[openstack-community] 1st OpenStack User Group Meetup Poland: Recorded Sessions & Lessons Learned
We held our first OpenStack User Group Meetup in Poland yesterday with up to 50 people joining us at peak times, both physically as well as online via Google Hangout and IRC Chat. It was a pleasure and honour for us to talk with some of the best known and most sophisticated OpenStackers in the world, and we are very thankful for their attendance. If you didn’t have a chance to join us live, please find below our recorded Google Hangout sessions. Tim Bell, CERN https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mcuW9mpFb3Y&feature=plcp Boris Renski, Mirantis https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4F8aDqqFHwY&feature=plcp Eric Windisch, Cloudscaling https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VabZmeb1RP4&feature=plcp Atul Jha, OpenStack India https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DqNH-9XOi9k&feature=plcp Lessons Learned Let me share with you what key learnings we drew from our first meetup: OpenStack: don’t believe the hype. Expect most IT people to know little to zero about OpenStack. It might be the largest open source cloud software project globally with hundreds of companies backing the initiative with hundreds of coders and thousands of members, yet there are still zillions of system admins and developers out there who have no clue what OpenStack is about. Educate them all, one geek at a time. Tune into the global OpenStack community. When you’re small, you have to think big. We have less than a handful of OpenStack deployments in Poland, hence there are very few experienced OpenStackers able to share their knowledge. As a small community, we have to think out of your (local) box and attract the brightest OpenStackers in the world to educate our community and we also need to find ways to give back to the broader OpenStack community. OpenStack is an open source community driven effort, it’s all about a mutual, respectful relationship with other OpenStackers, it’s about giving and taking, so let’s do it right. Google Hangout & IRC Chat rock. It’s exciting to talk with OpenStackers from the United States, Switzerland, Kenya and India at the same time. We obviously lack resources to fly in speakers from all over the world. But thanks to Google Hangout & IRC Chat we were able to attract the smartest OpenStackers from virtually any place on this planet. At the same time, we contribute back with our online sessions to the OpenStack community far beyond our country borders: We welcomed attendees from 9 different countries in Europe, Africa and even Asia Pacific - most of which face similar challenges to ours. But when small, local OpenStack communities join forces, there is an opportunity to create a huge multinational community spreading across multiple regions. It’s the power of many in action. Pick your audience wisely: Only the brave. It’s only possible to start a revolution with brave people, and OpenStack is a revolution. We learned that you need to attract the brave ones in the first place: People who don’t shy away from asking questions in front of an audience, even in spite of a severe language barrier. People, who are willing to make a difference, who show up at the meetup with burning questions and who want to apply their newly acquired skills the next day at work. We need to listen carefully to them and tailor our meetups around their needs. The vast majority of the IT crowd will follow later, but you can only start a movement with a small bunch of wildly determined, super-pragmatic, brave people. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fW8amMCVAJQ Address real life problems. Some of our attendees are contemplating to build private clouds or to deploy their applications on alternative public cloud platforms, but they don’t necessarily have OpenStack on top of their mind. We realized that we primarily have to address their questions such as: tactical choice of hypervisors or capacity planning for cloud storage, automated deployment and management, application development and deployment. Our learning: Relate to people’s everyday experience reality, and then expand the conversation to OpenStack - rather than the other way round. Keep it short and focused. We challenged our attendees with four speaker sessions in a row from 5.00 pm to 9.00 pm. Our key learning: We need to keep our meetups shorter and focus on one specific topic at a time. Also, people are keen on diving deeply into technical conversations on topics they are interested in (we feel that an OpenStack User Group meetup is not necessarily the right place for level presentations on OpenStack). Do it again, again and again. We will host our meetups and the accompanying Google Hangout & IRC Chat sessions on a monthly basis. Feel free to register for our upcoming meetup on July 11th 2013, 6.00 pm - 8.30 pm CEST (GMT + 2hrs), and watch out for further meetups in August, September, October, November … see you there! http://www.meetup.com/OpenStack-User-Group-Poland/ All the best, Rafael
