 Okay, so my name is Martin Lazarus. I'm working for SUSE since nine and a half years now, I guess. And welcome to FOSTA in 2009. Why we are here? So FOSTA is quite important for us. In my opinion, it's the most important developer conference in Europe, maybe even in the world for open SUSE at least. So we are here the first time now. And Novelli's sponsor again. So we sponsor the whole event. So Novelli's not that evil. We are supporting open source. Again, we have approximately 30 people from Novelli here or from SUSE. So you see a lot of people here running around with a contributor T-shirt. And if you don't have a contributor T-shirt and you think you should have one, please go to the booth and we will give you one. We have 20 talks. This time we have three talks from the community. From the community means people that are not working for Novelli or for SUSE. So I don't want to really make a difference because of course we are also part of the community, even we work for the company. But this time we have three different talks from the community directly. We changed also a little bit the booth. We have not only open SUSE there. We have the open SUSE education project there, which is a cooperation with HP, which is pretty nice. And we have Marty Mering here for the embedded build service stuff. So you can also ask questions about that. And what is not on the slides, we have open SUSE Studio here or SUSE Studio, excuse me. So if you want to build your own distribution, just go downstairs with the big monitor. And you can build your own SUSE base distribution with your own package selection. Very nice. We have also DVDs and USB sticks with us so you can just burn it or put it on the USB stick and take it at home. We had some changes. Unfortunately, Kulu is sick. So the second talk was the outlook to 11.1. So this talk will not happen. Marco said he wants to do a talk, but unfortunately I cannot reach them, so I'm not sure if we really have the next talk. He's coming. Okay, nice. Zonka is doing a keynote. Unfortunately, it's two o'clock when we have one of our community talks. But anyway, if you want to see Zonka talking about a little bit more general about open SUSE, what happened in the open SUSE project, join him at the main stage. This time, which was really funny when we yesterday tried to get all the stuff in the car. For the first time, we have much, much better video recordings because now we have microphones and we have speakers that you see. So the recording should be pretty good this time. The video was the last year was very, very good thanks to Jürgen and Tom, but the audio was not that good. And yeah, we have a smaller room. So it's the same room that we had last year on the second day. So probably we have in the evening a problem with air. So if the talk is over, please open the door so we get some air here. And so organizers asked us, here's really a hundred people limit. So if every seat is taken, we have to close the doors and nobody can get in. Otherwise, we get really problems or better the organizer get problems. So let me go back and see what we had last year. So 2008 was the year of the releases. So we had 11.0. It was very, very successful. We had 64% more downloads compared to 10.3. And in my opinion, the 11.0 was really a milestone in release, especially because of the new zipper release. So package management was really, really fast and really, really good. And we spread it around 25K of promo DVDs in two months. Usually I need for that six months and this was so successful this time. So we just needed two months. Well, six months later, we released 11.1. And this time we had only 5% more downloads. And the question is, of course, was it bad timing? I mean, it was a week before Christmas. It was only a six months difference between the versions. And in my opinion, it's really that A, it was too short before the year's end. And second, it was 11.0 is rock stable. So many users don't see the need for updating to 11.1, I guess. And of course, you have the build service if you want really the greatest KDE, for example, you don't need to install 11.1. You just can go to the build service and install the latest packages also on 11.0. So it's not really a problem anymore to skip one distribution. But anyway, 5% is not that bad. And overall reaction to the 11 series, it really rocks. Especially the package management, everybody said this is the best thing you had in the last five years. So 11.1, pretty good. So what else did we achieve in 2008? We started with forums. Many people wanted forums. I'm not really a big fan of a forum. I think mailing this is much better to handle. But anyway, after six months, we have over 20,000 people in our forums, which is pretty good, I guess. A few weeks ago, we started Features OpenSuzu.org. Tom will make later tomorrow a presentation about it so we can finally get Features into OpenSuzu. And not just if you're working for the company. We're starting with a contrib repository. We also have a talk about this from Henne a little bit later. We have the first elected board, which is pretty important for me. So the first board was appointed by Novell. So this is really a board the community want. Which is also nice. He's not here. It's the explosion of weekly news. So weekly news obviously is a newsletter where we can put all the news in it which happens in the OpenSuzu world. And in the last months, we saw that they're coming up many translations. So it's available in German, Japanese, Hungarian, whatever. So pretty nice team and they're working very good together. If you want to join them, just go to the marketing mailing list and you'll see the needed information there. We're also directly in contact with weekly news as a marketing team. So finally, we have a marketing team. We have a marketing mailing list. So we try to combine our efforts with the other guys. Yeah, we had the first external release party in Nuremberg. So now a new year started. So what is missing? For me, the most important thing in the OpenSuzu world is the spokesperson program. If you're not aware what the spokesperson program is, we want something similar. Fedora have, they call it Ambassador. We use spokesperson as a placeholder. We are not sure what kind of name we want to use. Obviously, it would be better if you have different names than Fedora or Obuntu. But we will see. At the moment, there's a voting running. So if you are an OpenSuzu member, you should already use the email and you can vote for the final name. We will release the final name on Wednesday. On Wednesday is the next IOC project meeting. So you can see what the final name is and why we have to do that. We want more local groups. We want more support from local people. And for me, a better distribution of DVDs. Because it's really a pain in the ass to distribute DVDs to foreign countries. It's not working. Postal services are not working. Some people complaining about the translations are missing. Especially on the main pages, on the start page. But also on news OpenSuzu.org or software OpenSuzu.org. So if you go there today, it's only in English. Some people argument, okay, if you can, everybody should be able to download OpenSuzu even it's only in English. But in my opinion, it would be nice if we also translate these pages. So we are working on that. Contributions. So we started with the contrib repository. And Henne will talk about later a little bit more about that. And so it's important that you can get stuff into the distribution. So it's not only through the base, only people from the company can contribute to that. This is in my opinion, very important. Otherwise, we are not really a community distribution. Some people also complain about trademarks. So if you make your own distribution, for example, with Kivi, or with Sousa Studio, you have the problem, what's the name of the distribution? Can I call it OpenSuzu? Can I call it based on OpenSuzu? How should I call it? So we are working on it to resolve the trademark issue. And in our idea, of course, it would be best if we have something with OpenSuzu because you should show this as based on OpenSuzu. But it's not that easy because there are some legal stuff, of course, involved. And what happened right now? We have no idea when we release the next product. And so we really have to rethink the whole release schedule stuff. So there are more than one option, of course. For example, should we release in a static release cycle six months? For example, should we release just once a year? Should we do some smaller updates, like kernel updates, or new booters in between? So this is a very interesting discussion at the moment. And the problem is, at the moment, nobody knows what to do. So I cannot say when the next OpenSuzu will be released. There are one option is, for example, September. But we will see. That's all. So I'm already over the time a little bit. So you see it's a lot of stuff is going on in the OpenSuzu world. Maybe just a little bit of our foster. We have a booth that's downstairs. It's the same location we had last year. Go there, talk with the people. I try to bring all the people who make a presentation after that to the booth. So if you have questions, please follow them to the booth and ask them. You have the chance. We have really 30 people here from Novel from Sousa. If you're not sure who is here, just go to the booth. Ask is this guy here? Can I talk with somebody about whatever? Go to the booth. Use the time. Use the knowledge we have here at FosterM and have a lot of fun. Thank you.