 Hello, this is David Flanders, I am here today with Victor from Guadalajara, also working at Intel. We're very pleased to be talking about application hackathons that you can obviously use on OpenStack Clouds. So to kick us all off, Victor, tell us what it was like to run a hackathon. I mean it was crazy, it was busy, but what were some of the highlights for you in running a hackathon in Guadalajara? Sure. Thanks Flanders. It was pretty interesting actually. If you think about running a hackathon obviously you need a community and it was a good opportunity to engage with a community in Guadalajara. There are many communities related with application development like Rubion Rails, PHP, Python, and well we wanted to be exposed to the benefits of building applications on OpenStack. So we participated in different communities, we know friends, family, and it was a good opportunity to engage with new people. One of the coolest bits is that the whole community was brought together. You reached out to other meetup groups, you know Ruby and Python and all the different programming languages, other hackathons groups, so it was really great to just see the power of Open and bringing everybody together. Another simple question, if people wanted to run a hackathon and everybody's kind of seen it and they're starting to get excited based on what you've done and everything else, what would be the first step in trying to make a hackathon happen, do you feel? I think one of the first steps is engaging with volunteers. So you will need to request the help from different people, like you want a volunteer that leads the mentors, you will need somebody to lead the training, and also you will become familiar to the different challenges that will be managing through the end of the entire hackathon. It's like a marathon, right? You never know what to expect. And I'm hoping you got some help in all of this. Where can you go to get help? Because obviously running a hackathon, a lot of people won't have run hackathons for the first time, but obviously the foundation wants to enable you with it. So where did you go for help throughout the planning of the hackathon to get the hackathon ready? So we have now a working group, so we have a hackathon working group that we made by weekly. So we have assistants from different key players in the community like David Flanders and also we got help from other key players from the community like Carol Barre and Edgar Magana. So there is a lot of material already. We have some champions from the previous hackathons, like ourselves. So we got help from Joanna, from Rico. And this was from the Taiwan hackathon? Yes, exactly. So I think we already have a very good base of knowledge. And if you want to run a hackathon, there is available information for you to learn how to do a hackathon, how to chase for sponsorship, how to build marketing materials, how to make this a social event. So I think there is plenty of information. And I'm hoping we can count on you to provide some advice as well to future hackathons. They can hopefully call on you. Absolutely. Yes, yes, yes. You can find me on Twitter. You can find me in IRC. Also, I'm pretty active in the community. I'm part as well of the application ecosystem community and I'll be very glad to help you. Yeah, and look, I just can't say enough about this gentleman. He's been absolutely fantastic Victor. Thank you so much. You are a shining star in the community. You're somebody who I would consider just not only somebody I love working with, but a very dear friend. Once you go through an event, you kind of share something and experience something. I'd like to publicly shake your hand on camera and just say thank you again for the amazing work. Oh, it's the same feeling. Thanks for the support. I think it was an amazing event. It was a pretty amazing opportunity. And I can't wait to do it again with you someday. We've got to recover from the last one. So please get in touch with either of us and we're excited to see the community grow. So, cool. See you.