 Hi, good afternoon, everybody. My name's Tom Nato. I'm from Red Hat. Today, I wanted to talk to you briefly. I've got a rapid five minutes to go through a couple of things. So what I'd like to focus today on is a bit of the telco service provider perspective on open source. Tomorrow, we're actually doing a tutorial, a full-length tutorial, with a lot of the technical details kind of surrounding what's driving this for us. So I'll leave that until tomorrow. Excuse me. I apologize. I had a sore throat all last week, so I'm a little coffee here. So I wanted to ask this sort of fundamental question about, what is driving communication service providers drive for open source and open source networking and this whole thing? And this statement I have up on the screen right now is basically the sort of the driving statement, right? So CSPs are being driven from demand for new digital goods and services, streaming video, streaming audio, mobile 5G use cases. And those are what are driving us in the open source community to develop these solutions with them. And then let's talk about how those solutions are being driven and what it takes to actually make those things happen. So you're at an open source conference, Linux Foundation conference, so community is obviously important in these solutions. What people forget, though, is that beyond the developer community, you need larger communities of sort of the support that goes around that. For example, OPNIV is a good example where there isn't a whole lot of code being developed, but there's a very important mission and purpose for that organization. And a lot of that is forming an ecosystem, as was discussed earlier. And that also includes other open source projects in addition to the one in question. And the point of that, too, is that these are all things that are wrapped around the technology. There's a lot of focus at these conferences about the technology. So it's not just about the technology, but the community and beyond that, the ecosystem. So I wanted to put up a quick example of the projects that we're involved in and why they matter in that vein. You'll hear a lot about Open Daylight, OPNIV today, FDIO, a brand new one we've just started, got involved with, it's called Acreno. That's for edge type of use cases. So these are projects that, again, not only form the technology and the community, but the ecosystem that's built around that. And then to kind of wrap things up, one of the points I wanted to make, too, is that building an ecosystem requires a couple of things that are important in terms of telco transformation, telco service provider transformation. And those are outlined here on the slide. One is changing the mindset internally. There's a cultural change that often is required. There's an open infrastructure and an open tools sort of transformation that has to happen. And you've seen that at a lot of companies today. AT&T, for example, is kind of the poster child for this these days. They're out working in projects, building projects, for example. But then if you talk to the most successful telco service providers that are in the space these days, you'll see that they're actually transforming internally to look much like the sort of canonical example of the open source organization, say Red Hat, for example. And so that goes hand in hand with the usual development stuff that you all see when you come to these conferences and whatnot. So there's an internal transformation that has to happen. And then finally around that is basically just an open process. And so you'll see varying degrees of that in any telco service provider you talk to. And those are things that are ongoing. And they're interesting and important to keep in mind when you're engaging with folks both upstream and downstream. And I think that's all the time I have. So thank you very much.