 And we've already talked to the organizers about this, and we're saying, you need to add sprints. So what is a sprint? Now, we've heard that in Singapore. For a while, there were all these hackathons where you go in, you spend a weekend coding like crazy, all business guys hound you, and at the end you get a prize. Most of you don't get a prize because it's great. I mean, the rigged in San Francisco, the rigged everywhere. That's not what a sprint is. A sprint is where we all get together in a room, and we code on open source stuff. And you get to do it with awesome people. Sometimes you have sprint leaders working out who belong to major open source projects like Jupiter or Django or Flask or whatever. Other times it's local stuff that you guys are putting together. The awesome thing is, is that you're working together collaboratively in a room with people that you don't normally work with to solve common problems. And if you think, oh, my boss will never justify this. Let's say you're trying to justify this to your boss. You can say, hey, I'm going to be in a room with other people who work on the same stuff. We might be able to solve things that we're having trouble with at work. So sprints are not just about advancing open source, it's about advancing their knowledge. At highcon 2009 in the USA, I learned Git and JQuery in an afternoon while also contributing to a major project. So that's how I started on those two projects. And you can do the same. You just learn while you're doing, because you've got your hands on the code. You're not just absorbing it from some guy and a lady on a stage you're doing. So we're going to go over some recent developments or history of things that we've done. Yes. So what does a sprint actually look like? Well, the day before the sprint, there is a sprint kickoff where the leaders of different projects will present 30 seconds to present their idea. And so everyone will be in the audience listening and figuring out which project they want to sprint on. Most people have no idea what open source project they'll even contribute to until they get there. This photo shows us some of the sprint leaders together. The night before the sprint, what we were doing to prepare was we were creating tons of GitHub issues that were easy, low-hanging fruit, simple, bite-sized issues for new contributors to be able to come and help out with. And then, you know, what we would do is, yeah, there are some things that Audrey and I could finish in 10 seconds. But we let people who are new to the project do it, because that way they get familiar with the familiarity with our project and they're submitting four questions in source. And after you do a couple days of emphasis, can we say, I want to do something challenging. And then you're reaching and you're doing things that you haven't done before and you're advancing a project. It's really awesome. So this, here's a photo of what a sprint actually looks like, and it looks like a hackathon, right? This, these two tables were the cookie cutter sprint tables, and the sprint leads would go around to one person at a time, checking on them, making sure they had an interesting bug to work on or feature or documentation thing. And people's reactions were that it was, the sprints were their favorite part of Python, and it was a chance to learn from some, you know, project leaders that they really admire. What you can't see here, for example, is the project, well, over there in the upper table, is where the project Jupiter cookie cutter template work was going on. So really, you know, people doing stuff, some people were very experienced, other people were brand new. The skill level isn't important when you walk into a sprint. Yeah, and people didn't want to leave. This was us at 9 p.m. Very tired, wanting to go to bed, they wouldn't go away. So you don't have to organize a sprint necessarily as part of Python Singapore. It could be as simple as a random weekend, just get together to work on open source and just have fun. Yeah, and once, we will warn you that once you attend this sprint, you'll want to do more. And they're cheap to run. There, I'll move into the camera. They're cheap to run. All you need is a venue, maybe someone to pay for pizza or something else that you might want to eat and drink. And that's it. Just remember that this isn't a hackathon. There aren't prizes except for bragging rights because you committed to a project, notable or not. If someone does try to make it competitive, tell them to go away. That's not the spirit of sprints. So thank you.