 Welcome, Andrea, of course. So hello, everyone. It's great to see so many of you here today. So my name is Andre Frittoli. I'm an open source developer advocate at IBM. So my team focuses on advocating on open source technologies to which IBM is a large contributor. But I wanted to talk today about the call for code initiative. So this is a five-year initiative that has happened year by year. So we have the first edition last year in 2018. And today, this year in 2019, we are continuing with the second edition. So the idea is to make a call to software developers to use their skills, their creativity, their intuition, their ideas, their originality to develop code that help solve problems in the world, like when you have an emergency situation or natural disaster happening. There are usually very difficult situations happening, like people lose communication to the network. It cannot request. It cannot communicate with first aid. It cannot communicate the need for basic things like medicines or food or water. So the idea is, let's put a prize and make this a global initiative. So software developers are motivated to come up with great ideas. And then we can continue from the idea and help it develop it. So this is a little bit of information from what we did in 2018. So there was a very large participation. It works with teams. So we had more than 100,000 teams. The developers had participated in 2,500 applications. We also have code for code events around the world. So they are called code for code days, where small hackathons focused on developing things that are towards this initiative. And the project winner for 2018 was Project AL that is a solution that is based on both hardware and software. So they created some kind of rubber duck devices. And five of them, they can float. And they can create a local network that allows people to communicate and send voice messages using kind of a voice assistant. And then these messages can reach a dashboard that is accessible by first aid people that can retrieve these messages. So in 2019, now we want to continue this. The focus for the 2019 edition for code for code is on personal and community well-being. As you can imagine, in emergency situation, it can be more likely, for instance, for a plague to spread. There could be also psychological impact and stress on people before and after some catastrophe happens. So the idea is to create a solution to support personal and community well-being. And we thought we could present this here at the hackathon today because it sounded like kind of a fitting type of intent with what is with the hackathon. So apart from code for code, there is another initiative that is starting this year, which is called Code Response. It's a four-year initiative. And the idea is to actually take this project that came out of code for code and make them real. So there is, again, funding and engineering that is supported by IBM to actually take the winner of the code for code initiative in 2018 and actually take it to production, make it real, make it happen. So if you decide to participate to code for code, there are some judging criteria that will be applied in terms of completeness, so how complete is your solution is. So the idea is that you have the hackathon today. You might want to take your solution that you're developing today and continue to develop it and develop it farther and get it to a state of completeness where it's ready to submission for the code for code. So also we will judge on effectiveness and efficiency, design, stability, of course, and usability. And I think, personally, I like the fourth one very much is creativity and innovation. So innovation using new technologies, of course, but it's not only that. It's really finding out-of-the-box ways to solve problems, so new ways to solve problems that people has not thought about yet. Of course, we have prices for the first three places, which are like $36,000, $24,000 and $12,000 for the first three places. And in terms of implementing your solution, you might want to look at the developer side from IBM. Of course, as IBM, we have multiple services in our cloud. And we do provide what we call code patterns, our examples of how you can utilize technologies or combine different technologies to create some solution. These are examples to get you started in getting to know a certain technology. And you can use this aspiration to combine with your innovative and creative ideas. And I mean, we spend a lot of technologies with the services that we have here. And we have different services. And some of them, I think, could be specifically interesting. Apart from this standard kind of application as a service, infrastructure as a service, services, we also have all the Watson services in our cloud. And I think you might find them interesting for this kind of solution because you have things like text-to-speech, tone and visualization, visual recognition. All these AI-powered type of services might be interesting to combine with the Kulfger code. So if you decide to apply for Kulfger code, your solution should use at least one of the services, at least one of the API on the IBM cloud. It doesn't need to be hosted on the IBM cloud, but it should use at least one of the services there. So yeah, that's all I had for today. We have a dedicated office hour for IBM cloud technologies and services tomorrow morning, I think at 11. So it's one hour, we'll be here. And of course, we are in the exposition hall at the booth. So if you have any questions, either find us at the booth. That's always a good point, a good place to find us. So just come around and talk to us. Thank you.