 Cool. Now we're into our spotlights on awesome things that have shipped in the past month, starting with Lotus. I think we still maybe are missing a Jenna version sees on a plane. I can hop in here. This is highlighting the most recent ship version of Lotus 1.15.1, which has experimental FEM support and also the indexer provider on by default, and the upcoming 1.15.2, which has a lot of things that have been heavily requested by the storage provider community. Window post workers. These are actually window and winning post workers, which help you kind of scale your proven process. Enhanced to the ceiling scheduler and a lot of improvements to snap deals which make them doing those in the live network much, much easier and much better UX for storage providers. So lots in these latest Lotus feature releases to enjoy on to West for the computer for data summit. Thanks Molly. Can you hear me okay. Awesome. Thank you so much know we had we were very fortunate to have a few days in Paris early this month to bring together a number of service providers and number of technology partners, a small group of us from the back of y'all team to really figure out what has been done in this space previously what's the history and one give us a good start just kind of giving a sense of the history of compute over data. We learned from other partners that it tried to implement their own ad hoc solutions to to distribute compute over data. We were lucky to have other folks from the crypto econ team and a number of other groups to kind of weigh in on considerations we should have as we start to build this. But really this was the first time for everyone to get together and sort of sort of community around this compute over data project. So after a series of sort of prepared lectures and day one day to is more of an informal on conference session. There's a lot of considerations that we need to start planning for related to security and reproducibility of the data sets verification of the data and so we're talking about different trade off to the architecture it was a lot of fun and we had real fortunate to have some really smart people there with us. But the biggest takeaway is that we definitely have the interest of the storage providers and that'll be critical for the compute layer. As we build out back to y'all. We want to really think about a lot of the architecture was built around the concept of plugability so if we do verification we want to allow to plug in their own verification we want to support as many different run times as possible. Things like was really growing a popularity. And so I think we have a good kind of sense of the initial considerations that we want to build out for the next couple months and as you can see here the goal is just to get the system up and running so we can do nice demos. Leading into the next few months we're going to be focusing more on outbound and getting user validation of the system so we'll be highlighting each month trying to get one notable research academic user and system. And as you can see we've got some longer term goals here for the next few months after that but we are off to the races and if anyone would like to contribute or find out more information. We do have a notion summary link there, all of our code is also public on the file point page so we'd love to have your opinions and feedback as we build it out. Awesome ZX and Alex Crypto Econ Lab Summit. Okay, this is Alex for crypto econ lab. Just want to review what we did on our crypto econ lab summit it was the first time that we had all met in person. Our lab is now, when we add one more person will have grown 200% in the first three months of the year. So, a lot of onboarding and keeping busy there. And now that we have this new capacity to split our work streams. We had a previously had everybody working on everything approach. A lot of that was due to the fact that some of us were new to the area and needed to catch up. But now I think we can split things into different work friends and they're listed right here. We have a new hierarchy consensus, etc, working on project Atlas in a way to marry file coin with geospatial processing which seems to be a very natural marriage there. I won't go into the details there one thing we did do is to have our first ever crypto econ day summit at Dev Connect. We had 60 attendees and 11 talks. We scheduled this pretty quickly. And I think we can do a much better job going forward. We're looking to now do a quarterly file coin economic stay. And so at major conferences. So we're working on that. And with that, I will turn it back. I'm turning there on using summits like this as an opportunity to get to know people who might want to join the team. I feel like it's a good lesson for other other teams as well. Thank you. Passing to Raul. Go ahead. This is Raul from the FEM team. The FEM team had a long and needed Kolo announced time for three weeks. It's ending. It's actually ending tomorrow we're still here. It's been crucial to work through some critical items for the for the upcoming M1 milestone and also to flesh out the scope and work breakdown for M2. As a result, the gas parameters for 532 are almost finalized and probably an update to the draft focus coming coming in tomorrow. We also made a ton of progress with various hardening work streams for M1 including the ones listed here. We also worked through the NV16 testing and deployment timeline with the Lotus team and the Infra teams had many product conversations around DVM and native scoping and the development experience prioritization there. And also had the opportunity to connect with several collaborators, including the FESHA team to discuss technical design details for the file coin EVM implementation. Awesome Patrick retrieval markets. Cool. Yes, we have, we've had a retrieval markets and will specifically sat in Kolo this week in Amsterdam as well. One week of the sat in team being here on Tuesday, we had a retrieval markets workshop intro to sat in. We had four speakers and over 30 people watching or attending the event. We had a lot of learnings to what Alex mentioned for the crypto equine day. I learned a lot about how to put on events in the last minute, and there's lots of learnings to take in doing it again in the future. We've also had the team my L team joins the last two days, which has been great. It's great to have the sat in and my L team in the same place. And even though they're building their own networks, they've been breaking bread together and sharing stories of building retrieval networks. And it's all been very happy. And major takeaways is that we've got a much clearer route towards launch for sat in. And we, it was also great to hang out with some of the crypto economics team earlier in the week and make progress in that space too. As Jake mentioned as well, we had a meeting with the bedrock team. We're X retrieval markets and we covered a lot of interesting things. So it's been a great week and things are much more clear for the future. Awesome. Great looking roadmap for the next couple of months as well. Over to Petar for advice. So I want to make a quick announcement of a developer tool that we've built called advice, which is an extensible RPC protocol compiler based on IPO D. This tool is now production ready at its first milestone. And it's generally meant to streamline the process of defining formally future protocols as well as legacy ones. It has a lot of features which you can read about on the GitHub repo, and it's quite flexible. Our current adopters soon to be in production are a few projects some in the IPFS ecosystem so hydra and IPFS itself, as well as store the store the index from the file coin ecosystem. Feel free to reach out if you want to learn more about it. Thank you.