 Thanks, Ricardo. Good morning, everybody. Hi, my name is Nathan Tabor and I lead the product team for Kubernetes at AWS And I'm really excited to be here get a few minutes to talk to all of you at AWS we love Kubernetes and of course we love the CNCF our team wakes up every day thinking about How can we improve the lives of our customers and the community that is using in building open source technologies? So I want to talk about a few things that we're doing and we know that we're not alone here That we're not doing this on our own. We stand shoulder to shoulder with you and the entire community To innovate and to serve our customers. So this is some of the work that we've been doing With Kubernetes, we're building the AWS cloud provider Contributing to Cappy and our part of the security response committee. We recently helped implement gzip optimizations Which improved the performance of Kubernetes clients? With at CD we're bringing our operational learnings from running just so much at CD at scale back into the community And with tinkerbell. We have multiple core maintainers They've done a lot of work updating the tinkerbell back end from Postgres to native Kubernetes Amazon is the fourth largest contributor to open telemetry with three dedicated Maintainers working on the project a key contribution has been improving collector tracking and metrics stability Including improved Prometheus interoperability with open telemetry We have two cortex maintainers at AWS and Amazon is the number one contributor to the project this last year We open source a zone aware controller to make it easier to safely update by zones and speed up highly available Deployments on Kubernetes. We also introduced parallel compaction on Ingestor scalability to reliably support larger number of active time series per tenant Amazon is the fourth largest contributor to fluent bit key Contributions that our team has been making include continuous stability and performance testing Introducing priority event loops for performance improvements under load and multi-line filters Container D as many of you know is a critical part of kubernetes and we have three maintainers at AWS And we're the number one contributor to container D this year Our team has driven observability improvements as well as general project health and maintenance alongside the container D community CD kates is a really interesting project This is a project that actually originally came from the AWS CDK project And we realized looking at the CDK that this could while it was originally made for AWS and cloud formation It would actually work really really well for kubernetes and could generate kubernetes manifest just like it was doing for AWS APIs and so we extended it and now CD kates is a CNCF sandbox project and the team is working on going towards incubation Carpenter is another new open source project that just was recently announced from AWS And it's an open provider cluster auto scaler. That's built by the team at AWS that radically changes How capacity is assigned to clusters provisioning the compute your pods need when they need to scale and removing the need to think about Setting or scaling node groups We've been thrilled with the community response to the project and we look forward to building more providers with the community ACK is a set of open controllers built to allow native kubernetes provisioning and management of cloud resources We built this to make it easy for anybody to manage AWS resources using kubernetes And we're excited to see this project being used directly by customers in their clusters and as a part of CNCF projects like crossplane And we're not just building we're expanding our contribution to the CNCF providing up to three million dollars in credits Some of this will be used to maintain and improve the core common CI systems which deliver CNCF project images to customers Some of the work that Emily was just mentioning before We're also committed to long-term support for kubernetes and the entire ecosystem of CNCF projects With the open SSF we've recently increased our investment to ten million dollars over three years to fund work in securing our Shared open source ecosystem. This includes two point five million dollars to the alpha omega project Money that's used to audit open source libraries rewrite foundational libraries and rust and ongoing security work with the rust foundation and Last year at AWS. This is not very visible to a lot of people, but it's it's very important to us We've launched the team that we call find it fix it and this team is focused on finding security Vulnerabilities in ubiquitous open source libraries and then offering the upstream community patches for these vulnerabilities and in cases where we can We don't just offer patches, but we actually offer a test suite to ensure that future developments don't reintroduce vulnerabilities We think this is a sustainable way for communities to help them become more secure over time Rather than just flooding them with a list of security issues and demanding that they fix them We're excited to keep working with and building Kubernetes with the entire open source community. Thank you very much I look forward to continuing our partnership