 All right, so thank you everyone for joining. It's that kind of session again, you know, the closing session. So, EuroPython 2020, the 19th EuroPython conference is almost over. And for some, this is probably sad for others. It's actually a good thing, because it was quite intense, tiring, stressful, and you know, it was long hours. But it's not over yet, so there's still something coming, which is called sprints, the hackathons on Saturday and Sunday. And I already posted some instructions or some, you know, explanations of how we think we're going to run them. If you want to run a sprint, please go to this page that I have posted here and register your sprint there. Right now we have these sprints already set up, but we can add additional ones tomorrow morning. So, we would have to add them. And then, yeah, we can then take it away from there. So, I would like to have all the sprint teams do a short presentation, basically like what you normally do at a regular sprint, where you present all the different teams and then people move off into different rooms to then actually work. So, it would be nice if you could prepare something for two minutes or so. Very short, and then we can do that tomorrow. Right, so some statistics. We had between 900 and 1,000 attendees from over 70 countries. We cannot really give you an exact number, because the closest we can give you to the number of attendees is the number of unique email addresses, and that's somewhere in between those two numbers. But, you know, some attendees, they have not really assigned their tickets to the right people, and so it's not really clear how many we actually had. We have sold over 1,000 tickets sold or registered for the sprints. They were free, right, so they were not really sold. 648 conference and sprint tickets, 350 sprints. Only tickets, which is a lot more than what we had expected. We were expecting 250 conference and sprint tickets and only maybe 200 sprint only tickets. So, that was a lot better. Also, a number of sponsors were a lot better. We had more sponsor income than we had expected. And we actually do have quite a number of people registered on the Discord server, so Friday, 653, which is, I think, quite amazing. The bot that we used, Chuck's Bot, really did an amazing job there to make that happen and so that we didn't have to manually onboard them. Of course, we would like to thank all the sponsors that we had, especially Microsoft and Bloomberg, but also all the others, of course. They basically made this possible to, you know, took away a lot of the financial risk for us. So, who's making all this happen? Well, we're actually just a very small team. We're a bit bigger, actually, than at the in-person event, but then, for the in-person event, we usually have people on site who help and we don't have those in this case. So, you know, the total number of volunteers that we have for running the conference, actually putting everything together at the conference is a lot lower. And we put together a collage of some of the photos that you see here, but of course, these are not all the volunteers, but you know, you can see a couple of people here. Hey, Mark, we can't see anything. And I can hear myself twice because it's coming through your audio. Okay, sorry about that. Let me see. You can't see anything? Nope, we can hear everything. We can see nothing. Okay, now we're good on the audio and we're good on the slides now. You mean you couldn't see all the slides I just presented? Yes. Well, no, we didn't see any of those. We just saw this one. You mean I forgot to... Okay, anyway. Hey, we've been going the whole conference with few technical difficulties. Yeah, well, you know, I mean, it has to start sometime, right? Okay, so this, basically, I told you everything in audio, so you didn't really miss anything. So, yeah, what you see here, these are the people who made everything happen, not all of them, you know, a subset. And this is the complete list of people who helped to produce EuroPython 2020. It's just 25 people, not really much, for a 1,010 conference. And what we want to do now is we want to, of course, give them, you know, the usual kind of applause that we do. Normally at the in-person conference, everyone comes up on the stage now and we have a big round of hand clapping, probably tiring for the attendees, but I think it's a good thing. So, let's try this here in the webinar. The way that we have to do this for the webinar is that we basically have to highlight every single volunteer and then make them, you know, present them here in the Zoom window. And then we will run a round of applause. So, let me stop the screen sharing again, like this, and then we can go ahead. So, this is essentially up to you, Jason and Martin, how you want to run this. I know. Do you want to say anything about each one, Marc? It might make it go smoother. Okay, so this is Ammo. You can always read the name, I think, down in the window, in the Zoom window, but I don't know whether it's shown on YouTube as well. So, Martin, please start the applause. We just keep the applause running. Maybe you can, you know, take down the volume a bit. Yay! This is Stefan. This is Bruno, sitting in the IFF. I'm actually not from the state. This is Andrew. This is Camilla. This is Lais. This is Chuck. This is Sylvia. This is Sam. This is Martin. This is Nicolas. This is Rekli. And who is this? It's you. Thank you, Marc. Are we done yet? Yeah, do we have time? Well, I can't highlight myself, Marc. I don't have the tools. You're right. So, let's give you an applause as well. So, can you show your webcam? Very well. Jason. In the Q&A there are some questions, actually. So, I don't know whether we have time to go for that. Can we go back to the start slide? Yes, of course I can go back. Let me just search. This time I'm actually going to share my screen. Let me do that. So, let's go back to the starts. This is, sorry. This is the starts page. Some people really want to know about the code for conduct cases, whether we have any. There is a slide for this. I'm going to come to that. I just want to say, before we move on, I just want to say thank you very much to the entire team. This has been a really amazing experience. And, well, it's been a pleasure. Right, so let's move on. So, of course, we're going to have a conference next year, right? So, next year is going to be EuroPython 2021. And we need some help. And the way that you can sign up for helping, hopefully we're going to make this an in-person conference. So, it's going to be, you know, we can actually have beers together. We can have an organizer dinner. We can do lots of things in Dublin. It's by, you know, writing to board at europeython.eu and telling us where you want to help. There's definitely enough to do. So, we really appreciate that. This