 And so after two days of intense talks and hopefully many connections made, we're heading towards the end of this year's open source strategy forum. First off, let me send a huge thank you to our sponsors, GitLab, IBM, Red Hat, Tidelift, and TradeWeb. You've been fundamental to put this event together and this experience, so thank you. Secondly, let me take a second to thank again our wonderful speakers. In my experience, it's not often that the conference brings together such a diverse lineup of speakers, ranging from senior executives to engineers across the industry, from financial institutions, buy side, sell side, fintech firms, open source leading tech companies, and regulators, a new addition to our community. I truly hope the audience has found the content interesting and most importantly, we hope that you've provided, that we could provide many concrete examples of how open source can improve this industry, and beyond that, making an lasting impact in areas like diversity, financial inclusion, sustainability, and climate. I truly hope this conference, very much like last year, can help you find ways to spark into action by participating, providing us feedback, and continuing helping amplify the message that this industry is long overdue a better model of collaboration. And this is not just because the industry will benefit from it, sorry, but as I've read James and Joe's downstream of the financial system, we hope they can get an advantage down the line. As I like to say, open source in financial services is a positive sum game, because the reality is that there's an immediate opportunity here, whether you represent a bank looking for new efficiencies, a fintech looking for an effective go-to-market strategy through open source commercialization, or a regulator looking for more transparency in the implementation and enforcement process. And finally, last but not least, if you are an individual contributor, contributing to FinNOS might well be your opportunity to land a pretty well-compensated job in this industry that is so much need for talent. Our community needs experienced open source leaders, so we hope you'll join and help us continue to grow this movement. Every commit, issue, pull request, any kind of feedback, or even a tweet or a blog post in our community blog helps. Everyone is welcome in our community, whether you live wherever you live in this world, new world of remote working. So I truly hope this can become a level playing field for any contributors, regardless of race, gender, provenance. As you've heard yesterday from Ali, we still have a lot of work to do in diversity, but it's important to get started now in this time of social reckoning, and more selfishly, because it makes us stronger as a community. On this note, let me get to my favorite part of the conference, awarding our community for that incredible participation last year. And since unfortunately, I won't be able to shake your hands in person this year, we decided to go for a more, you know, Academy Award type field. Like last year, we're awarding contributors in three categories. The new camera award, the contributor that joined our community this year that made most contributions, our top contributor award, and our leading the PAC award, which is for our lead maintainers in, again, not just leading their project, but helping us grow our community. So without further ado, let me introduce our first winner. She's been instrumental to E-PAM contribution of glue in Q3 of 2020. And it's amazing to see how she was pivotal to glue by raising over 80 pull requests and more than 70 commits. All of this were accepted by the glue lead maintainer. So she really has accelerated E-PAM's contribution to Finals. I'm happy to announce that the new camera award goes to Ingrid Brukhoff from E-PAM. Congratulations, Ingrid, for making yourself known to the wider Finals community. And thank you. Thank you. This award means a lot to me. I'm delighted to accept it, not only for me personally, but on behalf of the E-PAM glue team. That's Panos Sakondakis, Yasin Fingerov, Roman Semko, and Vladimir Nachik. Everybody involved in the project plays their part. And the E-PAM culture is supportive in encouraging us to use our initiatives and giving 100%. Being members of the Finals community is a great source of inspiration. We're committed to contribute, participate, and bring value, both personally and as team E-PAM. Thank you, Finos, for this recognition. Thank you. Well, thank you, Ingrid, for your passion and the contributions to our community. Next up is the very sought-after top contributor award. He's a maintainer of the Morpher project that was recently contributed by Morgan Stanley. Morpher has made a big impact within the Finals community through being a focused project throughout the year, and by joining our Finals events, our whole community calls. His hard work and determination were reflected through the contribution of over 64 requests, almost 200 commits, several issues, and so many issues merged in our community in the Morpher project. So I'm really happy to announce that the top contributor award for 2020 goes to Attila Midehali of Morgan Stanley. Well done, Attila. Thank you so much for your contributions. So first of all, I would like to thank Finos for creating this award. I think it's a great way to encourage people to contribute, and so I would like to encourage everyone to contribute to Morpher, but I have to warn you, there are some potential side effects. You might become very passionate and start decorating your walls using the Morpher logo, or maybe buy bicycles that go with it, or maybe some clothing. So be careful. On a more serious note though, I would like to thank everyone at Morgan Stanley, especially Stephen Goldbaum, who is a co-creator of Morpher, who made it possible to open source Morpher, and then also Finos for helping us move Morpher into the organization. So thank you again. This is very much appreciated, very unexpected, and incredibly exciting. So thanks. Attila, thank you so much. That was great. Thank you. And we look forward to growing Morpher in the foundation. So I think that's a good, a good impact award. In early 2020, not only Deutsche Bank contributed walls as a real mature project into Finos, but they also contributed the winning team. With an outstanding 131 pull requests, 377 commits, 61 issues, and 137 merges, contributed to wallets. He has demonstrated what it takes to be a Finos lead maintainer. He probably is all over the code, but walls makes full use of the GitHub issues, milestones for project delivery, running the project in a truly open fashion. So I'm really delighted to announce that the leading the PAC award this year goes to David Watkins from Deutsche Bank. Well done, David, for paving the way for others to follow. Hi. Excuse the lockdown here. Thank you very much for the Finos leading the PAC award. It's a great honour, great thrill, very unexpected. It's very nice to be recognised for the work that we have put into walls over the past years. And a big thank you to my colleagues at Deutsche Bank and elsewhere for helping make walls a success. And we look forward to seeing where this open source journey will take us over the next few years. Thank you, David. It's amazing to have you in our community. Finally, I want to send a shout out to the whole Finos team which together with the fantastic Linux Foundation event team has been the true engine between, sorry, behind the success of this conference and the growth of our community in the last years. I am truly humbled every day to be working with such an amazing group of people, their passion. As you might imagine, it took some quite relentless and painstaking hard work to get this industry to move into open source so swiftly. So I wanted to call out to all of them for their amazing work and I wanted to quickly introduce them to you so that hopefully you can remain in touch and you know how to engage better with the Finos community. So, you've seen already Tasha Ellison, our COO. Please make sure that you continue reaching out to her. Next up, Rob Underwood, our Chief Development Officer. Thank you, Rob, for all you do every day. I want to then call out Aitana Miohl. She's our Manager for Strategic Initiatives and co-lead the OpenRectic Initiative with Tasha Ellison. I want to call out Alexandra Stratigas, who's our Chief of Staff and literally keep us going every single day. I want to then call out James McLeod, our Director of Community. Thank you, James, for being such an engaging character. And I want to call out Gris, Aaron Griswold, our Marketing Manager for keeping us in the news, in the social, out there every single time. So, thank you. And finally, my fellow Italian and good friend Maurizio Pilitu, our Director of Infrastructure. He keeps our lights on and our projects lights on every day. So, thank you so much, folks. I really am grateful and thankful to have you as part of this journey. And finally, this year we joined up with the Linux Foundation, as you know. It's been a truly remarkable experience even though, unfortunately, due to this pandemic, we haven't been able to rebuild imperson ties over the last six months, but it's been a huge pleasure. You guys are fantastic. Thank you so much. And with that, we are wrapping this conference. I hope that all the attendees have enjoyed the content and I really hope, as I said before, that this is just the beginning. Enjoy the rest of your day and wherever you are, please stay safe. On behalf of the whole Phoenix team and community, we can't wait to see you joining our community and next year at this event. Thank you.