 Well good morning Portland. Welcome to the OpenStack Summit April 2013. We have just about twice as many people here as we had in San Diego six months ago. The summer start off so people could get together to code and build software. What actually started happened was you ended up developing this culture that became OpenStack. Now you look around and it's some of the biggest names in tech. The passion here the excitement is really absolutely amazing. I've been amazed by the buzz, the momentum. OpenStack is really well aligned with where the market is going. We are a 60 billion dollar media technology news and entertainment company. I mean the sort of demonstrations that we saw here from Comcast pushing everything back into the cloud and effectively being able to bring new functionality down into your TV system. All of the communication that we're sending back and forth from our set top box to our network is going through stuff that's running on top of our OpenStack production cloud. Summits have really changed over time from a developer focus to something that's much more user-focused than an operator focus. Today alone I've probably met five different people that didn't know much about OpenStack. They're walking out here fired up ready to go and start contributing. It's amazing. It's a great opportunity to see all the people and talents and also the companies. Personally I am still very excited by some of the interesting stuff going on outside of the mainstream. Some of the smartest people in the world are working on. It's always useful to remind you that the World Wide Web was developed by particle physicists at CERN. How are we using clouds in high energy physics? Clouds are a collaborative endeavor and help us preserve and archive high-energy physics data. You find out more information here than you would anywhere else. The summit is really the stewing pot where it's not just about what we talk about but it's actually the interactions that you have. This is the place you want to come and you want to see what's going on where the world is going and where the real development is happening and there's a community effort and it's a great place to be. So to contribute, to learn and to collaborate. Make sure you come out to Hong Kong in November 2013 because that's gonna be the place to be. On behalf of Red Hat, we certainly want everyone who is able to come out to Hong Kong and join us at our next OpenStack. Welcome to Hong Kong in October 2013. Follow me to Hong Kong at OpenStack Conference.