 So, in Atlanta, we launched something, SuperUser, which is available at superuser.openstack.org. And this is really an online publication to catalog great stories from companies who are rolling out fantastic change and innovative environments inside of their organizations. One of the things that we wanted to do this time around was to actually recognize some of those organizations here at the summit. So we had a SuperUser award contest over the last few months, and we got some great submissions. But you know, we wanted to have an award ceremony here at the summit, and you know how seriously we take things. We take them extremely seriously. So we wanted to bring a real presenter to come in and run this award show for us. We were able to get somebody to come here straight from Hollywood, who is going to be presenting the SuperUser award. So please help me welcome our presenter, Guillaume Obishon. So, first of all, let's have a big hand for open source of an open source of booze, especially. Let's talk about what a SuperUser is. SuperUser is someone who loves themselves while loving you. There's someone who builds their business while contributing back to the community. But the bottom line about a SuperUser is that they're better than you. That's really what it comes down to. So let's make the magic. We had a lot of great judges for this, a very diverse team of judges, including one very, very handsome man from Digital Filmtree, a beautiful man with a warm and open heart. And we deliberated for a long time on all of these submissions that took people all of ten minutes to fill out those submissions. So next time, I expect to see more submissions make the magic. So let's talk about the four finalists. There were a lot of great submissions, and let's make the magic. So NBC, Comcast, great finalists, producers of Kojak in the 70s, users of OpenStack Now, make the magic, CERN, yes, mushing those particles together, it's like an applesauce of physics in their OpenStack cloud. They're going to make either your world better or they're going to destroy it with a black hole. Nobody knows. Make the magic, make the magic, make the magic of somebody unjam the slide projector. Time order cable, once again, Kojak Marathons, Colombo Marathons all delivered to you by OpenStack. Late night, infomercial, oh, that's OpenStack. And last but not least, the people who provided my outfit today, Mercado Libre, selling the best in 70s where all throughout South America. And we have one honorable mention. These people here, they would have won, but quite frankly, that would be cheating. They deploy over two trillion VMs, two trillion, whatever. They deploy a lot of VMs that make your life easier, but they can't win because they're part of OpenStack. Make the magic. And the winner is Drumroll, please, CERN. You know it had to be. Let's see. Come on up here, CERN. Come on up here, Tim. Come on. We're going to tell you what you want. Yes, of course. You win the BMW. Each one of you gets a BMW. No, no, no, no, no. First of all, we have this lovely, lovely, moderately priced bottle of champagne for you all to share. I'd like to give you all a hug, starting with you and you. Thank you for making my world a safer place from a scientific standpoint. And you win, in all expenses paid, trip to Vancouver next year, OpenStack Summit May 18, 2015, a float plane ride where you will experience the great wilderness of Canada, bears and all, and a massage from me. So let's have a great hand for CERN. Please submit your super user submissions next year. Thank you very much. CERN has a very simple mission, which is to understand the universe, how it works, and what it's made of. We have already contributed significantly to the discovery of the Higgs Boson, for which the Nobel Prize was awarded last year. CERN's always been a contributor towards open source projects. We invented the World Wide Web in the 90s, and since then we've been contributing regularly to open source projects. Today we are using OpenStack as a way of improving the efficiency of computer operations within CERN in order to analyse the 35 petabytes of data which comes from the large Hadron Collider. Currently we're running an OpenStack cloud of 65,000 cores across two data centres in Geneva and Hungary. We've already got 700 physicists who are using that facility in order to analyse the production data from the LHC that was recorded in the previous four years. People are now getting resources in 15 minutes that used to take a week or months to be delivered. Then the Ice House release notes came out and we saw as one of the headline items was the Federation contributions. That's of course a great pride to see that in a short period of six months we have gone from an initial concept working through with the community and got code into the mainline source code so that other sites can then also be using that around the world. The OpenStack cloud at CERN with production in July last year which coincided with the award of the Nobel Prize for the Higgs Boson Discovery. Looking forward there are lots of other exciting areas of physics that we'll be looking into during the life of the LHC which is expected to be around 20 years. We hope that a lot of those discoveries will be assisted with the aid of the OpenStack resources that are now available at CERN and at other sites around the world. So congratulations to the team at CERN, we're so happy that you guys are our inaugural SuperUser award winners and we will do this again though we may try to find a new host.