Congratulations Rafael, great to see another UG and it looks like your hangout went ok, I just watched my good mate Atul tell you about the India UG. We used hangout for the first time to hook up 3 cities last week! Hi to Adam in Kenya, it's awesome to see OpenStack making inroads in African nations!!! Great advice below. If you haven't seen it, there's a wiki at https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/OpenStackUserGroups/HowTo if you want to share your experiences in a more permanent sense. Our next meetups on the 24th of June will be an OpenStack 101 beginners event and we will again be doing hangouts that anyone can join. They'll be at 8.00 UTC so feel free to join in, otherwise I look forward to your next meetup! Cheers Tristan On 07/06/2013, at 9:28 PM, Rafael Knuth <rafael.knuth@gmail.com> wrote: We held our first OpenStack User Group Meetup in Poland yesterday with up to 50 people joining us at peak times, both physically as well as online via Google Hangout and IRC Chat. It was a pleasure and honour for us to talk with some of the best known and most sophisticated OpenStackers in the world, and we are very thankful for their attendance. If you didn’t have a chance to join us live, please find below our recorded Google Hangout sessions. Tim Bell, CERN https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mcuW9mpFb3Y&feature=plcp Boris Renski, Mirantis https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4F8aDqqFHwY&feature=plcp Eric Windisch, Cloudscaling https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VabZmeb1RP4&feature=plcp Atul Jha, OpenStack India https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DqNH-9XOi9k&feature=plcp Lessons Learned Let me share with you what key learnings we drew from our first meetup: OpenStack: don’t believe the hype. Expect most IT people to know little to zero about OpenStack. It might be the largest open source cloud software project globally with hundreds of companies backing the initiative with hundreds of coders and thousands of members, yet there are still zillions of system admins and developers out there who have no clue what OpenStack is about. Educate them all, one geek at a time. Tune into the global OpenStack community. When you’re small, you have to think big. We have less than a handful of OpenStack deployments in Poland, hence there are very few experienced OpenStackers able to share their knowledge. As a small community, we have to think out of your (local) box and attract the brightest OpenStackers in the world to educate our community and we also need to find ways to give back to the broader OpenStack community. OpenStack is an open source community driven effort, it’s all about a mutual, respectful relationship with other OpenStackers, it’s about giving and taking, so let’s do it right. Google Hangout & IRC Chat rock. It’s exciting to talk with OpenStackers from the United States, Switzerland, Kenya and India at the same time. We obviously lack resources to fly in speakers from all over the world. But thanks to Google Hangout & IRC Chat we were able to attract the smartest OpenStackers from virtually any place on this planet. At the same time, we contribute back with our online sessions to the OpenStack community far beyond our country borders: We welcomed attendees from 9 different countries in Europe, Africa and even Asia Pacific - most of which face similar challenges to ours. But when small, local OpenStack communities join forces, there is an opportunity to create a huge multinational community spreading across multiple regions. It’s the power of many in action. Pick your audience wisely: Only the brave. It’s only possible to start a revolution with brave people, and OpenStack is a revolution. We learned that you need to attract the brave ones in the first place: People who don’t shy away from asking questions in front of an audience, even in spite of a severe language barrier. People, who are willing to make a difference, who show up at the meetup with burning questions and who want to apply their newly acquired skills the next day at work. We need to listen carefully to them and tailor our meetups around their needs. The vast majority of the IT crowd will follow later, but you can only start a movement with a small bunch of wildly determined, super-pragmatic, brave people. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fW8amMCVAJQ Address real life problems. Some of our attendees are contemplating to build private clouds or to deploy their applications on alternative public cloud platforms, but they don’t necessarily have OpenStack on top of their mind. We realized that we primarily have to address their questions such as: tactical choice of hypervisors or capacity planning for cloud storage, automated deployment and management, application development and deployment. Our learning: Relate to people’s everyday experience reality, and then expand the conversation to OpenStack - rather than the other way round. Keep it short and focused. We challenged our attendees with four speaker sessions in a row from 5.00 pm to 9.00 pm. Our key learning: We need to keep our meetups shorter and focus on one specific topic at a time. Also, people are keen on diving deeply into technical conversations on topics they are interested in (we feel that an OpenStack User Group meetup is not necessarily the right place for level presentations on OpenStack). Do it again, again and again. We will host our meetups and the accompanying Google Hangout & IRC Chat sessions on a monthly basis. Feel free to register for our upcoming meetup on July 11th 2013, 6.00 pm - 8.30 pm CEST (GMT + 2hrs), and watch out for further meetups in August, September, October, November … see you there! http://www.meetup.com/OpenStack-User-Group-Poland/ All the best, Rafael _______________________________________________ Community mailing list Community@lists.openstack.org http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/community
On Sat, Jun 8, 2013 at 12:30 PM, Tristan Goode <tristan@aptira.com> wrote:
Congratulations Rafael, great to see another UG and it looks like your hangout went ok, I just watched my good mate Atul tell you about the India UG. We used hangout for the first time to hook up 3 cities last week!
