 Okay, thank you everybody. We're going to do the wrap up now, so if you could pay your attention over here, it'd be great. A couple of points of order just before I forget because I know I will definitely not remember to say this at the end of the wrap up. For the social tonight, try and just realise the NF call website says 6.30, but it's actually 6, so try and be there for around 6 if you can. There's about a 30 minute walk, 35 minute walk, something like that according to Google Maps, so you can either walk or take an Uber or whatever you guys do over here. I defer to the locals. We have the place booked until I think 8.30, and after that it's just kind of regular bar, so you'll feel free to stay as long as you'd like. Try and remember to take your badges with you because there's food and stuff, so if you have your badge you can just walk straight in. There is a list on the door, so if you forget it, it's not the end of the world, but it just makes it a bit easier. Tomorrow we are back in the same place, same room, tomorrow morning. Again have breakfast from 8.30 I think, in the same place, just down this hallway. Feel free to come by then and get some food and start hacking straight away. If everyone is coming to a summit on Thursday, we have breakfast on Thursday, but it's a different location. I'll try and remind you again tomorrow if I remember, but it's just up the hall basically through the foyer of the hotel. Tomorrow same place, same breakfast. Is there anything else I have to say? Right, let's go on to the wrap up. First up is Models. For the Models team, we were mainly figuring out together how to use the new functionality in the NFCore dev development version on creating Models with NFTest. I think we finally succeeded, but we had some phases of failing, some phases of this doesn't work, and then finally succeeded. We have some Models in which we just converted the Python to NFTest, BPMap, Minism, Arriba Run, and also adding new Models as PRs. I just wanted to also thank everybody that developed those tools that made it very easy to add the NFTest and everybody that contributed new Models. For tomorrow, we have a large number of PRs opened, so we should start the day by just reviewing PRs from other people, but one is reviewed and merged. That's also great for us. Thanks very much. Okay, so this was the cool team of NFTest back there, so we primarily had a goal of converting as many PyTest to NFTest, and you can see by the issues that PRs opened there, we were killing it with 17 Models now converted to NFTest. Two sub-workflows too, thanks to some really talented people there. We haven't started reviewing much of the PRs that we have opened, so that's the first order of task tomorrow morning. Also, we found a bug in the NFCO tools related to NFTest, so that's a plus too. Yeah, that's pretty much it, so this momentum will just keep it going until tomorrow and after the hackathon too. Thank you. Thank you, Maxime, for giving me this responsibility for the Pipelines group. So the Pipelines group is mostly thinking about that sort of high level structure, new pipelines, how to restructure pipelines. So we have also had some great work from Avern, Avern, Avern, Vencat on Azure Megatests, so this is regular testing of all NFCore pipelines on Azure. Leon, for Bravely against Hodge, a non-NFCore pipeline is looking to NFCore Islet, which is not insignificant tasks, so really if you're starting your pipelines, it'd be great if you could use the template from the get-go, it makes everybody's life a lot easier. You eventually have to solve these problems, and it's always easier to do it up front. Chase and Alyssa, on the calling cards, really cool molecular biology technique, we're working towards an NFCore pipeline for that sort of data. Mag and RNAVAR, we're just sort of gathering interests. In the viral integration pipeline, we're adding validation NF tests, so thank you Alyssa and Chase. The MC micro pipeline is mostly a negotiation, that's what we've got Shatner in the bottom hand. So Rob here with Leon, Florian, sorry, is negotiating exactly what this sample sheet is going to look like. This is perfect, the perfect thing to do with a hackathon, the really human work of working out what this thing is going to look like. And some more custom pipelines than AmpliSeq, so thank you very much for everyone from the pipeline team. I'll pass it to Ops. Apparently you can insert gifts now. Okay, so the Ops team. Mostly what we worked on today was getting the 4H for the pipelines working in Terraform, and I was mostly in Graham teaching me, who's now conveniently left and flood the scene. So we also discussed mirroring the repos then, because we realized as we were starting to work on these, what if we accidentally blew away all the repos, and of course no more. Luckily Graham was like, what if we just made a separate org for that to create a blast radius of this sense as well. We also added a byte size team. Fran hasn't responded on that, but if anyone's interested in joining the byte size like reading through the transcripts and checking out those as well. So essentially just a quick run through so that everybody's like kind of aware of what we're doing. The idea is this is some simple Terraform, and then you can start to define teams, repos, et cetera, and we can just basically turn that into code rather than us clicking through the various buttons. This is just for the infrastructure team as a quick demo. And then so what we did today was we basically took this pipelines, and so we have like the test pipeline, methyl-seq, modules, et cetera, basically for the NFCOR pipelines, and then you'll just call 4H on all of them, and it'll generate the pipelines with the same settings for everything. So that's what we did today. Slowly the old NFCOR website PHP script is being stripped away. It's a pleasure. Ops team is quite nice. It's a new team this time, and we're sort of spinning it up at the moment, so this is kind of the hidden work that goes on behind NFCOR to sort of make all the maintenance and infrastructure work. So this is good to give a bit more visibility to this. Thank you. Yes, so for the beginners team, most were not true beginners in the sense that most had already used Nextflow. But were new to NFCOR. We had a number of discussions around starting, getting started pain points and all of that. A common theme that emerged was that there was a strong interest in using NFCOR templates, but not necessarily with the goal of pushing the pipelines to NFCOR. And we found a number of gaps in the documentation around that. I'm trying to say it diplomatically. We found some really interesting resources. Thank you, Gisela. The slide deck that you pointed us to was one of the most useful resources, possibly the most useful. Anyway, but clearly there's some gaps and we'll be working on filling some of that. I want to call out a few things that people actually worked on and got done. Charlie worked through some training materials and tested some features, actually switched from using, I think it's interesting, switched from using Gitpod for running through training materials, actually using his local setup, which for sustainability and being able to continue using stuff is important, and tried the resubmission with resume argument, which is a really important feature. And so it tried it out and it worked. So that's always gratifying. David actually created a new NFCOR module. There's a pull request for it. Somebody please go and review it by tomorrow morning. That would be lovely. And Lynn learned a lot from being in the passenger seat for the development process, helped figure out some issues. So well done there on having an actual pull request coming from the beginners table. Very proud. And Julie was new completely, I believe, to Nextflow and actually got set up with all the tooling, ran a real pipeline, RNA seek pipeline specifically. We encountered a number of interesting issues, interesting, but she learned a lot in the process and I learned a lot in the process too. We got help from a number of people, including Rob, including others. So thank you very much. That was very helpful. And we have some suggestions, some others that aren't in the slide here either, but just generally more documentation seems to be an emerging theme as well. And resources to kind of bridge the gap between the Nextflow stuff and then of course stuff. And we'll be working on that in the future. And I don't want to stand in the way of dinner and more than that. But thank you very much. That was very helpful. Awesome. Thank you for everyone who came up and presented and thank you all of you for your work today. Documentation, super important theme. We've had previous hackathons focused just on documentation. It was the main theme and we used to have a group dedicated to documentation, but we decided not to because we sort of feel like every group should be doing documentation all the time. So yeah, maybe we should have that as a category, like for each team. How many PRs you've put in specifically to fix or add to the docs. So thank you for all that. Right, with that we're going to sort of wrap up for today. So feel free to go back and drop your stuff at your hotel or whatever and see us at Cheeky Monkey or if you prefer. We're going to be here for a bit longer. So you're welcome to carry on working a little bit and go directly there, whatever makes most sense for you. Try not to leave anything in the room tonight. It will be locked up, but I don't want to be responsible for your possessions. We'll see you later. Thank you very much.