 Let me just get the recording going here. Oh, thank you. Someone got that recorded. I think we're good. Excellent. Well, thanks again, everyone, for your patience. My name's Holly Ross. I'm the executive director of the association. And just glad to have you on this supporter call. We do these quarterly just to make sure you guys know what's happening over at the association, what's coming up, and give you a chance to ask questions and have your say as well. So let's get started with our agenda for the day. So just a little housekeeping here. If you are listening from the computer or you are attempting to, but you can't hear me yet, hopefully these words are helpful. Instructions for how to listen from the computer. Folks do come on the line muted. That just helps us keep the background noise down. But you do want to be able to hear from you. So again, use that question. It may answer a window in your control panel. And feel free to throw things in there. Or if you see the chat, chat's fine too. And I'll be keeping an eye out there. So any questions you have that come up throughout the call, we definitely want to answer them. So feel free to throw them in there. And then also feel free to tweet anything you hear that's interesting. Our handle is at Drupalosos. And we're happy to hear what you have to say on Twitter. And also answer any questions you have that way as well. So there you go. So that's our housekeeping. Just a reminder about some of our upcoming events. We just closed down Drupalcon Barcelona. And we're still recovering from our ham hangovers. But we're going to take it in a completely different direction and go to Drupalcon Asia next in February. Middle of February we'll be there in Mumbai, India. And we're excited to get out there. And hope that you guys can send someone to join us there as well. The community across Asia, but especially in India, is so excited to host this event. It's a really big community. So it's definitely a really interesting part of the Drupal experience. And we're excited to get out there and help them celebrate their Drupal culture as well. And then after Drupalcon Asia, we'll be headed to Drupalcon New Orleans. This is our next North American con. So we headed down there in the spring. And then following New Orleans, we'll be in Drupalcon Dublin for our European event at the end of September. So we're taking trivia back home, which we're really excited about. So those are our next three cons. But also just a reminder, since so many of you have run Drupal businesses and get so engaged in Drupal training and learning, if you have that kind of component to your work, we definitely encourage you to get engaged with Drupal Global Training Days. That is a program that over a course of 24 hours, once a quarter, folks around the entire world host training events to bring new developers into Drupal. And so that's something that you have done before. Thanks for doing that. You know, of so many people who've gotten their start in Drupal from these events. And it's a really great program. If you haven't done it before, it's really easy to get engaged. Just look for Global Training Days on Drupal.org. It'll pull up the page. And you can learn more about it in our amazing community person, Liz, here will help you get everything in order that you need to, in order to host one. So always lots of stuff going on, but those are the next big things. And our agenda today, so we're going to share some news from the association. We will talk about some improvements on Drupal.org. And then some ways to outreach into the community in marketing programs and Drupal jobs. And then we have some exciting stuff to talk about when it comes to Drupal itself, which we're really excited about. So that's our agenda for today. If you have questions about something you don't see on this agenda, again, feel free to pop in with questions. We can always take off topic discussions there as well and have those conversations. So that's the agenda. All right, so before we hop into that content, I just want to take a moment again, and thank everyone who is on the call for your support as a partner in the association. We've been able to do so many amazing things with the community for the project over the last year, two years in particular. And that's really because these partner programs have grown so much. And the support that you're providing means that we are able to host an engineering team that can do things like improve test spots and make sure that our D8 core maintainers are able to actually put a product out. So it's that kind of work that's funded by you. And I just want to thank you guys for doing that. And hopefully what you hear here today is a good indication of what all that support is making happen. So let's start with some news. And Rachel, you want to walk things through and just give me the magic? I guess you can't wink at me since you're working from home. But let me know if you want me to do slides. That's fine. So yeah, we just had a Drupalcon in Barcelona last month. And it was very successful. We ended up with just over 2,000 attendees, which beat our expectations. It's a little bit fewer than Amsterdam. But with Amsterdam, we definitely saw a huge spike in local attendees that could drive into the community. So we were really happy with the turnout for Drupalcon Barcelona. Some of the key highlights was obviously Dries's announcement on Tuesday morning about a release candidate date. And we tried some new programming at this con. And one of the things that we tried readjusting the format of was what used to be the community summit, we turned into a community kickoff. And then had that programming continue throughout the week in one of the bathrooms. And so we had 44 people attend the community kickoff, which was a great start. And Donna Benjamin on our board kind of led the charge