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Community Invitation
Jonathan Bryce & Mark Collier, OpenStack Foundation - #OpenStack Summit 2016 - #theCUBE
01. Jonathan Bryce, OpenStack Foundation, Visits #theCUBE!. (00:20)
02. Mark Collier, OpenStack Foundation, Visits #theCUBE!. (00:41)
03. Any Key Take Aways From Your Keynote This Morning. (01:14)
04. Is The Next Step For OpenStack To Work With Other Projects. (03:20)
05. As Maturity Goes Up How Do You Look At Managing The Every Six Months Release. (05:55)
06. Do You Ever Wonder How You Got Closed Ententies A Part Of This. (09:08)
07. Can You Comment On The Business Side Of Things. (12:45)
08. OpenSource As A Community Is Has Always Been Welcoming. (18:30)
09. Share Some Of The Key Points You'd Like To Highlight. (19:17)
Track List created with http://www.vinjavideo.com.
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In the open-source age, ‘no excuse to dictate tech’ | #OpenStack
by Amber Johnson | Apr 26, 2016
2016 marks the largest OpenStack Summit yet. With more than 7,600 attendees in Austin, Texas, and numerous partnerships, it is safe to say OpenStack has arrived. Back at home in Texas, OpenStack is flourishing amid its native state’s southern hospitality.
“I never thought I’d become an open licensing geek in my life,” said Mark Collier, founder and COO of OpenStack Foundation. Collier joined Jonathan Bryce, executive director at OpenStack, for an interview with Stu Miniman (@stu) and Brian Gracely (@bgracely), cohosts of theCUBE, from the SiliconANGLE Media team.
The impact of the developer community
Bryce said that two of the morning’s keynote speakers were “incredibly brilliant.” He also credited the success of OpenStack to the real-world use cases and demos available because of the developer community.
Collier waxed philosophically about the “dichotomy” associated with open-source tech, commenting that previously major corporations considered open source to be akin to “socialism.” Nevertheless, attitudes have greatly changed largely due to the success of companies like Facebook and Twitter, Inc. Therefore, application developers like Apache and OpenStack have capitalized on what Collier described as “a change in the community,” which has left “no excuse to dictate” tech.
Bryce concentrated on the “broader context” OpenStack has achieved. He continued stating that mixing together the right components like a “recipe” has transformed OpenStack from an “idea or buzzword” into “something useful.”