 Hi, everyone. My name is Mohamed Nasser. I'm the CEO at VEX Host. I'm also used to be the project team lead for a couple of OpenStack projects that were specific to deploying OpenStack, such as Puppet OpenStack and OpenStack Ansible, as well as I currently sit as a member of the OpenStack Technical Committee. I wanted to talk a little bit about our story and experience with open infrastructure, and so we're involved in a couple of the projects that are open infrastructure projects, primarily at the moment OpenStack and Zool. We use OpenStack to deliver infrastructure as a service, both in our public cloud and for many customers in private clouds that are hosted inside their data centers or inside our data centers. We also leverage Zool extensively as a CI tool for both our infrastructure and our internal tooling, and as well as the excellent gating tool that it is. We're also evaluating a lot of the new open infrastructure projects, such as Airship and seeing how they fit in our way of delivering infrastructure as a service for our customers. We also try our best to contribute upstream. We actually provide upstream CI resources to the community. A lot of the tests that run for the OpenStack project and some of the other open infrastructure projects are ran inside virtual machines running in our public cloud, and so we're really happy about that. We also provide infrastructure for OpenDev, so some of the user-facing components of the OpenDev community, such as the GATEA server and some of the other infrastructure components are running on our public cloud, and we're really happy to support that. As well as code and documentation contributions into a project such as OpenStack and some contributions to the Zool jobs, which is really a collection of Ansible roles that are ran inside Zool to execute jobs. I want to talk a little bit about how we were able to leverage these contributions that we do, not only to help the community, but also how we've been able to deliver a nicer product for our users. I want to share some of the new things that we've been able to accomplish, really just using a lot of the benefits that we get from open infrastructure projects. First of all, we are launching new high-performance hardware that's being rolled out across all of our data centers, and it's already running right now in production as of today inside our Montreal region. It's powered by the new AMD Epic Gen 2 systems and using the fastest server memory on the market, DDR4, a 3,200 megahertz memory, and with extremely high-performance local storage, so you can use it for things like any machine learning cases or any cases like CI that require very high-performance local storage, but not necessarily persistent fast local storage. On that note, if you also do require persistent and fast local storage, we're also rolling out NVMe-based storage across all of our regions, and that's actually in the process of happening right now because of the awesome power of CEP we're actually able to migrate all of our existing customers that are currently using SSDs and migrate them straight into high-performance NVMe drives, which means that there will be performance increases, not even a reboot of a system that the changes will just happen on their own. That's kind of one of the powerful things that we can get out of open source. So that's tremendous and should allow for awesome performance for workloads that need persistent storage. And finally, another thing that's really exciting is a lot of our customers have asked us about setting up a cloud in Europe, and I'm really excited to say that as of now, we have a region open in Amsterdam, so that'll be our first region inside Europe. And the exciting thing is all this new hardware that we just talked about is all available there right now from day one, so you'll have the fastest performance systems with the fastest storage. And what I'm most excited about is we'll be running Victoria, which is the most recent release of OpenStack from day one. So that cloud is currently in early access, and we'll talk a little bit later about how you can have access to it starting today. And what's exciting is all these hardware options and these performance improvements are all available for our customers, for our private cloud customers as well. So really, I'm really excited and proud to say that our entire stack is open source like from the top to bottom, and from basic things to using something like NetBox as our data center infrastructure management tool to as complex as using set for distributed storage or OpenStack as our infrastructure as a service platform to even using things like Kubernetes and Helm to deploy OpenStack and have a reliable way of rolling it out across our entire fleet. And so we feel like our investment into open source really helps the community. It helps us. Everybody really wins when we invest in open source. And it also allows us to make technology more accessible. And so what I mean by that is, you know, we're especially living in a time where a lot of companies and perhaps small businesses are being kind of surprised then into moving to the cloud because of the circumstances that we live in. And so they need to do that as quickly as possible. And a lot of times the switch to cloud can be quite expensive at times. And so because we're able to leverage open source and we want to make open sources accessible as possible, we're kind of announcing a huge and very aggressive pricing that we believe should make the cloud more accessible to more companies. Generally in comparison to the market for, you know, pretty much the exact hardware and just as performance systems with access to a completely open API with no vendor lock-in, you're seeing almost 30% of savings on your infrastructure costs simply by using, you know, something like that's based on OpenStack because we're able to leverage all the advantages of open source. And it's really exciting because not only are you able to save by actually, you know, going with an option like ours, but you also have the option of avoiding vendor lock-in. And so, you know, while we'd love to serve you and build a private cloud for you, if you reach a scale where it makes sense to run your own private cloud, you can continue to do that. And you would be able to run it completely open source without having to re-engineer or enter in your ecosystem. You're already part of the OpenStack ecosystem and you'll be able to leverage all these same APIs, whether it's in a private cloud or a public cloud. Really to kind of end on this, I'd like to thank the entire open source community because of the open source efforts, all of this, it helps us make a really awesome product and at the same time, still be able to deliver, you know, and be able to be part of the upstream community. And we feel like if it wasn't for open source, we wouldn't be able to make kind of products like this more accessible to the small businesses and the corporations that are looking to get engaged in these type of softwares. So, you know, I'd like to close this with giving a big thank you to the open source communities and saying that's maybe a big part of what is happening and giving the ability for small businesses to be able to use infrastructure as a service in a much more accessible manner. Thank you very much and I hope you enjoy the rest of the open infrastructure summit. Thank you very much, everyone.