 Log into the console at cloud.redhat.com by clicking the console link and using your Red Hat ID. You can use the console to manage your Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Red Hat OpenShift, and Red Hat Ansible infrastructure. Today, we're going to look at your options for managing OpenShift. In the clusters section, you can view your existing clusters or create new clusters for cloud, data center, or even local. From the Cloud tab, you can actually create rows of clusters directly from the interface. There's a helpful wizard to get you through the process. For a complete overview of your clusters, choose the Overview tab. You'll see all the clusters you have, telemetry, and everything else you need. The Releases tab provides valuable information about existing OpenShift releases. Check out what channels available, the support level, whether it's full, maintenance, or end of life. And in the Developer Sandbox, you can launch a pre-configured private OpenShift environment to be hands-on immediately. The Download section is actually one of my favorites. You can download command line tools, developer tools, installation binaries from multiple platforms, disconnected installation tools, customization tools. You can copy your token, your poll secret, and download it, and you can even view your API token all in this one place. With Red Hat Insights for OpenShift, you can get recommendations for the best way to run your cluster. Each cluster has specific recommendations available in this section. In the Vulnerability section, you can actually see which CVEs affect your clusters and relate them directly to the cluster's running. With Subscriptions, you can view all available subscriptions across dedicated on-demand and more. In the Cost Management section, you can review specific cost data available from the Cost Management Metrics Operator installed in your various clusters. So you can dive right into things like per namespace cost analysis across your entire fleet of clusters. And there you go. As you can see, the Red Hat Hybrid Cloud Console is a great way to manage OpenShift.