 Is everyone ready for the key note, the closing key note of the conference? Yes? No? Yes? Yes. All right, so you have Darcy. Thank you. Over to you. How's everybody doing? Good. How are you doing? Fantastic. Awesome. You guys have any energy left? Yes? No? Yes, you do? You're going to be to stay awake and listen to me and listen to me talk for an hour, maybe? 45 minutes to an hour. That's great. And today was awesome. You guys had a good time? Yes. Okay, good. And now you're going to watch the worst talk ever, right? This is going to be the worst one. So my name's Darcy Clark. I'm a developer. I'm going to be talking about the future of video, right? Everybody's interested in that. That's why you're here, hopefully. I'm going to fix this slide. There we go. I'm a developer, designer, speaker. I'm also a mentor. And I call myself a UX advocate. I gave that title to myself. Actually, I gave all these titles to myself, but that one especially. So I advocate for better user experiences on the web. I really care about how something feels, how it functions. I'm from Canada, right? Everybody thinks I'm American? No, I'm from Canada. Yeah? So that's cool. If you want to follow me on Twitter, I'm at Darcy. I have my first name, which is pretty cool, right? I had to pull some strings to get that. So I get a lot of mis-tweets as well. I used to do a joke. I would show some of the mis-tweets, but they're pretty bad. You can also fork any of my projects on GitHub if you want, and you can check out my website. It's really old. Don't make fun of it. I'm sorry. I haven't posted any blog posts in a long time. So some work that I've done. I co-founded a company called Themify. Does anybody use WordPress? Yeah? No? Some of you? Yeah. Go ahead. If you go to Themify.me, I co-founded that company. My phone's gone off. Turn this off. People are adding me on Twitter. And I've worked with a bunch of startups as well in Toronto, and I've done some consulting for the likes of Google, Microsoft, and I've worked with some open-source projects and contributed to the community. I helped start a sort of concept called the front-end developer interview questions. That got really popular on GitHub, and it's a great resource to help sort of find the right questions that you should be asking.