My Peers, I am self-nominating for serving you as your technical committee representative. I won't bore you with my professional accomplishments. If you want to see such information to judge if I'm qualified for serving you on the technical committee team, that information is available in my foundation profile linked at the bottom of this self-nomination or on LinkedIn. I'll get straight to the point instead. I believe in OpenStack's mission. I believe in the OpenStack way. I believe in the Four Opens. I believe in the OpenStack principles. I believe in OpenStack itself. I believe Open Source has changed the world of computing in a fundamentally more effective way. Most importantly, I believe the diversity of opinions and teams in our community are what make OpenStack special. I'm a believer. I think the TC has done a reasonable job of managing OpenStack's tremendous technical growth. If you want a history lesson from my point of view on why OpenStack is the way it is today, please reference my Newton technical committee self-nomination [1]. The Big Tent needs some fine tuning, and the technical committee is working to make that occur. Fine tuning to me doesn't mean we need to overthrow years of progress because some folks perceive OpenStack as having an identity crisis. I also don't believe defending the status quo represents fine tuning. Fine tuning to me means making incremental improvements to the state of the art. This is how we develop software in OpenStack after a community around the software has been bootstrapped. Let's face reality for a moment. OpenStack does have some problems. They all stem from various choices made along the OpenStack journey. There are five types of consumers of OpenStack's software: application developers of the operator's clouds consumers of the operator's clouds infrastructure developers of the OpenStack software operators operating clouds produced by the developers of the OpenStack software OpenStack distributors This problem so far has gone unacknowledged. The problem to be solved with OpenStack is ensuring the above five types of consumers of OpenStack's software are served fairly, equally, with respect, and most importantly effectively. These are the individuals our community represents. This is an extremely difficult problem to solve. Can it be solved alone by any individual? NO. Can in be solved by the technical committee? NO. Can it be solved by the technical committee and various other working groups involved in making OpenStack tick? NO. Can it be solved by our community of developers, core reviewers, project team leads, technical committee team, operators, working groups, OpenStack distributors working in concert? I am hopeful. I am a tenacious problem solver. If you make a choice to select me as your technical committee representative, I will dedicate myself to working with the technical committee to facilitate a solution to this problem just as I have done in other leadership service roles inside the OpenStack community. While working to solve this problem, I will keep driving OpenStack forward to the horizon with the help of your vote and the technical committee. Freenode: sdake Review history: https://review.openstack.org/#/q/reviewer:2834,n,z Commit history: https://review.openstack.org/#/q/owner:2834,n,z Stackalytics: http://stackalytics.com/?user_id=sdake&release=all Foundation Profile: https://www.openstack.org/community/members/profile/360 Website: https://sdake.io [1] http://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack/election/tree/candidates/mitaka/TC/Steven_Dake.txt