 So now we're on the LibreOffice stall, and who are you? Hi, I'm Gabriele Ponzo, and I'm in the membership of the Document Foundation, the Foundation who cares about the development, coordinating the development of LibreOffice. What do you have in your stall, what are these leaflets? Well, these materials are for marketing, and we have English ones, and Chinese, Taiwanese ones as well. And those are intended to present what is LibreOffice, and also how to migrate from common commercial suits, office suits to LibreOffice. And so you're promoting ODF as the lovely standardized format for office suites, how is that going? Has it been adopted in many countries and companies? Yes, especially in 2014, there is the UK government that they have chosen. ODF as the official standard format, and that means a lot because it opens a lot of tours, let's say this way, because many other governments are following them with such a decision, so they're moving to ODF as well. Obviously, they couldn't say we, let's say LibreOffice is our official suit because this is not politically correct, but they can obviously decide on the format, and the rest is something that will come. And where can we find out more information to take part in using or converting to open document? Oh, well, it's a good question. I mean, the first thing is to understand the importance of the freedom and the independence, sorry, of the format, and knowing that there is the OSIS, which is who cares about the ODF standard, and that means that this is not the LibreOffice format as well as open office or whatever. This is really an open format, and this is really something that is not owned by anyone. This is the opposite of, for example, Microsoft Office, who they do the software and also the format. So this is the first important thing to be understood. Starting from that point, you can say, you can show, for example, the real openness of the format, meaning that you can just unzip the file, whatever file, and show the content, which is just plain text, XML. And that means that, let's say, within one century or the next centuries, you may be still able to open and read the documents, even if, let's say, LibreOffice or whatever software is not able to do that, because it's just plain text, XML. And that means also that what I used to do when I did trainings is to show the text file, the XML file, and show that a human can read it without any software installed. That's the purpose. Thank you very much, and thank you for coming to KDE Academy. Thank you, thank you to your host house, and it's really a good event. Thank you. Have a nice day.