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c8b7257 | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 606 | [0.00 --> 15.32] welcome back everyone this is the change log and i'm your host adam stekowiak this is episode 134 [15.32 --> 22.28] jared and i talked to the core team behind dot net core that's microsoft dot net core effects [22.28 --> 28.32] can't believe it we have microsoft on here talking about open source of all things we were surprised [28.32 --> 34.28] to definitely a great show we have rich lander emma landworth and varun gupta on the show great [34.28 --> 39.06] great conversation about microsoft and open source and lots and lots of fun we had some [39.06 --> 45.76] awesome sponsors for this show code ship top towel and rack space helping us make this show possible [45.76 --> 50.84] we'll talk about top towel and rack space a bit later on the show but our friends at code ship [50.84 --> 57.74] always amaze us continuous integration and delivery as a service you can release more frequently get [57.74 --> 63.00] faster feedback and build the product your users actually need a simple push to a repo runs your [63.00 --> 68.40] automated test suite and configure deployments from a simple deployment to heroku to a complex [68.40 --> 74.38] deployment pipeline set up for large infrastructures all that can be set up with ease using code ship [74.38 --> 78.92] it integrates easily with github or bitbucket you can get started today with their free plan [78.92 --> 85.06] setup takes just three minutes make sure you use the code the changelog podcast again the changelog [85.06 --> 92.40] and with that code you'll get a 20 discount for three months on any plane you choose head to [92.40 --> 98.08] codeship.io slash the changelog and tell them we sent you and now on to the show [98.08 --> 111.60] all right everybody we're joined back today we got a fun show lined up today we got myself here got [111.60 --> 117.62] jared here we got rich lander we got emo landworth we've got varoon gupta uh those guys are from the [117.62 --> 124.40] dot net core team over there at microsoft and i tell you this is this is maybe an unprecedented day [124.40 --> 129.36] for us because in the history of this show we've only had one show on dot net and that was on nougat [129.36 --> 134.68] um we didn't expect to ever have anyone from microsoft on the show talking about dot net being [134.68 --> 139.50] open source so i guess that's uh hands in the air on that one but um let's let's go around the table [139.50 --> 144.16] here real quick and give some intros so rich let's start with you emo and then varoon uh after that in [144.16 --> 154.94] no particular order sure um i'm rich lander as uh jared said and or sorry adam um and uh i've been at [154.94 --> 164.12] microsoft since 2000 i've been on the dot net team since uh 2003 and i've shipped each version of dot net [164.12 --> 170.22] since 2-0 it's uh been really interesting being on the team and building all the technology that we've [170.22 --> 176.16] been shipping to customers that whole time but uh this last little bit where we've been uh getting [176.16 --> 181.88] our open source project ready has been definitely the most exciting time in that that whole period [181.88 --> 194.50] all right and we got uh emo yeah so i joined microsoft in 2010 and uh i was a customer for a [194.50 --> 202.78] very long time i was basically on the first on the first beta is basically since 2002 i believe [202.78 --> 208.32] and uh so when i joined the uh the team i had a very much uh you know focus on dot net from a customer [208.32 --> 212.42] perspective and i'm super excited to see some of the things happening that we did over the last [212.42 --> 216.92] two years in particular releasing more stuff on new bit as well as open source that we're doing now [216.92 --> 224.38] so it's really great times for me as well gotcha all right varoon how about you uh hey guys i've been [224.38 --> 232.10] in microsoft for the last 10 years mostly around dot net um i'm part of the dot net team which is doing [232.10 --> 238.30] the open source work around dot net core interestingly i'm also part of the team that's helping set up [238.30 --> 245.40] dot net foundation so it's very exciting for me from both fronts uh you know seeing back last 10 [245.40 --> 251.18] years definitely very exciting and a new path um but it's you know something we're all very excited [251.18 --> 258.26] about so jared i guess i'll open this uh this show up with probably the most important question we have [258.26 --> 264.50] here and to you guys too i mean congrats on taking this shift towards open source i think you'll probably [264.50 --> 270.34] see and you probably have seen already the the benefits of of just the open source community [270.34 --> 275.40] interacting with you know a wider developer base maybe than you're typically used to with feedback [275.40 --> 280.72] and issues and github and pull requests and all this you know collaboration that goes into building [280.72 --> 286.26] open source software these days so let's let's maybe ask the the biggest question here which is why [286.26 --> 292.78] open source and maybe even a tail-off question which is why now uh how about i'll answer the first [292.78 --> 300.38] question i think this is rich right yeah sorry this is rich uh i think the big um key motivation behind [300.38 --> 309.66] um why open source is that um we want to just reach developers who um we we can't typically reach [309.66 --> 317.18] with a pure kind of closed source uh offering and um there are plenty of folks out there that uh open [317.18 --> 324.30] source is a key requirement and uh we want to make them uh our customers as well um so that that's [324.30 --> 331.24] really that's really the big piece do you want to tackle the second one email why now yeah so the so [331.24 --> 336.54] why now question is interesting so like in the blog post that we published uh two weeks ago we basically [336.54 --> 344.76] uh sketched open source as effectively two pieces the first piece is uh cross-plaid which is uh if you think [344.76 --> 349.02] of any sort of serious cross-plaid projects and they all have one thing in common in their open [349.02 --> 354.56] source and it's not that open source is the only way to do cross-plaid work but it's uh probably the [354.56 --> 360.52] most um sustainable way of doing it because you can very easily incorporate other people that care [360.52 --> 364.82] about certain things that you either can't repo yet or you just don't care about this yet so a good [364.82 --> 369.00] example is if you look at linux for example when linus tol was started this whole project he [369.00 --> 374.00] still didn't care about 160 architectures uh for him to target right but over the years [374.00 --> 378.44] certain people jumped in that cared about certain architectures and then you know the breadth of the [378.44 --> 383.20] project significantly increased over time right and that's that's why it cross-plaid i think of uh [383.20 --> 389.22] if you look at dotnet the mono community is a very strong um force there so it would be very very [389.22 --> 394.86] you know idiotic from our side if you wouldn't um uh you know incorporate those communities and make [394.86 --> 399.54] it easier for them to work with us the second part of it is uh if you look back there for the last two [399.54 --> 403.44] years we're basically doing more and more agile delivery and uh from from our point of view [403.44 --> 408.00] agile delivery is really the key of uh you know making sure that the right things happening [408.00 --> 412.96] uh in a reasonable amount of time because the more complicated the project is and the more [412.96 --> 417.66] design up front you perform the higher the chances are you get something wrong at some point right and [417.66 --> 422.64] our project is now you know almost 15 years old if you consider the initial work time before it [422.64 --> 428.06] went published uh public so there's a lot of complexity in the product itself so by us being able to [428.06 --> 433.06] deliver things in an agile fashion that also means we get customer feedback way quicker uh we also [433.06 --> 437.66] have happier customers because when you file a bug you live long enough to actually see the bug being [437.66 --> 442.14] fixed as well so if you consider this you know in the previous time having like three years release [442.14 --> 447.10] cycles uh it was often very frustrating for customers and as i said i was a customer for a very [447.10 --> 454.94] long time so i filed a bug in 2004 that got uh closed as uh loan fixed in like 2009 or something so [454.94 --> 459.68] i can totally relate to this uh uh problem that you just you know don't get feedback from microsoft [459.68 --> 464.30] so agile really gives us this way of doing it and we ship uh packages on you get for over two years [464.30 --> 469.30] now on our team and and from from our point of view open source