Thank you, Tristan. Atul is great! We really enjoyed having him with us. We consider that meetup our first iteration, our learning curve is extremely steep and I appreciate any feedback - we want to get better and better with every meetup.
Hi to Adam in Kenya, it's awesome to see OpenStack making inroads in African nations!!!
I am impressed by Adam's ambitious goal to build a public African OpenStack cloud literally from scratch and we love to have Adam on board as our co-host.
Great advice below. If you haven't seen it, there's a wiki at https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/OpenStackUserGroups/HowTo if you want to share your experiences in a more permanent sense.
Yes, thank you I know that wiki page, I use it as a *checklist* for our meetups, I haven't considered yet to contribute back - that's a great idea. Thank you! We will definitely do that.
Our next meetups on the 24th of June will be an OpenStack 101 beginners event and we will again be doing hangouts that anyone can join. They'll be at 8.00 UTC so feel free to join in, otherwise I look forward to your next meetup!
Thank you for pointing us to your session. We will definitely tune in and promote, particularly amongst universities, I assume it's 8.00 am UTC? Can you provide some more details? (URL, speakers, sessions and such) Thank you in advance!
Cheers Tristan
All the best, Rafael
On 07/06/2013, at 9:28 PM, Rafael Knuth <rafael.knuth@gmail.com> wrote:
We held our first OpenStack User Group Meetup in Poland yesterday with up to 50 people joining us at peak times, both physically as well as online via Google Hangout and IRC Chat. It was a pleasure and honour for us to talk with some of the best known and most sophisticated OpenStackers in the world, and we are very thankful for their attendance. If you didn’t have a chance to join us live, please find below our recorded Google Hangout sessions.
Tim Bell, CERN https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mcuW9mpFb3Y&feature=plcp
Boris Renski, Mirantis https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4F8aDqqFHwY&feature=plcp
Eric Windisch, Cloudscaling https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VabZmeb1RP4&feature=plcp
Atul Jha, OpenStack India https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DqNH-9XOi9k&feature=plcp
Lessons Learned
Let me share with you what key learnings we drew from our first meetup:
OpenStack: don’t believe the hype. Expect most IT people to know little to zero about OpenStack. It might be the largest open source cloud software project globally with hundreds of companies backing the initiative with hundreds of coders and thousands of members, yet there are still zillions of system admins and developers out there who have no clue what OpenStack is about. Educate them all, one geek at a time.
Tune into the global OpenStack community. When you’re small, you have to think big. We have less than a handful of OpenStack deployments in Poland, hence there are very few experienced OpenStackers able to share their knowledge. As a small community, we have to think out of your (local) box and attract the brightest OpenStackers in the world to educate our community and we also need to find ways to give back to the broader OpenStack community. OpenStack is an open source community driven effort, it’s all about a mutual, respectful relationship with other OpenStackers, it’s about giving and taking, so let’s do it right.
Google Hangout & IRC Chat rock. It’s exciting to talk with OpenStackers from the United States, Switzerland, Kenya and India at the same time. We obviously lack resources to fly in speakers from all over the world. But thanks to Google Hangout & IRC Chat we were able to attract the smartest OpenStackers from virtually any place on this planet. At the same time, we contribute back with our online sessions to the OpenStack community far beyond our country borders: We welcomed attendees from 9 different countries in Europe, Africa and even Asia Pacific - most of which face similar challenges to ours. But when small, local OpenStack communities join forces, there is an opportunity to create a huge multinational community spreading across multiple regions. It’s the power of many in action.
