 So, in conclusion of this 2013 DEBCONF, we'll present the Olga team for the children's ceremony. So I have a piece of good news and a piece of bad news for you. Which one do you want to hear first? Bad news. Louder. Is this better? So my question was I have a piece of good and a piece of bad news and the representative answer from Patty was bad once first. Is that okay? Yeah. Unfortunately the conference is over. Do you want the good news? We have DEBCONF Portland on the horizon and we have two really good bids or will be really good bids for DEBCONF 15. So within the next year we'll see each other again. As always it is very important that we thank our sponsors because you may or may not believe this but without them you wouldn't be here. So I'm going to go through them and I would like to ask you to applaud only between the levels. So I'll just put my hands up when you get to applaud, right? Matanel Foundation in Google are our platinum sponsors. We have also had great support from the Canton de Neuchâtel where we are currently. This is the Gold Sponsor. And then the Silver Sponsors at Finness Eye Group, HP, Ubuntu 9.ch and Switch, Apache Cloud Stack and the Zen Project. And then the Bronze Sponsors. This is going to be fun in some points because A, I don't have my glasses on and B, some of these are not necessarily translatable to words. C and R, Informatik Libre, NG Communications, RHX, Vivaire Internet, the Brander Group, Camp2Camp, at Tux apparently. Please go and look on the Linux user group Switzerland, Logilab, Sarex, Infomaniac Networks, NTS, NIMAC Networks, Zuma, Eucalyptus, Linux, Gold.ch, Solar Flare, ARM, PlatHome, the IT Support Group Electrical Engineering of the ETH, Zurich, Leap, CH Open, the University of Zurich, Unvention and E2P Informatik. And the supporters that are there, I would like to slightly reorder because it's my mistake that one of the two last ones, Project Neptune and Libara only turned up there a couple of days ago, not before the conference. So I'd like to mention them first, but also the Master for Rapid Application Development and EM Puzzle ITC Cyberlink. I don't know what that one is, Section, ah, Section Roman, so of the, of this area of Switzerland, an Informatik group that supported us. Horace Networks, Saral and the Neptune and Libara I've already mentioned, and thank you also to our media partners, Linux Magazine and Ubuntu User Magazine. I know that whenever we talk about DebConf, somebody puts up their hand and says it was my idea, and I don't want to get into any of that, but the first time that I heard of the idea of having DebConf in Switzerland was at the first meeting that the Debian Association Switzerland had. And at that meeting, three people were sitting around a table and one of them was Adrian von Bitter. Unfortunately, Adrian, as you all know, died a couple of years ago, and I am sure he would have been very, very proud, and an integral part of this conference, would he still be alive? I would please ask you to join me in a moment of silence in remembrance of Adrian. Thank you. And Adrian was unfortunately not the only person that left us in 20 years of Debian, but as it goes with everything in life, we're now at this conference, and we see that we're rejuvenating. First of all, we have a fountain over there that has rejuvenating water, but also you see younger people every day and more and more children. So the circle of life of DebConf is ongoing, and I am very, very grateful that this original idea of DebConf Switzerland, which for many, many years had nothing going about it, was at some point in time picked up by a very, very motivated and very good, strong local team that with the support of the DebConf global team managed to put up this awesome conference that we have enjoyed until today. And it is now time for me to please ask the core local team to come up here, who will then take over and thank all of you because you're all part of this conference. I would please like to ask to the stage, Gauden, Steinlein, Didi, Rabu, Rafael, Rafael Walter, Giacomo Cartonazzi, and Philip Hoop. It's okay. It's okay. We all love you. Yeah, mistakes happen. We had all the help from the local and global DebConf team. The TOX team, please join us here. You can't avoid it. Everyone that ever got one of these t-shirts will have to come here now. The TOX team, please join us. Nobody wants to be in the TOX team. So the video team, please join us. And the network team and the front desk team. And those that organized the day trip and the bar and the ones that found all our sponsors. And Pohito would also like to thank the Le Can kitchen and staff. Where are they? They should be here somewhere. The Le Can kitchen and staff. The chief of the kitchen wants to say something to you, at least to those that understand either German or French. So let's start with French. During the winter, autumn and winter, the Le Can kitchen, the kitchen team, plus the office, plus everyone, we organize the evenings. On September 27th, we have a night trip from here to there. And then, in October, we go south, to the Marseille region with Marseille and Spanish. And on September 6th, 13th, 20th, and 27th, we organize a kitchen course for Mr. Solmont, so that he can prepare the end-of-year meals for Madame and the family. On January 5th, we have the brunch of the kings. And then, on January 25th, we have the gastronomy with the club Té de l'astronomie du Nord Bourdon. We do it here on site. A little bit of stars and a little bit of something in the steel that corresponds. And then, on February 23rd, we do the tasting of the new map. We present the new map that we do here for the marriages, for the banquets, for the seminars of the company, all of them here. And when you mark it. So, now the German. That is the problem of the German. I can only speak German, I can't speak English. On September 27th, we have the September 27th, we have a Jagdmenu, from here, a lot of other places. On October 25th, we go to Marseille with Marcel Peñol. That was one of the times when he wrote a book about the region of Marseille. And then, on November 4th, in the middle of the afternoon, on the 6th, we hear the 27th, we make a kitchen course, a kitchen course, just for men, so that they can make a nice family dinner. It's about cooking, it's about the temperature we cook. And in addition, we make a really nice dish for dinner. And then, in December, we have reserved for other things, for example, for business meals or seminars, things like that. And then we go back in January. On the 15th, we have three kings' days, we make a brunch. On the 24th, in January, there is astronomy, there are a few stones and a few pieces of wood. And then on the 22nd and the 23rd of February, we again make our new breath every year, imagine that we make a wedding, we make seminars, we make business meals, all ladies. And then you can invite the gentlemen to come over for the whole topic. In the Rotter and Younger, I have prepared some things, I can operate them, and if someone wants to, they can give it to me. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. Just a very short summary. He presented what they are doing during winter. If you are from the region, you can come here and enjoy some of their soirees. And I would also like to thank the dishwashing equip we had during breakfast and lunch, and those employees that cleaned up our toilets and bathrooms and everything during the week. Well, I don't know if you are going to come from Japan to come to all these events, but anyway, as director of this camp, I wanted to thank you for coming to Beaumarcus. It was a great pleasure to welcome you all. We made progress through your coming, too. We had to install new technology here to the camp. I hope you were more or less satisfied. And, well, during two years, we have been preparing this big conference. We had difficult talks sometimes, but I was sure because the staff who was here, the people who I had the opportunity to work with were of real big quality. And thank you for coming to Beaumarcus. I must say, well, come back. I will have perhaps retired, but anyway, you are always welcome to the camp, and thank you for coming. So, I hope, till now, everyone that has such a t-shirt and is still here is actually here, but we have a few more... Before you go to the... I would like to thank... I have... I want to thank someone. I would like to thank Gizmo, Luca Capello, who was here yesterday and who was a vital part of our organization from the start. I would like to thank Dacia, who was a vital part of the talks and video team, Gunnar and Ganef and everyone else that worked remotely on the DevCon team. I have one thing to add to someone who wants to stay anonymous. It's correctly marked in our books, but some person decided to get donated 5% of the money made by the work done with free software back to Debian, and that person enabled these bar prices. So, Jey, thank you very much. And of course, we want to thank all of you who made this conference so nice. Thank you. Not you. And of course, the trout fillet. So, we have some fun facts. We used 8 kg of powdered sugar just to do the icing. Only the icing on top of the birthday cake. You all drank 2,600 beers, 975 coffees, 186 rivella, and it's a pity for the international corporations, but only 29 sprites. 320, including those that came here yesterday for the birthday party, people arrived in total. We had 513 unique MAC addresses seen on the DevCon network, not including the DevCon 13 network. So, and we have 123 sessions, talks, buffs, whatever for a total of 104 hours of work. To prepare this conference, 2,759 males in 384 threads were sent since the end of DevCon 12. 136 gigabit of video traffic went through at least the GPL host service. There were other video relays that are not included into the statistics. And one DevCon team member. You will guess who ran during the conference. 168 km and 86, yes. And 7 km of elevation in 21 hours and 22 minutes. In a year, by the time we will all be at DevCon 13, Debian will be allowed to drink beer. There. So, now the more serious part. We have some information for you. Please read the mail if you did not do so yet. We sent to DevCon for an ounce. If you need a bus ticket for departure tomorrow with a bus to Ivedon, please buy a ticket at the bar tonight. The problem is that they only sell the tickets on the bus and it will take the bus driver to approximately a quarter of an hour to sell 50 tickets. And then you will miss your train in Ivedon. We also moved our printer down to front desk so that you can use it if you want to print a train ticket or a boarding pass or whatever. For everyone and we still need help that wants to help with tear down, we meet at 8 p.m. outside beside the fountain to see what tasks can be done tomorrow and which group will do what. And after that meeting, we will offer those that help an apparel. If you don't know what an apparel is, come and see. And help. If you stay here until after 11 p.m. tomorrow, you risk to be just grabbed for tear down tasks. So, if you don't want to help, you have to leave. And right after this closing ceremony is finished, there are some more slides to come. We would like to remove all the chairs here and in the buff rooms and in the hack labs and in the second talk room. We split into four, five parts like those in the back there. You stay here and put all the chairs here together. Those in the back on this side, you go to the second talk room and put the chairs there together. Those in front here, you go to the hack lab down there and those here, you go to the buff room down here. We enjoyed the world. We have done the whole conference. We go outside and enjoy the view. And those outside, you go to the swingly hack labs and put the chairs and the tables together there. Thank you for helping. There's one thing that's not on the slide, but traveling can be annoying or boring at times. There was just sent a mail to Debcon Announce to invite you to write some text reports that we can include into the final report during your travel back home. And now I give the word to Christian for the Assassin's Game. Is that okay? Yeah, that was completely unprepared. I completely forgot to prepare anything about the Assassin's Game, so I will just here nominate the survivors first. So I forgot to take the list, so I hope some survivors are still here. So please stand up if you have survived in the Assassin's Game. Yes. Yes. I think we're missing Rhonda. Oh, and actually the winner of the Assassin's Game is the person who killed the most persons. And there were some bonus points too. So the winner of the game is actually Rhonda. Rhonda actually survived thanks to a very, very tiny piece of cheese during the valuable game, otherwise I would have killed her. Six kills for Rhonda. And the second person is Andy Bart. Yes, five kills. He has been stabbed. But actually he was killed. He was killed later on by who killed Andy? Rhonda. And a few other people completed with three kills, but I'm so sorry I forgot to check the numbers. I will publish the numbers, of course. So thank you, Assassins, for this game and I hope we will have even more next year. I think we can also have a round of applause for Christian for the chosen one party. The network team reminded me that although we are going to remove all the tables and chairs, please don't tear down the network stuff in the hack labs and everything. Yeah, neither video. Yeah. Au revoir. Auf Wiedersehen. Adi v'n energy. Stab ein. Goodbye. You can have it, but wait for it. See you. I have no idea how I'm going to explain this immigration. I think I'll just let him do the talking. It's a lot already. The mic was taken away from me a long time ago. And also, although many people did a lot of stuff, I think we can also thank and have another round of applause for the bar team that did an awesome job very late at night and that will be open tonight. Thank you, Benedict. See you in Portland. We will keep Portland weird and it will be fine.