is really just the ultimate version [469.30 --> 474.02] of being agile right because you're essentially every time you commit something it's immediately live [474.02 --> 479.78] and in theory it's consumable uh modular any bugs so we get feedback pretty much in real time so [479.78 --> 484.54] instead of having a customer discussion every two years and we ship a beta we can actually have a [484.54 --> 488.48] discussion with the customer in real time and that's why open source now makes a lot more sense [488.48 --> 494.56] than it did you know maybe 10 years ago seems like quite a sea change from you know microsoft's [494.56 --> 501.04] previous stance um as you guys said in your blog post it was you know kind of you you open source to [501.04 --> 507.92] universal acclaim trending on github anything microsoft does makes a big splash but i'm interested in [507.92 --> 515.84] how this change came about inside of the company because uh it seems like such a change in strategy [515.84 --> 521.88] that usually those things have to be sold up a chain um whose idea was it and how long has it been [521.88 --> 528.02] like you guys trying to convince people or are you the ultimate decision makers it's clearly all emo's idea [528.02 --> 529.16] definitely [529.16 --> 536.80] good one yeah so i think on our side we're all very interested right now that basically say open source [536.80 --> 542.52] was my idea yeah but i think that you said like it's a strategy change i would agree that the strategy [542.52 --> 546.90] changed but i don't think it should be you know a massive surprise i mean if you if you look over [546.90 --> 552.42] the over the last i don't know probably longer years i mean dot net open source is not this you know [552.42 --> 556.20] the first open source project that microsoft did right the very first open source project was [556.20 --> 561.26] the windows installed the xml and that's not you know fairly long time ago uh asp.net is open [561.26 --> 566.50] source for quite a long time now and uh they've managed c sharp and bb compilers was in open source [566.50 --> 571.82] six months ago so there's there's clearly a progression where microsoft became um i think [571.82 --> 576.08] better at realizing what open source actually means right i mean there's like you know these bad quotes [576.08 --> 580.76] from balma like 10 years ago or something about gpl but if you if you realize like how we run with [580.76 --> 585.66] open source now i think uh it's clear that it's not a shift that happened overnight um and there's [585.66 --> 591.76] for example the shift designer of c sharp he had a lot of experience with open sourcing uh as part [591.76 --> 597.02] of the typescript initiative that was open source from the first day and he really absolutely liked [597.02 --> 601.40] the experience that that open source designing the open interacting with people in real time [601.40 --> 605.74] was ringing because you could reach developers that we just could never reach before right it's really [605.74 --> 611.28] about the conversation and and the you know you know the sheer innovation speed of which you can [611.28 --> 615.38] take the feedback and make something out of it um and i think in general like if you look at [615.38 --> 620.24] microsoft around i mean uh you know balma had this uh vision statement of devices and services for [620.24 --> 625.26] example and especially when you look at services and we are in the same work that delivers uh azure as [625.26 --> 630.06] well so there's this uh ntfs and both are services now and so they're both in a very aggressive [630.06 --> 636.54] uh timeline as far as you know releasing uh you know small increments of uh functionality and then [636.54 --> 641.50] getting customer feedback on it and and from our point of view the developer stack is uh something [641.50 --> 645.18] that you really have to give people's hand very early on in order to get meaningful feedback but [645.18 --> 650.00] we can't just ship faster you know the framework itself on windows because that just doesn't scale [650.00 --> 654.58] to 1.8 building machines you really have to have a way where we can give it to developers faster and [654.58 --> 658.76] so on that point of view i think that that open source is also just the continuation of you know [658.76 --> 663.04] dev ops or some of the other you know keywords that you have probably heard so you mentioned [663.04 --> 668.14] balmer and as we all know you guys have had a change in leadership here recently uh is the timing [668.14 --> 675.80] there uh coincidental uh or was that change in leadership kind of leading to this this this new [675.80 --> 683.60] stuff uh this rich again um i do not think it was coincidental uh if we look at the fact that um [683.60 --> 692.28] dotnet supporting linux and office supporting ios happened in the same year um i think uh that's [692.28 --> 700.98] clearly showing that we're trying to reach out to um uh you know to our customers and provide products [700.98 --> 709.22] on the os's where that they're using so uh i i think you're just seeing a shift in strategy [709.22 --> 716.90] at a fairly broad um level in microsoft i have to give you guys credit too because when you're [716.90 --> 724.56] embracing it you guys really are embracing open source um on github uh mit licensed stuff taking [724.56 --> 728.78] pull requests you know i always compare apple and microsoft when i'm looking at strategies because [728.78 --> 733.14] i just enjoy watching you guys do things apple's still kind of just like throwing their open source [733.14 --> 739.36] over the wall and just like here you go you know they're not really embracing it as a thing as much [739.36 --> 744.76] but you guys seem like you're really going for it yeah i think that's something that we that we [744.76 --> 748.26] learned over the years is i mean my team in particular we did open source or should say [748.26 --> 753.12] source open for a lot longer than uh than just the you know the current open source strategy like [753.12 --> 757.00] there was the managed sensibility framework that we published on code black a while ago [757.00 --> 761.82] but the the challenges that we always had that we basically did that you know source open where we [761.82 --> 766.50] basically give you the source but then there is a lot of challenges around us keeping the community [766.50 --> 770.68] around alive because it's not really the real thing might we give you like every once in a while [770.68 --> 774.92] the drop of the source and so the one thing that we learned over the years is that first of all [774.92 --> 779.82] that's just not sustainable from our side because if you think of microsoft as a company that delivers [779.82 --> 785.66] um uh you know a bunch of products then you always have these massive release cadences where [785.66 --> 790.78] you know towards the end game you are focusing on fixing bugs stabilization all of that and then the [790.78 --> 795.38] first thing that you stop doing is you know things that don't directly contribute value towards that [795.38 --> 799.68] goal and so from our point of view like maintaining an open source site somewhere as a [799.68 --> 804.58] as a site project it's just not maintainable it's the first thing that gets it's cut when you know [804.58 --> 810.12] people have to focus so the only way you can sustain open source is if if what you see on github is the [810.12 --> 814.26] real deal because that's something we can't cut right like when we stabilize then you know and we have to [814.26 --> 820.04] commit to the same repository everybody sees then there's really no option for us uh to discontinue that [820.04 --> 824.12] work and i think that's also something that the community really appreciates because i think in open [824.12 --> 828.64] source in general and i think that's true in any community it's definitely true in marriages right that [828.64 --> 833.84] people don't want to get surprised right you basically want to have a trusted relationship [833.84 --> 838.14] with each other so if you get the impression that microsoft is holding something back because we go [838.14 --> 842.88] dark for half a year like even if we don't do anything bad it still has this very bad taste of us [842.88 --> 846.70] not telling me everything right and i think that's something that i think we learned very you know [846.70 --> 851.56] the hard way over the years and uh but i totally agree with your sentiment that you know i was a customer [851.56 --> 856.58] for a long time i pitched about microsoft like everybody else and uh one thing i realized internally is that [856.58 --> 860.58] you know things if they change they really change i mean people really embrace it and then go [860.58 --> 864.92] wholeheartedly with that vision and that's why i'm so excited about open source because i think [864.92 --> 870.52] you know we normally have like any way to to back off from that like now we are all in and i think that [870.52 --> 875.56] this trend will continue i like the term all in too especially for you because like you said when you [875.56 --> 883.42] make a turn or you make a change it tends to be pretty drastic or you know it's not an easy shift you [883.42 --> 889.26] sort of make quick decisions when it comes to to big turns like that one thing you said that i'd like [889.26 --> 894.06] to camp out on for just a second was the flip side of open source i never really thought about and maybe [894.06 --> 898.96] this is a new term to me or just a new term in general but source open versus open source being [898.96 --> 904.86] pretty much the exact opposite where open source is focused on uh like jared said not pulling an apple [904.86 --> 908.94] where you're just throwing the code over the over the wall and hoping for the best and not really [908.94 --> 914.16] embracing the community and where can you talk a little bit about that shift particularly with [914.16 --> 919.22] source open versus open source and maybe i guess maybe you've already done that to a degree but [919.22 --> 924.44] feel free to ramble on source open versus open source for a bit do you have any thoughts on that varoon [924.44 --> 931.06] yeah i think we had a reference sources up there for a while they were under the reference source [931.06 --> 939.08] license um but it was you know basically one way so what we this time it's very different we have [939.08 --> 945.02] resources up there and there's a lot of activity and we are basically two way it's basically the real [945.02 --> 950.40] way i mean what you were referring with apple is probably what we were doing earlier but the current [950.40 --> 957.80] effort is really about getting our stuff open source in a meaningful way and as you know your question [957.80 --> 962.84] earlier the mood in the dotnet team and you know how we're looking at it you know i i would actually [962.84 --> 969.70] put it this way there's a lot of excitement within the team and that's reflecting on the repo uh [969.70 --> 975.04] basically every day we have you know stand-ups and hallway meetings and stuff like that and chats [975.04 --> 980.32] uh and everyone is super excited like we are talking about you know what's the next full request [980.32 --> 985.56] coming and we're discussing about those and having a good time about it i think all of that is kind of [985.56 --> 991.16] reflecting on you know github the all the energy in the team the team in general is very excited about [991.16 --> 999.10] it excited about the open source aspect what um when you say team varoon um beyond you rich and emo [999.10 --> 1006.16] um who is who is the dotnet team you know how how big is that i mean obviously it's probably large but [1006.16 --> 1013.14] you know how give the audience a an example of how big your team is and the excitement size well i'll just [1013.14 --> 1021.70] cover the team size we have a lot of people working on like on dotnet in general um in the division so [1021.70 --> 1027.58] we're in developer division and so we have a ton of people working on you know visual studio on dotnet [1027.58 --> 1033.34] framework on compilers but i think your question is more maybe the size of the team that is working [1033.34 --> 1039.98] on dotnet core itself that's certainly well with the team that released the framework libraries that [1039.98 --> 1045.80] you saw there's tens of people that are working on that and then the runtime will come later there's [1045.80 --> 1052.32] some other set of tens of people working on that uh so all told i think you're probably looking at [1052.32 --> 1058.28] about 100 people working on uh the code base that's going to ship in um that's going to be available on [1058.28 --> 1064.26] github that's actually a lot of investment if you're wanting to you know make it bet on dotnet [1064.26 --> 1070.02] um you can see that there's a lot of people working at microsoft to provide you with a quality code base [1070.02 --> 1077.16] so let's talk about exactly which pieces of code are out there right now because let's face it y'all [1077.16 --> 1082.90] have a lot of software over there and there's distinctions between dotnet core dotnet framework [1082.90 --> 1088.18] entity framework so on and so forth if you go to your guys's microsoft's github page which i think is [1088.18 --> 1095.36] just microsoft dot github dot io um tons of repos kind of highlight the big ones and kind of show us [1095.36 --> 1101.74] tell us maybe what's not there yet well yeah so basically if you look at dotnet core what you see [1101.74 --> 1107.50] today on github is a very small number of libraries we have immutable collections we have the metadata [1107.50 --> 1113.32] reader that rostin is using we have xml and we have our vector library that uh enables sim the [1113.32 --> 1117.82] intrinsics and you know the question is why did we pick these four and not some other random slice and [1117.82 --> 1122.76] the the the reason is as i said earlier like from forest number one priority is to make open source [1122.76 --> 1127.76] real is that the thing that you see on the website is the thing that we can actually build uh ourselves [1127.76 --> 1133.34] and actually you know use the you know the actual source to deliver the the actual product and so [1133.34 --> 1137.48] there's some engineering initiative that we have to do internally to decouple our our built [1137.48 --> 1142.22] infrastructure from from the libraries themselves and as you can imagine like dev dev is super large and [1142.22 --> 1147.40] we have you know tens 10 years of like you know code base uh and built infrastructure that we have to [1147.40 --> 1150.96] decouple in order to make that work so that these four libraries that are out there on github right [1150.96 --> 1155.78] now and dotnet core are essentially just you know the libraries that you know we could easily extract [1155.78 --> 1160.26] because they're the you know the most recent ones we did um xml is certainly not the most recent one [1160.26 --> 1164.28] but it was right you know one of our or few libraries that we could just say okay this is the one we can [1164.28 --> 1169.50] decouple very quickly and so what you will see over over time is that um the entire dotnet core stack [1169.50 --> 1175.08] which basically includes the runtime includes the bcl layer includes networking uh and uh also [1175.08 --> 1180.66] includes hpl.net on top as the app model will be open sourced and so as right now as i said there's [1180.66 --> 1185.34] a smaller segment in it so you can basically watch us as we add more libraries and i think you know [1185.34 --> 1189.16] over the next couple of weeks there's like i think three or four libraries being scheduled for being [1189.16 --> 1194.14] added uh console is being one of them data flow is another and so that you know there's certainly more [1194.14 --> 1199.16] growth if you look at the other repos as i said that if you look at dotnet core it's you know one way to [1199.16 --> 1205.04] think about the core fx repo is it's essentially the bcl and so the bcl is basically the libraries [1205.04 --> 1210.58] that everybody has to use right and then you have asp.net which is uh essentially the um the modern [1210.58 --> 1216.10] web uh framework that's just on top of dotnet core as well as the full framework as a as a runtime [1216.10 --> 1221.12] option and then you have entity framework and you have uh the you know the rost and compilers which [1221.12 --> 1225.72] are not on github yet they're on complex still and so the all these things in combination are [1225.72 --> 1231.54] effective with the dotnet platform and um asp.net basically when they started developing uh asp.net [1231.54 --> 1236.58] five they already knew that they would go open source entirely so they started pretty much uh you [1236.58 --> 1241.12] know working on github from day one versus on our side as i said we you know dotnet core is still [1241.12 --> 1247.08] something that is in our internal servers and we're extracting it as we go and so um i think that [1247.08 --> 1251.96] should cover what's on github now as far as the dotnet framework goes we essentially have two stacks [1251.96 --> 1257.34] and right now if you go to the dotnet uh blog i just published a blog post about dotnet core and [1257.34 --> 1261.90] how it relates to the full framework so you can think of dotnet essentially our side as being two [1261.90 --> 1267.18] stacks one of them is the is the dotnet framework which is the you know you know full flavored stack [1267.18 --> 1272.32] that we shipped you know 15 years ago uh and uh that is the one that actually includes you know [1272.32 --> 1276.82] desktop scenarios it includes web scenarios it includes uh pretty much every scenario the developer ever [1276.82 --> 1281.44] wanted and then on the other side you have dotnet core which is which is essentially a fork [1281.44 --> 1285.78] and so the question is why do we have a fork and the the the