 Thank you very much for joining us here for the closing. So next to me is Mishari, who's our lead here, our organizer in Thailand, and I'm Mario, who's like here with representing the team, the First Asia team. So Mishari, we've done it. Yes, we have. Thank you, congratulations Mario. Thank you, but not just to us. To everyone. To everyone, thank you. So, yeah, Open Tag Summit 2019, it was the first summit in Thailand. Yes. We had meetups, I joined your Kota Dojos, and yeah, things happened, but like it was a big experiment. Many things we didn't know. Like it always happens when you go to another country, you organize something, there are things we don't know, there's like sometimes internal politics. Yes, cultural issues. Cultural issues and so on. But like the magic of the free and open source community is that we can overcome this. So we often overcome this online. Many people in the chat, for example, in our projects, we see that people from India and Pakistan work together when the news is like really, oh my God, what's happening there? So this is really an example for me always to have a peaceful cooperation, not just cooperation, collaboration. We work together. We don't leave it to some politicians or to some people who decide about our lives, we take lives in our hands. And I'm very happy to see this here. What do you think? Me too, I'm very excited. I've always been a fan of FOSS Asia ever since I went there four years ago. And I've always felt that Thailand needs to be more involved in the global free and open source software community. And I think we have seen that here today with international participants, international speakers. And we saw in the hall, there was a lot of talking, a lot of collaboration, a lot of introductions being made. So I think in that regard, this was a major success. Yeah. So thank you everyone for making the success and let's have a small recapture. So what happened here? So we had one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight tracks. We had eight tracks here. There was a breakout room. We had hands-on sessions there. I saw today a few people use it. They had some workshops there. We had a Python workshop there. And we had a lot of talks in the different tracks about hardware. What comes to your mind, for example? Which sessions did you visit? What did you like? Oh, well, definitely. I mean, I am biased. But I definitely found the open, the e-government stuff extremely fascinating. I also this morning attended the session about the wax printers, which is really, really cool as well. Mainly because it's the problem that open source is trying to solve it. They had a proprietary wax printer. It broke no parts. So what happened? Decided to build his own. It was like, excellent. Let's love that. OK, so and I think we can have this session here a little bit interactive. So maybe some other people have some feedback. For example, I always know Andrew has feedback. I already warned him that I would ask him. So Andrew Lee is from Taiwan. And he has been also to a lot of free and open source conferences as a DBN developer. Andrew, any feedback, any impressions that you like? Who did you meet? I think the best thing that's happened last night, right? We have live music and we will get together and then really talk to each other. I think that if we can put such kind of a social event a day in advance, the whole event the first day, it's even better, the people where you can know each other. Absolutely, and we tried that. We actually had a few people, but it always depends. There's never enough time. Some people arrive earlier, some people arrive later. But we can expand on that. Yes, we can. As a feedback. Thank you very much. Anyone else who has some feedback, just raise your arm. And I see Mark is worried that I'm asking him. He's so tired. So by the way, Mark just came from Switzerland and like flying, you're on the way to Taiwan and you made a stop over here and you hardly slept and it's real dedication. And a lot of people you have dedication. So I would just give a round of applause to Mark, but to everyone who showed real dedication here, thank you very much. So as a reminder, I mean, there are always a few things to be paid. Maybe like before we ask this, it's also a good chance as we say thank you. We can say thank you to the partners here of the event. Of course, organized together with the foster Asia community, but we have the UNESCO. We have the UNESCO workshops today on the top floor. There were a lot of government actors. Anyone here who was there at the UNESCO, actually at the UNESCO sessions, yeah, you were there. OK, so yeah, that was really good and they were really like surprised, yeah, because they see us. We are not like this usual suit conference and they see the laser cutter. They see my SQL. They see all these companies and projects and they're like, wow, how can they make, how can they make hardware, these people here, yeah? So they're really surprised what we're able to do and they invited us already. The partners also of the UNESCO to work with them. So that was great. So one of the partners here was the National Innovation Agency. Do you have any feedback on them? Well, a big thanks to the National Innovation Agency. This event would not have been possible