 This, so this is a picture from the first Linux conference which actually has our president of engineering sitting in there amongst the various people putting Linux up in the air. But while we have a prestigious history in open source, it's gone a lot beyond the enterprise-grade Linux that many are familiar with. So, you know, you see that box. It would actually was, as soon as I developed the first enterprise Linux distribution, it also developed the first enterprise OpenStack distribution. And by happenstance, it actually has the first enterprise Cloud Foundry distribution, which is the team that it came in through acquisition. But it's not the work that Susan's doing around Cloud Foundry is using a team that's been working with Cloud Foundry since the day it was open sourced. And that's the old part of the active state team. And that, you know, the first version of that distro, you know, congratulations to Pivotal on their IPO today. But we've actually been distributing a version of Cloud Foundry since before Pivotal was a company. So a larger look at what Sousa is today. At the very top, the green part, we talk about Cloud Foundry and application delivery. That is the platform as a service space. However, there's a lot of things that support that. And while our distribution can run on any Kubernetes you want, plug into various enterprise storage systems, you happen to be also get these things from Sousa, in terms of the Sousa container as a service platform for Kubernetes. Obviously, the OpenStack distribution I mentioned. And there's offer of software defined storage, it's SEF, we call it SES, Sousa Enterprise Storage, virtualization, all the various other pieces and management that goes along with. So from the Sousa point of view, we are looking at the much larger platform stack and delivering that in an enterprise grade manner to large and small enterprises across the world. A little bit of a look more at Sousa Cloud Application Platform that is specifically our distribution of Cloud Foundry. I know it's all 100% open source, various people, Troy was how it showed in the demo theater, github.com, Sousa, SSEF. This is a bit larger when you come into the product version, but here's a view of it. An important thing to note, when you're looking in the workloads, that's SLE, Sousa Linux Enterprise, the abbreviation there. So one of the key things that we've done is we've replaced Ubuntu with an enterprise grade Linux. It gets faster updates and much more security around that development style there. Pretty much everything that you have is running in a containerized manner in Cloud Application Platform, running on top of Kubernetes so you can have things that are much more natively integrated, much smaller footprint as well. This also happens to run on Azure at the moment. That was our announcement this week with the update to the Cloud Application Platform. All of this then running, whichever Kubernetes you particularly want, but that could be public, cloud, private, cloud, bare metal, et cetera. So the big hype message here, it's very easy for Kubernetes users. That is our target, or we're making the assumption Kubernetes is the next infrastructure as a service plus platform. It provides you a smaller footprint. It is 100% open source, and it is all based on enterprise grade Linux. So when I talk about being easy, there's four bullet points here. Only two of them are required to actually install Cloud Foundry on Kubernetes. The other two are just watching that everything's coming up because when you do a Helm install, Helm, for those not familiar, the kind of a de facto package manager for Kubernetes, it tells everything to start up, and then you have to wait for your liveness and readiness probes and everything to come in order. So we watch that. But basically, we install UA, we install Susie Cloud Foundry, that's the SCF there, and you're pretty much done and you're ready. And that's the same certified distribution that you would find from all of the other vendors just running entirely on Kubernetes. And a little bit about the other contributions. This is the product, but obviously we're 100% open source company, we believe very much in an open philosophy. We have developers working upstream in the Cappy teams, Routing, Oz Bappy, and the Bosch CPI teams. Another thing that was discussed more at length this week was the contribution of the Stratus UI to the CF Incubator. So you'll find that move from the SUSE GitHub, it's in the CF Incubator, Cloud Foundry Incubator GitHub now, and as well making SUSE Linux a viable OS base, which is something as well, we're working on to provide and then be available via Bosch.io. And thanks to Sanjay at SAP for also mentioning some of the other work streams that we're doing for the further integration of Cloud Foundry and Kubernetes. And that's what I want to talk about today. And don't forget, we're hiring, so if you know anybody interested, we'd love to chat with them.