 Hello everyone, this is Chris Morgan from the OpenShift partner ecosystem today I wanted to give you a very quick demonstration of some community work That's been going on with OpenShift and the Kubernetes Project and that is showing a Windows container running natively Within OpenShift. So let's kind of get started here first thing we want to do is is actually go and find our Windows container in this case. It's a Microsoft IIS server I'm going to change the name a bit just to make it stand out Nothing fancy. You can see you can add a host port change the node address. We hit create and we're off Now let's go see what's happening This actually comes up pretty quickly, but while we are waiting on it Let's go take a look and see what we're actually have happening here So you can tell this is the actual official Microsoft IIS latest image from the Primary repository and it is indeed running on a Windows node in this case in Windows node 2016 server and just for fun Let's let's go in and kind of type around in an actual DOS prompt terminal as you can see here, you know the the Slashes it's a true, you know Windows environment and we're doing this from within the actual OpenShift console So, you know just for added measure. We'll go back and show that this thing can scale. This takes a very short period of time You know, so we'll just give it a couple seconds here Oh, you know the while while we're waiting Why don't we you know actually take a look and show you that this is truly a running IIS application and There you go. Just the default IIS page when you get in there So now we're already scaled up. Let's scale it back down and we'll call it a day Thank you guys for joining and until next time