 Thanks, Nathaniel. Thanks, everybody, for coming. We sort of got the first idea to do a conference in Durham. We talked about it three years ago, four years ago. And so to have it be an idea and then finally come to fruition is something that's really exciting for me and really exciting for all of us to be putting on this conference for the first time. And thank you all for being part of the first 101. Someone said that everyone was going to get a little puppy, a Dalmatian puppy, but that's not actually going to happen. So why are we all here? I think we all in this room are involved in fintech and involved in global payments. And it's a great space for all of us to be in. There's just so much going on in terms of growth, internet, mobile, payment methods. It's easier than ever to be a company, a small company, about to transact globally. So with that comes a whole range of requirements. And there's obviously a really big explosion of interest in this space, and many of us are here in building successful companies because of that. With that came an explosion of payment events. Who here's been to Money 2020? Show of hands? I see some hands here. That's a great conference. I think they've doubled that every year in five years that they began and really focused on business development, new product launches, VCs, investment, a great conference. There's also a lot of conferences that are focused on merchants and solutions for merchants that you can attend. And we attend some of those. We think they're really, really interesting. But when we would hire new developers and we think about what conference should we send a developer to, we didn't have a lot of good answers. We didn't see a lot of good conferences out there. And then that combined with Sprigly's position as this agnostic platform, we thought there was a good tie up there, a good opportunity for us to help kickstart to create a conference that really focused on the engineer, the developer, and payments and brought everybody together under the one roof. So that's the idea behind the conference and behind launching this. And so here we are today. So what we want, the outcome, the successful outcome for us is connecting with your peers, meeting other people in payments who are doing similar things. For us, it's really fun. We get to meet a lot of our customers. And sometimes we sort of share what we just heard from the last customer who's looking at fraud and trying to implement something. So the idea of bringing you all together to hear great speakers and to hear their experiences and hear directly from them is a big reason for us doing this. And then finally, just a building a community. We hope this is a fairly humble stuff, perhaps the stuff of building out and extending on the community of developers who are really focused on payments. So I want to talk a little bit about the sponsors who've helped us put this on and help make this available. One of the other things for us is many of us are converts this area. Durham and Raleigh is a really interesting, exciting area that's undergoing a lot of change. We showed up here on Main Street in 2012. And even back then, probably one in three of those stores was closed and shut it up. And so it's really taken off in the last five years. And so we wanted to just kind of bring people here to showcase the area. BB&T is a North Carolinian based South Eastern Regional Bank. So having them sponsor and having them being involved and made a lot of sense for us and made a lot of sense for them, part of just sort of bringing more recognition to the fintech that's happening in this area. The other people I want to thank was Google Pay and the folks from Google. So Google, as you probably know, is trying to make available all of their customers who have ever stored a payment method with them across any of their properties. I want to pull that into Google Pay, the idea being that that for you as merchants, as platformers, we all kind of know if people have a payment method stored, it tends to increase conversions, make check out faster. And so Google is trying to do that, help you out with Google Pay. And that is now in private beta with Spritly. I see Dee Dee up there who works for Spritly and did a lot of work on this. So if you're interested in being involved in the private beta, please connect with us after and we can help get you involved there. Switching gears to PCI. Sikage is our QSA. We've been with them for a long time, way back when they were 403 labs. We have introduced some of you to them and the feedback we've gotten has been consistent with our experience, which is a really good partner to work with. So if you need a QSA, if you are unhappy with your current QSA then seek out Sikage here. Say that three times fast. Seek out Sikage here and talk with them because they've been a great partner for us. And lastly Spritly, these guys. Yeah. So our mission and our tagline is up there. It's the last payments API that you'll ever need to use. And so what we saw is that these clickers are semi-delayed. What we also saw was in payments there's a lot of payment providers who sort of stand up a vertical stack. And if you can go and integrate to just one and work with just one, that makes your life really, really easy. But there's a whole range of reasons that people in payments just can't do that sometimes. They're working with legacy systems that their company picked years ago and are deeply entrenched. Or they're working across a whole range of payment providers. So we saw this complexity in payments that was still there and was always going to be there no matter how many new and great and interesting new payment stacks were stood