with that, as well as Holly and Adam Hill. And so that was really great to see them just kind of run with that and gather all those community leaders together in a space together. We also had really great feedback about our keynotes. Obviously, Dries is always an extremely popular keynote speaker. But we got great feedback about Natalie Nahai. And we have really great feedback about the community keynotes, particularly how the topics really resonated with people. And also about how Mike and David did a really great job of speaking in front of such a large audience. Another thing that was really encouraging were the sprints. We had a really great turnout for the extended sprints. And on Friday sprints, we had over 550 sprinters, which was fabulous. So even though we had fewer overall attendees in Amsterdam, I believe we had more sprinters. That's a great sign of help of the community. Go ahead, Holly. Yeah, let me just add to that. If you missed any of those keynotes that you weren't able to be in Barcelona, all of the sessions are up on the Association YouTube channel. And I'd say all the keynotes in particular are definitely worth watching. Yeah, absolutely. I think there's a lot of really great programming that was offered at the con. And so yeah, if you go to that YouTube channel, you can see all the sessions there for free. Thanks, Rachel. I had fun with the mute button there. But I'm back. So yeah, if you folks have questions about the con, definitely feel free to keep putting them in the QA section. We'll roll back to those if you have any that you want to pop in there. But yeah, it's just a great event. And Rachel, you and your team did a great job. So thanks for making that happen. And what's not in the slides, but I'll just say, half the team got taken out by food poisoning at some point during Drift Club in Barcelona. But they did such a great job that you never would have known. Things just kept sailing off. So good job, you guys. I think Holly. All right, one other program that we have been running with throughout 2015 is the Drupal 8 Accelerate program. And the idea behind the program is to raise $250,000 and use that money to help accelerate the release of Drupal 8. And at Drupal Con Barcelona, in fact, just before Dries went on stage, we finished raising that $250,000. And I know several of you on the call here today helped make that happen. So thank you for kicking in as individuals and also as companies that helped see us through to this goal. I don't think this is anything that the Drupal community has undertaken before. So it was definitely an experiment. We weren't sure how it was going to pan out. But it was really exciting to see us come together to raise all the money, which we did from over $500 donors. So that $250,000 came in in some really big figure chunks, but also in $5 and $10 chunks from all around the community, which I think is really a great representation of who we are. And with that $250,000 so far, we've made 60 grants. It's about $210,000 that's been paid out so far. And what's really exciting to me is if you look at the reduction in critical issues over time, you can see where we had our first Accelerate Sprint, just the end of 2014. That was the first sprint funded by the association. And you can just watch the criticals tumble from there on out. So that's pretty cool. And the core maintainers who have managed that grant program deciding where the money goes, they've all been very positive about the effect that the money has had on their ability to get D8 out the door. We're really thrilled about that. And they have a little funding left to help clean up other criticals that might get raised during the release candidate stage and into an 8.x release. So I just think it's been a really overwhelming success. We're really excited to see what it has done. And our next steps here, we'll just talk more about what the role of funding development is for the project as a whole, which is a good, interesting topic with lots and lots of viewpoints to think about. And speaking of which, Kathy Faze had a session on that topic in Barcelona if that's something that interests you, the recording is also up for that. So see what happens there. But big win. Another big piece of news for us coming out of Drupalcon in Barcelona. We are about to launch our first large-scale membership drive. So we've definitely discovered at the association the last couple of years we've done subserving of the community and realized that there is a significant portion of the community that just doesn't even really know too much about what the association does or how we help support the community. And so we definitely want to be working on that for sure. Want to overcome that hurdle and really grow awareness about the association and help build that base of general membership support for us. So we'll be launching on the 13th a membership drive that will run through across Drupal.org. So you will see something that looks a little bit like this on Drupal.org for about the six weeks or so that this campaign runs. So your mileage may vary. This is just a mock-up. And we're putting finishing touches on. So you will see a slightly different implementation. But this will just give you an idea. The association's never really been that integrated into Drupal.org. So we're excited to see what kind of awareness this raises and what it says for our membership numbers. When you click through, you'll land on ADO to do that membership. And we have to process that membership. And we've been working with lots of awesome community members to get great quotes from them and testimonials to share their Drupal association story, which has been really fun to hear those stories. And if you have one that you want to share, I certainly do encourage you to let me know. I'd love to collect that story and make sure that we can feature