 Good morning, everybody, great to be here in Chicago. I'm super excited to be talking to you about what we've been up to and what we want to contribute back to the community today. So before we get started, I wanted to kind of just, you know, think about CNCF's mission of, you know, fostering and driving this community of open source projects and making it, you know, accessible to everyone. And if I take a step back and think about what we are doing with Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, we have a very similar mission. We want to break down the walled gardens in open source and in clouds and interconnecting them and making it easy for everybody to actually have built great applications across clouds. And before I dive in about the projects, I want to just thank all of you, you know, digital transformation and anything that happens in technology is about developers. So thank you. You are the front line that drives change. You are building high performance code that drives and propels many of these projects and businesses forward. You're doing the innovation that actually protects and, you know, protects, you know, add security value to every one of these CNCF projects that is actually driving the industry. So I want to thank you. We know you and we celebrate you. You know, when I started looking at, you know, what do I want to talk about? First I want to take a look at our long history of contributions and what have we as Oracle contributor back. There's quite a few lists of projects. But for me, the more important part is actually being stewards in the community, being with you and stewarding and driving 500 plus projects and helping the community thrive and build the next generation of technology. And second, it's, you know, when it comes to Linux, we're one of the contributors. I'm going to talk a little bit more about it. Well, I can't talk about our ecosystem without talking about Java and OpenJDK. Oracle contributes over 70% to the OpenJDK project. And for us, it is about maintaining a healthy ecosystem for one of the most popular languages in the industry. And if I look back at, you know, some of our contributions dating back even in 2000, we've been contributing quite a bit when it comes to Java, be it OpenCroc, you know, back in 2017, we handed that back to the Eclipse Foundation. In 2018, we did Heladon, which is, you know, a framework. And in 2019, we actually did GrowlVM, which is, you know, pretty heavily used when it comes to, you know, applications in our cloud and applications to your building in many clouds. But diving forward, when we, when it comes to cloud, we thought a lot about, I talked about how we're in the business of breaking down walled cartons. We believe VRU. And when we built our cloud, we built our cloud to be open with the idea that all of the services that we build in our developer platform or in our data platform is open and compatible that makes it easy for developers to contribute, bring the latest and the greatest technology and actually break down the walled garden. And so here are a list of services that are projects that either we have contributed back or we've taken an open standard and actually making it easy for developers on the technology that you have innovated. When it comes to data services, once again, streaming or data flow, all of these are technologies that we actually contribute back and, you know, make it open so we get customers can actually move between clouds very, very easily. And today, I also wanted to talk a little bit about Linux, especially listening to our community. Oracle's commitment to Linux is unchanged. We will keep Linux open and free. We've actually like made the source code public and free for everybody. No paywalls. And we welcome downstream contributions and something that we co-founded with a bunch of other folks. But it is something that is important for us as an industry and looking back at our history of Oracle Linux contribution. We made Linux Enterprise ready early in the 2000s. We drove scalability and performance, especially for our own internal needs to run databases on top. And lastly, you know, we've co-founded Open ELA to make it easy for our customers to keep Linux ecosystem thriving. Our commitment to CNCF remains resolute. And today, I'm very excited that we're denoting $300 million in ARM credits to the CNCF projects to enable all CNCF projects to be built on top of Oracle Cloud. And those credits can be used for all projects in any of our cloud regions. And we have a very distributed cloud across the globe. And we have been breaking wall gardens by interconnecting our clouds with Microsoft Azure. So I'm super excited that a lot of the CNCF projects can actually be built on our cloud. And the good news is it is built on open technologies. Another key thing that I'm excited to talk about is our zipper standard. It fundamentally aims at solving the problem of bringing identity down to the network layer. It enables you to actually write intent-based policies and sort of policies that is very hard for any human to understand. And we've made this an open standard. We're actually calling for contributors. And we want to be part of the community in defining this new standard and actually changing how security is done in the cloud-native ecosystem world. And lastly, this started as an internal project, basically driving our entire business to move to OpenSL 3.0 for all of our Java applications. We started building it. We saw great performance. And second, we went and did a bunch of work around FIPS. And it took us a very long time to do it. And we said, well, these are problems that every developer and every customer is actually going to face. So today, we're directly announcing the Java project to be open sourced under our OpenJD ecosystem. And it will be available for all pan-up-based applications. So super excited about these announcements. Let's break wall gardens in the cloud and open source together. Thank you, everybody. Well done. Thanks a lot. That's all for now. Thanks everyone. Thanks for watching. I love you. Bye bye.