reason really is it has to do with [1285.78 --> 1291.62] our ability to evolve that stack so that in core is essentially a stack where factoring concerns and [1291.62 --> 1297.40] modularity was a key concern from day one versus dotnet framework was never a concern as far as [1297.40 --> 1301.20] deployment goes because you know the dotnet framework was designed to be deployed with windows [1301.20 --> 1306.70] as one monolithic entity so factoring was never really a concern but now when you think about the you [1306.70 --> 1313.22] know the breadth of devices and uh the the scale that it has to um um has to do then the question [1313.22 --> 1317.18] really becomes how do we ensure that we have the same architecture and can evolve this thing over [1317.18 --> 1320.96] the time and so when we did dotnet core we really focused on that and that's why we have two stacks [1320.96 --> 1326.96] today and uh as far as open source goes one of the one of the key things that that we need to focus [1326.96 --> 1331.80] on is being able to not just release source on a regular cadence but also take contributions back [1331.80 --> 1335.84] and i think an open source product isn't really an open source product unless you can really involve [1335.84 --> 1340.44] the community which obviously involves you know bug fixes and spec reviews but it also involves [1340.44 --> 1345.12] actually taking code and so the dotnet framework because it ships with windows it's you know pushed [1345.12 --> 1350.32] out by windows update there's a super high compact bar for that and the problem is once you ship on 1.8 [1350.32 --> 1356.00] billion machines it's really no longer about whether you fulfill your contract it's also about the fact [1356.00 --> 1360.72] that do you fulfill the implied contract because when you have apps running in that you know at that [1360.72 --> 1366.16] you know sheer size then there's a lot of like implicit dependencies so even for us it's very [1366.16 --> 1370.48] hard to evolve the full framework at this point because every time you make a change there's this [1370.48 --> 1375.38] trade-off between oh did this break somebody or not and the dotnet core stack is completely designed [1375.38 --> 1381.56] to be app local so from our point of view it's very easy to actually take contributions on on dotnet core [1381.56 --> 1386.40] because it's very easy to reason about what happens if we take that source code and so that's why [1386.40 --> 1390.48] dotnet framework um you know we released parts of it that corresponds to all [1390.48 --> 1395.92] core stack as open source on github in the sense that it's an open source compliant license so it's [1395.92 --> 1400.56] all using the the mit license but we don't run it as an open source project so we don't take [1400.56 --> 1405.60] contributions back on the full framework stack uh from our point of view the the real open source [1405.60 --> 1411.76] strategy is on dotnet core and that's where the focus of attention is all right let's pause the show [1411.76 --> 1415.92] just a minute give a shout out to a sponsor i want to thank top top for their support of this show [1415.92 --> 1421.68] you know besides my personal experience with top top pure charity uh as many of you know who've [1421.68 --> 1426.88] been listening to the show a while and those who are new uh i work at a non-profit called pure charity [1427.44 --> 1433.52] and earlier this year we had a huge need for uh several ruby developers and within a matter of [1433.52 --> 1438.40] weeks top to helped us find some of the best and we still have them on our team some of the best [1438.96 --> 1444.08] ruby on rails developers we could ever find this show in particular we're talking about dotnet we're [1444.08 --> 1448.88] talking to the team at microsoft behind dotnet core effects being open source and what they're [1448.88 --> 1453.60] doing with the dotnet framework but even you as a as a developer or someone out there who's trying [1453.60 --> 1459.44] to hire a developer uh to join their team go to top top.com they'll take great care of you you can [1459.44 --> 1464.80] freelance this developer you can hire dotnet developers the full gamut top top.com tell them [1464.80 --> 1472.24] the changelog sent you so dotnet core you said the the term bco i translated as his base class license [1472.24 --> 1477.92] or sorry um base class library my bad i was uh stuck on your word of license back there for a [1477.92 --> 1483.52] second but am i right to assume that when you say base class library okay so you use the term bcl there [1483.52 --> 1490.08] to talk about dotnet core um and you use the word forked too so to slow down a bit for the listeners who [1490.08 --> 1494.96] are like just probably like i am like asking a bunch of questions as they're listening to you or um [1494.96 --> 1503.20] um is is dotnet core then a fork of of the framework then and will there be will there be a second [1503.20 --> 1506.88] version of the framework that's sort of open source and the dotnet framework that's sort of [1506.88 --> 1513.92] proprietary and closed source that you control that's that's kind of the model except that uh you [1513.92 --> 1518.32] know as i said the dotnet framework is super large but it also has client technologies like winforms and [1518.32 --> 1525.20] wpath on top but there's certainly also the bcl part in the full framework as well and so when we [1525.20 --> 1529.60] when i said fork i mean you can think of it we took the sources in the full framework and just [1529.60 --> 1534.80] packaged it slightly differently for dotnet core and so one thing we did for example is uh changing the [1534.80 --> 1539.84] assemblies themselves or the you know physical files that actually contain the the binary code and [1539.84 --> 1544.24] that is basically done in order to support the new factoring goals and that required some changes to [1544.24 --> 1550.96] the source so um from that point of view there are some differences in the in the api sets but we [1550.96 --> 1556.16] still are fully committed on keeping a story where you can basically create libraries that run on either [1556.16 --> 1560.72] side so you can only create a library that runs on full framework as well as dotnet core so there is [1560.72 --> 1568.00] a compatibility story between the two stacks but as far as evolution goes you can think of it as similar to [1568.00 --> 1572.88] the you know to open source in general where you basically have uh you know the the latest hot [1572.88 --> 1576.72] stuff is you know whatever the latest commit in the repo is people can download this build it locally [1576.72 --> 1582.56] and run it then the next step on our side is we release open source uh pre-packaged as a bunch of [1582.56 --> 1586.72] new get packages and so we ship these package every once in a while when the team that owns the particular [1586.72 --> 1591.76] component you know test that component and signs off of that but that's a you know per component thing [1591.76 --> 1596.48] and then the next step is basically we take a bunch of new get packages and effectively do the same thing [1596.48 --> 1600.24] that open sources with distributions and we basically take a whole bunch of packages together [1600.24 --> 1605.44] and say this is the next version of dotnet core and so a fourth step conceptually is it's porting [1605.44 --> 1610.24] these you know this you know the the innovation that happened on dotnet core back to the full [1610.24 --> 1615.76] framework and that is like just from a machine engineering if yeah effort that is always somewhat [1615.76 --> 1620.88] lacking behind because as i said touching full framework is hard we take our responsibility on [1620.88 --> 1626.64] compatibility extremely seriously so we don't just roll the latest build out and so that that requires some [1626.64 --> 1631.60] some some some delay essentially and so from that point of view the the core pieces of it are [1631.60 --> 1634.80] available as open source on the on the full framework but not everything is [1636.48 --> 1641.04] do you have that written down somewhere because uh my head's spinning a little bit it sounds like a lot [1641.04 --> 1646.56] of process maybe your direct customers probably follow that a little better than i did but it seems like [1646.56 --> 1652.48] um perhaps some clarity on exactly how it all works do you guys have that documented anywhere or [1652.48 --> 1656.96] somebody who wanted to get involved could go and say okay here's how here's what i can contribute with [1656.96 --> 1662.56] with here's the stuff i can't here's how it all gets shipped is that anywhere yeah so as i said like [1662.56 --> 1666.96] there's basically two blog posts on our side that basically summarize them up there there's one on [1666.96 --> 1672.80] dotnet core open source which is uh about two weeks old and then just today i published a blog post on [1672.80 --> 1677.44] what is dotnet core and how it relates to the full framework um and you