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Post: 5 Takeaways of OpenSearchCon NA 2024 #3425

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56 changes: 56 additions & 0 deletions _posts/2024-11-01-5-Takeaways-of-OpenSearchCon-NA-2024.markdown
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---
layout: post
authors:
- luchoa
- ybarabash
comments: true
title: "5 Takeaways of OpenSearchCon NA 2024"
date: 2024-11-18
categories:
- community
- conferences

meta_keywords: OpenSearchCon, OpenSearch Project, Adobe, Linux Foundation, GenAI, Vector Search, OpenSearch Software Foundation
---


In a far away land, where search experts meet to discussion the art state of the most wonderful search engine of all: OpenSearch. A tool that does not belong to the royals, but to everyone, and everyone can help to use it and build it. It’s time to talk about the OpenSearchCon North America 2024.

The event happened in San Francisco, in the United States. The city, being the heart of innovation, felt like the ideal place to talk about such important topics like Search and Machine Learning. The conference took place from September 24 to 26, 2024 and covered not only talks, but also training and the Unconference (yes, we’ll explain that part in a moment!).
Keynote

There is no present without a past, and that is what the keynote by Eli Fischer highlighted about the OpenSearch’s history. He showed how contributions shape such a complex project, working to keep it stable and shinning.

Continuing with Anupam Chaturvedi talking about Generative AI and OpenSearch interacting with predominantly technologies like information stored in PDF. This reminds us that new technologies have to consider also, the past ones. But how do ensure the future of OpenSearch?

OpenSearch is open source, and we all know that modern technology wouldn’t exist without open source software. From a long-term perspective, around OpenSearch and other open source projects, we need flexibility and neutrality. The Linux Foundation, as a non-profit organization, supports the sustainable growth of the OpenSearch project in this way. Jim Zemlin, the executive director of the Linux Foundation, shared how this works in practice.

Overall, we learned about the past, present, and future of OpenSearch in one inspiring keynote presentation.

While conference formats are nice, sometimes what you really need is an Unconference. Time to explain what actually happened there.

Talks
No conference thrives without talks and the exchange of knowledge, agree? OpenSearchCon North America was no exception!

Across 4 rooms, attendees experienced 41 insightful talks delivered by 54 speakers from around the globe. These speakers shared their expertise on topics such as Search, Analytics, Observability, Security, and Community, and of course, OpenSearch.

Many companies and partners were presenting and sharing knowledge. Some that you can be interested in:
Aruna Govindaraju, Eric Pugh & Stavros Macracis – You’ve Deployed User Behavior Insights. Now What?
Aparna Sundar & Lior Perry – Vega Integration in OpenSearch Dashboards
Nate Boot – Improving your chances of survival in Cataclysm: Dark Days Ahead with OpenSearch


Log.IO, Eliatra, Aiven Oy, and Canonical, are leveraging OpenSearch within their products. Are you curious for more? You can find all those amazing talks here


Unconference

The fun of the Unconference lies in its format: anyone can propose a topic, participants vote, and the most popular topics are presented which leads to thoughtful conversations in this open idea-sharing approach. You can call it an organized chaos full of interesting discussions and learnings about the search world!

Some of our favorite Unconference topics were Michael Froh (OpenSearch is a database?)[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HFItXRGumq8], Scott Stults & Eric Pugh (Lessons in Rebooting a Plugin)[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S_dc8l2P1ew]. Maybe next time you can also join us and share your thoughts. 💬

Trainings
Have you ever looked for a great opportunity to learn OpenSearch from industry experts? On the third day of the conference, this became a reality. Attendees could dive into relevance engineering with OpenSearch, learning how to measure search quality and improve it by adjusting field weights. Additionally, those interested in deploying OpenSearch on Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS) had the chance to work alongside Jon Handler and Arun Lakshmanan in hands-on labs covering OpenSearch, EKS, and data management. These sessions provided immediate, practical experience with OpenSearch, making them invaluable for participants

Party
Finally, if you were worried about not having enough time to meet people and network between talks, training sessions, and the unconference, the organizers had you covered with ‘The Search Party.’ It was a great opportunity to connect with OpenSearch maintainers, partners, and other community members. The vibe was just right for real conversations and making connections in OpenSearch world!