 Okay, so yeah, so I'm Ben Nosall. I work at Raspberry Pi Foundation based in Cambridge in the UK I work as community manager as Jen said I write for open source calm Which is a great way to kind of get out there. What we're what we're up to and what's going on in the pie world I also created a project called GPIO zero and and something called pie wheels so although the Raspberry Pi Foundation was founded in 2008 the first product that that came out was was launched in 2012 on day one 1,000 100,000 units were sold, but only 10,000 units existed at that point. So over the next few months We we worked hard to To to get all that manufacturing done and fulfill all those shipments and by the towards the end of the year You got to a point where you could reliably just buy one and receive it next day Around this time a lot of community stuff started happening around Raspberry Pi So people set up something called Raspberry Jams which are community meet-ups to learn about Raspberry Pi and they're generally open to all ages So parents can take their kids along You know a retired electronics hobbyist would go along and learn about start learning about electronics and Raspberry Pi again And probably learning programming skills and that kind of thing people a group of people set up a community Unofficial magazine called the magpie and there'll be more on that later and also lots of people started making their own add-on boards and Cases and all sorts of accessories for the pie Some of those actually became full-on businesses that are still running today making making Accessories for the pie and selling them So 2013 we moved manufacturing of the Raspberry Pi from China to the UK Which was a great great achievement did a few minor board revisions nothing major and Which actually sold a million units in the first year and by the end of this year there were about two million units sold The foundation start hiring people like that guy there. That's me and We started in 2014 We launched a new website where we had learning resources official documentation. We launched the teacher training program called pycademy And where we train teachers and get them inspired about learning physical and computing and electronics using open source software We also did a few board revisions. So the the Raspberry Pi a plus and the b-plus came out. They were the new form factor Released the the b-plus was the release at the same price as the previous product $35 the a-plus came out at $20 We also launched an in an industrial compute module for industrial customers to embed the pie into their products 2015 we launched the pie to a whole new generation of Raspberry Pi In the same form factor as the b-plus and fully backwards compatible at the same price of $35 We added a quad core and made it get it gave it a gigabyte of RAM The magpie the magazine that I mentioned earlier became an official publication of Raspberry Pi And we put it in the shops you can now buy it But it was as it was before you can you can access free downloads of the magazine and that's still going today We hired our first person in the US Matt Richardson we merged with Code Club a group that a volunteer led clubs around the world for teaching kids coding skills Nothing specific to the Raspberry Pi, but we joined up with them to help them sustain those clubs We sent two Raspberry Pi's to the International Space Station the end of 2015 They're running a code written by kids science experiments written in Python And we also launched the Pi zero a $5 variant of the Raspberry Pi In 2016 we launched our pie Academy program in the US so training American teachers we launched The Raspberry Pi desktop a new a new nice looking skin for the Raspberry Pi lightweight desktop theme And we also launched that launched that for x86 so you can launch it You can run that operating system on your PC the same way you run it on on your pie We launched the Pi 3 which became which is our kind of the main the main generation of Raspberry Pi today and 2017 we we launched the Raspberry Pi 3 B plus which is a revision on that we launched two new magazines hello world for For a magazine for educators a hackspace and magazine for modern makers We merged with Koda dojo who do after school out of school clubs as well We launched a new project site and launched officially launched Raspberry Pi Foundation North America Sorry, I said Raspberry Pi B plus was 2017 was 2018 We launched the the PoE hats power of ethnic board for the pie We did we celebrated our sixth birthday with the Raspberry Pi big birthday weekend We launched a scout badge the digital maker badge in the UK and Coming up in 20 2019 just to finish off Raspberry Pi's seventh birthday is going to be celebrated in March around the world And we have an event called coolest projects way which is a technology fair for young people to demonstrate their projects Thank you