 So we are here on the OpenSUSE Estall and who are you? I'm Douglas DeMiles. And what are you showing on the SUSE Estall today? So basically with the SUSE booth here we've brought a various collection of our projects. We have the OBS OpenBuild service, someone made that and so we thought it'd be pretty cool to just support that creativity and made a sticker to go along with it. We also have tumbleweed which is our rolling release and that's been successful, very successful and moving forward with the newest packages and opposite of that we have leap. So leap is more of a made for endurance you could say. It's more of a well-established, long-term support but it's more older packages that people don't want the newest stuff. Well it is long-term support because Antonio you made a comment during your keynote this morning about how you work successfully with Plasma. Can you tell us about that? For leap we are using the LTS support of Plasma and that includes always the latest LTS support, the latest LTS packages and then in tumbleweed we have the latest packages practically released the same day or maybe the next day after they are released by upstream. And then in package hub we also have packages from the community which are released for the French version of Plasma and then we also have the LTS version of Plasma here on Candy Packages, here on Package Hub. And another great project that's come from OpenSUSA is OpenQA, can you tell us about that? Yeah, well I'll go ahead and touch on it briefly. OpenQA was a project established during our hack week and so basically people can benefit from working at SUSA but being part of the OpenSUSA project is that you'll get paid for a week to do whatever you want to do. So that was developed and OpenQA is a moderated testing system and it's being used by OpenSUSA and Fedora as well as many other projects that are around and it's very beneficial to testing and testing a lot of different things and collaborating with different communities on tests. Do you want to expand on that a little? No, I mean we can maybe add that we are testing all the packages every day and everything that gets in the tumble with which is a rolling release so we have the latest packages of every application there. It's tested before it's released for our users so even if it's a rolling release it's quite stable thanks to OpenQA. And I know from working with the Plasma team that there are people from SUSA who come into the Plasma channels and say hang on this isn't working today and we've got cracked Plasma developers who've got good catch we'll get on and fix that so that works really well. You gave the keynote this morning Antonio, what did you talk about? I talked about the KD community and the KD community is around us and the systems that we have and how we should collaborate together even more than we are doing right now which I think is really quite good but I think we have to collaborate more. Well, thank you very much. Any other questions? Go ahead. These questions for Douglas. I know that SUSA actually is closed by default, no. What do we have to do in the KD community to change that? Well, I think keep doing what you're doing right now and it will lead to greater achievement. I mean things like this take time, right? And I think package up is a good start for that. But all I can really say from that perspective is keep going down the path that they're going down which seems to be very positive. Okay, thanks. So thank you for coming and thanks for your support for KD. Thank you.