually. There's great Trello boards, Slack channel is pretty active, lots of folks out there are connecting that aren't here today and the only thing I didn't do today was live stream this which maybe the next time we're going to have to do that. So really what we're trying to do is figure out the best way to make as many connections here today as possible. So if you're someone, I think Deutsche Bors came in last night about 2 a.m. and asked to be put on the wait list and they should be here and they probably haven't met most everybody in the room but by the end of today and the end of this week, hopefully they'll have been connected with everybody upstream and everybody on the OpenShift team so what we really like to do is not be anonymous. So one difference I think between this community and other communities in the open source world is we really encourage you not to use your Gmail when you sign up for the mailing list. We really ask you to identify who your corporate sponsor is, who you're working with, what project you're working on so that people have a way of knowing who to reach out to and talk to because it's not all about Red Hat or maybe the gatekeeper for this community. We want you to be able to have those peer-to-peer connections without us in the middle so that they're maybe more open and more honest and you're sharing that information a little bit more. So one thing we do know is that you guys talk a lot. We've got over 877 different authors on the repos in GitHub and that's just the GitHub stuff alone. We've got tons of people doing pull requests, people on the Slack channel, people in Stack Overview. There's lots of chatter going on. What we're trying to do is make sure that that is all constructive. It's a very healthy and vibrant open-source community. We want to keep it that way and that's why these gatherings we'll be doing one here. We're going to do one the day before Red Hat Summit on May 1st if you're coming to Boston and we'll do another one at the Austin Kubcon as well. So we're just going to keep a cadence of these actual physical events going on so that we can make sure the virtual is just not enough. We need to really have that face time too so we're going to keep trying to do that and we'll do another one. So really the one very interesting thing to me is that the community collaboration and all this communication when we first started doing this new model when I first started being sort of a community manager for OpenShift it was all about getting the folks here in the room to contribute code to origin. Really my focus and the focus of most open source community managers is trying to herd cats so they'll contribute some code, make a pull request, do that feedback. What we're really worried about in the beginning was that by including all of these different pieces and parts the vendors, the end users that we were losing our focus on getting code contribution and if we go to the next slide one of the things that became very clear is we don't have the picture of that. Well there's a nice pie chart that should be on there but that's alright, we'll survive with it. We have over 50 organizations from Google who's here in the room to small Globo in Brazil to get up cloud in Brazil to people all over the world are making new contributions every month. We've got a huge spike in that. We've got one more slide. So one of the things that's really clear is that this model of collaboration has made for an uptick, a very seriously nice uptick in new developers coming to the project and we're really pleased with that. We're seeing people from Amadeus from all of the different projects that people are now deploying OpenShift in are starting to add value and starting to from everything from documentation to pull requests on networking issues, all kinds of really good insights from now at being on at scale at all of these companies and we really are seeing a lot more people contributing to the project which is phenomenal for us. So the thing I'm going to keep iterating on is everybody if you're not, because I know about 50% of you in the room are not in the OpenShift Commons yet which means you're not on the mailing lists you're probably not listening to me lather on about weekly topics on the briefings and you're not on the Lab channel. So by the end of today there's a form on Commons.OpenShift.Or go there or see me and we'll sign you up. So today's agenda really is not about me and it's really not about Red Hat selling you any products or getting anything. It's about you participating in the conversation. So we're done with the welcome part. We're going to have a very tight schedule because we're already like 10 minutes late off schedule as it is. So here today on some of the emerging technology trends and challenges and for the digital transformation from Chris Wright from Red Hat then we're going to hear from Google and hear about what their point of view is on Kubernetes 1.6 and the road ahead. We're going to get then Clayton somewhere in the back is going to come up and talk about OpenShift 3.5 or as I call it 3.x because it's a moving target every time I turn around there's a new number and we're going to actually here we're going to take a little break after Clayton and then we're going to have T systems come up and talk about big data on OpenShift and their implementation of OpenShift here and then we will just before lunch we're going to do the upstream this panel which will give a chance for many of the upstream project leads to come and a new member of the Red Hat team Stormy Peters is going to be the moderator for that and then we've done one little switch in the afternoon to accommodate someone's schedules. We're going to start off with Alex Richardson from the CNCF's technical committee chairman and the CEO of WeaveWorks is going to come up and talk about what it means to be a cloud native. Then we're going to hear from Volvo I think Robert's in the room I'm hoping yes Robert's in the room and he's probably working on his slides right now and then we're going to have together a panel of people from one or two from each walk of the community so some service providers some end users some open source project leads and get allow them to give feedback directly to the community and their thoughts on what they need to see in the road ahead then we're going to hear from Amadeus and then we're going to get a little snippet about the future or the current state of containers the container ecosystem from Vincent Bats who's a member of the open container initiative and then we're going to get one really interesting talk I hope someone who's just come out of the open innovation labs working on a mobile app in health care easier AG is going to come up and give us a talk and hopefully inspire us a little bit and then there will be beer so first off we do things a little differently at lunch and we're going to try you will see when you go out to lunch there will be little table tents with topics on them there's special interest group topics and if you don't see your special interest group topic there and you have a different one let me know we have some blank ones and we can add those there so we're trying to encourage people to gather at lunchtime and talk about the things that are of interest to them I've tried to make sure that the table sometimes this works sometimes it doesn't one more the word about the evening around 5.30 if we're timely in the back room where we had lunch there will be some beer and sausage and typical German stuff and it's the good stuff I'm German I love this stuff and then tonight the CNCF actually is kicking off at around 7 p.m. so if you have classes to KubeCon upstairs there will be some lightning talks and I know there's at least one by an open shifter going on so there will be some movement upstairs to the bigger room and the thing that the next time I do this in Berlin we will rent the upstairs room I promise we'll have more chairs because we turned away about 50 people and I'm really amazed at the progress that OpenShift and the Red Hat is made here in EMEA we have folks that have come from Norway and Sweden and Turkey and unbelievable places that there are a few folks signed up from China even so I'm waiting to see if ZTE showed up in the house maybe not so anyways I'm going to ask one more slide I think there's one more slide so I really want to get started Chris Wright is hiding somewhere here and come on up and let's get your slides and this is going to be interesting to see Chris is our I'll let him introduce himself but let's see if we can get his slides up and I'm going to go sneak down over here so thank you all and please enjoy the day