 Okay, everyone. Thank you so much for coming to the cloud native wasm day. I'm going to wrap us up with some quick closing remarks and two calls to action. First, a gigantic thank you to our entire program committee Ralph Squills from Microsoft, Kevin Hoffman from Capital one, Colin Eberhardt from Scott logic, Chris a from CNCF till from fastly and the bite code alliance. Jonathan Barry from Goliath, a idiot Levine from solo mink you son from Intel and above all else, Elna Vogel from CNCF without whose work today would not have been possible at all. A second huge thanks to our sponsors are two diamond sponsors cosmetic and Tetra our gold sponsor Microsoft Azure and our community sponsored the bite code alliance. Make sure you take a few minutes and check out bite code alliance for more information about some of the things that are going on in the community today. Now, if anything was clear today, it's clear that WebAssembly is in cloud native. We see WebAssembly running on top of cloud native apps, we see WebAssembly running inside of WebAssembly cloud native apps, and we see WebAssembly running all around cloud native apps. As we think about the huge variety of things that we saw presented today. You know, there's this one thing that should just be absolutely clear, and it's something that I'm completely convinced about and it's that, you know WebAssembly isn't just another evolution technology. It is simply the next revolution and technology. And we started out today within the opening remarks from Ralph and Chris, who did a great job introducing us to what we were going to go through this morning. And I would like to point out that today's session included people from countries and cultures and communities all around the world. I know that I logged in at 3am, and there were others that were logging in in their afternoon or in their evening. This is really a global movement here. Next, we had a wonderful keynote from Lynn Clark, who not only laid out the importance of a some operating system interfaces, type interfaces that we need in order to help continue to move this revolution forward, but also laid the future vision for where we're going to be heading next with interface types and some of the other proposals that are being developed in an open and common way. Kevin Hoffman from Capital One talked a little bit about Wasm Cloud and taking his napkin sketches in his distributed application runtime. Then we had Michael Wan talk about AI inference on the edge and talked about some of the incredible performance benefits we're seeing by embedding and running WebAssembly and combining it with the latest in TensorFlow and artificial intelligence in the browser and on the server side. Matt and Taylor may have done what is my maybe my most favorite themed presentation today in their Wasm in the Wild Wild West, where they did a wonderful job providing not only an overview of some of the great work that's coming out of the open source group at Microsoft Azure, but also laid out some of the major challenges that we have in our ecosystem, some of the major opportunities we have to come together as a community. Then we had a wonderful sponsored keynote from Takaya who talked about secure extensibility by WebAssembly and I really love the language that they chose to use to bring today around secure and extendable and being embedded. It was a really well done presentation. I think they are really showing us some new opportunities for how we can use the technology. Then we had Michael Wan back again with Wasm as a service runtime where he presented some of the incredible performance benefits that are that are possible and some of the research that Second State has been leading in the area of comparing runtime performance startup times and so forth. As much as I don't like the diverse language, I really appreciate the real technical articulation of the benefits and the pros and cons that we have on the technology. Then we had our lightning talks and we started with Corinton talking about migrating from a JavaScript to WebAssembly. Then we had a great talk from Connor Hicks who talked about Atmo in a Sufa design pattern and building web services with Wasm. Then we had the ByteAssembly WAMR presentation which is the WebAssembly micro runtime and I love that we've seen people talking about use cases on the biggest of hardware. Later in today we had Andrew Brown and Ming-Q from Intel talking about leveraging this technology on Big Iron and here we have it running on the smallest which I think really plays to the diverse and what a real revolution this technology is. Then we had Matt Butcher and Taylor Thomas back again to talk about Bindle which is sort of a rethink about how we might package our applications and distribute them for next generation applications. Then we had Robert talking about serverless Wasm for compute intensive workloads and he was doing some demos around how you could leverage Wasm to get these performance routines and I think also did a really great job talking about how some of the new edge related companies are leveraging WebAssembly and how that might come into play in a truly cloud native world. Then Andrew Brown and Ming-Q Son with their machine learning with Wasm. Which is actually already committed as an optional plugin in the Wasm time host runtime that's available from Fastly and the ByteCode Alliance. So this is something that you can go out and play with today. Then I did a quick overview around why I really believe that WebAssembly is the future of distributed computing and I tried to lay out some of the what does this really mean for us as a community and really tried to reach out to a diverse group of audience and speakers there. Finally we closed up with a really well put together presentation from Shane and Yuval around Wasm filters for Envoy which was another great talk that really emphasized the embeddability and the plugability of WebAssembly as a technology. And I think today in being on the program committee one of the things that we really tried to do in putting today's content together was not really just was not just focus on the intersection of WebAssembly and cloud native but try to focus on a broad range of technologies that exists across today's landscape. Because it is clear that WebAssembly is running on in and around cloud native applications today and there should be a place for it. When we think about what's next in the short term. I think you could throw out a lot of different answers to this. You could talk about the technical roadmap you could talk about the innovations you can talk about the places that we're going to use that. But I really think that there's only one right answer to that question and that is that community is next because when we think about what we really need to be successful as a group. It's not just pulling together brilliant ideas and roadmaps and plans forward. We really need to make sure that we're building the content, the solutions, the comparisons, the white papers to arm not only engineers but managers and marketing and sales and customer success and all of the other orgs that are going to come into a successful transition and adoption of the next of this next revolution and technology. As for what is immediately next, I would love to make sure and do a call up that there's actually one more activity today sponsored by Microsoft Azure. The birds of a feather session for a cloud native WebAssembly landscape with Ralph Squillis where we're going to try to sit down and chat through what might a WebAssembly landscape look like. What would be the sort of key areas. Today alone we saw a number of themes we saw a couple of we saw a number of host runtimes mentioned. We saw a number of application runtimes mentioned. We saw multiple approaches to machine learning. We saw multiple orgs talking about embedding WebAssembly. What are the sort of characteristics of these things and we'll maybe try to take a first rough pass at sketching that out. You know, regardless of what you feel is next and I know there's always the tendency to pit applications and transitions off of each other to talk about why things are better. The one thing that really resonated with me today is this that today we're in this great situation where we find that cloud native and WebAssembly are both working well together. And I think that would be the theme and the overarching message that I would love for everybody to really embrace as we think through the next year and the next few years of WebAssembly as a community is that while WebAssembly as a technology may not be dependent upon. It is certainly compatible with the things that we're doing in the cloud native world and it opens up new possibilities for what it even means to be cloud native. So thank you very much for your time. I really look forward to you joining us at the birds of the feather session sponsored by Microsoft Azure. And I just want to say thank you to all the attendees because really at the end of the day it's going to be as a community that we're successful. Have a wonderful day. Thank you.