 Hi, I'm Martin Dugiamis, the founder and director of the Moodle project and our widely used open source Moodle learning platform. I'm proud to announce our latest release, Moodle 2.6, which is the culmination of over six months work from our core team at Moodle HQ and a huge number of contributors from around the world. This release contains hundreds of improvements and fixes that address requests from the community. But the major ones fall into two basic categories. Usability improvements that improve how Moodle functions from a user point of view and performance improvements that allow Moodle to run faster and better in a wider range of software environments. Our usability improvements include things like improved responsive behavior for all types of devices, clean new course editing interfaces, a new way for teachers to annotate their students' work that everyone will find familiar, improved course management, a more user friendly text editor, additional name fields, a new course format that lets you make a course out of any single activity, support for non-gregorian calendars and much more. On the performance side of things, administrators will find new options for handling sessions using backends like Memcache D, full support for PHP Opcache, faster admin menus, improvements on Microsoft SQL and Maria databases, and many more improvements all over the place. For more details on these, see our other videos or browse the Moodle 2.6 release notes. We're hard at work now on some big new features for Moodle 2.7 due in May next year. But in the meantime, enjoy 2.6 and we'll see you on Moodle.org. Thank you. Bye.