know what are the what are [1677.44 --> 1682.24] the differences between the two and how do we think about that gotcha awesome now i'm sitting here you [1682.24 --> 1687.68] said the word forked and this might be a fun tangent um you guys got some forks out here [1687.68 --> 1694.96] on your guys's microsoft page you forked redis you forked node you forked docker uh safe to assume that [1694.96 --> 1700.96] you guys are building technologies on top of these open source projects uh in-house uh well this is rich [1700.96 --> 1706.64] again there's probably a little bit of clarification that's be useful here okay uh so there's actually two [1706.64 --> 1714.64] github well actually there's multiple github orgs okay um that we're using microsoft the microsoft [1714.64 --> 1723.44] org is the main github organization that microsoft is using um as you might guess and so there's teams [1723.44 --> 1729.76] that we're like we don't even know anything about necessarily that operate in that org and so you said [1729.76 --> 1737.92] you know someone for redis um we actually have no clue um about that yeah i mean obviously we could [1737.92 --> 1743.52] find out kind of thing but um we have like zero insight into that i'm seeing now at the bottom of [1743.52 --> 1749.76] that page there's other hype microsoft github orgs and you guys have man double digits yeah we actually [1749.76 --> 1756.56] have like 20 or 30 or 40 orgs we're actually trying to move more people over to the microsoft org to make [1756.56 --> 1765.68] it a little bit easier to navigate but um the thing um is our work is actually in the dotnet org [1765.68 --> 1771.20] gotcha yeah that's where dotnet core lives uh actually verun can speak to to this piece what [1771.20 --> 1780.72] the dotnet org is and why um dotnet core is in there right so basically dotnet repo is actually the [1780.72 --> 1786.16] repo for dotnet foundation the open source effort um you know the open source community effort [1786.16 --> 1794.24] around dotnet in general with the community so dotnet core became open source it joined the [1794.24 --> 1800.72] community as well dotnet foundation community so they were setting up a new repo um so basically [1800.72 --> 1808.00] uh you know we had a lively discussion and they actually set it up the repo directly in the foundation [1808.00 --> 1815.60] so that org uh in the github you know organization is dotnet foundation organization and dotnet core [1816.16 --> 1823.68] has joined uh the organization and is basically doing all the open source work in the open and you know [1823.68 --> 1830.32] rich can talk about how mono is also in there um you know basically actively participating in the [1830.32 --> 1837.36] discussions and the efforts yeah what vroom was mentioning is there we have a dotnet foundation [1837.36 --> 1847.20] dot org website and there's some forums on that at forums dot dotnet foundation dot org and for those [1847.20 --> 1852.64] of you um who know about dotnet open source you'll probably know about the mono project and so we're [1852.64 --> 1861.36] very much um collaborating with that project both in a code sense as well as um collaborating together [1861.36 --> 1867.04] and talking together in these forums and if you take a look at the forums you'll probably get a sense of that [1867.36 --> 1875.60] okay and for those who are unaware can you uh give a brief rundown of mono sure mono is essentially um [1876.40 --> 1885.60] a clone of um the dotnet that um microsoft built it's i don't know the exact date of its inception [1886.24 --> 1894.08] but um it's in the early 2000s for sure and uh it's headed by a guy named uh miguel de casa [1894.08 --> 1901.36] who actually had worked on some other open source projects i think he'd worked on the gnome uh window [1901.36 --> 1910.08] manager oh i'm correct on that point and um anyway it's it's a project that uh a lot of people have [1910.08 --> 1917.20] used um more recently it's actually been used to target ios and android as part of the uh a tool set [1917.20 --> 1925.44] built by xamarin who miguel actually works for he's actually a founder of that company and um [1925.44 --> 1931.20] the thing i think is really interesting right now is microsoft like the dotnet team at microsoft and [1931.20 --> 1939.28] the mono project are now working closely together to um kind of deliver coherent and consistent dotnet [1939.28 --> 1947.04] implementations for all um dotnet users on the planet essentially and we didn't quite have that [1947.04 --> 1953.92] kind of an arrangement before so uh i think it's really really positive and uh you'll see that i [1953.92 --> 1959.52] think you'll really see that come together probably next year right now we're just kind of trying to get [1959.52 --> 1966.64] everything laid out you know this news of us open sourcing is also new to miguel so i think by the time [1966.64 --> 1972.48] we get say to you know the middle of next year i think we'll have a much more a much better sense [1972.48 --> 1976.80] of what it is that the two projects are doing together we're very much you know still trying [1976.80 --> 1981.60] to figure that out that's awesome i mean i think the cross-platform aspect of this is going to be a [1981.60 --> 1988.48] huge win for developers everywhere i fact checked your uh your your gnome there and you drilled it uh [1988.48 --> 1993.60] okay awesome so just uh while you're talking there i was like i looked it up yeah yeah i do i mean we [1993.60 --> 1998.80] we know miguel personally so uh but i just wanted to yeah make sure that was correct [2000.72 --> 2005.44] can we uh maybe camp out there for just a sec on the on the cross-platform thing and maybe just the [2005.44 --> 2009.20] the fork thing and the open source thing i think it's sort of the the summary of what we've been [2009.20 --> 2014.96] talking about for the last 20-30 minutes but um you know what's the true goal here you know varoon [2014.96 --> 2020.72] you mentioned earlier uh cross-platform as a is a nice advantage of of going open source [2020.72 --> 2026.40] um it mentioned embracing the community embracing actually open source versus source open [2026.96 --> 2031.52] what's the what do you think what can you share about the true goal the overall goal of [2032.16 --> 2037.92] open sourcing.net core versus keeping a closed source and not embracing community [2039.12 --> 2045.12] so i think you meant me not varoon but that's okay um so i think from the the other the other [2045.12 --> 2054.88] um maybe i have a light sound so soon was it was it mo yeah oh sorry you know you take it i think the [2055.84 --> 2061.52] one of the one of the challenges is as i said is that you know microsoft is as which mentioned now [2061.52 --> 2065.92] certainly going you know out of more devices i think the the general realization that everybody [2065.92 --> 2070.96] in the industry is now uh making is that you know there's no longer like true monoculture so [2070.96 --> 2075.68] there there there's many like you know device ranges and like they all have certain market [2075.68 --> 2081.68] segments but in order to to be successful uh as far as an application experience skills those span [2081.68 --> 2085.68] devices now right like you can even if you're say even if microsoft would say you want to focus on [2085.68 --> 2090.32] windows the the reality is there's so many other devices and experiences out there that you kind of [2090.32 --> 2095.12] have to integrate into that's expected from an app standpoint that basically requires you to to [2095.12 --> 2100.08] support not just one thing you can still say as an application developer you know i provide you know [2100.08 --> 2104.48] the best experience or you know most of my features in a certain in a certain vertical but you know [2104.48 --> 2109.60] the integration points are the ones that you still have to you know deal with somehow and uh dot [2109.60 --> 2115.92] net was pretty much from the get-go designed to become to to have a single experience on a variety of [2115.92 --> 2120.48] scenarios so if you look at the original design of win forms and web forms for example somebody really [2120.48 --> 2124.32] made sure that they are pretty much the same no i would argue that for that that was a mistake [2124.32 --> 2129.04] because it's not an event-based paradigm but that you know in the spirit of making things similar i think [2129.04 --> 2133.84] that that's still very much uh an important scenario for for for many people because if you think from [2133.84 --> 2137.76] a just on an epic from an architectural layering perspective there's always pieces of your code [2137.76 --> 2142.48] that you want to reuse across the devices right some business logic you know some you know some [2142.48 --> 2148.40] logic that does something in your app and and you know from it from a scenario standpoint dot net [2148.40 --> 2152.48] wants to enable those scenarios and that that has to that certainly means that we have to go [2153.04 --> 2157.52] effectively where the app has to go and in today's world as i said like there's mac there's ios there's [2157.52 --> 2162.00] android there's there's linux and so we you have to enable the stack to go there from that from [2162.00 --> 2166.64] that point of view i think that open source is really about increasing the breadth of dot net [2167.36 --> 2172.48] and making it easier for people to just stick to one technology if they if they chose to do that but [2172.48 --> 2176.24] you know but they'd always had great availability with native code so if you want to do something [2176.24 --> 2181.60] else uh you know providing a native ui for example uh and then you know call into dot net or the other [2181.60 --> 2185.92] way around there's certainly stories for that as well so when we talk about cross-platform i just one [2185.92 --> 2190.24] question here for the listeners who are thinking like okay so what does this thing work on what [2190.24 --> 2196.16] can i if i'm hacking today could i pull it down start working on it today what platforms are currently [2196.16 --> 2201.84] supported by dot net dot net core dot net uh framework framework that's the word i was looking for [2201.84 --> 2210.24] the other f word the good f word uh i could take that one that's rich um right now both dot net core and [2210.24 --> 2217.36] dot net framework support only windows so just to back up a little bit we've we've clearly stated that [2217.36 --> 2225.68] um for dot net core we're going to um uh support it on mac and linux as well and so we kind of had a [2225.68 --> 2232.56] decision to make which was should we wait until we've done all the engineering work at which point [2232.56 --> 2239.36] we support linux and mac as well as windows and then open source or should we open source with our [2239.36 --> 2247.76] windows implementation start to build a community and then build the uh linux and mac support in the [2247.76 --> 2254.88] open and so as you can guess we chose this latter option and i i like that option yeah i really feel [2254.88 --> 2260.00] like it was the right option especially given the response that we saw i think it's just been [2260.56 --> 2266.40] hugely validated that it was the right option that's essentially what we're doing so we do not yet have the [2266.40 --> 2271.68] the linux and mac support but we're uh we've started already started working on it um we have [2271.68 --> 2277.68] people who that's their main job is building linux and mac support into dot net core and uh you're going [2277.68 --> 2283.60] to see that um start to arrive pretty soon now it's it's it's not going to all appear on one day [2284.48 --> 2287.76] it's going to be very iterative is there one that's first before the other [2289.20 --> 2296.32] that's a good question i don't think we've made a plan uh quite like that yet well what i would say is [2296.40 --> 2299.76] in general like if you look at how dot net works i mean there's certainly things that are [2299.76 --> 2303.92] innovative platform independent right i mean all the collection libraries like immutable collections [2303.92 --> 2308.88] probably works today as it is already on any environment you know things that interact with [2308.88 --> 2313.44] the operating system like file systems and other things are obviously a bit more involved and then [2313.44 --> 2319.20] as you go to the lower stack uh you know we have this very you know thin layer that basically ties the [2319.20 --> 2324.48] the actual framework towards runtime and so you know on our side we basically have two different [2324.48 --> 2329.44] runtime strategies today we have a legit based runtime and we have an ahead of time compiled runtime [2329.44 --> 2333.76] and so we also make investments to make the runtimes available cross-clad but that's obviously [2333.76 --> 2338.48] something that is more like an all-in or nothing because you need the entire runtime uh up and running [2338.48 --> 2343.60] before you can actually run any managed code so there's certainly some um you know some investment [2343.60 --> 2348.56] there as well but as far as libraries go i mean you can probably already compile some of our libraries [2348.56 --> 2353.04] there that are in github i would say that the metadata reader probably uh in some way or the other [2353.04 --> 2358.64] already works on mono because there was a demo that we gilded where uh the majesty shop bb compilers [2358.64 --> 2364.88] we use that component already run on mono new collections should just work and so uh i think the very first [2364.88 --> 2369.52] thing we probably do is on our side uh you know add the build scripts we can actually build on a non-windows [2369.52 --> 2374.56] machine and then set up a ci system so we can actually uh you know validate for requests across the [2374.56 --> 2378.96] different platforms but as far as the ability goes to just take the source from one of it today you should [2378.96 --> 2383.36] be already be able to do that the one thing i want to add is that you know it's always true that [2383.36 --> 2388.08] dotnet was you know cross-platform if you screen hard enough right because the mono was around for a [2388.08 --> 2392.64] long time now but i think the real difference is now that we normally have a fourth community you know [2392.64 --> 2396.72] where you know one side does the windows thing which is microsoft and then this is other community that [2396.72 --> 2402.56] does the linux implementation the intent of dotnet core is really to have one unified code base that runs on [2403.12 --> 2408.72] you know linux windows and mac and not just that also on top of that microsoft actually says we support [2408.96 --> 2412.88] these three things so it's no longer the case that you know there's a microsoft distribution that is [2412.88 --> 2416.80] windows and then there is let's say a mono distribution that does linux and mac it will [2416.80 --> 2421.92] actually be coming from you know from from from one corporation so to speak you know as far as baking [2421.92 --> 2426.64] goes but as far as the community goes it's really just one big community where microsoft plays one [2426.64 --> 2431.20] part in it and then you know the mono community plays another part and whoever else wants to join in [2431.20 --> 2436.48] plays their part all right let's take a break from the show real quick we got to mention a sponsor [2436.48 --> 2443.12] that sponsor is rackspace rackspace loves open source they love supporting their community and [2443.12 --> 2447.28] just one of the ways they're doing that is by sponsoring this show right here that you're listening [2447.28 --> 2452.32] to and that's why they're giving you and everyone else who wants it fifty dollars a month in credit [2452.32 --> 2457.84] for 12 months to explore their open cloud get a free developer plus account today to get started [2457.84 --> 2463.28] you get dev to dev support so if you get complex questions you can talk directly to their developers [2463.28 --> 2468.96] they're the same experts who write their sdks and their apis and get access to all their services [2468.96 --> 2477.44] monitoring dns auto scaling orchestration private networking message queues and more all for free [2477.44 --> 2482.64] there's no usage limits whatsoever so use their services as much as you want you're only billed [2482.64 --> 2488.00] for the usage above fifty dollars a month they have open source libraries to support any language of [2488.00 --> 2493.68] your choice and for those listening today they do support dot net go to the change law dot com [2493.68 --> 2500.16] slash rackspace to get started and now back to the show earlier on you guys mentioned i think uh [2500.80 --> 2508.00] was it emma who made the marriage analogy i want to get i want to get back to that here uh [2508.80 --> 2513.76] yeah that was all about his personal life was laughing his butt off so if rins got something up his [2513.76 --> 2518.56] sleeve i think well i want to get back to that for a second because uh i love you guys excitement [2518.56 --> 2523.92] and this is a really cool stuff the community was you know jumped on it everybody even microsoft haters [2523.92 --> 2528.40] were like wow that's really awesome um and you mentioned how excited you guys are for pull requests [2528.40 --> 2533.04] and stuff and i would say you're very much in the honeymoon phase of open source where everything's [2533.04 --> 2537.84] exciting you know i've had that situation where i get a bug fixed to my repository and i didn't have [2537.84 --> 2542.48] to do it myself and that was awesome um we spoke with a lot of people over the years where [2543.12 --> 2548.00] they've been maintaining open source projects for a time and started off exciting and they got you [2548.00 --> 2554.64] know a lot of press or whatever and uh it was fun and then over time it became hard work um obviously [2554.64 --> 2560.40] you guys are doing this as part of you know your jobs but running open source