 I was selected for Google Summer of Code to work on LibreOffice for Android. And, like, I started with LibreOffice back in January this year. And, you know, I looked at the projects and the ideas which they proposed on the Summer of Code wiki. And I like the Android project. I'm also having some experience with Android development. So I selected that project. Like, in the start, I looked for some easy hacks. Like, after I really got support from the community, I joined the IRC. And there were, like, very helpful people like McLose and my mentors. My mentor in the project, McLose and Tomasz. So, yeah, that's how I started solving some easy hacks. And in the end, I made a good proposal and made it to Summer of Code. And over the summer, I worked on improving the Android viewer. I basically worked on behind the scenes to improve the build system. So, yeah, that's right. And here we are at the conference. It's pretty amazing. It has been a really good journey for me. The TDF has been sponsoring us for the Rome trip. And, yeah, it's a really great opportunity to present the work. Back when I started, I was like, I had never, like, I had never dived into this large code base there. So, when I started, it was a bit challenging for me. I had, like, made usual Android apps and stuff. But it was something entirely different. So, okay, so I took it as a challenge and started to dive. And I got really good help from the community. And, you know, there are these people, the mentors, and the other developers, which really helped me out since the start. So, that was a good thing. And I don't really, I cannot really think of any bad part right now. It was actually pretty great. There were times in the Summer of Code when I felt like the project is too much challenging for me. But, somehow, with my mentor's help and some perseverance, you could say, ah, I made it. The project was challenging, but at the same time, it was fun as well. Like, I didn't have an IRC for the romance. And, yeah, it was pretty great. So, I've been using Linux since the last four years. I have recently switched to Mac. And so, I have, and I'm working on Android. So, I have pretty much all of the idea about all the different platform library offices that are currently on. So, in Linux, it works pretty great. The development setup and all those, you know, the wiki pages, like starting from the wiki pages, you set up your development environment. You run the library office. You use it in your, like, daily lives to make, you know, documents and all sheets, spreadsheets. So, it works pretty great. Talking about the Mac, it's a bit slow. So, library office, if I get the time, I'll myself look into it, how, like, my library office is compiled from Mac OS and, you know, the desktop version. And I think it can do better on Mac. And talking about Android, Android has to, you know, has a long way to go. Right now, it's like everything you want to do on the go. You want to edit your documents on the go. So, Android is the future right now. So, Android app is currently unstable, I would say. And we just have the viewer part, like, you can just view the documents. The editing is an experimental, is an experimental feature right now. So, as, like, a future scope is, I really want to get editing working properly in the library office. And we wanted to, you know, reach, to make it the best office app on Play Store right now. I would actually say that, read the information on the wiki thoroughly before asking anything. Just do your research. And if you cannot find the solution or you're stuck on something, join our IRC. The best people and the best developers are there. They'll help you out with everything. And, yeah. So, everyone is there. And we also have our mailing list. Just in case you want to get started with development or you want to propose something new, just communicate on the mailing list or IRC. There are always people, you know, working on 24-7 most of the time, so, yeah. That's pretty much about the advice. The project is a bit challenging. So, you might face some difficulties while building or something, but you should hang on to it. In the end, it will be worth it. This conference has been pretty great. We got the chance to explore the city of Rome. It's pretty great. Like, I've seen the people from IRC. I'm really meeting them here. It feels pretty good. I met my mentors and it's a really good thing that TDF is sponsoring a student to come all the way to Rome. Also, it's my first time in Europe, so I'm pretty excited.