 Hi there, I'm David Aster and I'm a solution architect with GitLab. As you may know, we ship a new release every month on the 22nd, and since we're so close to the holidays, I decided to create a little poem with apologies to Clement Seymour. Twas the night before release and all through the house, all the features were shipping with the click of a mouse. The issues were closed by the PMs with care, and excitement and wonder hung in the air. The users were eager for this code when it ships. Hey look, one said, this one comes with tooltips. The tests were all passing and the team gave a clap, and the status was green across the pipeline map. When all of a sudden, a failure popped in the mix, I sprang from my chair to see what needed to fix. The frown appeared on my face, which was previously smiles, so a wave to the pipeline to view the log files. I knew once I found what I needed to purge, it would just be a matter of creating a merge. When what to my wondering eyes should appear, the error in spacing in YAM a lot fair. Not having to go through more than one app, I knew I could fix this just with a snap. A snap? Like Thanos? Well that wouldn't be awesome. I'm sorry, I'm DJing, let's get back to the problem. Armed with this info that I could now see, some clicks, a new branch, open the IDE. The change was all made all liquidy split, one press of a button, now let's commit. The pipeline was ticked off, a fresh and a new, and now I just waited with nothing to do. The jobs were all running, and quickly they came, so I laughed and I shouted and I called them by name. Go sass, go dast, go code quality. Check licenses and containers and dependencies. The jobs they all passed without any hitch. The release was now good, sans the previous glitch. Approval was given, we were ready to go. 11.6 is now the star of the show. As I drifted off to sleep, thinking me clever, I realized that we just shipped the best release ever. Happy holidays, everybody, from GitLab.