without their current support. They did a lot of heavy lifting in order to make this possible. So I would like to really thank and acknowledge them for their help. Absolutely. Thank you very much. And then we had, of course, Lik here, right in front of the door, MySQL. So MySQL has been supporter of free and open source events for a long time. And yeah, I saw like really tech discussions sometimes. Yeah, you really focus with people and you had your workshops yesterday. So thank you very much and we hope to see more in future. Maybe there are a few words from you as a feedback. Thanks a lot. This actually is a great event. And I like it. And thanks to all the actually participants to join. And actually, I see many faces and talks about the technical or actual business. And one of the things that I really really impressed. So we see lots of good kids, right? So they are really good and well. So they speak and also into the open source. OK, thanks, kids. Oh, what's your name? So you are having to organize the help first. Our kids help first. So can we give a big hand to those kids? Thank you. OK, so thank you very much. Absolutely. So you see it's hands on. And yeah, we had Grab here today. And like Grab is relatively new compared to a lot of like older established companies. And many people didn't know like what you do with the free and open source community, with the free and open source software in your company. So you share today, for example, about the OpenStreetMap, how you use it. So that was really great. And we had ODE with a great coffee. So please, big round of applause for all the sponsors. And yeah, also the partners here, it was great. So I think we will continue this in future. For example, with the Thai Programmer Association, who actually here received the information about the event from the Thai Programmer Association, who got this information here? Is there anyone who can get information about the event from the Thai Programmer Association? Yeah, thank you very much. So it's great really to connect with the CODAC community. We had your organization, Zimple. We had Launchpad. Some people arrived earlier. And they were traveling from somewhere else. So they could spend a day at the co-working space of Launchpad, free of charge. And by the way, if you're staying longer in Bangkok, Launchpad just offered us that if there are any participants who would like to use Launchpad, they can do it. Tomorrow, yeah. Tomorrow, they can also do it. So feel free to check them out. We had WeLearn, great workshops, hands-on. We had Kapook, who was covering the event online. So that was really great. So the OpenTech Summit 2019. What do you think? Should we do it again? In 2019, it's a bit too soon, isn't it? I'm kidding. Thoroughly. Or maybe we ask it. Yes, next year, definitely. So who here wants to see OpenTech Summit again? Yay. Who here would like to volunteer? All right, wonderful. Thank you. So this is great. Should we continue with a bit more feedback? Sure, yes. We would like more feedback, please. We'd like to know if this is our first year. We'd like to get your feedback. What do you think? What do you like? What do you not like? Let's see how we can make it better. Well, here's Pum. Sorry. Well, perhaps we could publicize this a lot more beforehand so we get more participants because the idea of open source is a very noble idea. And to kind of like toot the horns and make people know that there's alternatives where you don't have to pay for software to run their hardware, especially their older hardware, effectively, is a great thing. And of course, other noble causes, like free hardware as well as an older. Free designs for hardware or even different forms of electronic governance, good governance, and universal access to whatever utilities for the 21st century like internet access, environmental concerns, future crucial points, thinking points, debate, open discussion. It would be much more richer with a bigger amount of people joining. You're welcome. It sounds like a huge event to me. I don't know if we can do this, but free and open source events are not just limited to this team. I think you can also take this as an inspiration and do more dedicated events. And by the way, is it OK? Also, we can also have people more comfortable to speaking in Thai. Yes, yes, yes. Sorry, we have Pum here. We wanted to share something. Pum? So yeah, I really like the event. I'm a volunteer. And I just, maybe next time, I want to have more time for the volunteers to prepare everything. But I like the whole event. It's very informative. Thank you. Well, how about the drones? Do you like the drones? All right, cool. So more drones. More time to prepare and more drones. OK, that's fine. Thank you. If anyone has a comment on Thai language, please share your thoughts. I'd like to know what you like, what you don't like, what you don't like, what you should do. Klaikong, I saw you yesterday. How did you like the social event, for example? Actually, I don't have some of the comments much, because I enjoy just one day. But actually, I think one of the things is kind of the we can do much more public relations for the next time. We just do for the Facebook group and kind of like a narrow circle for the communication. But I think it's an