 Hi, Heather. Thank you for joining us today on SuperUserTV here at the Barcelona Summit. We've talked to you a few summits ago, but can you kind of tell us what's new with OP NFE right now? Yeah, sure. We recently had our Colorado release, which is our third release. It was based on OpenStack Meetaka. In that release, we had a number of feature incremental feature improvements to help support NFE use cases including continued fault management improvements, IPv6 support, service function chaining, and better VPN layer 2 and layer 3 support. Awesome. So you talked about fault management there a little bit. So on Tuesday morning, you were in the keynotes in the Foundation lounge and we saw you do a demo on NFE fault management. Can you kind of walk us through what that demo meant and what it really means for global telecoms that are using OpenStack and OP NFE? Yeah. So that demo showed sort of two scenarios. One, using sort of older OpenStack and sort of when Mark started pulling cables, VM failed. And it took a while to detect failover so they couldn't go to the other VM, so the mobile call that we were doing dropped. And then sort of they talked a little bit about what the OP NFE doctor project had done, which was bring in a number of different blueprints and patches across a number of different OpenStack projects to increase how fast fault detection and failover could happen. And so then they sort of showed sort of the updated scenario with OpenStack Newton running on an actual 5G mobile core for a service provider. And at that point with sort of like all the things that they've added, Mark started cutting cords with scissors, but the mobile call was able to stay up and did not get dropped even though lots of the VMs and ports were being disabled rather forcefully by the chaos monkey. Yeah, it was definitely you could hear the cat collective gasp in the audience. There was like, oh my gosh, what happened? Yeah, but it just I mean, it just shows you kind of some of the strides being made in OpenStack to support some of those use cases of supporting sort of the global communications network and some of the reliability and resilience needs that they have. So it's a great example of the telecom industry, OP NFE and OpenStack working together. Awesome. And so what's next for OP NFE? What can we expect to see next for you guys? Yeah. So one of the next big things we have is that we have a plug fest coming up in December at the University of New Hampshire. So that's going to be really exciting. And then our Dan Ubrelis is coming out in spring of next year. Awesome. We look forward to talking to you then and seeing what's new with OP NFE then. All right, cool. Thank you. Great to be here.