 I do have some community heroes that I'd like to announce. To me, a community hero is obviously community-minded, collaborative, inspirational, and you saw all of us up here. Again, we all are part of this community, and these are just the speakers. So first I wanted to, Jack, where are you? Are you over here? Oh, there's Jack. Jack from CERN. Thank you. So I am going to read what Diane said, and Diane is online. She said, Jack and the good folks at CERN, because she's worked with you a long time, right, in the OKD working group, have been innovating with OKD and open source, always contributing back both in code and in feedback, helping to drive innovation back into the ecosystem at almost every level, always making us better and keeping us focused on collaboration. That's pretty amazing. Thank you. Okay, you saw David up here. David, where'd you go? I'm missing everybody. Hi, David. Now he's going to turn beet red. All right, and, you know, this is coming from Clayton. I don't know, if you don't know Clayton, Clayton's now a distinguished engineer at Google. And if you've touched anything with Kubernetes, I'm sure Clayton has had his hands on it, as probably has David. And so Clayton said, David has been a driving force in keeping Kubernetes afloat, his focus and commitment to doing things right and remaining consistent over time has helped keep us on a sustainable path. As a true craftsman, ask him about his woodworking and PKI. He is passionate about what he builds and helps others to improve their own craft. Thank you, David. So, and Mike McHune. So, again, this is another okay-do-you-one, but Mike, Michael, has been working upstream for many years, and you saw his talk on cloud controllers. I mean, again, the innovation and collaboration that he's been driving upstream, very impactful and very appreciated. So I will say, this is Diane's quote again. Thank you for bearing with me. Mike has been a die-hard long-time contributor to OKD Working Group. At every level, evangelizing, coding, innovating, and helps help bring OKD Streams into existence along with a whole tribe of others. And if you wanna know more about OKD Streams, there's this guy right over here, and Jack that can fill you in more on OKD Streams. And I'm not sure if she's up here, but Ellen, she's probably downstairs helping out. So, Ellen Noll, you'll see her around, you'll see her downstairs. She helps drive a lot of community and collaboration here in the local area, and she really helped put this together. Like, she came here on her off hours, you know, scope out this place. She has helped drive the Kubernetes Meetups and the OpenShift Experience Group. So, look for Ellen, or Ellen. And this QR code, there is a reception here on Thursday night for that she is hosting. So if you're interested in learning more about the local happenings, sign up for that. And definitely not least, Diane. So, Diane has been my mentor for several years. Teaching me the ways of community, as only Diane knows how. And I'll admit has helped keep me sane through the last few years. It's always good to have people that you can lean on, people that are open, people that support you, and that's what Diane has been for this entire community. So if you, and I know I mentioned at the beginning of the day that she's retiring, and if you wanted to say anything about Diane, you'd social media, or just send it to me. I know she's listening in right now, but you can, you know, close your ears. But, you know, after, and even come find me today, and I'm happy to take that down. I do have Clayton actually saying some nice things about Diane, but he always says nice things about Diane. I first met Diane almost 10 years ago when she started working at Red Hat and contributed very significantly to the success of the OKB community. Throughout that entire time, Diane represented the best ideals of Red Hat and the community focused on what we can achieve together, how we approach every problem as a positive sum outcome, both of us win, everyone benefits. And throughout that entire time, I've always depended on Diane for her perspective on what the right thing to do is, because when I would think what would Diane do, she would always be open, honest, forthcoming, and help us work together to get the right outcome, which is the true definition of community. Thank you, Diane, for everything you've done. It has been a pleasure and a privilege to work with you. Right. And with that, I think we can all go downstairs and enjoy the reception. And thank you so much for being here.