 Now, OK, sorry. So this is just about the Solstack developer community. So all of you know about the Solstack, right? That's a Confession Management and Remote Execution Orchestration Tool. And so first, I just want to know how many of you are coming from a developer background? Can you just raise your hand just to understand? Yeah. At least half of you guys are from a developer background. And how many of you contributed to any free or open source projects? Yeah. At least a bunch of you guys contributed. That's good. So this tool is something that is going to be interesting for you folks, those who contributed to free or open source of tools. So I also done a little bit of contributions, not too many. I think around 68 commits. And that too, it's in 2012. So that means I am no more such an active contributor to Solstack that I've done two years before. So one of the things is that this, I hope you guys heard of the term called open source versus open core. Many of you picking up a good development community, I think you should see whether that's really working in the free or open source culture also. But there are some other companies which actually works in the way of open core technology. Of course, you can Google search and find out whether your favorite whatever this configuration management tools are really open source or free open source or is it just open core. And so Solstack is something really free or open source software and it's the community. Everything is developed in the same way. And it's a very active development community. Maybe if you just check the octaverse.getof.com, I've taken a picture here. You can see that this one of the community highlights, if you look at this, projects with most merged pull request and repositories with most issued cost. You can see that Solstack is coming as the third largest project in the GitHub, which is the, and in 2012 also, that was the eighth in a most active project in GitHub. And if you look at this, I made some comparison with the OAuth law, which is a statistics provider, where you can compare with the Salt. I kept a puppet Ansible. Maybe this Ansible and puppet is having almost same kind of activity. But if you look at the, compared to the puppet, you can see the number of developers. It's almost a less number, maybe less than half of the developers and number of comments, everything. Even though Solstack is like a three year project, whereas, you know, puppet is like a nine year old project. So we can check this OAuth law statistics. And it's a very receptive community. So all the pull request that you send to that GitHub is, we'll get some review. I can definitely go and check this, just I'm making this comparison with similar things like puppet or Ansible, just to get an idea. You can go to Ansible or puppet GitHub repositories and check the pull request and see how much people are commenting on your pull request that is sent to that one and how many of them are closing without even any comments. And you can check the same thing in Solstack or Post-it also and see there won't be any single pull request which there is no discussion going on. And you'll not see too many pull request hanging around there for so many six months or one year like that. And it's a very active mailing list and IRC channels you'll see there. And there are a lot of awards also that are received by Solstack. You can go to this solstack.com awards space. You can see that received the cool vendor from the award from the Gartner and many other this kind of GitHub ranking all the things you can see here. Okay, so what I was trying to tell you is that if you're picking up, if you want to contribute to such a amazing, of course this is a Python based one. So if you are a Python developer especially and if you want to contribute to such a great community, this would be a good project where you can look into this for contribution. Okay, that's all.