 The original impetus for the OSD data platform, for the forum itself, started with the major energy providers who were dealing with massive amounts of data that they needed to ingest, analyze, to display, and ultimately make very informed decisions, very expensive decisions. So the idea would be how do we harmonize that data, how do we ingest it, how do we search for it, and ultimately display it so that geoscientists can make sense out of that data quickly, efficiently. Under the open groups OSD forum, the ecosystem that participates spans the end-user, phone the operators, through the subcontractor, suppliers, the supply community, through academia, and also consultants that all work together collaboratively, and they work in a pro-competitive way. We don't discuss anything with pricing, with future predictions of products, or anything of that nature that's not public, that is, we don't discuss those things at all in the forum. We discuss those things that are important to the creation of the data platform. So the OSD forum is really preparing for the future needs of the energy sector by delivering innovation at scale. So that is critical. We know that to deliver the energy of tomorrow more reliable, cleaner energy, we're going to have to solve innovation problems at a scale that is hard to imagine. And so communities like this really help us to build on that and see delivery of innovation for the energy ecosystem. Standardization really matters for the energy sector because it is an incredibly complex business. So we have a tremendous amount of data that we deal with on a daily basis, and increasingly these tools are digital and they need to interact with these data in common ways and make it easier to share. Standardization is critical because the energy sector, especially in recent years, is facing a lot of opportunity and a lot of challenges and there's many different moving parts that are involved in this. So to me standardization is important not only to make sure that all of these different entities are able to align together, but it's also about understanding the needs of those entities and having a standard framework which people can engage with each other. It's not just standards, it's software and totally different pieces that fit together as well. OSDU forum members can get the most out of that participation by not just playing a singular role. A lot of people who join communities such as this, they come in in a consumption role. They come here to figure out what can I extract, what value can I extract out of this. But the real value is when you show up and you participate and that can be engaging in discussions, it can be writing software, it can be creating documentation. Just today we had all kinds of different ideas for ways to optimize and improve the OSDU and none of that matters unless people actually roll the sleeves up and get on with it and that's where the real opportunity is for them to see.