Pick your audience wisely: Only the brave. It’s only possible to start a revolution with brave people, and OpenStack is a revolution. We learned that you need to attract the brave ones in the first place: People who don’t shy away from asking questions in front of an audience, even in spite of a severe language barrier. People, who are willing to make a difference, who show up at the meetup with burning questions and who want to apply their newly acquired skills the next day at work. We need to listen carefully to them and tailor our meetups around their needs. The vast majority of the IT crowd will follow later, but you can only start a movement with a small bunch of wildly determined, super-pragmatic, brave people.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fW8amMCVAJQ
Address real life problems. Some of our attendees are contemplating to build private clouds or to deploy their applications on alternative public cloud platforms, but they don’t necessarily have OpenStack on top of their mind. We realized that we primarily have to address their questions such as: tactical choice of hypervisors or capacity planning for cloud storage, automated deployment and management, application development and deployment. Our learning: Relate to people’s everyday experience reality, and then expand the conversation to OpenStack - rather than the other way round.
Keep it short and focused. We challenged our attendees with four speaker sessions in a row from 5.00 pm to 9.00 pm. Our key learning: We need to keep our meetups shorter and focus on one specific topic at a time. Also, people are keen on diving deeply into technical conversations on topics they are interested in (we feel that an OpenStack User Group meetup is not necessarily the right place for level presentations on OpenStack).
Do it again, again and again. We will host our meetups and the accompanying Google Hangout & IRC Chat sessions on a monthly basis. Feel free to register for our upcoming meetup on July 11th 2013, 6.00 pm - 8.30 pm CEST (GMT + 2hrs), and watch out for further meetups in August, September, October, November … see you there!
http://www.meetup.com/OpenStack-User-Group-Poland/
All the best,
Rafael
_______________________________________________ Community mailing list Community@lists.openstack.org http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/community
On Sat, Jun 8, 2013 at 12:30 PM, Tristan Goode <tristan@aptira.com> wrote:
Congratulations Rafael, great to see another UG and it looks like your hangout went ok, I just watched my good mate Atul tell you about the India UG. We used hangout for the first time to hook up 3 cities last week!
Hi to Adam in Kenya, it's awesome to see OpenStack making inroads in African nations!!!
Great advice below. If you haven't seen it, there's a wiki at https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/OpenStackUserGroups/HowTo if you want to share your experiences in a more permanent sense.
Our next meetups on the 24th of June will be an OpenStack 101 beginners event and we will again be doing hangouts that anyone can join. They'll be at 8.00 UTC so feel free to join in, otherwise I look forward to your next meetup!
Cheers Tristan
On 07/06/2013, at 9:28 PM, Rafael Knuth <rafael.knuth@gmail.com> wrote:
We held our first OpenStack User Group Meetup in Poland yesterday with up to 50 people joining us at peak times, both physically as well as online via Google Hangout and IRC Chat. It was a pleasure and honour for us to talk with some of the best known and most sophisticated OpenStackers in the world, and we are very thankful for their attendance. If you didn’t have a chance to join us live, please find below our recorded Google Hangout sessions.
Tim Bell, CERN https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mcuW9mpFb3Y&feature=plcp
Boris Renski, Mirantis https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4F8aDqqFHwY&feature=plcp
Eric Windisch, Cloudscaling https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VabZmeb1RP4&feature=plcp
Atul Jha, OpenStack India https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DqNH-9XOi9k&feature=plcp
Lessons Learned
Let me share with you what key learnings we drew from our first meetup:
OpenStack: don’t believe the hype. Expect most IT people to know little to zero about OpenStack. It might be the largest open source cloud software project globally with hundreds of companies backing the initiative with hundreds of coders and thousands of members, yet there are still zillions of system admins and developers out there who have no clue what OpenStack is about. Educate them all, one geek at a time.
Tune into the global OpenStack community. When you’re small, you have to think big. We have less than a handful of OpenStack deployments in Poland, hence there are very few experienced OpenStackers able to share their knowledge. As a small community, we have to think out of your (local) box and attract the brightest OpenStackers in the world to educate our community and we also need to find ways to give back to the broader OpenStack community. OpenStack is an open source community driven effort, it’s all about a mutual, respectful relationship with other OpenStackers, it’s about giving and taking, so let’s do it right.
