 OK, to the previous speaker, thanks a lot for that talk. That was interesting. It looks like we don't have questions in the room. I don't think it was for lack of interest. It was just a very good explanation. Thank you. So I'm a little early with these closing remarks, but I'm just going to go for it anyway. So in terms of upcoming events, the Linux Foundation has open-source summit North America coming up in late June in Austin, Texas. And there will be a Kubernetes on edge day North America coming soon. But the Linux Foundation hasn't surfaced the CFP site or registration yet. I believe that that's destined to go to Detroit either before during KubeCon, which I think is in October. There are a few other embedded system conferences held by the Linux Foundation. The one I'm aware of for sure is embedded the open-source summit with Automotive Linux, which is in December in Tokyo. And I think they have one of those before that in South America and perhaps one in Europe that if I'm not mistaken was in Ireland. But the Linux Foundation site should have references to those things. If you're interested in this IoT Edge and Kubernetes topic, there has been a Kubernetes IoT Edge working group operating for years over under the Kubernetes project. So it has a Slack channel. It has Zoom meetings that have been every two weeks, although half the meetings are for Asia. So they're in uncomfortable time zones potentially unless you're in Asia and half for North America. This group is in transition. So what happened was that a lot of the discussions coming up in this working group went beyond Kubernetes. I mean, there were even the heresy talks of, is Kubernetes really suited for Edge? And the Kubernetes project decided that maybe this is a better fit for being under the CNCF, because we've got a lot of CNCF projects like Kube Edge came and talked to us. Some of the WebAssembly stuff is over under the CNCF GitHub. And it's been decided that this group is destined to move, so that rather than being hosted under Kubernetes, it will still exist, but be underneath the CNCF. And that move is going to mean that perhaps the Slack channel will change the place we have a GitHub repository where we've published some white papers and collateral information. But I think somewhere between one month from now and October when KubeCon North America hits, this group is going to move. We'll leave the legacy things where they are now, the Slack channel and everything, but we'll probably leave a parting remark in the Slack channel saying go over here into this other channel on CNCF Slack and it's possible that we'll move the meeting times, but that hasn't been determined yet. But anyway, there is this group. We're very much open for users to come, listen and learn with often the meetings have pretty open topics. We've had recently demos of tools like Portainer, the Red Hat version of Red Hat has that micro shift and we had a presentation on that. And we're open if anybody in the audience works on these projects. Our rule is that we don't want presentations that are just commercial sales pitch. If you've got some product that's closed source and you're trying to sell it, don't come to this meeting to expect us to be a platform where you'll put on your sales pitch. But certainly if it's open source and it's okay if it's open source under a CNCF approved license and you sell a commercial version with support besides that's fine. Something like Portainer for example has given presentations at the group. So if you're either associated with an open source project or even a vendor that has a free community addition that's open source, you're welcome to just put yourself on the agenda for a presentation at the list. It's not very formal, you can, we share a document with the agenda and you just become a member, you get edit rights and put yourself on the agenda. So that's how that works and you might be interested in joining the group. So to wrap this up, I just want to make a comment that in tech, things are rarely these overnight successes that go from inception to universal adoption like instantly like the drop of water captured in a high speed camera or even within 24 hours. The process involved here is kind of more along the lines of pursuing a college degree. When you get down to it, these open source projects get built but it might take up to four years before they build up enough momentum, stability, things like this to get adoption. And along the way during that four year process, the ones that turn out healthy and get adoption are ones that get exposed in venues like this where users hear about them but freely exchange information, give feedback as to gee, I have this use case, it's not quite right but what could I do to accomplish this? And maybe the people behind the project learned to adapt it like the speaker before me talking about web assembly is an example of that where that's really a rapidly moving thing that people, it was originally done for web browser but the act of moving that kind of stuff over to be suitable for being something Docker-like for Edge but Docker-like in the context that it's packaged up, not Docker-like in the sense that gee, the web assembly might be smaller, have much reduced startup latency, maybe be more portable but these kinds of new things are the kind of subject matter both for that group I talked about conferences like this and what I'd like to encourage is that we're about to break for a happy hour and I know it's been a long day, it's tempting to go back to your hotel room but I've seen some pretty interesting conversations break out in the so-called hallway tracks so I'd encourage people to just hang around and have these conversations about the cool new technology you saw today or even cool new technology that you're aware of that you didn't see today and let's get these conversations going and learn from each other so please stick around for that happy hour, it's, I've been told that you go out the door, turn right and it's going to be near the front door somewhere, you've got one of these green cards that gets you a cocktail and you might as well at least hang around long enough to burn your green card before you head back to the hotel so that's due to start in 12 minutes, we still have a little more, I wanna just rapidly go through the list of people to thank these are the CNCF organizers of this event, a few of them were outside in the hallway and they were the ones who managed this thing so thank them if you see them also I wanna thank all the speakers, I'm not gonna read all the names because to be honest, I'd probably butcher two or three of the names but if you were here, you saw them and they said their own names and we'll just go through them but there's a lot of work in giving these talks, people rehearse them, they don't get paid for this and I wanna shout out some appreciation for the act of doing this, it's a lot like the act these days of writing a book in the computer industry, you might think that's glamorous and lucrative but nobody makes any money at that and I don't think anybody makes money at speaking at these conferences, they just do it to share their ideas and I wanna thank these speakers and then finally this event had a program committee and these are the people who reviewed the CFPs I'm on this list but there's a number of other people, this is also a fair amount of work you know we get over a hundred submissions and go through these and pick the best candidates, try to avoid duplications, one of the odd things about this and I already talked to somebody in the audience on a break about this who was interested in speaking so definitely at that happy hour if you're interested in speaking, come and chat with me as I can give you some advice having reviewed these both for this edge day but I also am a reviewer for the KubeCon conference itself and have been reviewing for KubeCon for three years. Often what happens is people put in a really good proposal but it turns out six people put in a proposal on exactly that same topic so there are certain things that are competitive, it's hard to really predict how that is gonna turn out if you did put them in in the past if you're in that scenario where you were one of six and very close you shouldn't get discouraged, you might be able to just submit it to the next one that comes along and do just fine. The other thing is with the CNCF and Linux Foundation I don't know the people are aware of it because they rarely do this but if you get rejected you can just email the people and ask them why and the people on these review committees normally give reviews in writing and I know for myself I never write up a review that I'm not willing to share with the author but you won't automatically get that but if you ask for it you will and you might learn you were in one of these scenarios where it was just a lot of competition and you could maybe leave it almost unchanged and just try again and just get it in at a different location or in other cases if this is the first time you're doing it maybe you're just not aware of the sorts of things that would get your speaking proposal accepted. A lot of this is just clear explanations of where you intend to go with this. Once again I'd be happy to chat about this and give people tips for getting those accepted or even you know a lot of times there's different tracks at these things too and you're gonna be far more likely to get accepted in one track versus another there's sometimes crossovers where at edge you could have it submitted under edge or maybe it has networking aspects and you'd be better off to submit it to a networking track. You're almost never better off to submit it to multiple because they will, in fact I think KubeCon recently prohibited multiple submits from one speaker so you couldn't do it if you wanted to but in the old days it watered down your vote and made it actually tougher to get an accept if you put in multiple. You're just better to put all your efforts into one talk, make it as good as you can and put it in there. So moving on, the final thank yous are to our sponsors who help pay for the event, the food and that's it, thank you for coming but like I said, please take advantage of the opportunity to continue the conversation at the reception which is supposed to start in seven minutes so maybe by the time you gather your stuff walk down to the entrance they should be pouring drinks so hope to see you there, thank you.