 I'm the senior developer and I basically work throughout our tech stack and lead a team of developers. First encounter at GitLab years and years ago, it made my life so much better by moving to GitLab. To have that backlog easily visible to me in source control where I'm working with the code was just life changing, really. It's opened up doors where other places have potentially wanted to discuss DevOps with me. We use it, we use the CI CD pipelines quite a lot, so being able to just add that string to my board on my CV means I've got recruiters knocking on my door all the time. It's a great feeling to have, but it's also great to be able to say no thanks, I'm really happy where I'm at, I love the tools I'm working with, I've got the challenges that I want to be tackling, I don't feel let down by the software I'm using. Personally, I've just found the overall GitLab community really welcoming and very understanding. Just the patience people have, it never comes across as, not again, how can you not get this concept? No, that's no problem, we know this is a big change for people if they haven't worked this way before, we know we've got a big code base, there's a lot of things to consider and they're just welcoming and willing to give the time to help even though you're probably causing them more work than they previously had or more work than if they'd just done the task themselves. That's been absolutely fantastic for it to feel that, which is something I've not felt when I've tried to contribute to other open source projects before.