 So I hand over to Stockholm for the official welcome speech. Thanks. This won't be a speech. I just want to thank you all for coming, for attending. I welcome you very much. I'm glad that so many, again, had the chance to come. Yeah, I feel always accelerated when I meet so many DV developers, and I enjoy it immensely to meet you every year. A few months ago, I was at a conference in Finland, and there was a representative of a big multinational company talking about their business model and WebSphere and stuff. And he said that his company was in the Linux market not for the ideological things like making the world a better place or so, but for money and for building business and stuff. And later on, I gave a talk, and I said that, among other things, that Debian was in the Linux market not to make money, but to make the world a better place, among other things. And just a few days ago, I met here in Mexico a guy who uses Debian in a small linguistic project where he works with some tribes, which don't have a language, but they would want to keep the language. And so they work with pedagogues and linguists to develop alphabets and everything. And he uses Debian, and he walks long distances because there are no roads and stuff, and he works with hardly any existing budget. And for some reason, that excited me more, made me more happy, more proud even, than just another phone call with a big company representative which uses Debian to boost their business because it's a stable and reliable system. And I was really happy to hear that here in Mexico, we actually do help as a force for good to make the world a better place for some people. And I would like to thank you for being part of that, for building packages, for making a high quality distribution that is actually so usable, so worthwhile, so actually great. And yeah, well, this is something that I'm really proud of, to be able to work with you and with this conference, to trick you all into working with Debian one more year, to put more energy into it, to be excited about it, and to spend immense amounts of time on this, even though you don't get anything from it. Well, you get something, but most likely not money. Thank you very much. And now I need to volunteer who wears this kind of t-shirt because I need to have a look at all the sponsors. Could you please stand up and turn around? Thank you. We have, of course, a lot of sponsors this year again. Most outstanding again is HP, which gave us a little less than half of the conference budget, I think. Really, if you see an HP representative, give him a hug. Oh, yeah. Thank you. Thank you. Then, right, not right, but then we have, as a really noticeable sponsor, Nokia, and almost right on the same level, Intel, which gave, yeah, a lot of money. We have also IBM and Gandy. Do you know Gandy? That's the small registrar. And lots of deep-in developers actually use it. NetApp also on the same level. Opera software, and there were more. Yeah, we have so many sponsors. It's really hard to, yeah. We have HP, IBM, Intel, and then a Mexican, Jagueta. Guna will mention what they sponsored. Nokia, VA Linux, Ubuntu, Talart, Telecom, Aruba, they are doing our wireless network here. AlphaNAS, Colax, Xandros, FNB, they are doing hosting, Gandy, GNU, Linux, no, actually, they are the extra-madura place in Spain, which helped us sponsor travel, sponsored trip. This one I can't read. Linspire, Linux, New Media, they are giving us a one-page ad in their magazines worldwide, which we used to attract sponsors with a thank you ad. MySQL, and this must be the University of Pedagogic Things here in Mexico. NetApp, Opera, Software, O'Reilly, which gave you books. Here comes the University with, OK, I'm not sure. CineNomino, Associated, Unvention, Amazon, CompuGraph, NeoCenter, Copy Left, VoxKit, and ByteMark hosting. They are doing the hosting for a Debcon fork. Yeah, I guess you all know that without their money, we most likely wouldn't be as many as we are now, like 20 or 30, I guess. I'm not sure. Yeah, and then we also have a bunch of local volunteers, which spend amazing amounts of money on time on this, making this happen. There are Gunnar, where's Gunnar? There, here. He lost a lot of weight, by the way. I'm not sure it's due to. It's not due to Debcon, but he did that on purpose. And then we have his wife, Gabriela, who also, yeah, well, I think they actually split the work. Somewhere else also, Darmock is somewhere here? Is he here? I'm not sure. And Yair, no, no, Yair, he's helped a lot with a wireless setup and with shopping for our needs. So we have a quite small local team, which spent a lot of effort on this to make this happen. And I would like to thank you guys very much. Punco, where's he? Is he here? He's in Mexico. He's the guy who built our wireless antennas and the access points, which do the bridging from the high pole on the, where's the, somewhere there, down to the internet cafe in the village. Yeah, it has been a very exciting time, the Debcamp time, actually, because lots of things happened then and the internet became stable, actually. We hope that the pole on the roof keeps being stable. It doesn't fall off. Yeah. Now I would like to ask Gunnar to say a few words. And if our beloved DPL is here, could he perhaps also move himself? And no. OK, yeah. OK, thanks. Well, a few words. I was not prepared for this. Well, thank you. I'm very, very happy to finally have you here. It's been, well, at least three years of trying to bring you all and one year working, because for everybody who's interested in having Debcamp in their countries, it's very important that you get involved in the Debcamp team at least 20 years before. And one year of hellish work here. I really hope this will make the free software movement and the Debian involvement in Mexico grow. Well, I don't know. I could also go again through the list of local sponsors. Of course, the local companies have helped us most with infrastructure, with lending equipment we could not have got otherwise. I'm not going over the list that Stockholm already read. I don't know if you have any other piece of clothes to give to us. No? OK, well, there's not much more to say. We have many people also who, well, even we don't know, but we don't have their names like handy, but have helped us tremendously. And well, I know I can count on any of you. So even if you don't expect it, we will be requiring random people to do random stuff. The nice thing about Debian is that we know we can do it. We know each of you, each of the people that came to Debcamp are part of the team. Each of you are interested in working with us. So this is not just another conference. Well, and that's it for me. So welcome and enjoy your stay. Have a nice time. And Tolimar, you are the protocol man.