 In your session, here is Scarlett Moore presenting over a million reasons why snaps are important. Take it away. So, I'm Scarlett Moore. You don't know me. I have revived the snaps in KDE and I'm here to tell you why they're so important in the Linux packaging ecosystem. I have been working on their snaps since their inception many years ago and then I had a bit of a hiatus life and all. And then, so now I'm back. I've been working on upstream snap craft. We have our own extension tooling and automation and of course the snaps themselves. I also maintain our content pack, which is our frameworks with QT. Right now we only support five, but I'm working on six. What we do at a conference long ago, I saw this talk about this cool new technology and it was called Snaps or Snappy at the time. After the talk, I walked up to the speaker and asked if he would be interested in me snapping KDE. And his eyes lit up like a Christmas tree and he was very excited. So, I got started and back then of course the process was very long, tedious and 10 mile long snap craft YAML files. We have come a long way since then with snap D and snap craft. We now have interfaces and plugs for most of it and just piece it all together to which parts we need. And it's mostly a process of updating dependencies and so the workflow is you update said dependencies and decide which parts that you need. And then you push and then the CI does everything else for you. It sends it off into the interwebs and builds and builds it. And if it's successful, it will publish it to the store for you and then you have to test it. Always got to test it. You don't want to give the users a very broken application. Once you've determined that it is something you want your users to be able to use, then you just have to promote it to stable and you're done. We also, I have made a template for new applications that have not had their snaps done yet, but I'm working on making sure that that's not an issue anymore. But yes, that's available. And so here's why snaps are so very important. We have over a million users, active users across all of our applications and content packs. Our applications are very popular amongst snap users. Our heavy hitters, of course, are Krita and Ocular and Katie and Live are very close second. Don't get comfortable in those top seats. You have a lot more applications coming up in popularity. As mentioned before, we maintain a content pack which is all QT libraries and our frameworks and it is used by many other developers for their applications as well. It's not just KDE, there are other applications out there utilizing our SDK and content pack. We also have a KDE Neon extension in Snapcraft itself which is the building tool that builds the snaps. It is also very popular out there and so I maintain that and make sure that the users of that are happy. Our team is mostly me, Jonathan and Carlos is coming in new. And you, all of you that have already submitted merge requests, thank you. I appreciate that. It's very useful and helpful. KDE, as mentioned before, is very popular among the snap users. And as I started out with about 75 that I revived that were in very sad state of affairs. And they are now all nice and shiny, new, updated, newest. And I have now added, so we are at 153, I think, total apps right now. And that number is still rising. And I'm not at all in line with my slides, sorry. So essentially we have deep roots in the Snap ecosystem. Again, we have the content pack, we have our own extension in Snapcraft. Our applications are very popular and we are a very important publisher in the Snap ecosystem. That's because we have awesome everything. It's been a long journey and there's more to come. I already said all this, I'm sorry. So with that said, I have Boff in room two on Tuesday. Anybody that's interested in learning how to maintain your snaps if you know that there's a new dependency coming up, you want to do a merge request and all that, come talk to me.