 Hello everyone. Does the video appears on this screen? Yes. Okay, perfect. And get started. Okay, so everyone, I represent the talk about the elf of the KD community. My name is Karashua, I'm a KD developer in 2008. I think because of what I have got some good overview of multiple teams in KDE, and I'm so good to be able to get some Q and A applications, and it is not made. This is actually a continuation of previous blog post of mine. It's a similar analysis of what Hans Peter Johnson did for Gnome, and it's using his tool, named Funalder. So that's a quick recap of my previous blog post. I got some analysis of all the KDE repositories, how to read these graphs, what the beige graphs are, what the new contributors, or the occasional contributors, and then the color represents the contributors that started in 2017, for example, for the red color. And you can see how it evolves on the time. And the same thing about the commits. What's interesting is to see that while most of the contributors started three years ago, around twice three years ago, in terms of commits, it's mostly old-timers who present most of the commits. Not what I need to add. There are a lot of various statistics. For example, a project that didn't get a kit repository anymore. For example, you can get an SVN that appeared with statistics. There are some difficult commits, for example, Krita and Calico have some shared history, and so it doesn't end in name changes. For example, a lot of material. And what I did is to try to create analysis for some sub-projects. For example, for Plasma, these are the statistics. We can see what further in 2020, with KitLab and mostly the pandemic, maybe there are a lot of new contributors compared to the other years. Before 2007, the data are a bit wrong because it doesn't include... There was some real white and a lot of history. KitO3 was lost in the whites of Plasma. For KDE4, for commit, it's a bit similar. For KDP, the numbers aren't looking that good. There was a loss of number of contributors around 2009 or 2010. After that, it didn't recover a lot. In terms of commits, most of the commits are done by very few number of contributors. For example, you can see Laurent Montel. It's a really large portion of the commits. For education, it's mostly stable, it's decreasing a bit. For the commits, it's a lot of variation between the years. For the gains, it's also not really that good, but you need to understand that most of the gains are mostly done and don't need to have more contributions over from cleaning some stuff and conversion. For CaliCa, after 2012, most of the number of contributors decreased a lot. Due to the Nokia stopping to contribute to the CaliCa project, in 2015, Quitta moved to a new repository as a really big decrease of contributions. For Quitta, you can see what it means as an all-away. There's a lot of increase of contributions. Mostly in 2020, with the introduction of GitHub and maybe other factors. There's a big increase, and I think from this graph, you can see what the Quitta committee is able to maintain the contributors for a longer time. For Plasma Mobile, there's a smaller time scale, but you also can see that there's an exponential number of contributors and commits, so I hope it stays like this for a longer time. In terms of reach, Quitta is the statistic of the visit of Cali.org. The US has a lot of visitors, but actually Europe is like 44% and North America and Asia are at 20%. What's a bit sad is that Africa is only 2% of the commits to the visits, so we don't really have a lot of visitors coming from Africa and we don't have users for years or two. It doesn't reflect exactly of many users here, but it really gives an idea of the solution. For Twitter, it's increasing over time. It starts only in 2019, but now we have like 90,000 subscribers of Twitter, so it's increasing until it increases. Okay, patience. Since we don't have the questions for the lightning talks, I guess you can monitor the chat. Yeah, I can do that. Any? Yes, for Plasma Active, I helped the Kigami repository and the Cocoa repository. We have some longer activity from the Plasma Mobile project. There are some more 2011 Plasma Active events. Okay, thank you very much, Carl. Since this is a lightning round, we don't have too much time for questions. Thank you very much. I guess you can answer all the other questions in the chat anyway. Yes, I can chat in the chat. I can do that. Okay, thanks. See you there. See you next time by Carl.