 All right. Next up, we've got another amazing Japanese user, Makoto Hasegawa from Cyber Agent. Come on out. Hello, everyone. I'm Makoto Hasegawa, who is working at Cyber Agent in Japan. Today, I represent about how the Cyber Agent is using OpenStack and what we are planning for. OK? Let's start now and future of OpenStack at Cyber Agent. To begin with, I must introduce Cyber Agent because I know that only Japanese people know us well. Do you know Cyber Agent? Please raise your hand if you know Cyber Agent. OK, OK. Japanese people only. OK, I knew it. The Cyber Agent has one vision. That is to create 21st century reading company. The Cyber Agent is expanding its business in the field of internet, a reading industry of the 21st century. And we provide a variety of services, such as online games, online community, and art technologies. Let me give some examples. For example, online games, Rumble Fantasy, Girlfriend Pre-Luminary, about communities, Pasha's MyPed, and Broke Services, about art technologies, DSP, DMP, SSP, and so on. OK? And we have been running these art technology services on our private OpenStack crowd. The art technology is a bit complicated. So if you know more details about our technologies, please look at our website. OK, now let's briefly take a look at Cyber Agent history, OpenStack usage at Cyber Agent. In September 2012, OpenStack 4.0 released. We used OpenStack only for POC. And in April 2013, we provided over 10 services on OpenStack Wizard. And June 2014, we provided some art technology services on OpenStack Icehouse. And March 2015, we provided more art tech services on OpenStack Journal. We had 40 compute nodes. And we had three engineers in the team. And last month, the key role, the new environment, has been deployed. Some community services are running on key role. And now, let me show about the statistics of the biggest OpenStack deployment that we call Diana. OK? The exercise chart is transition of CP cores on Diana. Diana started with 3,500 CP cores. And now, it's growing and growing. And the right side chart is the distribution of flavors on virtual machine that running on Diana. As you can see, eight core flavors is most popular in Japan. Sorry, in Japan, not in Diana. And two core flavors is the second popular in Diana. And we are running over 20 various other technology services on Diana. And we have over 70 billions for these services. OK, let's get back to the history chart. It's time to show you the future of our OpenStack. What is the future? Let me show you three keywords of our future. The first keyword is a scale of our OpenStack. Second, the OpenStack version, the last keyword is STM, software defined network. The first, expanding our OpenStack, our services that running on OpenStack increasing and growing. So we need scale our OpenStack. The second, new is always better. We want to retire Icehouse and Juno deployment. And we must try to deploy the new environment, Liberty or Mitaka. The last keyword is software, sorry. The last keyword is software defined network. We are running only Neutron layer 2 agent and not running Neutron layer 3 agent. And trying to get rid of conventional VR based networking by using IP based overlay networking. We are now experimenting with Midnet by Midokura. I believe that Midnet is suitable for our use case and give us a great experience with Neutron. The OpenStack keyword with Midnet is already running on our development environment. We will adapt VXRAN hardware off-road for overlay networking technologies. Hardware off-road is very important for VXRAN performance. OK, that's all I have to say about now and future of our OpenStack server agent. I ask you again, do you know cyber agent? Please raise your hand. Do you know cyber agent? OK, please keep your hand up. OK? OK, OK. Give me a smile. Give me a smile. Brightest smile, please. OK, thank you very much. Oh, sorry. Today's presentation will be available on our GitHub platform. If you have any questions and any questions, please create on issues on GitHub. I will reply ASAP. OK, have a nice summit. Thank you so much. That was amazing. We've heard from so many incredible stories here, right here in Japan, Yahoo Japan and NTT, running billions and billions of page views on OpenStack and a lot of other companies that are at different points in their journey of adopting OpenStack. I think that's one of the most valuable parts of the summit is hearing what decisions people are making and then hopefully they can meet the right folks here this week and end up with another success story down the road as they expand their OpenStack clouds.