 I feel the last available lightning talk slope, but as it was glaring at me, I thought, okay, I'll take the opportunity to make up on an email that I didn't send. And it's a response to an email I think a lot of us have received, and it has the ominous title, Announcement. And I'll just read you the first paragraph, and you know what I'm talking about. Here Libre Graphics Magazine contributor. Over the past five years, we've worked together to publish eight wonderful issues of Libre Graphics Magazine. Those issues, through the writing and visual work they contain, have addressed themes and issues relevant to current understandings of Libre Graphics and media and their place in the world. Together we've showcased work that disproves the old assumption that floss is just for hobbyists or that copy left and permissive licensing don't fit with professional artistic practice. We're extremely proud of everything we've done together. So this is the first paragraph of an email that was sent to everyone that was involved in these five years of Libre Graphics Magazine to say, yes, we are extremely proud, but we will close the process here. So I didn't want to let this email slide, but I also didn't know how to answer. So I thought maybe this is a moment to say thank you Libre Graphics Magazine and give them applause here. So I stole just from the exhibition the stack of magazines, they'll go back there. So if you've not already know them by heart, take your time to look at them. Go to the website, look at the source files, look at the PDFs, order the back issues that are still available. Because these five years of editing, of interviewing, of looking around for what is important to this community about the practices that we are all involved in is here. So I want to have another applause for Libre Graphics Magazine. So now I have like seven minutes left. And I wanted to just launch the question of what are we going to do now? How can we be without a magazine that somehow thinks with us, shows what we're doing, showcases, gives us a deadline to finally write up that article about something that has been bothering us. What are we going to do when Libre Graphics Magazine team is not there to push us to get the article in time? And moreover, isn't there to take care of the editing, of the layout that it actually ends up in this beautiful principle form. So this is not something we're going to solve because I think it's not as easy as that. But I just wanted to take this opportunity to just launch a few ideas that has been circulating around. What are we going to do? It has to be different, but who's going to take care? Who's going to have the time? Who's going to do it? So one option was to, this was Brandon actually that suggested this. He said maybe we have to rename it and to gain some academic credit. So I'll read you the title he proposed. The International Journal of Free Libre Open Source Software Design, Art and Critical Practice. So maybe this can interest somebody. Another idea that was quite serious actually is that people have been thinking about is maybe we could find a school that could adopt the magazine for a period. So because five years is a long time to be so precisely caring for something. So what if we split that time frame into more let's say doable elements and then say okay this art school or this design school will take care of this magazine for a year and we'll interview solicited articles, take care of the design etc. It's a different thing. I mean it will not have the coherence of the magazine we had but well it will be something else. So that could be an option. Another one is to work much more in continuity. So to have more like maybe a web based system that you could have magazines that update all the time that could be interacted with through scripts or through ways that people are writing around the web to have a much more, there won't be much more messy and kind of unpredictable but again we need to find out another solution. So my idea is to try and keep talking about this and then come up with a plan that wants to land in Moslevo. I think a year is what we need to kind of get a revival of bibliographics magazine on the road. I think it deserves that. Thank you very much.