 Forseshia have started this unique coding contest called CodeHeat which actually starts from September and ends in February. It's a six month coding competition which actually helps new developers who are new to open source to come and contribute to some of the Forseshia projects. This year we kicked off the second CodeHeat contest and we have some amazing stats now. We were able to get 650 developers registered during the six month time period for the CodeHeat contest and we were able to close around 2000 plus pull requests with the help of 37 mentors. I think you should give a big round of applause. At the end of the contest, we picked up three winners who have made some amazing contributions and have made a great progression. We have helped them fly to Singapore to attend Forseshia and get a chance to meet other developers and bring up their networking network. So I'd like to invite Mario to take over the ceremony session. Yes, so for anyone who has seen the program, maybe we have a lot of people coming here on stage in a moment. So give us a few seconds to get everyone here aligned and I can tell you a bit about CodeHeat in the meantime. So CodeHeat is our coding contest and we started it because we saw this works really well. You have a coding contest, people get a certificate, there are some winners and they built up their GitHub profile very good for their future and everyone just learns a lot. So it's really fun to do this and we do this nearly six months. It starts right after Google Summer of Code. Google Summer of Code is a famous coding program here in the world. Many projects like 1500 take part but we ask ourselves what do we do after Google Summer of Code? We need to engage people. The same question that we had on the panel, how do we engage with people? In other countries, even other continents, how do we connect? Contest is always a good way and everyone benefits. So let me show you a little bit here in details. So we have the website on CodeHeat.org and that's how it works. The jury chooses three winners from the top ten code contributors. Very easy, not so difficult. You just look at which are the top contributors and then you check like there's a jury saying this one did more quality commits, other contributors maybe made more like front end or something not so deep. So there's a jury in the end deciding among the best contributors. So the contributions also include scrum reports and technical blog posts because we want people to connect. It's not just like here's my code, somebody check it, hey mentor, please check my code. We want people actually to engage in the community and to share their knowledge. Then winners present the work here at the Fossil Asia Open Tech Summit. So we have some lightning talks, we have workshops and so on. And they're not just prizes for the top winners. They're also like t-shirts, swag, vouchers and of course the certificate of participation. Maybe like I know like some Germans ask me certificate of participation. Why do I need it? I know that I participated. But in Asia it's often very good. You get a certificate, something written down and you know it. So this is our Quoteet contest and maybe there are some other projects and companies who want to join us next time when we run it the next time so we run it annually now. So it can come back to me. Okay, so now in a moment we're getting started and we have three people here who have agreed to like congratulate and hand over the prizes directly to the winners. So I would like to ask Hon Phuk on stage again. Hon Phuk, please come here. Yeah, applause. By the way, have you seen this beautiful dress of Hon Phuk? Have you seen it? So yeah, please show us the flowers also. Yes, it's an Ao Yei by the way from Vietnam and I can tell you it took a very long time to choose it and a very long time to make it. So you can check it out but this Ao Yei you can only see today because Hon Phuk has an Ao Yei for every day. Is that correct? So different Ao Yei for every day. So if you want to follow with this Ao Yei you have to come today with Hon Phuk, yes? Okay, good. Okay, so thank you very much for joining us and the second one I would like to ask Italo. Italo, we know each other for many years. Yeah, please applause also for Italo. Why you don't comment on my dress? It's special. You know, special jeans from Italy and t-shirt from United States. Is that okay? It's fantastic. And I will have a different one tomorrow as well. Okay, great. And so Italo also has a t-shirt in black which represents the developer and designer community. So thank you very much for bringing diversity here to the stage. Thank you. So many of you probably know Italo through LibreOffice. You've been instrumental in LibreOffice in the organization. But you're also now a director of OSI already for some time. So if anyone wants to know more about open source for the last 20 years, come to Italo. And there will also be a BA event and different activities over the next few days where we celebrate the 20 years of OSI. Exactly. I will speak tomorrow morning at 10 and I will be at the booth tomorrow for questions all day. Okay. Thank you very much. And finally we have Michael here, Michael Christen who made this big experiment. And finally it worked out. We could see the offline Susie talking. So thank you very much. And you were also a jury member and looked through pull request, merged some. Sometimes it's difficult though for you to know who is who because you don't have the faces, you just see the code. And then you always ask me at the First Asia Summit, who is this person? Yeah, he has this nickname and made this code. Oh yeah, this person is fantastic, right? Yeah, with some of code and code he is always such a big mess of new people coming and it's amazing what they are doing. So it's a lot of work to get them sorted out. Good. Thank you very much. Thank you very much for joining us. So I see like people coming in and out and I wonder if, I hope we have everyone here, we have all the winners here because we have prepared something and I would like to switch to the next slide here and call the winners on stage. So big round of applause and now I want to really big. I see some people in the back not clapping. Please clap, clap everyone. Okay. Raghav Jayoda, actually we've never talked with each other before and I don't know if I speak your name correctly. How is it correctly? It's Raghav Jayoda here. Okay, so we have a few days to practice now. You contributed to different projects, Bad Shae, Open Event, Yay Dog, Suzie AI, the Creery Server, Suspa Search Engine and Lock Lock over the period of the contest and 2000 Merge pull request. You were one of the top 10 and you convinced the jury. How does it feel? It feels really amazing, like working on so