 power by OpenStack. But to give us a direct example of one of the users that's really starting to aggressively roll out OpenStack, we've got the cloud lead from OVH, Maxime Hurtel. Thanks Marc. As most of you have never heard about OVH, our company was founded in 1999 by a freshly graduated student named Octav Klaaba. We built the first data center in the attic of his parents. A few years later, OVH offered bare metal servers, exposed developer friendly API, and eventually moved that data center to Paris. It quickly became the largest French infrastructure provider. Today we offer pretty old flavor of clouds, including the latest public cloud we've just launched a few months ago. And this is, of course, based on OpenStack. A key thing you need to know about OVH is that we build everything ourselves, from data centers to servers, even including the desk we would use every day. OVH is today the largest European infrastructure providers with data centers in Europe and in America. We have plans to open new ones in other European countries in Asia and also here in the US in the upcoming months. We also built and operate our own network throughout the world with 32 points of presence and a total connectivity of 5.5 terabit per second. And as I just said, we build our own servers. It means we have access to the latest technology from our tech suppliers and we can optimize the servers, especially for our data centers, to then offer the best performance to our customers. Actually, we've got 250,000 currently running in our infrastructures and we build up to 500 new every day. Let's talk about our love story with OpenStack. It all started in 2012 with Swift, allowing us to scale our personal cloud storage solutions. Two years later, we entered the public cloud market for servers with Nova, offering instances that would combine the flexibility of the cloud and the performance you would get from bare metal servers. We got great feedback from our early adopters, from internal users also, because we use OpenStack also to build some products on. And we released that product worldwide in 2015. We had great reviews from developers all over the world because this offer was combining a simplified billing and also great performance with a no-noisy-neighbor approach. Today, we are really busy working, adding new functionality, following three different passes, adding new functionality from OpenStack, integrating with other VH products and working on real new features you wouldn't have seen anywhere else. And I'm about to share you some of them now. Let's talk about a few numbers. We now have 75 petabytes on Swift, so that's our production cluster. We've been scaling from 2012 up to today. We have 70,000 instances running today in our different pods, ranging from two gigs to 240 gigs of RAM for each of these instances. And to get an actual idea of the level of usage, last month, our users spawned 430,000 servers on our OpenStack public cloud. But let's get into the details about how we attained that success. Some of our users are like you. Agile's need that develops. They know the OpenStack API. And for them, we expose Vanilla API and the Horizon client. But some of them are not. And that's why we simplified the process and built, for example, this really easy-to-use web interface, where you can see here a user spawning a new server in the North American data centers. It will then create a sender volume and attach the sender volume to the server I just created. It's really easy to use. You can use that even if you have never used any cloud anywhere. But let's get into some more technical ways we have innovated around OpenStack. As we were scaling, we also ate some bottlenecks at the network level. So two years ago, in 2014, we embarked on a project to remove the network node from the NorthSource network flow. This allowed us to drastically improve the performance for our customers and offer them the best experience they would get on a network level. Another way we have improved is integrating the OVH VRAC technology. So here is what you would get, actually, in a typical OpenStack installation. You can create multiple private networks in a single region of your OpenStack. What VRAC brings you is the ability to link those private networks, those VLANs, between regions. It means between data centers, in our case. You can also link in those private VLANs other products from OVH, such as bare metal servers or dedicated cloud, for example. All this is worldwide, and we are about to expose that publicly in production in a few days. I encourage you to test that out. So as you just could read and could, as you could get, we are big fans of OpenStack at OVH, and we are also a broad infrastructure donor. This means that a significant part of the bugs, corrections, and the features you benefit from every day are actually tested and integrated in our data centers. One of the mission is to put OpenStack in the hands of more and more dev and ops all around the world, and as you can see, this is just the beginning for us. All my colleagues and I are eager to share with you some more information over the next few days, and you will recognize us with these blue shirts or white hoodies. Thank you again and have a great summit. Just a couple of quick reminders before we head out. First of all, if you are coming to the party tonight, please have a great time, but do remember that we do take our code of conduct very seriously. So be on your best behavior. Secondly, I want to really give a special thanks to our event management partner, Effentech, and their crew that make this whole thing possible. Live music, live demos, everything. So they are amazing. And I just want to say have a good time with OpenStack, and our band Soul Track Mind is going to play us off. Thanks.