 My name is Mariano Pugnetti, I'm the CTO at Hunter. My name is Martina Casaglia, I'm Martina, the manager at Hunter. Today we are hosting the first OpenStack Day in Italy. We are very happy and proud to host a lot of people here and to host the OpenStack Foundation representatives here. And we are hosted in our offices, Hunter's offices. Hunter is a nice B based in Milan. But we have started this co-working space which is a project we have discussed a lot about last year after our several travels we had to San Francisco Bay and we decided that the best way to represent how cloud approach, cloud infrastructure is is to represent it physically in our offices. A co-working space as we intend it to be is a place where you definitely share infrastructure and where you host different people. It's a very multi-talent environment. The plus in the co-working space compared to cloud environment is that you meet a lot of people, very interesting people. So we have a huge exchange of ideas, new ideas. New people come in, new people bring new ideas and so we do not need to travel so much like we did before because ideas never come to us. We have companies that work in security and we are involved in projects to make our cloud more secure. We have companies working in communication and organization so we work with them for our communication. We have people working with drones. We founded our maker space so we work with Arduino which is Italian. And we work with Arduino, we work with 3D printers. All the new stuff that's going around the world is here now and we share the same offices. Can you tell us a little bit about your cloud offering that you have? Since we are in ISP we spent a lot of the past years. We were funded in 1996 so we are around a while and our expertise is mainly data center services and connectivity so cloud is putting them together and run them on a software platform. When it came to OpenStack we were searching for a technology that could help us bring our new VPS program. The Italian market is very focused on VPS because 95% of companies are very small companies so they don't need very large scale architectures. We started working with OpenStack and now we have a real cloud infrastructure. Its name is an Android Cloud Suite. It's a public cloud offering. We are also active in hybrid cloud since we want our user to run OpenStack in-house and then scale on the public service as they need. Since OpenCloud is like the kernel is for Linux and OpenStack for our infrastructure is a sort of core we are building a set of services around it. We developed our own NICAS-based DNS service. DNS as a service means you can call APIs and just set up records and zones. We are setting up a Hadoop as a service with an Italian company based in Amsterdam. We are setting up CDN services by partnering with one of the largest networking companies. We are going to build a distributed email system based on Dovgot and OpenExchange so we want to run our own Gmail and all over the stack. You were telling us earlier about the growth in the community here from last year to this year. Yes, we are very pleased to see how much Italian people have joined the community. In the last one year and a half we started from zero. We founded the OpenStack user group. I think it was October 2012 and now I think we are now, today, we are 300 people and considered Italy is not a very big country. It's a very interesting and amazing result. People are very interested, very fond. They ask a lot from us. We try to provide the more information we can because we are a small team, very involved in operations so we try to balance between doing and sharing. We are very happy with that. You were in Atlanta and how many OpenStack summits have you been to now? I have been attending to four OpenStack summits. The first one was in San Diego for Folsom and this was my fourth one and this time I had no time to attend to any conference because I spent all the time to our first booth. It was so time consuming, I could not, but I know a lot of people there so I had time after the conference to speak to people and to exchange ideas. It was very fun, very useful. How does it feel to be part of the global OpenStack community? It's very thrilling. It's very participating in the OpenStack community starting to work in a global environment dramatically and totally change the way we approach the work. We used to go to customers with suit and now we go like this. We used to be more formal, we used to exchange the tools we are using have changed. We are much more smart than we were. We are very less formal and all our processes internally have changed the approach to the work. The idea of a team and the idea of a company is changing. It's not being a painless process and I know that moving to the cloud is not only a matter of infrastructure, it's not just a matter of how you do develop your tools. It's changing the processes. It's being more agile, it's being more quick. I think in the next year, the next years the difference between companies and adopting clouds compared to the ones that are not adopting would be the difference between surviving and not. Time to market will be so fast and so hurry that you need to keep the pace. It's up to you. You choose which pace you want to run to and then where you want to go to.