 Hey friends, it's great to be here. Looks like I have my work cut out for me. Not a lot of folks know about the OpenJS Foundation, so I am just delighted to share a little bit more about our new organization and really what led me to leave my career at Microsoft and join the Linux Foundation. So if you're online today, you're probably using JavaScript. Do you know that more than 95% of the world's websites use JavaScript, including many of the major web apps that we all know and love? And there's also one of my new favorite customers, who's a big user of JavaScript and Node.js, and that's NASA. Do you know that NASA uses these technologies to build solutions for spacesuits? And these IT solutions not only help keep astronauts safe, it helps them reach their dreams, much like Jessica and Christina did last month. So I thought that was pretty cool. So if you see now that JavaScript really is central to the web and the cloud, just as developers are to our world. But how do you take this technology and keep it trustworthy and keep it modern with an astronomical user base? I mean, it really is a humbling and awesome responsibility. Well, the answer is you. I mean, all of you in the open source community, plus our new home at the OpenJS Foundation. And while we're new, many of us have actually been around for a long time from the JS Foundation, the Node Foundation, and many more. And we've been able to take really the best of both worlds and adopt what really works. And in fact, I do go way back with the Node Foundation in my early days at Microsoft. We worked to co-found the organization with several leaders across the industry. Because we knew then that by creating an independent kind of a neutral foundation, we really could help increase the number of contributions to the Node project and really ensure the project's future success. So for me, joining this organization has been really amazing because there's just the strength and the resilience of all of the people coming together and joining this new organization in such a positive, productive way has been really great to see. So today, the OpenJS Foundation hosts over 30 important projects, including Appium, Dojo, jQuery, Node.js, and Webpack. We have really, our members really make it happen. They not only provide the financial support for our projects, but they really are active in our governance process. And now that we're an umbrella organization, we really wanted to create a goal. And that was to really create a model that gives a strong voice to our projects. So we've designed it this way. We have a cross-project council. We call it the CPC. And they serve a centralized role to provide technical governance and provide moderation, onboarding new projects, and they're great folks. We also have our OpenJS Foundation Board of Directors. And Todd Moore from IBM is our board president sitting right there. Hey, Todd. They provide our vision and direction and are very active in supporting me and the organization. And so what we really want is for our projects to really operate independently, but use the foundation to remove that friction so that OpenSource projects can really grow and get better every day. We've also created policies that give projects the confidence that they're entering an ecosystem that is stable and open. We have discussions as much as we can always in the open. And we really encourage decision-making at all levels. And we know the JavaScript community is large, so we're always working and reaching out beyond our members to bring in new projects. And you'll find many of our leaders actually working in the standard-setting bodies, for example, ECMA and the W3C. We've had a really busy cool month at the OpenJS Foundation, so I thought I'd share a few things that's happened since I joined. We just welcome two incubation projects to the organization. Node version manager, you may know as NVM. It's a widely used method for installing Node.js and managing multiple versions. They just joined as the incubation project. And we just welcome the AMP project to the OpenJS Foundation. How many know AMP? There you go. So AMP is a web component framework. It allows publishers to create websites where pages load very quickly. It's actually used in 30 million domains and billions of web pages, really important open source projects. And it's implemented in products like Google, Microsoft Bing, Pinterest, and Pantheon. So we also shipped another program just last week that was in high demand from our community over the past couple of years, our Node professional certification program. And we developed this program with NodeSource in near form because we thought it would be a really great way for you as developers to showcase your talents in the job market and for companies to find top talent. Now, the program, the exam, is actually administered through a remote proctor, through screen sharing and streaming. And so it really allows you to become a Node certified developer from your home. And given the virtual nature of the test, we really wanted to make this accessible to anyone in the world. But we actually have found that we're going to have to work on some of our pricing models to make it more accessible to everyone in the world. So we really need your help to do that. And we'll be having more to share in the coming weeks. Here we go. So I've been on a little bit of a listening tour. I've been on the job for a month. And one theme I keep hearing is, I'm like, what should we do? They're like, do more. And so we've had a few priorities that are sort of rising to the top that I'm hearing. One, we need to grow our organization so we can do more cool things and reach more developers. We really rely on these communities. So we're looking at how the OpenJS Foundation can help even more. We really need to bring in more women and diverse communities into our foundation. Our doors are open. I really welcome anyone to join. Working on open governance is actually a lot of fun. It's very rewarding. We make a lot of great friends over the years. I know many are in the audience. And I think it's great to grow your career as well. And finally, we have a lot more work to do to improve security and trust. So we'd love for you to join the OpenJS Foundation in any way you can. We are around this week. Todd's here. I'm here and others. So we'd love to get to know you. You're also welcome to join us. And WinTree, beautiful Montreal, Canada in December, where they speak French, where our big flagship conference is going to be. And you'll also find ways to reach us on Slack and GitHub on our collaboration page. So thanks again for inviting me here. It's been a great honor to represent the communities of OpenJS. Thank you. Thanks.