 I've kind of checked a couple boxes on that today. Next up, we're going to be talking about user experience. This is really important for people who are using OpenStack, both operators and app developers and end users of OpenStack Clouds. And one of the people who is providing a lot of leadership in that area is the Ptl for OpenStack Client. And he's also a senior cloud engineer at Intel. So let's welcome out Dean Troyer. All right, Dean. So a lot of people may know what OpenStack Client is, but not everybody. So let's start with that. What is OpenStack Client? OpenStack Client is a re-implementation of the core command line clients for the OpenStack projects we started four years ago and with, I guess, there's five now that we cover internally. OK, so before we had a bunch of individual clients for all the pieces of OpenStack, now we're bringing it together in a unified way. And when you talk about being unified or consistent, like why does that matter to people? Why do they want a consistent experience with that? Users should not have to know that volumes are handled by sender, that servers flavors are handled by NOVA. It should be one experience. And getting rid of that and making all of the commands have a consistent form and just feel the same takes a whole layer of stuff that a user doesn't have to think about, takes it away. Cool. So you said about five projects are covered today. So what projects are you covering with the project right now? We do compute, image, identity, volume, and network. And those all come in the box. OK, so imagine with OpenStack having some other capabilities out there, there are probably people asking you for more. How do we grow it beyond that set? What we did to keep it manageable and to keep from a user from having to install every client, we've got plugins now to handle the additional projects that have come along, especially with the BigTent. We've seen an explosion in the number of projects and the number of things that want to have a similar CLI experience. So you can just install if you need heat. You install the heat client and OSC will automatically use it. Cool. So I guess just a quick show of hands. Who here wants to see OpenStack user experience continue to improve? Is that important to people? All right, I just put the lighting team on an unexpected quiz there in the back. Cool. So if people here want to see it improve, that's the good news. The bad news is you're now all going to work on it. So all those people, they want to get involved to help you. How can they get involved? Well, there's a couple of things. We are actually in a perpetual catch-up mode with the projects, trying to keep up with the new things that they implement and with the new projects. So the things to do are to just help implement those things and come find us. We've got a session on Thursday, and we've got, more importantly, a meetup session on Friday afternoon where we're going to be talking about this kind of thing. And it's more informal. And we're on IRC. We hang out in the OpenStack SDKs IRC channel. You can also find us that way away from the design summit. Good. And I guess we've got some new mobile apps this time. So you can search on your mobile app and look for Dean Troyer's sessions and help pitch in. And that's how we make it better. So thanks so much, Dean. Thanks for having me, Mark.