 I'm going to talk a little bit about the road ahead for OpenShift and some of the stuff I'm going to go through quickly because I've talked about it, I've gotten the opportunity to talk about it in the panel and a few people have talked about some of it already. So we really talk a lot about OKD today, I tried really to reiterate this, but it is, this is how we deliver OpenShift, we build it from that open source upstream project and we push it out into there. So if there's one takeaway that I can give you today is to really go and take a look at OKD, the documentations, go look at learn.openshift.com if you're a newbie. It's a great source of information and so it's official, you've all been blessed and I've said OKD many, many times and over beer you'll all say OKD with me and we'll have a toast and I'll think oh they're all listening and agreeing with me. OpenShift in the marketplace and where OpenShift is right now I think we can say that the industry has really standardized on Kubernetes and we've seen it, the growing groups of people if you go to cncf.io and look at the membership there and the people who are part and parcel of the community, I don't think there's anyone who's going to disagree with me around that. Where we are and you know depending on which adoption lifecycle, whether you're looking at the Gartner one and in the hype cycle we might be not quite in the trough of disillusionment yet that we're still in that excited period early but we're still, we're really seeing that it's now being uptake by the pragmatists, hopefully the conservative folks and we're even seeing in the banking and finance industry some of those folks are really taking Kubernetes on and OpenShift as well. So what we've really tried to express today is that OpenShift now is the Kubernetes platform for your big ideas. It really has matured from a platform as a service and containers as a service and it's really taken that multi-cloud thing. But it's really, we used to joke about HTML in the early days, I did mention that I worked on some of that and I'm older than Dirt and XML. But we always, when we had HTML around, we always used to say we'll be really happy when nobody cares about what HTML is and slowly that happened and slowly Kubernetes will become just part and parcel of your infrastructure and it won't be anything. And so we're seeing that happen and coming and I look forward to the day where I'm not explaining Kubernetes anymore. But all of you and you've heard some of the stories here have different starting points. Some of the folks today were running OpenShift on OpenStack. Some people are all about the microservices and cloud native stuff and you come to it for different reasons and different starting points and I think that's what makes your stories interesting is that no two of you are completely the same but there is a common thread through them all around going cloud native and using containers and taking that new cultural shift and making that effective for you all. And it's not just one specific industry or one set of groups of people, it's lots of people. So one thing you should never feel is that you're alone in this. The big news this year really has been the OpenShift's CoreOS integration and I hope you all are aware that this happened because it happened in January, it was a big wonderful acquisition and the CoreOS folks have been really amazing people to work with and collaborate with and they've brought some really interesting innovations to bring into the team and one of the, you know, we talked a little bit about it. I just wanted, nobody really mentioned this but as we've, people have heard of Atomic and Container Linux, those two things are being brought together and that's what will be CoreOS and will be our minimal Linux distribution. We didn't talk a lot about Red Hat Quay but there are, as I always say, wonderful OpenShift Commons briefings on Quay, the container registry. That was a case of the big fish eating the next fish eating the smaller fish, the CoreOS acquired Quay, so in the acquisition of CoreOS Red Hat Got Quay it's a wonderful platform for hosting container registries and scanning them and it's very full blown and then this new thing that we call operators and I really, I think that for me is the next game changer for automating all of the infrastructure. And there's, we've had a couple of slides about this. You can come, I really highly encourage you if you are thinking about operators or wanting to use one or if there's one that's missing, please let us know or come to the operator SIG. You can find it on commons.openshift.org under the interest and just click through and you'll find it. There's lots of ISVs that are working with us to get their operators certified on REL but there's also lots of community ones. If you go to the operators repo you can find this thing called awesome operators and there's a list of about 50 to 60 community operators that are out there already and we'll be moving some of that onto the landing page for the operators SIG shortly. So there's, you know, there's lots of things coming together and some of the stuff from Tectonic that's getting integrated in the next and the coming releases. Merrick who has had to leave us a little early today unfortunately covered a lot of some of the new features