 My name is Gaurav Menjal. I'm a front-end engineer at HedgeServe. And I'm a maintainer of Ember Twiddle and an all-around open source contributor. I would have actually had slides prepared like a couple of weeks ago. But so much has happened in Ember Twiddle since that I decided not to bother with those slides. So this is what Ember Twiddle now looks like. One of the major differences between this and last week is that we are no longer using pod structure by default. We are now using the standard structure by default. This was done because pods are no longer apparently the future. I don't know why, but they aren't. So it's a little easier for newcomers who have first got into Ember and have no idea what pods are. They can drive right in more easily. But a lot of your existing Twiddles are in pods. So what are we going to do about that? If you look in, there's a file called twiddle.json in every single Twiddle that you create. One of the things that it nicely does is tell you what version of Twiddle was created in so that we can ensure that your Twiddles will remain compatible forever. The options over there is use pods. When you, if you were to switch that to true, it will start creating new files in pod structure rather than in traditional structure just like a generator would. And if you already have a Twiddle in pod structure, you may just want to set this tag true in that Twiddle so that you can continue where you left off. But you don't have to. You can mix and match. The Ember resolver understands that just fine. The next thing I'd like to point out is if you have worked with Ember Twiddle in the past, you might have noticed that you had to copy and paste from gist to find your old Twiddles. You no longer have to do that. We have a Save Twiddles page which brings up all your Twiddles. You can see all my Twiddles forever. I have too many of them. And you can just click on one of the Twiddles and just bring it right back up. And I'm back to just where I was a second ago. It's great. And the next thing I'd like to point out is we've really been working on tests very hard in Ember Twiddle. Now, this was a long effort, but we've managed to make it possible for you to actually run an automated test in Ember Twiddle. This is great if you want to show the core team that, hey, why is this test not working? The code works, which happens a lot. So it used to be, and I actually had a whole presentation on how to write a test because it was so difficult, you had to bring in blueprints and create files and all that stuff. You no longer have to do that. You can just go to File, Add. Go down to this new tests bar. And if I can get it to stay there, you can see that you get your, what did Liz call it, the stages of acceptance or something like that? Anyway, you just, OK, this is not fun. Believe it or not, I can't see the screen in front of me. Now, another wonderful thing we've done is all you basically have to do when you're creating a new test is make sure that your file name is correct for the test you want to create. You click OK. And it does everything you need. It creates all the blueprints you need for tests to run and adds them to your Twiddle. And of course, the test fails because the route that I just are testing doesn't exist. But that can be fixed. Anyway, I'm going to move on. If you go back to one of the things you can now do is actually open an earlier revision of a GIST. I'm going to open a new test. And the only thing with this is the UI isn't there for it yet, but we're working on that. But in the meantime, you just pick any GIST you happen to have, go to the revisions tab, pick the revision you want to open, go up to the URL bar, grab the hash, and this is going to be fun, a hash of the GIST and the hash of the revision, and just copy and paste it back to your Twiddle, bring the URL bar back. And I can't see if that's right. But one of the new features we also happen to have is that when you happen to have changed anything in your Twiddle and you probably have done this, you've accidentally navigated away from the page, you will find that you lost your data. But now we actually have a confirmation dialog. This will hopefully save a lot of people a lot of time. So where is the extra letter? Right there? Like that? Perfect. And once again, we have the revision of the GIST that we had at the beginning. Thanks a lot for listening. There's plenty more going on at Ember Twiddle Land. We are looking for help, help, wanted tags in the GitHub. My name is Gore of Zero on GitHub, 9576 on Twitter.com. Please feel free to contact me and help us out.