you and highlight you during this membership drive as well. So it looks like that. Like I said, it'll launch on October 13. It should run through to December. And we are looking to go from about our current number, about 3,000 members. We're looking to add another 1,000 members, essentially, I think, to that list. So lots of work to do. And we're excited to see that get done. So it's a little bit of news from the association and things that we've been working on. But we also want to share what's happening on Drupal.org. So Josh, you want to tell us what's going on there? You bet. We've had some exciting things in the last quarter. A couple of big things that the team worked on were search improvements. I don't know how often you actually use search on Drupal.org. We managed to train users over the years to mostly use Google. But if you use search on Drupal.org right now, you are going to get much, much better results. We did a whole bunch of tuning to the solar engine and did some elevations that make exact title matches show up a little bit better. So now if you go in there and you plug in a module name or a theme name or an organization name, you can be almost assured it's going to hit in the top page of results. We have a few more changes that are coming in that space over the next month or two, but we're all very excited about how much we were able to improve that in a relatively short period of time. Another big focus for this last quarter has been content strategy. Many of you know that we did a huge content strategy project over the last year, where we've outlined everything that Drupal.org is going to become from all the different content types and how we need them to address the use cases that our users have. And the one that we've been focused on for the last quarter with the documentation working group has been documentation improvements, and specifically the features around that community contributed documentation on Drupal.org. We've got some exciting changes coming in that space, including notifications associated with documentation so that people can see whenever documentation is changing so they can keep up to date on it a little bit better. And also some improvements about how we communicate about documentation pages themselves. So basically providing a chat functionality or a comment functionality on documentation that works a little bit similar to what Wikipedia does with their talk tabs. We think this is going to be a huge improvement. Can't wait to get it launched, and that's coming very, very soon. Holly, go ahead and hit the next slide. The other big thing that we were focused on, and this probably was the lion's share of our time, was removing blockers to Drupal 8. Holly mentioned earlier the Drupal CI improvements, and for those of you who aren't familiar with it, Drupal CI is our continuous integration and testing platform. Every single time a patch is committed to core, we run a series of tests. Or I should say every time a patch is uploaded to an issue in the core issue queue, we run tests. And basically what those tests do is they give the core maintainers a sense of whether or not that code is safe to commit into the main branch, and actually become a part of Drupal 8 core. By getting those tests to perform a lot faster, and by getting them more accurate, and by doing some tweaks that were influenced by what the core maintainers needed, we were able to directly impact the speed and velocity of the project getting out. This was a really important way for us to spend our time, but I think it's also given us a lot of key insights into what is really important for building open source code that is as vast and complex as Drupal. The other big item that we worked on was localize.drupal.org that was upgraded during Q3. We now have the integration with Drupal 8 that was a little bit of a blocker coming up to the release candidate. That's now working the way we needed to work. You can now install several different languages directly from the install process of Drupal 8, which was one of the key things that we wanted to be able to accomplish in Drupal 8. And so that was a big part of the work for this quarter. There's still a little bit left to do there, but we're excited, totally on track for having full localization integration for Drupal 8 and being the performance tool for delivering it to a global audience that needs to be. Go ahead, Holly. So what you're seeing here was the big news that we announced at Drupal Con. We were able to squeeze in a bit of work on our marketplace and make a key change that has been talked about since, frankly, since well before Driz's Amsterdam keynote about community contribution and tending the community commons. What we've done here is we've taken the concept of issue credits, which we've been tracking now for, we're going on about six, seven months of fully tracking issue credits. And what we do with issue credits is every time a contributor does something in the issue queue, they have an opportunity to say that that act of reviewing something or providing a design mockup or contributing code was made possible by an employer, so the organization that employed them, or by a customer, which might be the organization that paid them to do the change. And what this allows us to see is how organizations have been involved in the process of solving issues on Drupal.org. Credits are then awarded by the maintainer of the issue queue. So if the project is core, then it's gonna be core maintainers awarding those credits, very similar to commit credits. If it's a module that's maintained as a contrib module, then that contrib module maintainer has that same ability. When they close an issue, and when the issue is marked as closed fixed, that closed fixed accomplishment triggers the issue credit being associated with the individual who was involved and also