 Again, my name is Christian Hernandez. I am a senior technical marketing manager at Red Hat. Probably one of the longest titles I think I ever hear anyone say. And Red Hat is a diamond sponsor for GetOpsCon. So we decided to do one. We did these t-shirts. So if you want one of these t-shirts, Open GetOps, it's out in the front in the booth. So go ahead and grab one of these t-shirts. They're a limited run. So we only did this for this specific conference. So you can't buy these anywhere after. So there's very limited. I didn't expect this many people out. So go ahead and grab your shirts. And what I wanted to talk about today is a very long title. But it's essentially everything as code and using open source software, essentially, for all your GetOps. So for those of you who are in LA, I hope some of you were there. If you weren't, I did a talk there talking about pipeline as code, where GetOps, traditionally, when you first started, for those of you who are using Flux very early on, focused really all on the CD aspect of CI CD GetOps. And where pipeline as code, which is a concept of what they talk about at Tecton. But if you're using GitHub actions, that's the idea where you have the declarative CI process. I did a talk there about incorporating that as part of your GetOps journey. And now I want to talk about that next step, the next step that the code chairs here were talking about. What's next and what else can I bring into the GetOps environment? This is a lightning talk, so I have five minutes and we are behind. So I only have one slide. I want to talk about just everything as code and everything declarative and everything in a process where you can use open source software and projects that Red Hat is contributing to upstream to bring that into the enterprise, essentially. And so in and by extension, then we give that back to the community, where again, where the CI process starts. That declaratively, last time I spoke at GetOpsCon in LA talking about Tecton, using Red Hat as a big contributor to Tecton and using that as the cloud native CI system for our Kubernetes offering. And this here is that first part and kind of like something I already covered, right? But I think I'll just talk about that again as having those GitHub action type of process inside your own infrastructure and having that be part of that whole declarative GetOps picture of your environment. That is just one part of it, right? There's also other parts of it where the CD aspect of it, Red Hat again, is all in on Argo CD, using Argo CD for that reconciliation, right? Do you know how to use Argo CD if using flux that same idea applies, right? You're having that fourth principle, right? You have a tool there that's always reconciling those. And then that is either doing pushing the configurations or applying them locally if it's running on cluster for your CD aspect of it. And then you have the compliance, right? So Stack Rocks, something that is monitoring all your images, something that is always taking care of the compliance aspect of it. And it's really like that compliance as code, right? That people were always talking about. And that is something that should also be part of this whole tool chain. And then really last but not least, talking about open cluster management, that is a brand-new sandbox project at the CNCF based on Red Hat's ACM as based on open cluster management, which is basically what is treating your clusters as cattle, right? Or as I think Dan likes to call it, Dan has infra as apps, right? I like to call it cluster as cattle. But you have, you manage the lifecycle of your clusters declaratively as well, right? And you're having all these tools working together. Open cluster management also has hooks into infrastructure as code, traditional infrastructure as code tools specifically like Ansible, right? So like, you know, living outside, you know, kind of your non declarative things. You can still kind of manage those declaratively, right? If you're just managing VMs, for example, using that declarative aspect of it. So really, you know, last time I talked about, in LA, I talked about infra, sorry, pipeline as code. You know, we did everything, you know, we have the star as code, right? Like, you know, that's almost becoming a thing, right? If it isn't already, like, infra as code, pipeline as code. Now really, it's like everything as code, right? So we're now getting to that aspect of declarative environments in your whole stack, right? And you can now just do it all with open source tools, which before, you know, it was just like a bunch of scripts that we would hobble together, bash scripts, or you know, what have you. I used to do corn back in the day. But now it's like all declarative. And then we have this common platform like Kubernetes to be able to do that entire process. So that being said, I know we're behind. I only had like five minutes. I wanted to catch everyone up. Again, a reminder, second track is directly upstairs, right? So those of you staying in track one, stay here. Track one is here. Track two is upstairs. Check the schedule. The schedule, if you click on the talk that you want, it'll tell you what room, right? We are in Pavilion 3, Room E. So that's this room. And then the Joaquin, I believe the other one's Joaquin. I forget what it's called. Room is upstairs. Joaquin Rodrigo? OK, so again, thank you very much. I hope you enjoy GetOpsCon. And I hope to talk to you all out there. Thanks.