project can be difficult [2560.40 --> 2567.76] it can be taxing it can have moments where um you know this pull request you know is is excellent [2567.76 --> 2571.52] but it actually goes against our business goals so there's all these different concerns were these [2571.52 --> 2577.04] things you guys thought about as you decided open source yeah i can take this one this is varon [2578.16 --> 2582.56] yeah i think uh here the culture of the team kind of comes into play uh you know that's what i was [2582.56 --> 2589.04] talking about earlier so you know when i look at the team our engineering team you know all of them [2589.04 --> 2595.12] are really excited about you know open source they feel like uh they're not just doing it you know as [2595.12 --> 2600.32] part of their jobs i mean if you look at the github repo you know how it looks and everything folks are [2600.32 --> 2606.56] truly excited the only difference is they're getting paid for it uh you know so basically that's why i [2606.56 --> 2612.80] think the excitement around open source uh you know will continue here there are you know obviously the [2612.80 --> 2617.60] kind of things you mentioned about you know we have to think through you know how we are going to process [2617.60 --> 2623.68] you know full request in a democratic way uh you know moving forward uh you know how do we you know [2623.68 --> 2629.52] work on some of the contentious things you know obviously you know as engineers we tend to get into [2629.52 --> 2635.36] our discussions and stuff like that and how do we kind of handle them uh you know with a broader audience [2635.36 --> 2640.24] so all of those challenges are true but i think the true uh you know thing that makes me excited [2640.24 --> 2645.04] about this whole thing is the culture on the team that's that's really unique uh you know i was [2645.04 --> 2651.92] telling this to you know imo the other day that you know it doesn't feel like that i am uh you know [2651.92 --> 2657.04] working in a team which my friends think you know i am you know probably working as you know you know [2657.04 --> 2660.96] my friends are not from microsoft they think they're probably wearing suits or something but [2662.24 --> 2669.28] here i think the culture of the team is very very different truly excited and you know basically [2669.28 --> 2674.96] uh you know if i use the phrase living in github you're not wearing suits then uh no we're not [2674.96 --> 2681.28] wearing suits t-shirts shorts flip-flops or what uh in the summer we'd be wearing flip-flops um it's [2681.28 --> 2686.48] pretty cold in washington right now that's true yeah it's just about freezing so um yeah we're skipping [2686.48 --> 2692.00] the shorts uh well i've heard the rule is if it's above 30 even flip-flops are okay yeah i thought you [2692.00 --> 2695.84] kept it so warm there as you wore your cold clothes on the way to work and when you got there you changed [2695.84 --> 2702.08] into your warm clothes totally yes i i just like to comment on a question that you guys were kind [2702.08 --> 2708.16] of asking earlier back to the motivation piece so we talked a lot about the motivation for open source [2708.16 --> 2715.68] but we didn't um really address the motivation for cross-plat quite as much and um from a corporate [2715.68 --> 2722.40] customer standpoint we actually do get a lot of customers coming to us that say uh you know really [2722.40 --> 2728.48] love dotnet love c sharp it's very productive we can build the apps we want to with it but we've got [2728.48 --> 2734.08] a bunch of linux machines um that we've been using and you know we're trying to consolidate [2734.72 --> 2743.12] our dev platform across everything we do we want it to be dotnet um so please build a linux version for [2743.12 --> 2750.96] us you might be surprised at how often that question comes through uh another one is that uh that's [2750.96 --> 2759.28] fairly similar in nature is um i think we've publicly stated that about 20 of the vms in azure are linux now [2760.00 --> 2768.24] and um we very much want to be able to give a consistent um offering of developer platforms that [2768.24 --> 2776.16] work on both linux and windows server in azure you know azure will continue to have the model of you [2776.16 --> 2782.24] you know it's your vm run what you want on it um so we're certainly happy to have people running linux [2782.24 --> 2789.68] vms that run java on them or or whatever but um from like a first class offering standpoint we want [2789.68 --> 2796.80] to make sure that people can run uh dotnet apps on linux on azure and so that those two those two kind [2796.80 --> 2804.24] of things are really the cross-plat motivation for us on the server side you mentioned uh your corporate [2804.24 --> 2808.16] friends so that's a good lead into the question we told you we were going to ask you about [2808.72 --> 2816.24] just the change that this imposes to your corporate users who either didn't use open source [2816.24 --> 2820.96] purposefully because they wanted to use something that was proprietary and had support or had something [2820.96 --> 2825.84] to blame basically if something went wrong you know how does this change things for those corporate [2825.84 --> 2832.48] users who may not embrace open source or who purposely didn't embrace open source for whatever the reasons were [2832.48 --> 2840.00] first i think there's our first answer which is we're not really changing much about what it is we do [2841.12 --> 2847.36] as you can imagine we've always had source control and so really all we're doing is taking our source [2847.36 --> 2855.84] control system and hosting it on github and changing the license to something much more liberal so that's the [2855.84 --> 2862.16] open source thing but we're not changing anything about our internal processes for how we go about [2862.16 --> 2869.84] shipping quality commercial software um there's nothing really about that that's changing uh and [2869.84 --> 2875.28] that's definitely a strong message we want to send our corporate customers the other side of it is if [2875.28 --> 2880.56] you're a uh you know uncomfortable with open source or just don't care about it you don't really have to [2880.56 --> 2886.32] think about it because you don't have to participate in the open source community if you don't want to [2886.32 --> 2893.92] do and what we ship at the end of the day is still commercial software most uh for the foreseeable future [2893.92 --> 2900.24] most of the code base is still going to have been written by microsoft engineers i mean we certainly want [2900.24 --> 2907.04] to get to the the case that a very high percentage of pull requests come from the community but um you're [2907.04 --> 2914.16] fundamentally still getting a product that was vetted by microsoft and is supported by microsoft [2914.16 --> 2920.96] um support so i think for corporate customers you can still think of this very much as microsoft [2920.96 --> 2928.72] commercial software and call it good awesome well as you guys know we usually close out uh with a [2928.72 --> 2935.68] question about a programming hero now all three of you feel free to answer um but i know at least one of you [2935.68 --> 2941.36] have somebody in mind so uh who is your guys's programming hero yeah so from my point of view [2941.36 --> 2946.64] i already mentioned i was a customer for a long time for microsoft and um the reason i really jumped [2946.64 --> 2952.48] on dotnet when it came out was the fact that i used delphi quite a bit before and uh i was i found [2952.48 --> 2957.60] that delphi was an amazing experience and then the guy who did pretty much delphi went to microsoft and [2957.60 --> 2962.72] did c-sharp and that's andrew heilsberg so from that point of view like he's he's somewhat my hero in [2962.72 --> 2968.16] the sense that you know it set my career and uh influenced my decision to join microsoft as i said [2968.16 --> 2973.28] many people here i didn't join microsoft i joined the team that owns dotnet and uh that happened to [2973.28 --> 2978.80] be microsoft but if that would be any other place that's where i would have been awesome anybody else [2979.68 --> 2987.04] uh that's good enough for me personally i don't know if faroon has uh an answer bill gates anybody [2987.04 --> 2989.92] i'd say modern more than [2993.52 --> 2998.72] you heard it here first another question that we tend to ask which i think probably is apropos for [2998.72 --> 3003.92] you guys yeah is a call to arms uh for the open source community you're speaking directly to the [3003.92 --> 3009.04] open source developers here today what would you say what how can they help you or what would you love [3009.60 --> 3013.44] uh for the open source community to do with regard to your new you know dotnet open source stuff [3013.44 --> 3018.48] yeah i can i can take that one so the one thing you just mentioned is like the honeymoon phase where [3018.48 --> 3023.60] everything is awesome