 I want to say thank you first to everyone that's here and everyone that's still here. I know that this is a long day, cloud-native days always are, and it's the spicy questions that make them worthwhile. So thank you for your participation. Tremendous thanks to all of our speakers today. I know how hard you work. Some of you really line up for conference-driven development. I was amazed by all the talks, and I was not let down in the slightest. A huge thanks to our incredible staff and the two empty spots. I apologize to our sound crew and our video crew. I intended to come and get your names and pictures, and I did not do that. But I really wanted to say thank you, and to the volunteer staff as well. So to the folks that usually don't get thanked in the room and did not get thanked on stage today, thank you. Huge thanks to the program committee. We get an incredible number of submissions for Wasm Day, and we put a lot of time into telling a story on stage and trying to help the audience navigate the landscape and figure out what is the right content to deliver at the right time. And it is truly a thankless job, so I'm very grateful for the incredible participation of the program committee. And the story today started with an absolutely packed house with Bailey, setting a bold vision for the past. How did we get here? Where is WebAssembly today? And what does the rise of WebAssembly really mean? And then Taylor came up and I think gave us all the hands-on tutorial and did his little cha-cha-cha and danced us through the pipe operator, essentially. But we could take these WebAssembly components and we could just start plugging them in and lining them up in an intra-processed fashion. And that is what I think really inspires me about the performance here for what we're doing. The Intel team then lifted off and talked about how WebGPU, a rising standard for the Web, could simply be adapted, picked up, and then taken everywhere with Wasi. And then I think my favorite part of the day was the biggest of the big companies, Orange, and their incredible global footprint. I only know them as who I roam to when I travel to Europe, but that's at least only who I knew them as, and a fast-moving startup, both talking about how they're embracing WebAssembly in their environment. Real customers, real people using WebAssembly in their environment. Think about how fast and how far WebAssembly has come in such a short time. And then the cryo crew that made the slide that I did not even ask them to make but was delighted to see on the Better Together story in real life. And I would point out that the Wasm Edge runtime, another CNCF project, is doing a joint tutorial with the Wasm Cloud project where you'll do WebAssembly components and it doesn't really matter what runtime you're on. Because I think as Bailey and Joe just demonstrated here in my last picture, I was able to snap of the day in a Wasi Cloud that we're really witnessing this rise of Wasm native. That it's not coming, it's already here. And those little green shoots are the areas where I'm already aware that Wasm is embraced, whether it's as a plug-in, as a runtime, or as an executable itself. WebAssembly is here, and it's growing very quickly. If you haven't had enough WebAssembly content, tomorrow there are three interesting talks. Angel from VMware and Francisco are giving a talk around efficient LLM deployments in any cluster. Brooks Townsend and Michael Juan of Cosmonic and Second State who are representing CNCF Wasm Cloud and CNCF Wasm Edge are giving a hands-on tutorial if you want to learn how to build a component yourself. And then the question that was asked earlier around WebAssembly and EBPF, Nandor who has spoken at Wasm Day previously, and Zolt will be building a zero-trust environment without a service mesh. And I think that's going to be a really fascinating talk. I think there's a ton of potential there. And on Thursday, get ready for the big keynote with Ralph, Michelle, and Kai who are going to be up on the big stage talking about WebAssembly and Kubernetes. Then we've got another cryo talk with WebAssembly, and then Matt Butcher from Fermion on another Wasm and Kubernetes talk, and then finally bringing us home another talk that I'm actually really excited to see. This is Akil from Stealth Rocket and then Rajiv from Marsk who would obviously be representing another customer talk. I always have a real soft spot for people that are actually out doing things and coming and telling those stories. And if, so if you want to get registered for the workshop, here's the QR code. It's here at KubeCon on this floor, 7.3 in 102 right down the hall here. That's tomorrow at 430 CET. Hands on. You can come and learn and get hands on with WIT and then use the runtimes yourself. And if that wasn't enough content, start your engines because WasmCon is on the way. Another Linux Foundation conference, and this is a twofer because this is co-located with cloud native security con in Seattle, Washington in June. So if you are all excited, last year's was incredible with 263 attendees. And if you want to talk about the density of who's who in Wasm, one out of five people were presenters. We had 52 talks. I mean it was wild. Literally everybody in Wasm was there, I felt like, and was delivering talks or talking about their things. We talked to everybody on every standard from every industry. And it was, I would say, one-third customers, industry, one-third open source, and one-third commercial. Truly incredible. And I'm excited for this one again this year. And the CFP is open. Please take out your phones right now. If you are in open source looking at YouTube, please. Jeff Labs, come on. Justlawnswa.dev, wish you guys were on stage, wish you were doing that. It would have been a great talk. And click this. And this will put a calendar reminder that when the CFPs are due, which, and you'll still get an annoying email from me to get your CFP in for Wasm Day, please. And any other, anyone else, please. Lots of great topics. Anything in WebAssembly. Here at Wasm Day, we're trying to focus on the intersection of Wasm and CloudNative. WasmCon really opens up the aperture and really gives us an opportunity to talk about much broader WebAssembly topics. There was a lot of embedded folks there. Sony was out talking about their GPIO stuff. Bosch was on stage talking about what they were doing. Siemens came out and gave a great talk. So just a really, a whole bunch of interesting WebAssembly stuff. And let me close with what I hope that you really witness today is that where WebAssembly is now is building better together, which is the theme that we started with when we announced WebAssembly and CloudNative five years ago was that Wasm and Kubernetes weren't enemies. They were better together. And now I would say that we're well on the way to building better together. Thank you so much for your time. Enjoy the rest of your afternoon.