 Are we ready? Are we ready to get started? We do another eight hours of sessions. What do you think, you know? It's, open source is so good work through the night. Kidding aside, thank you. Thank you for, you know, having been here and participating lively. There've been so many interesting session. I hope you found this useful. I also wanna, you know, thank you. This is actually my second event in person after two years. I'm not saying you guys are guinea pigs, but certainly we are also learning how to go back, you know, to in person events. So again, I really appreciate you being here and you know, on behalf of the team and the community, thank you. I'm just gonna say few words to close this and then I would like to get to one of my favorite parts, which is the community awards. I'm gonna call James McLeod, our director of community for EMEA to actually to give the community awards for EMEA. We have the luxury of doing two events this year, one here and one in the U.S. So a couple of words, I hope today has been, again, you've learned to which extent the community has progressed and just the movement of open sourcing financial services and I think, you know, that if you look at few years ago, just seven years ago, that's been, you know, hopefully you can see the difference in terms of, you know, the perception. There's certainly still a lot more to go, but we think we are on the right track and that's, you know, by a large thanks to you guys and your contributions. As we look forward to next year, I hope that some of the themes that we have outlined today, you know, whether it is, you know, becoming and behaving more like into tech companies, you know, all of our initiatives around open source readiness, you know, the DevOps cloud, those have been recurring things, starting from our keynotes today into, you know, the afternoon and certainly I, you know, come from a developer background, I think that the sort of developer centricity, the engineer centricity is a theme that is very close to my heart and I hope that you're seeing this developed today in the conference in New York and throughout next year. We've heard a lot of interoperability, FDC3 has been a recurring theme, not only APIs interoperability, but as we move into next year, data interoperability is clearly a big theme through a legend project. We've heard about currency reference data. Jane, as our data expert, is going to hopefully be driving more and more of these initiatives from Phoenix. And then of course, I think one of the big, you know, aspirations for us is to ensure that the benefits of open source collaboration are seen beyond the technology organization and are even more and more driven directly through the business, whether it is, you know, our engagement with regulators, whether it is, you know, a better collaboration of the different constituents that make up this industry. So I hope you find this exciting and we'd love to hear your feedback on how we can, you know, have more and more valuable projects in Phoenix. And in case you didn't like what you've seen today, there's been more than one contribution a month this year. So there's, the menu is pretty vast, whether it is, gain data projects, we got time base, there's been projects that we haven't been able to cover today. And again, if you or your colleagues will be in New York, we'll have a chance to talk about them. We have special interest groups. We think that there is something for, you know, everyone in terms of whether your area of interest is, whether the level of maturity participating to open source, as we said before, is not just about code. We have special interest groups where you can just show up, you know, of course contribute some ideas, not just be there and we don't like talking shops here, but there's a lot that can be, you know, used and contributed to in Phoenix. And again, we hope you will be there. And last but not least, yeah, I kind of stole my own thunder. This was the slide where I was supposed to talk about how you get engaged. As I said, depending on your maturity, you can start by evaluating our software, consuming our software. This is all open source. All of our software is Apache to licensed or Creative Commons licensed. So, you know, there's no paywall here. There's no paywall for participation. All of our groups are open. We do love your participation. And certainly, yes, we do appreciate your contributions. We use a pretty advanced platform called Easy CLA. It's provided by the Linux Foundation. It manages our contributor license agreements. I'm running out of steam here. One thing that, you know, I know it's hard from oftentimes within financial institutions to be an advocate, to be publicly present by your help, regardless of, you know, your seniority, your title, your department, helping us advocate for not just Finos, but open source and financial services, is, you know, creates the network effect that, you know, more mature. We've seen, you know, this morning Kubernetes and CNCF, you know, talking about, you know, the outstanding numbers that they have achieved in just a few years. So, you know, I would like to see us there in a couple of years. And so please, if you can, a tweet, you know, a LinkedIn post, that does help. Every little contribution does help. And if you need to convince your boss, just in case you're getting pushback, this is my last slide. We have a case study on the website, just in case, again, you need, as we've seen this morning, the industry is awakening, waking up to the ROI of open source. This is by far not a complete picture of all the different sort of aspects that open source delivers ROI to, but it's a pretty simple one to understand. This is a bank that used, consumed a perspective. It's a library that we haven't talked much about today, but it has over a thousand stars. It was originally contributed by J.P. Morgan. It's a true open source project. It's in Wasm. It has been assessed internally that this has saved over $3 million to this platinum member bank in terms of years of development, you know, resources. So, you know, pretty powerful numbers. Again, by far, we think that there's much more to open source than just a mere sort of cost saving. But as we've seen through the survey, you know, reduction of TCO and mutualization is still top two, top three reasons why the industry is looking at open source. That said, corporate motivators are fundamental, but communities are built out of individuals. And, you know, having come from, I'm still, I've considered myself still relatively new to this industry even though it's over five years. But I'm here, I'm actually 18. I just aged so much in the last five years. And so, this is definitely my favorite part of the day, also because it's the one just before drinks. The community awards. As I said, I keep saying communities are made of individuals. Now we have numbers proving that. So corporate motivators are important. We wouldn't be here without the funding of, you know, the institutions that are members of the foundation. And we're always thankful to those. But again, still the vast majority of folks, yes, they do work on projects on a corporate basis, but you know, about half of them still work on their personal time. I've seen even in projects that are in the foundations, I'm a little bit of a hoarder and signed up to every single notification that we have in every single system in the foundation, which might not be very effective. But I see commits coming at every time of the night. And that it's likely not part of the day job. So there is a huge amount of individual passion and contribution that comes from, you know, you guys, individuals, above and beyond the corporate motivations. So whether it is a personal interest, whether it's fun, you know, I want to be as much as possible thankful and rewarding you, you know, in little ways that we can.