 Today's presentation has a lot of information for and about our community, but it's also a time to share a message with the broader JavaScript community. Ember is a front-end framework that has something new to offer you, a new set of tools, and a new way of working on web apps. Our latest work is called Ember Octane, and it's a total overhaul of Ember's syntax, mental models, and learning journey. If you tried Ember before, this is pretty different. One of Ember's long-standing core strengths is that it includes the things you need to build a successful software product, tools that are built to work together. Now with Octane, it puts HTML first, it puts components front and center, developers can learn by following thoroughly tested, free, brand new tutorials. And this past December, we shipped Octane in a minor, stable release, building some of the best new features that the front-end has to offer on top of a solid dependable foundation. Ember developers didn't have to rewrite their apps in order to start using these features. Let me take you on a tour. With a few commands, I can generate my app, install and use almost any popular JavaScript package from NPM, and add some markup, interaction, and CSS. I can write some end-to-end tests, run them, run a production build, and deploy. I can do all of these things with zero config. Along the way, I learned some important things in a guided way. Out of the box, every new Ember app comes with linting that guides me to make good choices for following coding best practices and improving my app's accessibility. And when I work on other projects, I bring my knowledge and expertise about the web with me. Here, I'm copying and pasting some D3 code I found on the Internet into my Ember app. In the end, I have more time for doing the things I enjoy as a developer. Whenever I have questions, it's especially helpful to be part of this community. I can get debugging help from other people without needing to explain my app's architecture first. The Ember community includes developers who work at companies that have thousands of engineers. They work at small startups with scrappy teams and the drive to build something new. They're hobbyists who choose Ember for their side project because it lets one person get a lot done. And anyone can participate in shaping Ember's future by making proposals for new features or providing feedback on the things that others have written. We're all using the same core tools, and that opens new possibilities. If you need to move quickly to get your app into production or you want to learn what it takes to get there, we invite you to try Ember Octane. Let's build something together.