 Oh, not that weird, open source tools for creatives. Quick pause though, anyone in the room do creative content stuff, make images, make music, make writing, fiction, any of that stuff? All right, how many guys only use free software? Oh, all right, you guys remember yourselves for a second. Now, where are the open source tools now? These are your workhorses. We've got Blender, 3D modeling, animation, video compositing, video editing. You kind of involves graphics and visual and pretty things, Blender can do it. And very professional, works very well, I use it every day. Inkscape, if you're talking about vector graphics, we're talking about icons and design and really cool cars. Definitely want to use that. Gimp, raster image editing. So photos and those sort of, you can use it for painting, but mostly photo image editing kind of stuff. Creda is really, really great for illustration. You're going to use that for comic books, for other sorts of illustration, digital painting, and textures for your Blender models. Audacity, if you're doing music and podcasts or anything that deals with audio and you have something very simple, all these things are also multi-platform. Audacity is a great way to go. VLC, yay. They might even, I hear rumors they're going to be doing a video editor soon, maybe. I'm not holding my breath, but maybe. In any case, Plays video, VLC kind of does it all. But that's just the start of it. So, Scribes, we have for printing and publishing and layout and that sort of thing. If you want a digital publishing, you can use Caliber and you can use Sigil, usually to fix the stuff that Caliber can't do quite right. After writing, if you want to do screenplays and screenwriting, after writing is a web app that does that sort of stuff and it's great for that. If you don't want to use a web app, you can use Trailby. Actually, about these two things, I just wrote an article that's on today. On open source, come on screenwriting software. There's two more options in there. I found out about more. By Paint, if Creda is great for a lot of things, if you want something that loads just a little bit faster and the brush system is a little bit better, by Paint, I use it all the time for concept work. Kated live, open shot and shot cut. Video has always been a sore spot. Always has been, probably kind of still will be. One of these three probably should do it if they can't. Blender can. Natron, which is very cool. It's talking about compositing, post-processing. The stuff that you can do in GIMP on still images, Natron does on moving images. Our door. So audacity is not enough for you. You want a full digital audio workstation. Our door's the way to go. If you want something between our door and audacity, you might want to try out Q-Tractor. Rose Garden and MuseScore, do you make music, compose music, come up with new music and want it to be played by other people or by yourself? Both of these two? Well, worth looking at. Hydrogen, drum machine, fun stuff, just good beats, and so you put that with the other two because they talk through Jack as does our door. Mesh lab, if you do 3D printing, so I made something in Blender, I sculpted it, it looks totally sweet. I want to make a physical object of it, but it looks kind of nasty as far as the geometry goes. Mesh lab can help you clean that up. And there's more, but there's not enough time. But, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but. A lot of people, first thing comes in, these programs are not perfect. They don't fit my workflow. They don't do my thing. No, that's not the point. They don't have to be perfect. No program is. The point that I'm trying to make is that it's absolutely possible to go from concept to finished, polished products using just free and open-source software. You can go from beginning to end. Any of the, any of the graphics that are in here, any of the thing that's been done, even this presentation, all free software. I can be done with all of it, and it's, God, it looks good, right? More importantly, it's not that weird to do it that way. Let me modify that. What, those of you who's raised your hands again, we're not that weird. That's my time. Thank you.