 Hi, everyone. I'm Mark Collier with the OpenStack Foundation. And I'm back to give you another demo this time of IceHouse. This is the latest release of OpenStack, the cloud platform that makes it easy for you to manage pools of resources in your data center. I want to just show off a few of the new features and the new look and feel here in the dashboard on IceHouse. So as in previous releases, there are project and admin views. So depending on whether you're an end user or if you're doing administrative tasks. But because so much more functionality has been added over the last couple of releases to OpenStack, you can see here there's been a need to really create these collapsible and expandable sections so you can actually zoom in on the particular service you're wanting to manage. So that's just one of the neat new enhancements we've seen here in the IceHouse version. And if we actually go in here and start to provision some resources, I'll start with volumes and show you something that has been added to IceHouse. So in the past, of course, you could create a volume. And I'm running this on my laptop, so I'll just make a small volume. But with availability zones, with any of these resources, you can actually target the availability zone that you're wanting to provision the resource in. Again, being on a laptop, of course, for this demo, I don't have a lot of availability zones, but this is something that you would really come in handy when you have a much larger cloud. Now, one of the new features here in the IceHouse is that with a volume like this, you can actually extend the volume. So I had said that I was going to make a small one gig volume, so we're going to go ahead and extend it to two gigs. And in a few moments, you'll see that we've got the successful sign here that my volume's now been expanded to two gigs. So being able to do that through the Block Storage service, aka sender, as it's known by its code name, is a handy feature. Now, if I go in here to my instances and want to start an instance, I'll be able to actually boot from that volume that I created earlier. And you'll see that my volume is right here. So we'll go ahead and make this my new instance. And we'll show you how easy it is to get that started. So within a few seconds here, we'll have booted up a new image. It'll be attached through the block mapping here to that new volume that we created and also we're able to expand. And you'll see that this is really the basic function of any cloud is to provision those resources, get your virtual machine up, determine how much storage you want to have, how you want to attach it with your instance. And of course, when you're selecting your instance, you may have a number of different flavors that are here for your users. And you can configure in the admin section if you're administrator, what some of these different sections may be, what some of these different flavors may be, in fact. And of course, you'll notice here because there has been more capabilities added to OpenStack to power new services, the new service with Icehouse is the database service, code name Trove. So this is database as a service. So if you take that very, very common technology that every enterprise and every application relies on, which of course is various data stores and you want to be able to automate that, having databases as a service is a great new feature here in Icehouse. Now, if we switch over to the admin view, I'll just show you a couple of things here that are worth highlighting. One is under host aggregates. Again, as you're looking to have bigger and bigger cloud and you want to manage availability zones as well as host aggregates, having that capability here is really useful. And I also mentioned before that you as an administrator want to respond to the needs of your users, you want to be able to give them the combinations, AKA the flavors of resources that they want. So for example, if you wanted to change this flavor so that it had four BCPUs or one to manage your resources a little differently, you can all edit that here. And then when the users go back through their viewpoint, they'll see the flavors you've created and they can spin those up. So the last thing I just want to highlight because it's a nice user experience enhancement, which came from a lot of feedback because of how many people have been using OpenStack, running Grizzly, running Havana, talking about where they want to go with Icehouse and beyond is that we can now actually go in here and inline edit the project. So whenever there are tables like this, you can actually make edits right here live. So these are just a few of the refinements that have come from, again, lots of people running OpenStack in production and responding to that through the roadmap. So with that, I hope you get a chance to check out OpenStack for your company and I hope you have a good time with OpenStack. Thanks.