Google Hangout & IRC Chat rock. It’s exciting to talk with OpenStackers from the United States, Switzerland, Kenya and India at the same time. We obviously lack resources to fly in speakers from all over the world. But thanks to Google Hangout & IRC Chat we were able to attract the smartest OpenStackers from virtually any place on this planet. At the same time, we contribute back with our online sessions to the OpenStack community far beyond our country borders: We welcomed attendees from 9 different countries in Europe, Africa and even Asia Pacific - most of which face similar challenges to ours. But when small, local OpenStack communities join forces, there is an opportunity to create a huge multinational community spreading across multiple regions. It’s the power of many in action.
Pick your audience wisely: Only the brave. It’s only possible to start a revolution with brave people, and OpenStack is a revolution. We learned that you need to attract the brave ones in the first place: People who don’t shy away from asking questions in front of an audience, even in spite of a severe language barrier. People, who are willing to make a difference, who show up at the meetup with burning questions and who want to apply their newly acquired skills the next day at work. We need to listen carefully to them and tailor our meetups around their needs. The vast majority of the IT crowd will follow later, but you can only start a movement with a small bunch of wildly determined, super-pragmatic, brave people.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fW8amMCVAJQ
Address real life problems. Some of our attendees are contemplating to build private clouds or to deploy their applications on alternative public cloud platforms, but they don’t necessarily have OpenStack on top of their mind. We realized that we primarily have to address their questions such as: tactical choice of hypervisors or capacity planning for cloud storage, automated deployment and management, application development and deployment. Our learning: Relate to people’s everyday experience reality, and then expand the conversation to OpenStack - rather than the other way round.
Keep it short and focused. We challenged our attendees with four speaker sessions in a row from 5.00 pm to 9.00 pm. Our key learning: We need to keep our meetups shorter and focus on one specific topic at a time. Also, people are keen on diving deeply into technical conversations on topics they are interested in (we feel that an OpenStack User Group meetup is not necessarily the right place for level presentations on OpenStack).
Do it again, again and again. We will host our meetups and the accompanying Google Hangout & IRC Chat sessions on a monthly basis. Feel free to register for our upcoming meetup on July 11th 2013, 6.00 pm - 8.30 pm CEST (GMT + 2hrs), and watch out for further meetups in August, September, October, November … see you there!
http://www.meetup.com/OpenStack-User-Group-Poland/
All the best,
Rafael
_______________________________________________ Community mailing list Community@lists.openstack.org http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/community
Thank you for pointing us to your session. We will definitely tune in and promote, particularly amongst universities, I assume it's 8.00 am UTC? Can you provide some more details? (URL, speakers, sessions and such)
Yes indeed it'll be 8am UTC, and we dont have the sessions set down or the hangout URL organised just yet (other than our main URL http://aosug.openstack.org.au), but that should be out in the next week. Because of the continual growth of the user group it's important to have regular introductory meetups. It'll be all about getting people started, all the basics! Cheers Tristan
Yes indeed it'll be 8am UTC, and we dont have the sessions set down or the hangout URL organised just yet (other than our main URL http://aosug.openstack.org.au), but that should be out in the next week. Because of the continual growth of the user group it's important to have regular introductory meetups. It'll be all about getting people started, all the basics! --- Tristan, cool, thanks. I will keep an eye on that page. I will write an announcement blog post in English, German & Polish to promote in our region as soon as details are available. Let me know if there is anything else I can do, I am happy to help. All the best, Rafael On Sat, Jun 8, 2013 at 1:34 PM, Tristan Goode <tristan@aptira.com> wrote:
Thank you for pointing us to your session. We will definitely tune in and promote, particularly amongst universities, I assume it's 8.00 am UTC? Can you provide some more details? (URL, speakers, sessions and such)
Yes indeed it'll be 8am UTC, and we dont have the sessions set down or the hangout URL organised just yet (other than our main URL http://aosug.openstack.org.au), but that should be out in the next week. Because of the continual growth of the user group it's important to have regular introductory meetups. It'll be all about getting people started, all the basics!
Cheers Tristan
participants (2)
-
Rafael Knuth
-
Tristan Goode