 So for the people who said that they do DevOps within the organization, how big is your company? How many people do you have? Well, let's say within the DevOps, do you have a dedicated DevOps team, or do you have a product team that contains operations people? Wow, it's so funny. I mean, the teams that you have here are much bigger than the teams that I'm used to working with. How about for other people who are doing DevOps similar? It's about 100 people. And so within your organizations can developers push code directly to production? They can do it together with an operations person? I see. OK. Great. Great. And I mean, that's really what it's about. It's about that close collaboration between development and operations. I'll go through some of that a little bit more in the presentation. Let's see. Are we ready to start? All right. Looks like we're set to go. So first off, just a quick introduction in terms of who I am. I'm a product lead at a company called Pulse Energy. By the way, this is my Twitter handle. Generally, during the talks I've been giving, I've been asking people to please tweet about anything that you find of interest during the talk. I'd love to get your feedback. And I'll try and respond to any of the questions that are raised over Twitter. So this is the company that I work for. And a lot of the practices that I'm going to talk about are based on my specific experience. So if you've got some questions about some of the practices or tools as we go through the material, please feel free to ask. I'm happy to go into detail. So yes, we do dev ops within my organization. But just a disclaimer for me personally, as it seems like is true for most of the room, I'm definitely more on the development side than on the operations side. So my perspective is going to be influenced by that. And this entire presentation has been inspired by Dilbert. So hopefully everybody here enjoys a Dilbert cartoon. Specifically, this is a little joke about virtualization solving the energy crisis. I work for a company that does work on energy efficiency, so it's kind of appealed to me.