that are in 3.10. There are some great briefings that I again on 3.10 and there'll be some upcoming with the next release. We'll have an OpenShift Commons briefing from the product managers on 3.11. If you're all trying to take pictures of this and the fine print is too small don't worry I'll post the link to the slides and to their roadmap stuff but there's a lot of synergies between what the CoreOS folks were doing and where we wanted to go. So this has become a really wonderful relationship and it's been great. But when we have to ask have we really crossed the chasm and I think today from what everybody has shared with you I think we know that containers in production are real and they're real and people are doing these things real on Red Hat today. So in some ways we have definitively crossed the chasm. In other ways there are a lot of people that we need to bring along with us in the community and to help learn from the lessons and the war stories and the things that you did and so thank you to the folks today that have shared from Elisa and from that other company whose name I'm not going to try and pronounce but from Arrow's team. Thank you very much for sharing your stories. There's still a lot of people who are working on this. There's a lot of dynamics in this landscape. There's people who still are who are doing it themselves. There's still some traditional pauses out there or pauses depending on what your accent is. There's a number of startups. We're not going to say that OpenShift is the end-all answer to everybody's solution but we are all going to work together on lots of different platforms to help solve these problems for you and to roll them out and incorporate the lessons and the things we learn. We saw today Tony talking about the wonderful things that Microsoft and Red Hat are doing together. There's lots more to come. If you come to KubeCon North America there'll be even more because it's downtown Seattle so I'm sure the Microsoft and Red Hat team will be there in force. People like Red Hat and IBM have been doing a lot of stuff and a lot of great partnering is going on so there's tons of information out there. If you're looking for stuff like WebSphere and DB2 or MQ, reach out. We can connect you with the people at IBM as well and get them moving. I started the whole day with this architecture slide with the four Cs. I think really what we've proven today with your participation and with the feedback that we've gotten that it really is the four Cs plus community that are really making the difference for OpenShift and for Kubernetes and for all of you and so we're really pleased that you've joined us here today. I know there's beer out there but I'm going to ask you one more time and remind you one more time to join OpenShift Commons so that you can share your stories and learn from other folks. Please do. And now another word about the beer. The beer should be out there. It should be... You have to first register to the Commons. No, well, you know, I'd like to force you to do that but I'm not in sales, all right? I'm in community and it's open community but it's really wonderful. The other thing that I was going to say about OpenShift Commons that's different than other open source communities is that we really ask you not to be anonymous. One of the things that's really helped us is that everyone who signs up, signs up using their organizational name or their corporate sponsor's name or the company that they work for's name in their email and in their Slack profiles. So everybody knows who you're from. So if you have an agenda or you have something... So it's kind of interesting because GitHub is really anonymous. Most everybody, including myself, signed up for GitHub with their Gmail account or some of you with Hotmail or if you still have that or something like that. But the Commons is really about self-identifying in a very positive way. We know when we're talking to someone who's a vendor, we know when we're talking to someone who has an agenda or a point of view but as long as you're open about it and honest about where you're coming from, it makes the conversation a whole lot richer and it's also easier to go and find somebody who knows about a domain if you know where they're working or you've heard a story from them. So now you know how to track down the people from Elyssa easily. So you can go into Slack and find them. If you'd like to join the Slack, let me know and I will sign you up for that today too. I want to just one more time thank all of our sponsors without Arrow and Microsoft and New Relic, this would not have happened today. And it really makes a huge difference to have participation from these Commons members. If you are ever on the road somewhere and you want to get connected with someone, let us know. We'll definitely make sure that happens because it is really all about the peer-to-peer network. Even more than it is about code contribution, it's about connecting you to your peers and that's what OpenShift Commons is all about. So I invite you to come and have a beer with your peers and with the Red Haters who are here and all of you who did not ask a question during the Q&A because you have that thing going on in Finland. Please ask those questions at the booth and thank our sponsors for us. So thank you very much.