[Openstack-operators] Fostering OpenStack Users

matt matt at nycresistor.com
Fri Jan 2 01:31:49 UTC 2015


I can't speak for anyone else, but I'm from brooklynite, so as I see it,
you couldn't have been more polite if you tried =P

I think at the end of it all, OpenStack as a community does not want to own
this part of the stack.  They've been pretty vocal about that in times
past.  That being said, with the rise of projects such as heat and ironic,
it does seem the community is involved in a relentless march of progress
towards full ownership of the deployment and management of the stack.

It's hard to say right now what the future may hold.  But, this year will
undoubtedly see some big changes on this front.  Hopefully they are driving
towards the ease of deployment for new users.  That would be a wonderful
thing.  Be that as it may, there are some considerable hurdles to that.

-Matt



On Thu, Jan 1, 2015 at 8:23 PM, Adam Lawson <alawson at aqorn.com> wrote:

> That sounded a bit harsh in retrospect, so my apologies if it's perceived
> as an uninvited slap on the hand.
>
> The topic keeps coming up and it's hard to tell potential consumers over
> and over the magnitude of engineering  investment is improving. Would be
> great to be able to say that with a straight face one day.
> On Jan 1, 2015 5:14 PM, "Adam Lawson" <alawson at aqorn.com> wrote:
>
>> I apologize for my candor but sounds an awful like political candidates
>> stating they understand what their constituents really want. We gotta avoid
>> making claims of fact that are pure personal opinion, especially if our
>> goal is market adoption of OpenStack and especially if we're deeply
>> entrenched in the OpenStack development process. New users can't tell the
>> difference, these dialogs get picked by search engines and perceived truth
>> is truth. Otherwise the risk is that the community competes against the
>> Foundation with a conflicting message.
>>
>> Once a potential consumer hears/communicates there is no path forward,
>> decision makers will choose a product that DOES have a path forward. Plain
>> and simple.
>>
>> But this again highlights OpenStack's desperate need for a working cloud
>> model that users can deploy with minimal headache. Even if it's just one of
>> many possible deployment options. Looking long term, the need for an easily
>> deployable cloud will only present itself for so long. Then the need
>> disappears .. and none of us wants to be in that position.
>>
>> Mahalo,
>> Adam
>> On Dec 30, 2014 1:26 PM, "matt" <matt at nycresistor.com> wrote:
>>
>>> It might be good to setup some sort of collaborative set of reference
>>> architectures for some basic examples of OpenStack in different areas.
>>>
>>> On Tue, Dec 30, 2014 at 4:18 PM, James Dempsey <jamesd at catalyst.net.nz>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> On 31/12/14 05:09, Stuart Fox wrote:
>>>> > Hi James
>>>> >
>>>> > Great question and some good answers so far although I think they done
>>>> > go far enough.
>>>> > They have (mostly) focused on other operators who, while a very
>>>> > important part of any cloud, are not the primary audience.
>>>> > Think more about the end users: devs, qa, marketing, data dudes etc
>>>> etc.
>>>>
>>>> Yes, these are exactly the people I'm interested in making excited.  I'm
>>>> interested in all the ways that OpenStack can be effectively presented
>>>> to these people.
>>>>
>>>> > Focus less on running a cloud and more about how to use the cloud.
>>>> > As a simple example with huge ramifications, a fully automated and
>>>> > dynamic build and release pipeline driven by (something like) Jenkins.
>>>>
>>>> Exactly.  Jenkins / Gerrit is the first thing that devs tend to build /
>>>> ask for.  It makes their lives a lot easier.
>>>>
>>>> > All this took place using common tools and the Openstack API's. Once
>>>> > the pipeline is defined, there is little need for human interaction.
>>>> > Think about ideas like Canary testing, Continuos Deployment, Rapid
>>>> Prototyping.
>>>>
>>>> I think Rapid Prototyping is a great way to engage users of OpenStack
>>>> because it cuts to the core of what devs are interested in: building new
>>>> stuff.  As opposed to CI infrastructure, which I see as more of an
>>>> enabling technology.  I'd be keen to hear about any rapid prototyping
>>>> demos that people use to sell their cloud.
>>>>
>>>> > Hope thats helpful.
>>>>
>>>> Very much, thanks!
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Cheers,
>>>> James
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> James Dempsey
>>>> Senior Cloud Engineer
>>>> Catalyst IT Limited
>>>> https://catalyst.net.nz/cloud
>>>> +64 4 803 2264
>>>> --
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> OpenStack-operators mailing list
>>>> OpenStack-operators at lists.openstack.org
>>>> http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-operators
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> OpenStack-operators mailing list
>>> OpenStack-operators at lists.openstack.org
>>> http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-operators
>>>
>>>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.openstack.org/pipermail/openstack-operators/attachments/20150101/73f91e61/attachment.html>


More information about the OpenStack-operators mailing list