open tech submit. This can be much more fun if we can do a project of the open source pitching the project or something like that. Maybe another thing that I would like to suggest for the next time. This is really great that you volunteered to organize this. Thank you very much. I'll be sure for that for the next year. And also I said, yeah, we don't think that we can buy out the more sponsorship for next year. OK. Thank you very much. And I see Eden this year from the First Asia team in Vietnam. Eden, what's your impression here of Thailand and the open tech summit? How did things work out? Hi. So the teams worked out very well for me. For the first time, the Thai people are very friendly. Everything is good. So I hope to come back next year. That's all for me. Yeah, very shy. But like you can talk with each other. And Mr. Witte, you're from the Singapore community. Yes. OK, it's my first time here and actually second time in Thailand. Yeah, it's my first open tech summit as well in Thailand. So far, I would say comparing. OK, it's not good to compare, but I would like to compare now. The crowd here is quite receptive compared to the Singaporeans. So very good. Can you elaborate on receptive? More active, I would say. Yes, they are more open to it, open source, you know. I mean, it's not saying Singaporeans are not. But just that, the way how culture actually shapes different mindsets, yeah. But yeah, actually, I would enjoy coming here quite often. Of course, I'll come back again next year. OK. I would like to hear from Mr. Chumpot because he is actually a coffee farmer, right? So how do you like this event? Well, today, I feel like I'm going to meet the geeks and the techs. What I feel is that if there's a next time, I might be able to contact the group that isn't the geeks, to give birth and change the knowledge. Some things, I live in two worlds. I'm a programmer and I'm a farmer. So he said that we should be publicizing this event to more than just geeks. We should be publicizing it in the wider circle. Because he's coming from a perspective, both as a former programmer, as now a farmer, and as many other talks he goes to, and it just wowed him. So he wants other people to come here and get that feeling of wowness as well. Thank you. I just want to say how enjoyable it's been. And the relaxed, fun atmosphere. It's very different to a lot of conferences I've been to or spoken at. The fact, I think this is a great venue, number one, came up, so great choice of venue. And just the way it's been laid out, the volunteers and these kids have been brilliant. And the fact that you've allowed families to bring their kids, it just shows how relaxed and informal the summer's been. And it's been very much experiential. And I know that the organizers, like Mario and Eden, they went out socializing to all hours. And that's rare to have when you've got organizers and people going out and socializing with the delegates and with the speakers. It's quite extraordinary. I think that kind of spirit has made this summit really enjoyable for me. And I'd love to see it come back. One thing I would like to see is when you go on the website and you go on to the different assets you've got online, maybe some of the videos just posted up there from previous events. Whether it's Vietnam or Singapore, just get some videos up there so people can see the kind of content that you've got. Thank you so much for organizing this. It's been great. That's a good idea. Maybe even the speakers can send us links to previous talks so that we can feature the previous what the speakers have talked about in the past as well. That's a pretty good idea. So you can send in a pull request and add that feature. Maybe many people don't know that yet, but actually all these websites can get repository. So we will share this with you in the after event email. So if you want to change anything on the website you find a mistake or something like that always possible to make a pull request. Okay. Yes. Do you have anything to say? It's a very good submit for me. It's different people, different idea, different proposal. Good to learn. I hope next year we should set it up again. Okay. Thank you very much. Look it. Look it is the let's say the the informal leader of the of the of the volunteer youth squad. So turn up. Any comment? I think this is a very good project because there are many interesting things. I like it the most. It's a not a computer. Okay. So he said that there were a lot of interesting topics. He really liked it. The session that he liked most is the CS Unplugged Session from We Learn. