 Hi, my name is Julie Turner and I am a principal architect with Sympraxis Consulting and prior to that I worked for Blue Metal Architects as an architect. So I came to SharePoint in 2007 when I was in internal IT for a small medical device company and then I decided that I'd like to get into consulting so I shifted to consulting and sort of stayed in the SharePoint world and sort of been moving in that direction as the versions come out all the way through to Office 365 in Azure. I went to the first dev kitchen that they had and so I had exposure to the web parts there and then just playing around with it back at the home office and sort of seeing what it could do and that kind of stuff but none really in production. You know I think it was impressive like how fast they got something out. They said a lot of things in the May 4th event last year, they had a lot of stuff to get out and it was impressive that they got it all out and tooled it out and got to GA. So my impression is that they're working really hard at it and to be open source so non-Microsoft I think that's really great. I think they have a long way to go though. I mean the roadmap as I've seen it has some really good backlog items and they're just all necessary. I mean I feel like you could do some stuff and if you're going to do a web part and it's you know pretty basic and you don't need to talk to anything else and all of that stuff. The idea that you can be on Classic and Modern that's awesome but we really need things around like being able to deploy to the site collection versus the tenant and just allowing a little bit more flexibility and flow around those kinds of things I think is critical. Honestly the workbench you know that ability that I don't have to deploy full you know I come from the 2007 I mean you know this stuff right where you're building a 64 meg or gigabyte laptop and full stack you know deploying your own on-premise SharePoint farm on your laptop and that was just always like mental inducing you know because you had to be an infrastructure person too. And so the ability to have that workbench and just be able to like spin it up and see how it's going and you know and really debug and get your bits together before you really have to deploy to the production or even to a dev tenant or dev box it just really makes a big difference. We just need a way to provide a deployment mechanism that gets things out to the site collection and not have to go to the tenant. The actual other thing is you know we need a good story around the ALM model and where we're going to put those bits those bundles you know for access to the web parts and how we're going to update them and that story really needs to coalesce. It really feels like we need some support with the UI fabric for more than just react so you know the angulars the even just core basic JavaScript really needs to be there a little bit more fully supported so that we can really exploit all the different platforms that people might want to use. I think it's going to be adoption you know I you know we talk about this all the time you know the traditional SharePoint developer is going to come from you know a C sharp background you know strongly typed you know and you have TypeScript but moving from that visual studio to you know all these weird technologies gulps in your NPNs and your node and how to use that tool set is going to be a huge challenge and I think adoption is going to be slow. Definitely think they're full in on this you know and to that end there it's first party and third party right there they're using it to build the components that we're starting to see in modern pages and stuff so they're definitely going to be full in and full bore on it. I'm hoping that the adoption will pick up as people understand how to use this new new thing and that they get more functionality out there right because we're missing a lot of stuff in modern around you know well what JS link was you know script injection that kind of stuff and once that is there and so this is a full story about what you can do in a modern page with the SharePoint framework then I think you know things will really pick up.