 Hi, I'm Steve Speicher. I work on developer tooling and experience with OpenShift. Let's explore how to get OpenShift for going on your laptop. I'm on try.openshift.com. We'll go ahead and let's get started. So those are a couple different ways you can get into it. One is obviously you got to register as your the Red Hat ID. You come in, you look for the right provider. So the laptop is a new edition here in developer preview that's powered by Red Hat code ready containers. Likewise if I came at it from cloud.redhat.com I could come in here, I could open to the infrastructure to my cloud manager and I could create a cluster ending up in the same place. So let's go ahead and click on this. We can see there's a number of things here. A nice warning about this is a developer preview and this is really about running OpenShift on your laptop. This is going to set up a minimal Red Hat OpenShift 4.2 cluster. There's a number of steps here. So it talks about running setup, download a few things, the binary, and then the pull secret. So I've downloaded this and the secret already also started a few things locally. So let's see I've started to empty directory. I've copied in my pull secret. I extracted the CLI tool CRC here. I went ahead and made it executable on my machine and I added it to my path. So let's do a quick exploration. So now I can do CRC version. Let's see what we have. Yep, 10 beta 3. If we want to see what all things it can do, we just type CRC. Get the dump of the commands. You can open the console. It's great. Delete IP whatever. Get the IP address of the instance. All kinds of great things. Let's now run CRC setup. Get things set up. I've run this before. So it's double checking. Everything looks good. And now we just simply run CRC start. So it's seen that a few things are already there. It's checking for file permissions. And since I've done it before, it's actually going to start a stop VM instead of creating the VM. So I did this way just so it'd be a little bit quicker to start up. So doing some checking, making sure network's okay. Be starting if needed. And now it's done all its pre-flight checks. It's time to spin up that cluster. Okay, our cluster has started. We can see there's information on how to get it up and running. So there's the ec command. You can run this eval to set our local environment. So we do this. We can now see the version. We can see it's OC status. We're going to do some exploration. Let's get started. Since I logged in before, so if I wanted to, I could just follow this command line here to log in, which is just saying log in as QBadmin. Here's the temporary generate password, which is highlight here. There's a console for when it started. So let's take a look at the CRC command line again. We see there's this console here. If I want to see IP address, we already saw how to set up OC ENV. So let's go to CRC console. So there we go. It fires an instance of the OpenChift console. We can see all the information of the things that are running in the cluster. We want to use the browser interface. Let's continue with this CLI for a bit. So we want to make sure our instance is up and running. So we'll just clear this real quick so we can make it very simple. All of the normal OC commands work as you would normally expect from the project. So let's do a simple my project one. Let's go ahead and create a new app. So we'll see new new app. Let's do the htpd example. If you're going to follow along, I mean the OC map does a good job of telling you like there's a route created so you can follow along there. You can see there's a service, there's a route, there's a chemistry and build config. Let's go ahead and follow the walks associated with that build config. Things move along pretty quickly. Let's go ahead and do the htpd command on that. So you can just give the status to make sure something's running. Now available yet. Let's do build deployments running for 18 seconds. Okay so the deployments still are running. I just need a little more patient. Okay so number one is deployed. So if we go back to our code command, you can see it worked. And there we go. We were able to start basically nothing, set up CRC, code ready containers, which gave us a local OpenShift 4.1 running on my laptop. I could interact simply with the CRC command line and then quickly use OC just as I normally would work with any OpenShift cluster itself. Be sure to check out all the different options of code ready containers. Be on the lookout for new changes coming. We'll be updating it often so check back. It does require to to reset up delete and recreate it because these are locally cached instances and so we'll be improving that as time goes on and also please provide feedback on anything that we see as well. We'd love to hear things you like or don't like and we want to make sure you're you're able to be successful with running this on your laptop. Thank you.