up. And so that for us, we saw maybe people were regionally based and they didn't have access to that. Or maybe they had legacy systems internally. It was an impediment for them to be successful. And it was really that opportunity that we built Spritly around. International expansion, Latin America is a very popular region for us right now with customers. If you have a primary provider in one area and you're expanding outside of that area, we can really help mergers and acquisitions. A lot of companies grow through acquisitions and they inherit new back-end legacy systems, especially on payments. We can help there. And then partners, this is a really interesting thing. I mean, you think of all the affiliate types of models out there now where you may be in a mobile app, but the transaction happened somewhere else. You're sent off to a partner. So if you're a ticketing app, you might buy 10,000 seats directly to the Yankees because you know you sell them all the time. But then if someone wants to use your app to buy from a small boutique theater on Broadway, you can send it off to a third-party API and have that fulfilled there. So we saw customers grappling with storing data, transmitting data, sending it to other places. Payment providers may be not so interested in those models, and that's a big part of what we're focused on addressing. And there it is again, the tagline. I'll keep it short in case there's a test at the end. So some of our customers that are here, we have some folks here from PushPay, came all the way from New Zealand. So great to have them here. When I look at this, I see Fat Merchant at the other end. So helping actual payment companies do payments, that would be applicable to both PushPay and Fat Merchant. Up there, we have SeatGeek, who's also here and going to be speaking later. So really pleased to have them here. South by Southwest, Gingerbread Shed, all involved in ticketing platforms, consumer apps. That's a big part of what we do. We talked about Latin America. Helivisa is a big sort of media conglomerate in that region, doing things like the Netflix for that region, a good customer for us, and then Cabify, expanding through Latin America. They're kind of the Uber of that region, always going into new areas, always pushing us to join them in new countries. And you see some very interesting technology when you expand in places like Bolivia. Potler's Stripe is here, Authorize.net are here as well. Companies we work with closely. We do a lot of volume with Together, as many of you in this room know. Google Pay I just talked about. Shopify is also here, and that's kind of interesting where they utilize us as a secure kind of PCI bridge for Shopify merchants that are transacting off the platform, but still want to fulfill with Shopify through their checkout API. So that's sort of a good example of someone using us to extend where their merchants can sell. PayPal, Adion, many of the companies that many of you here use us to transact with or for. So how are we doing? So 2012 was our pivot year. We pivoted from being a subscription service, which we call, affectionately, sometimes Spreedly 1.0. In 2012, we pivoted. This is a solution that you all use today. 2013 was our first full year, and we did a little over 600,000 credit card transactions on your behalf. And last year, we did 19 million transactions. So we feel like we found a good spot. We found we're obviously addressing a need in the market, and we're really, really pleased with this. And we're also a great customer for a conference like this, because just like you were deeply involved in payments with legacy solutions and care about scaling and how that looks and how we can do that effectively. So the next couple of days, right after me, there'll be some customer use cases. That merchant's going to come up first. And there'll be right behind them will be the folks from SeatGeek. And then we have some of our own folks doing some lightning talks. So that's Spreedly Engineering, Spreedly Success too, I think is up there. And then we're doing the AMA or the AMU, as Nathaniel correctly, outlined it before. And then tomorrow we have keynotes from John Duff and Sandy Metz, as well as some practical lessons learned and then networking with your peers. I think these next slides break it down a little more specifically. So again, right behind me will be Jax and Steve from Fat Merchant. Hopefully, you all have access to this. So I'll just go through it quickly. Yes, the social piece. So we have a Twitter handle at payments fn and a hashtag. It'd be great if you talked about it. I think I'll give an extra plug for this because this is the very first one that we're doing. And I think the success of this and how many people we get here next year will be largely dependent on how you as participants talk about it and go out there and speak. So we don't just need a one flattery praise. I'm sure with a room full of developers we wouldn't get that anyway. But we just want that. So if you have good suggestions for us next year, I guess I'd just give it a little bit of an extra push and say, like, this is the first year. You're the first 100. So people in your network, the way you share information, we're hoping that you can help spread the word and we can have a lot more people maybe in a larger venue next year. The Payments FN and PFN 2018. And so that's it. That's me wrapping up. And that's the cue if Jack's is here and come on up and we'll get you mic'd up. And again, thanks so much for coming. I really hope you enjoy the time here. I look forward to seeing some of you out this evening in Durham and I hope you really enjoy the town and thanks so much for being here.