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. So he said that he would like to have this event. See this event organized many times. I would like to volunteer again. What did you get from volunteering? So from volunteering, he learned from volunteering, he learned how to work as a team to delegate and to identify people's individual responsibilities. Okay. Thank you very much. And I know we have one of the organizers of the Picon here in Thailand. It's always interesting to hear the experience of other organizers and what went well for you, for example, here. Yeah, thanks very much. So I'm Mike. I think quite a few of you probably attended the Picon this year. I was one of the organizers of that. And yeah, this is a great event. I like this kind of size of event. It's great to see it's very inclusive and you've got a good age range here. That's really good. I would say as advice to the Picon's, this size of event is really quite not too hard to organize. And this is also a great venue. We had one of the Picon's here as well. As you... Children. Children. As you grow the event, you need more volunteers. I think like about 500, then you have to start thinking about outsourcing some of the work. That's my advice for like growing this event. But it's good to grow. And yeah, if people want to volunteer for the next event, I recommend that. It's good to be involved with these kind of events. It's a community thing. Thank you. Maybe Bella, any feedback from your side? We had the registration. How did things work out together with the Thai people? The thing is, actually the good thing is I was not, actually. But they're very kind and I love Thai people as well as Thai food. But the event was actually such a great experience to me. So I hope I could come back next year. Thank you. Thank you. And Janal, anything to say? This is the first time I think I was attending one of these conferences and something that I think is probably the highlight is I loved how kids were all around. They were organizing. They were troubleshooting problems. They were doing everything. It tells that there's so much interest and that is something which is fascinating. Other than the talks, it was a bummer that I couldn't attend the first day but hoping that I can continue and collaborate more with everyone around. Thanks so much. Thank you. So I think we will send out a form after the event and yes, in German we say some things have to sync. Do you say that in English? I don't know. So yeah, sync in or something like that. And yeah, we're looking forward to your feedback and this is an open team. So how we often do things in post-Asia events, we have a core team. They take care of some of the logistics and so on, which is difficult to handle with volunteers. Everyone has a life. But community can do a lot of fun things and this is how we want to continue this so the team is generally open in future. How we do this, for example, in Singapore the three months before an event, we have meetings once a week or every two weeks and yeah, if you're interested to be also not just a volunteer but part of the organization team, that's okay. If you're a speaker or any other role it's always great if we can connect. Yes. So that's it. Yes. A lot of more things are going on. This is not the end. We hope you also organize events or meetups or something like that. Actually my observation in Thailand is often that we have this crowd of like expats getting together and then we have this crowd of Thai people getting together and I'm really happy that we achieved two crowds here together and that I hope to see more in future as well and actually it's a lot because of you, Mishari, you're kind of a connector of many worlds. So yeah, I would also like to say thank you who make all this happen. Thank you very much Mario, very kind of you. Okay, so tonight there's Asiatik. So we are meeting up at the food court so there's a lot more conversations to be had. A lot more fun talking, connecting, building up a network collaborator so just enjoying each other's company, right? It's difficult to come across fellow geeks who are into open source so we want to make the most of it, which is why we are meeting up at Asiatik around the food court. So Asiatik is a night market by the river. That's a Ferris wheel. We can find it online. Then if you are still staying in the city and you would like to work in a co-working space maybe there will be several people tomorrow you can go to Launchpad. Next things that are happening online of course we'll be posting the videos that we made What do you estimate? How are things going? One to two weeks we'll see. We'll inform people. Then we have an event also organized by the Vietnam team in Ho Chi Minh City soon. We have an event coming up in China with Tsinghua University. They're focusing a lot on hardware and next you will be the FOSSAsia summit. But if you have any events please share them with us so we can also share this with the community. I think a big feedback here was that we have to share more actively across different channels so people really know what's going on so if you have anything going on we would be very happy to share this through the channels that we have so please let us know and I think communication we always need to keep up things. Yes. I think that's it. Of course there's a special massage offer for anyone. A friend of mine who has a spa near BTS Chang Lung C is offering 30 minutes of free massage to any FOSSAsia participants. The announcement is in the Meetup the FOSSAsia Meetup page. If you want just call up the number and book your free massage. They're open until midnight and tomorrow from 10 am until midnight so that's one way of contributing to open source. It's free and open massages. I see Mark. You've probably never heard this at any other event ever. Thailand. Free massage. Thank you very much. Have fun with the massage and see you at the next event. Thank you very much and goodbye. Bye.