 Hi everyone, I'm Alex Campanelli of Tesora. I'm here with Frank Daze, also of Tesora, and we're two of the organizers for the very first Open Sack Days East here in New York City. We're here at the PlayStation Theater in the heart of Times Square, and for this year's event, we've seen over 500 people come through, and we couldn't be happier with the presentations that have been going on. Frank, do you wanna talk a little bit more about the content we've seen? Sure, we conceptualize this event as a community event, and the great part of it is that we recruited all the meetup organizers up and down the East Coast from Toronto all the way down to Atlanta to put this event together, and that really helped us quite a bit in terms of trying to recruit really high quality speakers. The theme of the event this year was trying to talk with people about making Open Sack real, and with that it was a very business-focused and end-user-focused on the talk. So we saw an amazing array of case studies from starting with companies like Walmart, Bloomberg, NetApp, all the way down to names that we've heard at other Open Sack summits like Charter, Time Warner Cable, Verizon, and Analyst Goes, and that's really made it a high-quality event, and the feedback we're getting from people has been a lot of excitement around the fact that it was really more than just the standard out-of-the-box presentations that we have, but we've seen a lot of net new content and original ideas come out. Hi, I'm Tisula Cacouris from IBM, and I run the Seattle user group and the meetups in our region. One of the best things I think about these regional events versus the huge summits that are fantastic, but can be overwhelming at times are the small intimate conversations you can have with fellow users, the connections you can make with people that you have seen online, but maybe have never met in person. There's some great topics this year at Open Sack East that I plan to take back to my user group in Seattle, such as the tools and resources you can use once you've actually deployed your cloud in Open Sack, the different ways that you can benefit from the other users in the community, and of course, since community is dear to my heart, ways that you can build your own meetup or participate in the existing meetups and contribute that way, even if you're not technical. I've really been enjoying the conversations with users that are just starting to explore Open Sack. New York's got kind of a different vibe and feel to it than a lot of the other events that we've been to. People that have kicked the tires but asking how to take it to the next level, stretching Open Sack in new and different ways and maybe what we typically see in the conversations at the larger summits and what we've seen in the past. A lot of good positivity around like, hey, it's arrived, we're probably a little bit behind the ball, how can we catch up and actually get Open Sack out the door, and asking those real world questions, it's kind of fun. So, OneOps is actually a company that we acquired about three years ago and it really helped accelerate, so like the largest challenge we had at Walmart was not just building out cloud infrastructure, but how do we actually get our applications moved onto cloud, how do we get our developers using cloud, how do we get the right governance and processes and all that type of stuff solved and make it easy and improve that developer experience. And that's what OneOps helped us do. And so we invested a lot over the past three years into OneOps and we're like, this is an awesome tool. Can we bring this out into the community? So back in January, we open sourced it and there's been some great conversation about it, but we wanted to see and have a conversation with the Open Sack community. Is this something that they were interested in and that we bring it in and make it part of this overall umbrella or what is the right approach to get that kind of community participation and feedback around the tool so that we can even further develop where it's going and maybe blend that marriage between Open Sack and OneOps. So Walmart's been doing some pretty cool stuff with Open Sack. We've been expanding at a pretty high rate, adding new data centers, adding a lot of new applications. One of the things that is kind of new, we actually added Open Sack previously was really focused on our e-commerce side, but we're now onboarding all our traditional retail technology applications onto Open Sack. All those enterprise stuff, all those things that maybe initially seem more difficult, but we're now figuring out, we're rewriting those apps, we're doing what we need to do, bringing them through OneOps and running them on Open Sack today. To do some of that, we've also started to leverage some additional technologies. We brought in a lot of stuff. We're also starting to explore in containers. We're actually running some production workloads on Kubernetes on top of Open Sack, actually deployed by OneOps. So we're doing some neat stuff and innovative stuff in that space.