 All right, good morning everybody. Thank you so much for Liam, Jason, and that gentleman over there fixed my issue. Somehow my laptop was two years old and it just somehow didn't like it. So we tried like four adapters today. All right, let's get started. So I want to be here to represent the program committee and our coach here, Liam, to welcome you to Wasm Day. Thank you. A quick introduction about me. I'm the head of open source at Solo.io. I'm a very long time contributor at Istio Project. I've been one of the founding members of the Istio Project. I actually wrote two books about Istio. One, most recent book is Istio Ambient Explained, which we will talk about it later today. I'm also a CNCF ambassador. A little bit fun fact about me is I worked at IBM for 19 years and right before I leave IBM, I went to the corporate directory and took a screenshot and I actually had a 2007 patents where I was a co-author and of course, IBM owns all the patents. So that's what I do as a side hustle while I was at IBM. Now I want to introduce Liam, who's right there, help me, and this is his machine. He is also the coach here for Wasm Day and I believe Liam is a founder and CEO at Cosmic and he really gave me a lot of courage to be here on stage. So thank you for your trust. And Liam, well, a lot of heads, as you can see he's being very, very engaged in the Wasm community since the beginning. A little bit of trends I want to share with you all is if you go to Google Trends and if you search Wasm, you might be surprised. Over the years, we've seen a lot of trends grows people searching Wasm as a search term. So that's exciting. So this is what I did for the United States. If you do a similar search for worldwide, you can see very, very similar trends. So not only Wasm is growing popularity in the United States but also worldwide as well. Now I want to ask you a couple of questions if you don't mind. So how many of you are building Wasm runtime right now at the moment as part of your daily jobs? Very cool. And how many of you are building Wasm plugins as part of your daily job? Very cool. And how many of you are the early adopters of Wasm? Wow, okay, we actually have more hands for adopters. Yay, very cool. That's a little bit surprising but very, very cool. Thank you all for that quick poll. I also want to share the state of Wasm report. How many of you have read the state of Wasm report by CNCF recently? Excellent. So based on the latest Wasm report, we find out the difficulty troubleshooting Wasm is like a number one concern. So Liam and I did slot at least one or two talks for that and performance we believe we also slotted a one or two talks for that. So we actually look at these type of reports trying to understand where people's concerns are and then try to have relevant topics on the agenda for you today. How many of you know Wasm has a landscape? This is a separate landscape in addition to the CNCF landscape. So very, very cool. Wasm actually has its own landscape and I'm also very happy that the project I work on Istio and Envoy is also part of the landscape. So very, very cool. So if you work for any of the project, if you contribute to any of the projects in the landscape, just raise your hand. Yeah, awesome. You guys are awesome. Thank you. A couple of things I want to discuss. A little bit boring, but it's also very, very important is CNCF do have a code of conduct for this conference. So if you want to read more, scan the QR code, the nutshell, we want you to be kind and respect each other. And then call for paper is open. Who wouldn't want to go to Paris, right? Scan the QR code. Try to get the submission in. So you might be a speaker on stage at next KubeCon or next Kolo events. Lunch and refreshment will be outside at the foyer. And we also have a receptionist tonight at 5.30. And translation and captioning is available if you prefer to use that. All right, I think that's all I have. All right, with that, we're going to transition to the next speaker for today. All right, I'm going to pull out the agenda quickly so you guys can have it. Lea, you probably remember who it is. Of course, yes. Thank you, thank you everyone for being here today. For our first speaker we've got coming up next is Bailey Hayes, C2 of Cosmonic. I didn't, oh, it's Mac, okay, great. And sorry, and Kate Goldenring, who's a senior software engineer at Fermion. They're going to be giving our opening keynote this morning about WebAssembling components. Please join me in welcoming them to the stage, although there will be some awkward transition where we have to get their MacBook to work up here.