 Hi, this is Samin Parthian. We are here at Open Source Summit in Vancouver. Today we have with us again the tariff from Comcast. So tell us about Open Source at Comcast. What's new going on there? So since the last time I talked to you, we've got a really good team of four people now focusing on community compliance and compliance engineering. We are not just consumers of Open Source that we've actually contributed a great deal to Open Source. So there are a couple of different types of contributions we make as a company. One is clearly when we consume a product, we fix it and we contribute it back and we also enhance it and we make those types of contributions. So we've made roughly about 150 contributions this year. And then the second thing we've been doing Swap is to also create original works, you know, things that we created inside the company to solve our problems and then to contribute those back into Open Source. So contribution can come in the form of code, in the form of financial support to projects and you know just all of us being here in Open Source and evangelizing Open Source really helps share good practices with everybody. So the project that you talked about two projects, is it like Comcast, you know, you're maintaining it or you have kind of given it to some neutral foundation? These are the two projects that we are actually maintaining for now and we are inviting contributors from all parts of the world to contribute to it. We're seeing a great deal of diversity and contribution on Tickster and Vinyl DNS we just open sourced so it's taking off. But you bring up a good point, we do have traffic control which is our CDN project which is hosted at the Apache Foundation and we're very grateful. And the other good news is the Apache Traffic Control which used to be an incubation the last time I saw you has now graduated to a top tier project at the Apache Foundation. So we will be celebrating that as well at ApacheCon. And then we've also been known to create, you know, separate foundations like the RDK project which sits in its own foundation outside of Comcast and that is a collaborative effort across the cable providers, cable industry, OEMs, SOC providers like Intel Broadcom, they're all involved in creating that project. And you are also on Linux Foundation board? I'm a director at large which means that I represent community and not company. And one of the big lenses that I like to bring to the board is diversity and inclusion. And so I've been focusing on working and partnering with Angela Brown and the Linux Foundation on improving how we include people in events, in training, in projects because I think we have a great opportunity as a foundation to set some guidelines for the 150 plus projects that are at the foundation itself but also to create best practices for the community to follow. You're also very much in the world with diversity. Can you talk about your efforts now that you're making and why? Why do you care about diversity? Why not? The whole world is getting digitized and if we are recreating this world then we need to create it with people of all types. Otherwise we'll have a very monotone world. We'll have a black and white world created by a few people with their biases that are embedded into that world and we cannot afford to do that. That's one big reason. From an economic perspective, teams that are diverse are more innovative, more impactful, create better business results, create more productive teams and who wouldn't want that? Which business wouldn't want that?