 I'm Lollardo Mohanty, I work as a technical lead for Red Hat Container Development Kit. I consider myself as a free software and open source enthusiast and advocate. Red Hat Container Development Kit is a way to give developers a development environment which is based on Red Hat Enterprise Linux on the workstation so that they can package, build and run containers. When you run applications, their most real life, they are multi-cultured applications and we are talking about DevOps here, microservices here. So you need a developer environment where you can actually deploy microservices on your workstation and also it actually fits into the DevOps ecosystem, DevOps concepts, where your developer environment is almost similar to a production environment. The most important feature of CDK is you can actually set up OpenShift which is a patch offering from Red Hat, it's actually a platform as a service, it can also act as a container as a service and it actually supports private cloud, public cloud, basically hybrid cloud but with CDK you can set up OpenShift just with one command on your workstation and you can use it for application development. With CDK, developer will get free subscription to Red Hat Enterprise Linux and the developer environment is based on on top of it. In Red Hat ecosystem, we recommend OpenShift and Kubernetes which is basically the developer can choose either of these but the open-ended solution would be OpenShift to run the containers. CDK makes it really easy for a developer to set up OpenShift, it's actually a simple Vagrant app command and it will set the whole OpenShift on your laptop, it's a single cloud OpenShift setup. CDK promotes OpenShift is the open-ended solution application developers should run their containers because OpenShift actually takes care of the whole life cycle of the application starting from building the image, the Docker image and running them and also the continuous deployment pipelines and stuff like that. CDK makes more sense to enterprise application developers where application developers want to focus their effort on developing just the application and let the tool takes care of building the application, running the application on a supported enterprise platform. If your application developer and you are using Microsoft Windows and OS X as your workstation, you can run Linux containers on top of it because it's not supported. So how do you get almost native experience? You can run your platform whatever you are using and that can be done through CDK. If you are using Eclipse, you can continue using Eclipse to build your containers, run your containers, maybe just using Docker or maybe using OpenShift and that can be implicitly done on CDK. If you are a developer using Microsoft Windows, the best way to get CDK is you should use Developer Suite which is an installer for CDK and it will install all the required components on your workstation and you can just start working with it.