 I'm Emily and I'm from England. My name is Paul, I'm Emily's dad and yeah, we're from Essex. No. I have, so I've been coming to Drupal Conferences for about 10 years now. My first one was Boston in 2008. I prefer it almost to actually the larger Drupal Cons, just because it's a bit more personal and I feel like I can talk to other people in the Drupal community a little bit better. And yeah, at some of the larger Conferences I find that I'm a bit lost, you know. And especially, I've been to some of the North American ones and I felt, well, actually I guess it was different because when I went to the North American ones I was newer to the community, so I felt possibly that I was a little bit more shy and I found it harder to approach other people. So yeah, but yeah, I like, it feels like I can relate to the other attendees a lot more when I come to a local camp. Emily actually asked me, so obviously I've been a coder for quite a while, and a few years ago, when Emily was about 5, 6, 8 years old, she asked me to teach her some coding. So she's always kind of shown a bit of an interest in it. And so coming along to Drupal Camp I felt that it would allow to sort of see the bits about coding that aren't just about code, if you know what I mean. So actually sort of the exchange of ideas and kind of meeting the people that are in a community around the software but also the things that people are trying to achieve with what they're doing rather than just the physical aspect of writing code. So I guess the hope was that it would sort of inspire her to see what she can do with it rather than it being just a physical act of writing code. It's like, well it's a means to an end. These are the goals that you can achieve. I think I will because well, I just like coding, developing things.