 Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Chief Technology Officer, Cyberport, Dr. David Chung. How are you doing? So good afternoon. Before my presentation, I give you some of our video highlights of what Cyberport and our community cloud just launched recently. Yeah, please play the video first. Thank you. Thank you. So, well, since a number of you may be coming from overseas, maybe you have been enjoying our, you know, this infrastructure and our airport is so efficient. I just want to give you some highlight, you know, what we have been enjoying in the last, you know, 10, 20 years when we have the internet. You know, so, Hong Kong actually, we're quite proud of, you know, we have been deregulating the telco industry for a while. So we can enjoy very fast, efficient broadband network. And it's actually helping the whole industry, especially the ICT industry. As you can see, a lot of reporters actually pointing Hong Kong as a very good, you know, e-commerce, e-business, as you can see, a lot of mobile is also helping all this. In terms of the readiness, you can see cloud readiness index actually pointing Hong Kong is actually ranked number three in the region that we are, you know, kind of ready for the cloud. And then, you know, a lot of this talking about Hong Kong is a very free economy. So all in all, this will kind of giving you that, you know, Hong Kong is kind of a good for ICT industry. So we are talking about 6.1% related to ICT, you know, contribute to the GDP of Hong Kong. And I think this momentum is continuing to grow as we can see this in the trend. And Cybertpoor is actually 100% owned by the Hong Kong government. This project is about 10 years now. And this is an incubator for a lot of ICT startup companies. We get a whole bunch of this company that riding on this infrastructure and then try to do their own business and then serving different countries around the region. So Technology Center is one of our so-called center of excellence. We provide different kind of service as well as software hardware to support this startup. So our goal is really to lower the entry barrier for a lot of startup companies because we need the necessary service and support to make sure this startup company to thrive. And the journey is hard. We understand for a lot of startup companies. So that's why we have to be their so-called testing lab. So Cloud is one of the key initiatives that we kind of embarked on a couple of years ago. And so far, our community, we are growing about 300 to 400 startup. Some of them are university graduates. Some of them are seasoned professionals. So they leverage on this infrastructure, Hong Kong, as well as in the region to grow their business. Couple of companies has been profiled in different literature, for example, different magazine, et cetera, and also won a lot of awards recently. So this actually gives us some sign that maybe we can help them to be the next Tencent, next Baidu from Hong Kong. So what we can help them? Okay, so we actually gather a whole bunch of startup companies, and then about 24 or months ago, about two years ago, that we gather them and asking them, you know, if we provide cloud service, what kind of service or software they require. We could begin this journey by this focus group, and basically they are telling us that they are lack of, you know, IT or cloud expertise. And they don't know, they are still very much on the client server era, and a lot of database, they are still using the so-called traditional Intel kind of old architecture. And they are worried, you know, some of them are tasting, you know, some of the public cloud service, and they are worried about their uptime, the performance, et cetera. So this is Hong Kong after all. We don't have a lot of U.S. companies that set up their data center in Hong Kong two years ago. The support, and also the costing. And if they want to get the so-called image back from a lot of this cloud service provider, can they get it back? So these are all the questions they kind of are posting to us, and we are trying to help them on trying to resolve these kind of issues. So again, what kind of service? And then we are kind of thinking, you know, maybe we should, you know, offer some of the ERP, you know, CRM kind of application, you know, like a SaaS to serve those startup companies. But are we, you know, keep up with the industry? How about we sell out a cloud service that we can kind of compatible with the public cloud service offering, like infrastructure or service, or even some of the past services? So after all this kind of discussion, we kind of nailed down that, you know, maybe we should kind of position ourselves as the so-called the commodity cloud. So we have a hybrid model, you know, private, public, and then, you know, how we can leverage on this? We make sure that we have a very good tunnel, as well as a gateway to a lot of this cloud service provider. So we kind of realign ourselves that we have to be ensured that our cloud, if we build our own cloud, we have to ensure that we can replicate to a lot of this public cloud service provider, and then we can work with them together. As so-called the cloud service offering. So we try to look at our own infrastructure. Because our infrastructure, we have this network, we have this, you know, storage. So the first journey we try to, is to virtualize the storage. So we go to look around and then try to see what kind of technology are available out there. So, you know, obviously the, you know, open stack is come to our mind, and then we try to give a taste of this, and then we try to virtualize based on, you know, the Cinder technology. Because there are a lot of this requirement from this startup company, they want efficient I.O. Because a lot of those are offering like, you know, streaming services, or maybe some of the, some of them require rendering, you know, software rendering. So we have to make sure this, the storage element, we have to make sure it is very efficient. On the network side, we also have been using VLAN to segment our network for a while, and then we are looking into different hypervisor. Okay, so, you know, this, I think everyone here, you know, kind of agree with me that, you know, this open stack phenomenon, you know, has been, you know, this graph is kind of telling you that, you know, just, you