 Okay, so thanks, thanks Larry, although he's not here anymore, that was an amazing talk and a very engaging session, I think. So it's already time to wrap up the event, hard to believe. Do we have the slides, Leila? Can you share your screen maybe? Sorry, I'm working on it. It should be okay. Great. Okay. Thank you. Sorry, it just wasn't second for me to leave. So I think the, I can already announce the next slide, you will see the map, right? You will see the map on which you put your little red stars during the breakout, the ice breakout session. We see that we have quite a big spread of where people are from, but we also still have a lot of white spots on this map. So let's work together to fill up this map for the future and tell all your friends, you know, I guess, especially if they're from Canada or Russia or Brazil, big places from which we have no speakers. So we still have way to go, but overall amazing diversity already. By the way, what I found funny is that you see some of the stars are slightly rotated. I think someone rotated by mistake after copying and then people copied that. So we have a nice way of basically figuring out. It's nearly like doing genetics here, who copied from whom. Great. Thanks. Layla, can you please advance the slide? Thanks also to all the PC members who had us put together this program. As was mentioned by Layla and by Miriam and Srijan, we had a record number of submissions and dealing with them is only possible because of this amazing program committee that we had. My assessment is that the reviews that were written by this set of reviewers for the workshop were by far much better, more useful, more informative than the average review that you get at a typical computer science conference. And this is possible because we moved really to a Wiki model. 31 submissions, 37 reviewers. So your papers when you submit them to the workshop actually get a lot of love and attention. In the first edition of the Wiki, in the first editions actually of the Wiki workshop, we had only the three organizers who did all the reviewing and this amazing quality of reviews that we have now is only possible because we moved from three to 37 reviewers. So thanks very much again to all the reviewers who spent their time in assuring the quality of what was presented here. I think you noticed in the presentations that this is really good work. This also applies to the entire event that the fact that this only works because we work in a Wiki model. The set of people who are involved in making this event success is much, much bigger than the set of the smallish set of people that you see listed, for example, on the website. So we have, of course, the invited speakers who make this event a success. So thanks again to Larry and to Eric who moderated the panel, to Tiffany and Corey who were on the panel. Thanks for the live music from Ugne. I think this is really such a nice twist to the workshop. Thanks to M.C. Ready or DJ Miriam for putting on music in the breaks and so on. Thanks to all the authors. This is really the meat of the workshop. I apologize to the vegetarians. Let's say it's the potatoes of the workshop, the thing that touches us. Thanks to all the session volunteers who made sure that everything ran smoothly, not only in the main room, but also everywhere else. Thanks to Benjamin Mako Hill who worked really, really tirelessly with Leila. I think this is just amazing to review 230 papers to sift out these two excellent ones that we saw nominated for the reward. Thanks also for Jimmy Wales for popping in. It was great to see Jimmy's impromptu appearance also in the beginning of Larry Lessig's talk. So this is really nice, I think, to see this momentum. And thanks to everyone also who I forget. It's really just so amazing to see that this workshop works. And it's in that spirit of what it's about, Wikipedia working together as a group of people to make something happen. So this is the second to last slide. This is just ways of staying in touch even once we all click leave, the leave button in a couple of minutes. Wikipedia workshop is kind of our maybe a flagship event of the year, but there are many other opportunities for staying in touch among in as the community for connecting with other researchers, both at Wikimedia, but also much beyond. Jimmy mentioned it in his talk when he gave the award to the to the WIT paper, the first one that was mentioned. If you're attending ICLR, a machine learning conference, then please do not miss the Wiki M3L workshop. So that's Wikipedia and multimodal and multilingual research. Both researchers and non researchers are welcome to attend that event. Then another way of staying in touch is via the public mailing list, Wikipedia research. You have a link here. Then there are monthly public office hours. It's a great opportunity to basically get hands on advice and input on your research ideas, research problems directly from the mothership, if you will. And then also there are monthly research showcases where every month you see two talks about ongoing research in the Wikimedia world from invited speakers, mostly from outside the Wikimedia foundation actually. And then finally you have some other social media channels here. Old school and new school. There's IRC. That's the old school and Twitter. That's the new school. And of course we will see you next year for what it will actually be the 10th Wiki workshop. Hard to believe, but it's actually true. It will be, it won't be quite a decade yet because there was a year or two where we had two workshops in one year. So I think it will be the eighth year, but it will be the 10th workshop. And if I had Miriam's music playing abilities, I would now play this song called 10 years, but I encourage you all to just wiki it afterwards. And it's quite entertaining. So with that from my side, that's it. Thanks again for attending. It's really, you attending is what makes this workshop work. So thanks a lot. It's been an amazing time.