 So I'm not here back again to discuss about DNS to begin with. So I think one of the topics which is also something which I have personally explored at my end is self-hosting a lot of things, not only personally but also from a business perspective. And I think this is a very important topic to actually look into because day in, day out we are looking at articles or things coming out where our data is compromised, our data is basically being abused for advertising purposes or commerce etc. So the need for having implementing or installing stuff within your on-prem or within your home network or office network I think has a lot of imperative advantages to it. The only number of reasons why I hear people not doing it is because of the amount of time that one has to spend in configuring things as well as maintaining it. But my experience of actually installing a few things in my office network as well as I'll talk about something which is also critical for that matter. So one is we use a lot of open source stuff, one is NextCloud. So NextCloud is basically you can say an alternative for something like Dropbox. This can go on the cloud, this can also go on-prem inside your office network or your home. So you can do not only sharing of documents but even photos, videos etc. The second thing is already something that I've mentioned which is the Pi hole, the Raspberry Pi running a Pi hole. For communication on an open source front we are using something called a Zulip. So Zulip is open source, it's an alternative to Slack. I would say there are a lot of advantages, disadvantages to it in comparison to Slack or other platforms. But I think from a holistic perspective it has anything that you typically need from a small segment of requirements. Another common reason why I see email getting outsourced. So if I ask probably everyone here, how many of you are running your own email servers, I am pretty sure that nobody is going to raise their hands. And one of the common reasons why people point out saying that self-hosting, not exactly self-hosting in your home network but self-hosting in the sense that putting all the pieces together to run your own email server. Instead of outsourcing it to somebody like Google or something of that sort. One of the very prominent answers that I hear is basically that it is hard. And it is also the element that if I configure my own email server, then my emails, when I send it out to other recipients for that matter, those emails will never be reached. And I think that's a myth and I can confirm that having been running my own email server for that matter. As well as authoritative DNS servers where the DNS data is not coming from a third party, is not coming from a private company for that matter, but it is basically a box which I have set up from scratch and configured so that it answers based on what I configure and not according to the whims and whistles of what a private company might do. Now having said that, the disadvantages are having given you an overview of what all you can do in a very small short span of time. The disadvantage is basically the element that you have to spend a lot of time in learning stuff. So if you would be interested to actually go in a recursive mode, go down the rabbit hole with respect to learning stuff, and then I think then there is nothing stopping from anyone to self-hosting a lot of things which are provided by a lot of cloud companies for a price, and the price is not necessarily monetary price that they might charge you, but it is an indirect price, there is an invisible, economics as a principle called as an invisible hand. So I like to call it as an invisible hand where you are actually not getting it for free, your data is somewhere being sold. So I think that's about it. So any questions you have, anything that you would like to discuss on the self-hosting perspective I'm here, I would love to discuss it. Thank you.