know, three years, less than, you know, three and a half years about. So we can see the momentum is growing so fast, and it takes, you know, Linux of almost 10 years to kind of achieve. And we can see this, and then we want to be on board, you know. So we kind of doing this about a year. So we have gone through different iteration. We test out the Diablo S6. And then after we have received the Fawesome release, we think that maybe it's ready. So we gather 30 of the companies that we try to offer a pilot, you know, program for them. And this 30 of different startup companies, they have been, you know, heavy users of AWS or some other public cloud service. And they have different requirements. So we think that maybe we can offer this as a so-called test case. And so far, I think we are very successful to kind of conclude that this pilot has been very successful. And then it actually convinced us that maybe we should do it a bigger way. So, okay. So I can give you some of the successful case that have been using our cloud pilot. So you can tell this is one of the software rendering. We try to ensure the whole infrastructure is virtualized. And then we put this so-called render software on top. And then every so-called customer or a startup company, when they want to submit a job, they can submit different segments of the animation. And then we can take the load from the desktop. And this is very successful and we have managed to scale up a lot of these applications. And this is kind of offered this as a so-called software as a service to the user. Another type of, you know, kind of application is we call it IoT, you know, Internet of Things. So this application actually collects a lot of sound, you know, noise from all around Hong Kong. And then they have this, you know, this device and then sending all this data back to the cloud. This has been also very scalable because they have been using this longstop to collect different sound samples and then they will give alerts or even penalty if there is certain violate of the over certain noise level. Reader to IoT application is the building management. As you can understand, Hong Kong actually has a lot of high-rise building. And using or leveraging on this so-called Internet of Things, we can make sure the building are more intelligent. We can have less people and then we can try to collect a lot of data. For example, the temperature, as well as some of the, you know, for maintenance and repairing works can be conducted very efficiently. As you can understand, Hong Kong is also, you know, part of China. And China is actually getting their geographic information. So they have been launching a map, you know, GPS, and very soon they will, you know, fly up their satellite and then we are able to integrate all this information. And so we have a company who has been leverage on this phenomenon and then take on this as well. So in the very near future, you know, in Hong Kong, you know, you can have using some of the map offered by this Tinder to the companies. Okay, so social media is also very important because you can have a spike. You know, for example, a conference, you ask for a Q&A so you can get instantaneous feedback from the audience. So this is also a very classic, you know, take advantage of the cloud computing power. So because of all the time you have idle resources, you can save a lot of loading on the server. But if you have the spike of traffic, you know, the cloud can spin up and then can increase the capacity to take care of this loading from the audience. So this is another good example of how they can leverage on the cloud. And this company has been pretty successful raising funding recently. Okay, we also try to share our own success and then we try to write up different, you know, successful story by leveraging on OpenStack, you know, this deployment. Okay, so this Monday before the summit, we take advantage of this to launch our community cloud. So I can share with you some of the so-called design goal. We try to help the companies or staff companies to look in to ensure that they don't have so-called vendor login problem by using different cloud service provider. And the self-provision is also very important. And we also include that because the community cloud we are writing on Grizzly release, so very timely we can have the neutron, the plug-in. So we also can enable the so-called SDN features within the cloud environment. And we also leverage on a third-party software to offer so-called cloud admin, you know, to manage different public cloud, as well as our private cloud. So this also available to our startup company. The load balancing as well as the API, all kind of come in a box. So the companies can kind of take advantage of this. And imagine you are a startup company, you know, you can get it from the community cloud. And they don't need to, you know, run around or sending email to one answer, and then we can help them to leverage on this platform and then try to build up their application. So we save a lot of their so-called time and energy. Okay, so we just launched it and it offered to our so-called community. So, and it's a self-provision, and we have been offering SDN, as I mentioned, and different network firewall as a service can be offered as a package. And so far we, you know, in our early trial, we have been enjoying pretty stable environment so we can offer like 99.95 uptime. And also the data center, we are on ISO 27,000 certification. So this all is kind of coming in to offer to our startup company. So this is kind of a promise that we've been to our Hong Kong startup. So my, you know, I kind of, you know, kind of wrap up. And, you know, it's just a beginning of our cloud journey. And I'm sure that, you know, in a couple of months, we need to updo an upgrade and do a maintenance. So we are trying to improve our, you know, offering as well. So we are seriously looking into the past service as well and also the heat offering that we can have using the orchestration as well. So this is just a small step to a, I think this phenomenon will be continued. And I'm just, you know, need to thank for the community, you know, for the OpenStack, you know, all the contributor. And we enjoying all this with, you know, with the rest of the community. So yeah, so any questions, if I will? Okay. So if not, thank you.