 the last day of the NeroConnect Budapest 2017 and so how did it go this time? It's been a great conference, it's great to be back in in Europe. There's been a lot of discussion, a lot of collaboration, a lot of open technical discussion. We've had a really good time. And so the opening keynote you announced that Google is joining as a club member of the NeroConnect. Yes, we're really pleased that Google have joined as a club member. We're excited to have them working with us. We've been doing a lot of work on Android and AOSP over the past few years. Google obviously invest in and use a lot of open source software so it's very good to have them supporting what we're doing in Leonardo and working with them. So that's definitely a proof that what you're doing really makes sense for the whole industry? Clearly there are a lot of companies involved in the entire open-source ecosystem and Google is an enormous user of open-source code. Android is used in all of the world's phones that are based on open-source software so it's great to see them being on board and working with us. And so there's definitely it's going to be great to have Google join the segments that they want. They have access to it. Yes, so as a club member they can work across Leonardo in everything from IoT up to the enterprise. Clearly big focus on mobile is what we've been working on on AOSP for the last for the last few years but the nice thing about Google's involvement with Leonardo is it stretches end-to-end. And there's some other new members right? Yes, so we're very pleased to have HXT which is a joint venture between Qualcomm and Chinese local government working HXT's joint Leonardo's enterprise group to work on servers both for the Chinese market and globally and also Fujitsu whose post-k supercomputer has been announced to be working on the ARM architecture. They've also joined leg particularly to work on that and work on high-performance computing HPC. And during this week but not at the show actually Microsoft also now they will definitely do ARM servers. Yeah, exciting news, really exciting news for the whole ecosystem. I think the the announcements from Microsoft and demonstrating running on both Qualcomm and Cavium hardware is really good endorsement for the ARM ecosystem and a sign that ARM I think in the service space it's early days but it's certainly an endorsement of how interesting this is going to be as we move into the next generation of enterprise and cloud computing. And the 96 boards started two years ago but it still can explode right? There's a lot of projects on the way. As I said on Monday there's there's over 30 boards in design that we know about and I believe there are more that we don't know about and we see this ecosystem really starting to build and our goal is to leverage this to help get better open source support for newer devices and I think that's starting to we're starting to see that so we're pretty excited. And ARM is talking about the new tagline is called Accelerating Innovation like with the new acquisition they want to potentially fund even faster innovation so that that could be a big deal also for the ARM right? Yeah, clearly SoftBank's investment in ARM is about accelerating the entire ecosystem and accelerating innovation and so we're very excited to be a part of that because we think that open source is an absolutely key element of doing that. And all these engineers must be very proud to know that their work is being used all over the world. Yeah, this stuff is making a difference. It is and when I joined Elenaro it was the opportunity to work across big companies who are innovating in all sorts of areas but also all of the startups in the maker community who are working with open source code and open source is is literally running the world's biggest software systems and biggest financial systems and it's on everything from from TVs and phones to cars and spaceships. And it even turned out that you were the number one contributor to the 4.9 right? To the 4.9 kernel, Elenaro for the first time was the biggest single company contributor we're normally in the kind of top four or five contributors which for a company that's relatively small compared to the major contributors is is is a big big feather in our cap but it's it's not me it's it's all of these guys the engineers from Elenaro and from all of our members who are making that happen and they're really if you think about engineers who are working on Linux are working on the next generation of every device. And so there's been six seven years now Elenaro right? Seven years. Seven years and so it's definitely everybody's like no Elenaro as a success story right? It's what Elenaro does is is very much in the at the intersection of hardware and software on these complex SOCs and now microcontrollers, MCUs. So we're not a household name but in the industry I think we're hopefully providing a key collaboration point for all of these companies who want to work together to help them innovate faster.