is the slide for the code of conduct issues. So, we have zero reported conduct issues for inappropriate behavior. We have zero reported communication issues. Can we get applause for that? I mean, seriously. That is fantastic. Martin. So, thank you very much to the attendees. You did an excellent job as well. I think this is very good. There's some nice background there. It feels like at the conference. That was rather... Are there finger sandwiches now? Can I have something to eat from the conference? Or do I have something to buy my own? Okay, so let's move on to Europe Python Society. As you may know, it's the organization behind this. We are a non-profit organization. All the profit that we make from these conferences goes towards the European Python community. We support conferences and projects. You can apply for grants. You go to the grants page that we have and then we are going to help you running your conference. Probably, if you want to do something online, come to us and ask us. We have lots of experience now. We want to share that experience, because it would be useless if we just throw it all away. We want to share this knowledge. But also, if you need financial support, we can help you with that as well. You can become a member of that European Python Society simply by going to the website, signing up. And then we have to vote you in, which we usually do. This is the current European Python Society Board. At regular conferences, in-person conferences, we have the General Assembly at the European Python Conference. But this year, it was just too much work, so we just dropped it. We are going to have it afterwards. You see here Anders, Reiko, Sylvia, Stefan, Martin and myself. Those are the current Society Board members. We also had Angel and Jakub on the board, but they stepped down after we switched to the online event. We are going to have the General Assembly in a few weeks. I know, sometime in August, maybe end of August or something. We have to see. Like I said, you can sign up. If you sign up and you vote it in, then you can vote at that General Assembly. The General Assembly itself, well, it's rather boring. I mean, there's nothing we can do about it, because the agenda of the General Assembly is actually hard-coded into our bylaws. So it's difficult to make a fun event. We loved having you. Normally, we would say have a good trip home. In this case, I think we should say stay safe and healthy. See you again next year for your present 2021. You can already mark the dates. I didn't put them here on the slide. The dates are July 26th to August 1st. Most definitely, it's going to happen in Dublin because we have a contractual obligation now to do it there in that week. So we're going to do everything that we can. Please spread the word about the conference, whether you liked it or not. And if you liked it, then perhaps also bring your friends. If you come to Dublin, Ireland is a fantastic place to do vacation. You know, the time of year is fantastic to come to Ireland to travel around a bit so you can stay longer. And it's definitely going to be enjoyable. Right, so now it's party time. Actually, I'm going to answer a few questions maybe before we do this. So let me just go through the questions. I have seen a setup.py. That means we can package and distribute. Oh, those are some old questions. There's a glitch with this room, but I've got the latest questions here. So one person said, was this online conference satisfying for the team? Are there any disasters? The only disaster was that the first keynote where basically it's a bit embarrassing that the first talk is a no-show. But I think we managed quite well by having it today at the dinner time. So that was fine. And we kind of glossed it over a bit. So I think that was good. That was pretty much the only disaster, let's call it. We just had a couple of the usual little fires that we're pretty good about putting those out with our coats. You always have these small little issues that maybe like screen sharing doesn't work like what I just had or what Mark Smith had in the session. Or audio issues sometimes. We had relatively few internet issues, which is good. We had a few issues with YouTube. The stream sometimes not working. But that was more connectivity between Zoom and YouTube because we are not really in that loop. So we just sometimes had to restart it. James said we had lightning talks also had less issues. Yeah, lightning talks went really well. But we have a good technology now. Anders bought this device for doing the lightning talks at the in-person conference. So it's much easier now. Johnny wants to know if the Discord server is going to be archived because we had loads of good discussions. It's definitely going to stay online for, you know, the next couple of months. What we're going to do with it, whether we can archive it, maybe put it somewhere. I don't know how that works. You can probably tell us better, Jason. So what we want to do probably is... Everybody like nobody can message anymore except maybe only the administrators or something like that. And it could just stay there for people to come back to check stuff. If we can make it read only and we can be relatively sure that it will stay up, otherwise maybe we should find some way to archive it in some sense, like archive.org or something. Right, another board could grab all the messages. Yeah, something like that. Because there's a lot of content on the Discord server now, lots of references and things, which we do want to save. We still have to do some discussion on how we're going to do that, so it's not really clear yet. But we intend to keep everything that we can up online. Right, so this is the best time in Ireland, says Namrata, beautiful and sunny. Join us next year here. Yeah, definitely. We're going to try to do that. And then James is suggesting a Python script to scrape Discord. It might actually work. You know, at least read all the content using the API. Oh, true. The Discord API is quite... The Discord API is quite capable and it's easy to use. So if you want to play with bots, I think Discord is a perfect way to get into bots. It's really nice. So let's come back to the slide. Is it still showing? Yeah. Yeah, it's been showing this whole time. That's all right. So now it's party time. We have a party hall channel. It's called in Discord. We should probably all mingle there. And then at 20 or 30, that's eight minutes in the past, we are going to start the work parallel in the Microsoft track. And then after that, we're going to do karaoke talks in the Microsoft track as well. I just tried one of these karaoke talks for the D-Wave talk. That was a lot of fun. Because the speaker was 15 minutes too late. So I enjoyed that. So yeah, thank you again. Bye-bye. See you tomorrow. Thank you very much.