 In this next demo, CJ Williams, product manager at GitHub is going to give us a glimpse into the very near future. He'll demo how GitHub is making coding more attainable for nonprofits with a new co-pilot tool in which developers can write a text-based comment describing the logic that they want. And GitHub's AI-powered co-pilot will immediately suggest code to implement the solution. This is a tool I've personally been hearing a lot about lately and I'm excited to learn more. So take it away, CJ. Hey, everyone. My name is CJ from GitHub, the home of developers. Today, I'll be talking about co-pilot, its impact, and how it can improve your nonprofit. Just before I move forward to our presentation, talk about myself. I first want to thank TechSoup for this opportunity. Just a little bit more background, product manager at GitHub. We previously worked in AdTech and also network and software engineering. So moving into the three things I want to discuss today is going to be nonprofits and technology. Why co-pilot and give you guys just a short cool demo of just what co-pilot can do. Previously, with my research and some of the nonprofits challenges that I've seen and what TechSoup is also helping with is making sure that you're able to leverage technology to solve for your solutions and what co-pilot can do. Okay. And what co-pilot can do is actually help out your tech sector, whether that's in your nonprofit or you're looking to pivot as a nonprofit or you're just curious about programming in general, co-pilot can assist with that. So what is co-pilot? Co-pilot is an AI artificial intelligence parent programmer that allows you to increase your productivity. What we've seen since we've launched co-pilot is roughly most of our developers are coding at 90% faster and some of the cool things that you're able to experience is a 60-day free trial and once you go through that trial, you can either opt to $10 a month or $100 a year, which is great flat rate pricing. And then also we offer all the major programming languages. As of now, we're going to go into a demo and if you guys aren't able to see this screen, please let me know. Okay. And I'm still sharing. Right. Okay. One of the great things about co-pilot is you're able to talk as a programmer using comments. So let's just do a quick print. Let's see. I missed. Hello. Other cool things about co-pilot is that you're able to click through different comments and go to previous things, accept or open up co-pilot and to see the suggestions. So this is the power of co-pilot. Actually, what it does is that it reads the comments and provides different solutions to you as a programmer. Let's just go with this first choice for the sake of time and print this here. Go ahead and run it and what you can see. Hello, everyone. TechSoup. Looks like we have a little bit more time. Let's do something a bit cooler. What we're able to do is generate a scissors. Okay. Give it a little time. Okay. And what you can see is that there are multiple solutions that don't get or co-pilot is offering. So let's see. Let's go with it. Let's go with this first one. Good to go. As you can see, you can enter zero for rock, one for paper, two for scissors. So zero. Okay. It looks like it was a draw. Let's run it again. Paper or the draw. Let's see. Going back to the presentation, you can visit here to go to co-pilot and try it out. Again, it's 60-day free trial.