many different technologies all together on a single platform. It's something like really amazing. Like there's a lot of learning involved in it as well. So if we have questions, I want to be a quoted winner in the future. I can come to the booth. Will you be there at the FOSS Asia booth at some point? Absolutely, sir. I'll be there. Okay, thank you very much. Please join us up here. How do we do it? Do we like one by one? Yes. So I would like to say, please hand over the prize. So we have a nice... We have a nice, what's it called, an English penant, right? Is that correct? Yeah, a penant. So we made a penant here and yeah, we take a photo together. No, but this is Manish. It needs to be Raghav. This is the wrong name. Yes, yes. So his name is on there. So how does it feel? It was on purpose. Yeah, we need it on purpose for you. Yeah, it also has a medal. Yeah, thank you very much for joining us. Stay here for the photo. How does it feel like? A lot of photos have been taken at the FOSS Asia Summit. I would like to get the next person here on stage here. So we have three winners here. Paz Chandelier. Paz Chandelier. Please come on stage. What? His flight was delayed. You guys have told me who will take the prize for Paz. So we can celebrate him and tell him later how we celebrated him. Yeah. You are his friends? You are his friends? You will take it for him, yeah? Okay, so make a big round of applause and you have to tell Paz everything about it, okay? Such a pity. Flight delayed. But how does it feel to take the prize for Paz? Amazing. Okay, please tell him about it. And we congratulate you in the name of Paz, but you don't get a photo because you are not Paz. Are you sure you are not him? It looks very similar. Okay, thank you very much. So Paz, hang on, I want to read out Paz even he is not here because he has done an amazing thing. And he has also made a proposal for the next thing which I really love. He participated in Lockluck's Sub-Spot Meleaks, which is a Linux distribution that we developed, a query server, Batchez Open Event and Susie AI. If you wonder what are these projects, come down to the first Asia booth later. Okay, thank you very much. Thank you very much for taking the place for Paz, but Manish is here. I already saw you. The next one. Thank you. Diana? Diana? Next one, yeah, thank you. So Manish, please come on stage. And a big round of applause. Philippa. Yes. Okay, Manish, thank you very much for being a member of this community and contributing to this project. So you focused on Batchez Career Server, Susie AI and Chromeboard, but I've seen you also since then after the contest, contributing to many other things. So you just keep staying engaged and that's really wonderful to see. Thank you so much. I would really like to contribute to this community more and more. I was involved in a lot of outreach programs. I actually helped spread a lot of awareness about FOSS Asia in and around my campus and universities. And I was really happy about doing this. And I'm really thankful to FOSS Asia for organizing. Cody, thank you so much. Thank you so much for participating. And I would like Michelle to hand over the prize. So thanks. That was it. But it wasn't at all. So we actually have a lot of people who more engage more. And I would also like to mention all these others. Not everyone could be here, but like some of our finalist winners, because everyone's a winner. Like everyone who participated as a winner are here as well. And I would also like to ask everyone who is here at the event to come now to the stage. We also have a small present for you. Who's here among the finalist winners? Ah, so you're twice on stage. Okay, good. Excellent. The finalist winner. And what about Ritika? She was also supposed to come, I think. Maybe also flight delayed. But thank you very much. So now in your own name, yeah, Nikit, right? So Nikit here, Nikit Bandari, yeah? Bandari, yeah? Okay. So you will tell us all about your contributions as well. You've also been like a very important contributor in the community. And we hope to see more from you. Yeah. Thank you very much. And Hon Phuk will hand over the medal for you as a finalist winner. So awesome. And awesome. So great. Thank you. And it's not all. Like in a moment nearly everyone could be on stage, because these are the mentors that have helped to run this program because people are asking, how do we scale? How can we become bigger and bigger and engage all these people? And then like sometimes people tag me at Mario or at Hon Phuk. I want to talk with you about this and the project. We can't do it all alone. Don't do it all alone. It's like a lot of people and many of them you will meet them here at the event, right? Raise your hand. Anyone in the room here who's on this picture? Okay. We have Saptak here. They're behind. I see Andre. I see like a few guys here. These are our mentors and you can meet them here at the event if you want to know more about it. So thank you very much. And so we have also something for the mentors. And this is a surprise also for me. So please come here on stage quick by run up because we don't want to also want to enjoy the coffee in the moment, right? Come down here with some energy. So quickly tell me your name. My name is Saptak. Which project? Open Event Server. My name is Chetan Koshik. Hi, I'm Saurabh. Suciay Azul. Hello, I'm Sumed. I was on Open Event Frontend. Good. So thank you very much. And... Hello, even I'm one of the mentor. Exactly. Can I join you guys? Of course. Come over here, Damini. Please. And we'll quickly put over the medal. Yes. Yeah. Michael, you're also a mentor. Yes, I'm a mentor. Okay. So you also get a medal. Were you also a mentor? No. Hi, I'm Dilpreet and I was working with Open Event, specifically Open Event Frontend. Yeah. Andre, please come down. Stop coding. Take a moment off and come down. And yeah, and we'll like move a little bit over. Yes. And please all take a photo. Actually, I was also a mentor. Thank you. Thank you very much. Okay. A round of applause here for all the mentors who helped to run our programs. A lot of applause to everyone here. So thank you very much. And guys, keep contributing. We're having a great time over the next few days. So thanks a lot again for coming here. Thank you. So we are nearly at the end of the opening and I handed back here to our wonderful host of the day. So we have come to the end almost, but not yet. We have the summit overview. We have 12 different tracks and we have 12 moderators who are taking care of these tracks and they have 30 seconds to one minute to pitch about each and every track so that they can attract participants. Come to my track, please. Fill the rooms. So I invite all the moderators to come and kind of pitch about the tracks.