 Okay, here's the last update for me. The Open Education Consortia has been for years now running a series of events in support of open education around the world. Those include OE Global, our annual conference that takes place in different places around the world. We actually just had a call for proposals to see who wants to host the OE Global 19 conference, and we're pleased to say we've selected but not yet announced, so that'll be announced in a future update. But also, Open Education Week is one of our big events, and that's scheduled for March 4th through 8th in 2019, and that particular week and event involves all of you who are doing open education work around the world, sharing the initiatives and work that you do, and we host all of that on a site and provide a means for people to say what they're going to do during that week and for people to participate, so we hope you'll start planning for that, and I look forward to engaging you all in all of that, and have been working hard actually on the website to improve its functionality from previous years. But another significant initiative that we've just started to develop is one that transfers our kind of focus from the world, from global efforts around open education to regional efforts, acknowledging that the work in open education regionally can be significantly different from how open education is playing out in other parts of the world. So we're starting to develop what we're calling regional nodes, open education consortia regional nodes, and in some ways the long-standing initiative we've been running called CCC OER is a regional node for the U.S. where it's supporting open education efforts primarily of community colleges. But we want to now also create regional nodes in other parts of the world, and so we're first starting with a focus on Latin America, and so we've actually begun the process of planning a regional node for Latin America. The intent here is to bring together open education leaders from across that area and have them work together collaboratively on developing a regional node where there's sharing and coordination and collective cooperation around open education initiatives in that region. So we've actually identified a bunch of open education leaders in that part of the world. So we have, I think, eight people in the core group right now, including people from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Mexico, Nicaragua, Uruguay, and Guatemala. And I'm really excited about what that will turn out to look like. It also has a component of embracing diversity, equity, and inclusion and recognizing the need for open education to embrace different languages and different models of implementation for different regions of the world. So that's another great initiative we have underway. If you're in the Latin America region, we hope you'll participate in that regional node and help with its development.