 I believe you have seen that OpenQA is a tool you are using for software quality assurance and automated tests when CIPA is available for Fedora as an additional installable sites of DNF. On the other side, we are using DNF now in OpenSUSE at Tumbleweed. All of you know that you are using the RPM from the package format. You know that it is well known as the Red Hat package management. And our goal is to integrate that also in our case with the same version so that in the future we can work better together. What is the benefit of cross collaboration? We can watch us as friends instead of competitors when we are working together on core technologies which are used in every Linux distribution. We bring new technologies to our partners if we think that is useful for all. That is what we have watched in the last presentation about volunteering and everything else. I am a 390x maintainer here at OpenSUSE and I make it a little bit faster now. I went through the community collaboration, sharing of technologies, benefits of cross collaboration. My role at OpenSUSE is what I want to achieve there and then we are coming what I want to achieve with containerization for all and afterwards perhaps to the Q&A session. We are a community collaboration is building relationships to other communities that we can work together as partners where we provide upstream contributions that everybody can use our technologies everywhere and we share our technologies and our knowledge as we are doing it here. OpenSUSE provides Fedora some software from us. OpenQA, you are using that for automated tests that is a web-based automated testing tool. We are developing it as OpenSUSE software and Fedora contains ZIPA as an additional installer besides of DNF. What we have integrated into OpenSUSE, additionally you know that RPM comes from Red Hat with the Red Hat package management as a package format. We have adapted our RPM to the same version now so we want to improve our collaboration in the future. The benefits of cross-collaboration is that we watch us as friends instead of competitors. We are working together on core technologies which are used in every Linux distribution and we bring new technologies to our partners. What has been highlighted in the last presentation has been that developers like their technology, upstream and in other Linux distributions and we share knowledge at conferences. My role at OpenSUSE is that I am an S390X maintainer for IBM C and Linux one since around one year. I was nominated from a community for this role as an IBMer and I became a team lead for the S390X port. I am a member of the release engineering team so I am responsible for packaging, QA development, communication, everything in this direction and I want to expand that to other Linux distributions. That was not possible inside of IBM therefore I have changed my job to reconciling. Mainframes are largely performance computer systems for people who don't know mainframes. You can call that big engines and that's the architecture S390X besides of x86 power and everything else. You have got x86 on your laptops and this architecture is used for mission critical data and you can run thousands of virtual machines on such a system. As I told you, I have received this message from IBM, don't contribute upstream, other Linux distributions may have a benefit of that. I wanted to contribute also to Fedora the same as we had somebody for power in the community. I like cross-collaboration therefore I see a future of community distributions for this architecture. The problem in the area of containerization was that IBM didn't publish container images for S390X to public registries but open source Fedora and Debian are running on S390X2. Therefore I thought community distributions can give access to open source container images We can receive latest packages and everything else and provide a really good foundation for all Kubernetes distributions the same as the three Kubernetes distributions and then we can enable all Kubernetes platforms for that. The collaboration is possible with that then our open source technologies are joining here. We build packages and container images with our open-base system and we have got our own container registry where we can test our container images afterwards. We build multi-arch container images and we are receiving daily or mostly weekly based on open source a tumbleweed with latest container images with software updates. That is planned with open source and I want to do that with Fedora and special software which requires that event to so that everybody can use community distributions for their container platforms. That is the overview of that. If we are building with open build service you can receive latest container images inside of registry.opensusa.org. If that is working really nice we want to publish that to Docker Hub also that is the main container registry for and most used container registry which is public and then you can use that based on open source Fedora, Debian or Ubuntu and it should not be important which container platform you want to use. You can set up your own Kubernetes. You can use open source a Cubic, OKD or Minicube and then you can use our container images. When I have achieved the end in the right time that was really fast, oh no need to cut the session off. When let's come to the Q&A session that was really fast now. I did that a little bit longer before and I ... Yes, impressively fast I put as big slower as in the point. It is difficult to do that in 7 minutes instead of 15 or 20 minutes. Yes, that's really loud if you have to be fast then you would be louder I believe. Are there any questions? Yes, and I can reference the collaboration panel at the last day of our conference where you can see our contributors who are contributing continuously, Neil and other people who are cross community members. So you can hear what has been happening together with open source and Fedora. I am happy that I am allowed to contribute upstream again since this month too. I am not an IBM anymore so I have got more freedom now. Yes, Luna is also a cross community member inside of OpenSUSE and Fedora. We have got multiple cross community members. Thank you if there are no questions anymore. And let's join to the next session.