 Now it's time to also invite the next speaker to join us. Thank you. Hi everyone. Welcome to my real quick lightning talk about partnering up for Wikidata and a program that Wikimedia.com has been running for the past two years on shared Wikidata software development. My name is Maria. You can reach out to me now or after my talk as well. I've been a project manager for Wikimedia Deutschland for a couple of years now and I'm always happy to meet new people. What I'm here about today is a special kind of partnership and for us at least a prototype of partnership with other movement partners, which we've been doing for, which we started doing two years ago and which is hopefully going to contribute to having other movement partners able to do software development for Wikidata and Wikibase in a hopefully sustainable way. And for that first round of this prototype of collaboration, we are concentrating on underrepresented language communities. We are on meta, so check us out, look for software collaboration for Wikidata. And all of this is possible because we received an external funding from the Arcadia Foundation, which is a foundation located in the UK. I'm going to real quick talk about our amazing partners, but they have their own sessions here at Wikimedia. So if you want to learn more about what they've actually been doing and what they've been learning, check out their sessions. We've been working with Wikimedia Indonesia. They have been growing their own software team over the course of the last 12 months. And this team is concentrating at the moment on the whole ecosystem of flexeam development, lexical graphical data and in Wikidata and building a community in with their communities around the whole topic of flexeams. We've also been working with the Ebo-Vikimedians user group, have a slightly different approach. What they've been doing with the program of Wikimenter Africa is they are establishing a mentoring and learning program for their community members to contribute to Wikidata tool development and to learn about software development in general. What I'm going to talk about a little bit more is today, learnings and important things we've realized as the partner of Wikimedia Deutschland here. As I said, check out their sessions to learn more about their projects. Everyone who's been doing partnership probably won't be surprised by this slide, but trust transparency and understanding among partners with each other is key and crucial in this kind of collaboration. So you need to trust the partners that they are doing the right thing, that they are doing the things that are appropriate for their communities and their local contexts. You need to have a certain understanding, acceptance of differences that just because software development is done in this certain way by Wikimedia Deutschland in Berlin doesn't mean it has to be done exactly the way in another location with another affiliate with another community. This can only be mastered though by open and transparent communication among partners. When doing something new, there's going to be change and also especially with those projects, there's going to be growth in those organizations and that might bring challenges. It might be painful and it needs special attention. So you can't just grow like a team from out of nowhere. Your structures also need to grow. Your infrastructure needs to grow and you also have to be aware that when establishing a software development team, the people working in software development might also have different expectations to working style, to communication style, to management style than the teams you've been working with before. That is just something that we all have realized we really need to be aware of and need to put attention to. And finally, a nice note to end with. Sharing is caring. Yes, definitely. I love that sentence, but be sure you know what you can actually share and be open and talk to your partners about like how can you actually organize sharing products, sharing features? How does that work if partners don't share a time zone and are actually very far from each other geographically? And with that, I'm ending my lightning talk hopefully in time. Thank you for listening. Reach out to us if you have any questions and have a nice micromania. Thank you very much. That was massive. We've come to the end of this session. I think we've all benefits one way or the other from what we've learned and being shared.