right um we will certainly like my team although like we certainly talked to [3023.60 --> 3028.08] a bunch of other teams around here that did open source and you know already way past the honeymoon phase [3028.48 --> 3032.72] like you know everything is different every every requirement is different so that's some of the [3032.72 --> 3036.08] stuff that we're working on are things like you know how do we do api reviews what do we decide [3036.08 --> 3040.40] something is good or not in a transparent fashion and so it is very likely that we will do mistakes [3040.40 --> 3045.04] we will do not be as transparent as we promised we would be or we will miscommunicate certain [3045.04 --> 3049.52] things or we will just annoy somebody by closing their pull request so if one of those things [3049.52 --> 3053.92] happen then we absolutely do want to get feedback from the community and we want to have a conversation [3053.92 --> 3059.60] about that and if you go to the forums uh at the net foundation.org there's already a whole bunch of [3059.60 --> 3063.92] like people talking about how we do open source what we do well what we don't do well what we could [3063.92 --> 3070.32] improve on what we should uh do differently and and that's really for me like the the primary uh [3070.80 --> 3074.24] feedback that i am looking for i mean there's always people that want to do pull requests but [3074.24 --> 3079.20] it's it's it's from all the people that we reach it's the minority but you know a lot of people [3079.20 --> 3084.16] you know benefit from the transparency and so that's the thing i really want to get [3084.16 --> 3086.16] i get a handle on whether we do a good job or not [3088.64 --> 3094.32] so you mentioned dotnet foundation a couple times in the show uh it makes sense to mention here at the [3094.32 --> 3100.16] end that um that we do plan to have you and beth or sorry varoon and beth on upcoming show to talk [3100.16 --> 3105.60] about the dotnet foundation and what that is but can you talk a little bit about just a snapshot of [3105.60 --> 3111.52] what the dotnet foundation is you mentioned earlier that uh core effects is is uh granted to i think is [3111.52 --> 3116.88] the word you used to the dotnet foundation what does that mean what is it uh what is that foundation [3116.88 --> 3125.20] yeah that's a great question so basically dotnet foundation you know is an effort uh which is to [3125.20 --> 3130.88] aggregate the dotnet community kind of basically together there are a lot of projects that are happening [3130.88 --> 3136.16] in process like some of the new ones that are coming on board like dotnet core so the idea is to [3136.16 --> 3141.60] kind of have you know common place where we can you know kind of advance the community uh you know at [3141.60 --> 3147.76] the same time together it is uh you know community driven effort it is being bootstrapped by microsoft [3147.76 --> 3156.00] at this point uh but uh it is going to be a community driven it's its own entity separate from microsoft [3156.00 --> 3164.08] its advisory council will also have people from the community so the whole idea behind dotnet foundation is [3164.08 --> 3170.56] that like dotnet core has joined the foundation many other projects have you know joined the foundation [3170.56 --> 3176.40] and they're actively contributing you know working with each other in the foundation so for all the [3176.40 --> 3181.44] new open source developers or the current open source developers dotnet developers are exploring open [3181.44 --> 3187.44] source is a great place to kind of bring your projects work together and kind of contribute in existing [3187.44 --> 3193.20] projects or you know make your new ones with the community together there are a lot of advantages that [3193.20 --> 3199.12] you know come from working together and growing a community so dotnet foundation is that one [3199.12 --> 3205.04] one attempt in the upcoming you know podcast that we'll do we'll talk more about you know the exact [3205.04 --> 3210.16] specifics but in terms of call to arms i'll recommend you know request everyone to visit the dotnet [3210.16 --> 3216.88] foundation dot org website and learn more about it uh there is an email address where you can get in [3216.88 --> 3222.00] touch with us uh and you know talk about your existing projects some of the new ideas you're thinking about [3223.04 --> 3228.56] and i want to mention too um only because it's timely we don't usually time stamp our shows that much [3229.12 --> 3234.08] to a degree but uh you've got as jared mentioned you've got some change happening in several open [3234.08 --> 3239.28] source large open source communities where uh you've got corporate partners and sponsors that have [3239.28 --> 3245.04] sort of been paving the way and we asked a couple questions around your choices with dotnet core and some [3245.04 --> 3250.08] of the future we can expect in open source but i think it's worth mentioning just because of this tail off [3250.08 --> 3257.84] the dotnet foundation the fact that at least what i see now is that your approach towards um the foundation [3257.84 --> 3263.92] a lot of good open source is built around a foundation versus a corporate entity sort of open governance and [3263.92 --> 3268.32] the community is what you mentioned there so i think from what i'm hearing it sounds like you guys are taking [3268.32 --> 3275.44] the right steps to go towards linux and mac uh adoption for development platforms uh open sourcing the [3275.44 --> 3280.72] the the platform itself or open sourcing you know dotnet core and and the the bcl as you mentioned [3280.72 --> 3286.80] before so congrats definitely on that can you maybe mention anything else on that fact that uh you know [3286.80 --> 3293.12] it's about community that that there's nothing um that's sort of like microsoft and then versus the [3293.12 --> 3298.24] community it's sort of just based on this foundation absolutely and maybe tease the fact we're gonna have [3298.24 --> 3303.84] this upcoming show with that you know tease the fact um i completely agree with you know the summary uh [3303.84 --> 3309.44] around that it's very important to build open source projects around a community rather than a corporate [3309.44 --> 3316.48] entity and that's what foundation aims to be um and i think it'll go a step further the idea is to [3316.48 --> 3322.32] you know bring together all the other you know basically cool dotnet projects that are going on and [3322.32 --> 3327.20] you know uh you know aggregating them at the same place so that they can connect with each other [3327.20 --> 3332.24] and sort of you know cross-pollinate and you know participate in various projects and this kind of should [3332.24 --> 3340.16] uh you know accelerate the whole dotnet community as a whole uh you know as imo said you know previously [3340.16 --> 3346.72] we are all in into this um and the only way we'll be all in if you know all the community works together [3346.72 --> 3348.64] then you know some you know guides from here [3351.12 --> 3355.60] well i uh i know that jared and i are definitely excited to have you guys on the show we appreciate uh [3356.24 --> 3359.36] you coming on the show beth sorry you couldn't make but we'll definitely catch up with you and [3359.36 --> 3364.48] varoon on dotnet foundation dive deeper so for those listening with bait of breath on that one [3364.48 --> 3368.40] stay tuned that might happen in the new year i'm not sure if it'll happen before christmas or not [3368.40 --> 3373.12] we'll definitely we'll definitely do our best to try but rich emo and varoon thank you so much for [3373.12 --> 3378.32] joining us today on this show and thank you to to everyone behind you your team behind you making [3378.32 --> 3382.32] your appearance here on this show and talking about dotnet core and what's happening there [3382.32 --> 3387.84] possible i know you've got a lot of excited people that are part of your team that are you know [3388.32 --> 3393.84] lifting you up and and you know doing lots of great stuff so really appreciate all the effort that that [3393.84 --> 3401.20] goes into making your appearance here today um come true for us and we're excited about it so um i do [3401.20 --> 3405.52] want to mention before we tail off we got a couple sponsors that make the show possible code ship top [3405.52 --> 3410.96] top towel and rack space um some really great uh sponsors we have on the show so we very much [3410.96 --> 3415.92] appreciate their support um and and with that unless there's anything else let's uh let's all say goodbye [3416.48 --> 3421.84] so goodbye from me goodbye goodbye from rich uh thanks for the opportunity to be on the show [3421.84 --> 3426.96] no problem guys thanks for having us yeah thanks guys this is varoon uh it was exciting to talk to [3426.96 --> 3429.04] you guys thanks for having us thank you [3429.04 --> 3438.48] this is [3441.12 --> 3454.96] you [3459.04 --> 3489.02] Thank you. |