 Hello everyone. I'm the one who told the jokes earlier and I told you both jokes that I have so no more jokes left, sorry. So yeah, my name is Lian and I will be talking about our work that we're doing with the tag app delivery and I would like to just know who knows what a tag is or has heard of a tag before. I think I saw like four people. Good. Okay, so excellent. You're the perfect audience for this talk then. So let's get right into it. Just real quick, my name is Lian and I am one of the tech leads for the tag app delivery. We're pretty much basically the assistants to the chairs. Also, I am probably best known for being the chief karaoke officer. We're having a karaoke party. It's called Kuboroki. It's the first and only Kubernetes karaoke community on Wednesday. So talk to me after this to know where to go and how to get in. And then finally, I'm kind of on a bit of a sabbatical right now instead of doing performance art amongst other stand-up comedy. So again, if you don't have any plans for Thursday, talk to me as well and I'll get you into a stand-up comedy show. If you want to find me on the internet or also see some of my jokes or whatever I'm also doing, Lian makes things on most social media or you can go to my website, which is lianmakesthings.dev. Okay, enough about me. This is a quick look at the tag app delivery, but if you want to have a slower look, Thomas, who's one of our chairs and myself, we're going to be talking about the last 12 months at the tag in a full talk on Thursday. It's for the Montana track. And yeah, if you scan the QR code, then it will take you through the schedule website maybe, or maybe it will be a rig role. Only one way to find out. Okay, everyone got the picture? Excellent. So this is what it was for me at the beginning. And I guess with most of the people here after that quick vote we did, what is a tag? What does it do? A lot of people come to our meetings and they are like come to the booth. We have a booth here and they're after still thoroughly confused like what is it that you actually do? So we have a charter and the charter says that the tag works with, about, talks about projects and initiatives related to delivering cloud native applications. So that would include building, packaging, deploying, managing and operating them. One of the things that we do is we gather feedback from app developers, platform engineers, users, share that feedback with projects in the domain and produce guidance and examples for end users. So we're really trying to be kind of in the center between the users, the projects, the community and facilitate a little bit of that communication with each other. Yeah, as I said before, we support projects that are related to the charter, as I said, building, packaging, deploying and so on. And there's two active working groups under the tag, the platforms and the artifacts working group. The Githos working group recently left us. Basically, they have been successful with their work and they have now merged with open Githops. Generally speaking, we have a general meeting. It is every two weeks at 4 p.m. UTC, which I never know what time that is in human time. So you have to, again, there's a QR code. You can check it out and you can just subscribe to the meeting. What we do there is mainly projects come, they present themselves. We recently had, for example, cross-plane that are applying for graduation and they just wanted to show what they do. You have time and space to ask questions, to talk to other community members. We also discussed, maybe, do we need a working group for, for example, artifacts or app development. We had that discussion very recently. On the CNCF Slack, you can find us at tag-app-delivery. Then we have the artifacts working group. They're working on common models for describing artifacts and artifact bundles for cloud-native architectures. Their meeting every second and fourth Friday, again, it's probably best if you just scan the QR code to find out more. Also there, you can join their Slack channel. It's VG artifacts. Right now, they're more in a finding phase. They haven't produced any deliverable yet, but they're discussing a lot of different things, like, for example, writing a white paper on the best practices that they've been discussing. Then the platform working group is probably the one that is currently most popular. They've been working really hard on a lot of things. Last year, shortly before Amsterdam, Kubecon Amsterdam, we released the platform's white paper. Now they've recently released the platform maturity model. It's very exciting. It's a lovely group. They're also having breakfast, lean breakfast. I'll give you more information on that, or you just scan the QR code. This group discusses concepts and plans, develops a demo infrastructure, and so on. There's a lot of space. This is what I took from the website, but it really is not a hard and fast rule. It's more like a general guideline, like, where do we want to go? What we want with the working groups is that they have a scope. We don't want them to just form and kind of just chat and have coffee all the time, but we want them to actually produce something that will be beneficial to the community. For example, the white paper or the maturity model. They're meeting every second. First, Friday. No, they don't meet on Fridays. They meet on Tuesdays. Sorry, I copy pasted this wrong. You can find them on, oh, wow, I did copy paste it, and then I didn't change it. Excellent. You can find them on VG platforms. Finally, we have a booth, as I said. We have lightning talks at the booth. We have full schedule. We have more talks. Please, again, scan the QR code, check out our schedule, and come to our booth and talk to the lovely people. We will have specific hours for the artifacts working group and the platforms working group where the chairs will be there, and you can ask them whatever you want to ask them. And that's the end of my presentation. Thank you very much.