with the organizations that they attributed. So this has been great. We show the marketplace ordered by issue credits issued in the last 90 days. And the reason why we do that is we wanna give people an opportunity to move up the list. It's not a permanent all time list where you're just seeing your total issue credits all times. It's what have you done in the last 90 days to really move Drupal forward. And right now that's very much skewed towards Drupal core, but we expect as Drupal 8 comes out and everybody starts porting their modules to Drupal 8 or their themes to Drupal 8. We expect that to change a little bit and it's gonna shift a little bit towards contrib and we're gonna be able to see how those organizations are contributing in that space. The secondary sort on this page is an attempt to highlight those of you who are supporting partners, which should be all of you on this call. Because we really wanna highlight the fact that you are contributing to Drupal.org to make it better. You're providing us the funding that allows us to do all this great work. And so, Hallie, next slide please. I just wanna say thank you, because I think it's your generous support that is making my entire team possible and allowing us to speed up the processes of community contribution and to do the things that we need to do from a strategic standpoint on Drupal.org to be viable as a long-term open source project. If you wanna see what's coming next, please go to drupal.org slash roadmap. We have our prioritized list of features that we're planning on working on next and feel free to have your developers jump in and give a hand. And also comment on the things that you feel should be higher on the list, weigh in with your feedback, because that's how we know the things that are resonating best with the community. So, thank you very much, appreciate the support. Thanks, Josh. Yeah, lots of exciting changes there. So, if you have questions about the issue credits and the marketplace ordering, definitely feel free to let us know, but we're excited to people show that contribution in marketplace and bring some more order to the listing of companies there based on what the community values. So, all right, we're gonna talk a little bit about some of the opportunities for outreach on drupal.org and in our Drupal universe. So, Carrie, if you are still alive and not suffering from your cold, I'm great to have you. I am alive, so thanks, Holly. So, to start, I just wanted to give a quick refresh of our new digital ad products that we launched throughout the year on drupal.org. In addition to traditional display banners, we do offer dedicated email campaigns, a homepage sponsorship opportunity. We launched the new Try Drupal program back in April, which allows users to try a free demo of Drupal and it's supported by our premium hosting partners. We have marketplace listings for hosting and supporting technologies, as well as Drupal.org audience retargeting, which allows advertisers to reach the drupal.org audience programmatically while they visit other websites. And then, moving on to some new opportunities that we're working on more recently, we've developed these new Community Connect programs designed with hosting and supporting technology companies in mind, really to help bring new companies further into the fold of the community. The first one we're calling Partner Connect, which was designed for third party software companies that are looking to integrate with the drupal community. And really a well-developed and maintained module is fundamental to doing so. So these companies may not have a drupal module yet, so we can provide matchmaking services and help notify shops that specialize in third party integrations when new RFPs become available. That's really the first step. Companies who have new modules or might have existing modules still want to help educating the community about their technology or any upgrades. So the program does offer visibility to the community via display banners, on drupal.org, through marketplace listings, and through more promoted educational videos. And just a quick side note, if you are a shop that specializes in third party integrations and you do wanna participate in the program, please see your account rep about how to go about doing that. The next new connect program we're calling Drupal Camp Connect, which was created for partners who wanna support local camps, but really need help identifying and managing the 40 plus individual camps that are happening worldwide. The association will help facilitate sponsorships with camps and act as the main point of contact for sale and billing. We're essentially trying to help camps gain reach into new customers, so we're not really involved in the event itself, other than helping with the sale. Camps can choose to opt in, and most camps that we talked to in Q4 were really, really excited about this opportunity and really looking for the extra support. So knowing that we do have a beta program running now to help camps that are happening in Q4. Again, if you're interested in testing that out with us, you can see your account rep for more details. And lastly, some quick Drupal jobs updates. It's been a little over a year since we launched the site back in August 2014, and since then we've seen a lot of really great organic growth. We average about 16,000 visits a month. We have over 1,500 job seeker profiles, and we've been getting a lot of really good feedback from employers who are using the site. We've had over 2,600 job postings since the launch. You may or may not already be aware of some of the feature improvements that we launched this year, including job email notifications that allow seekers to set up notifications based on their search preferences, as well as a featured company profile for subscription customers to get some extra visibility. The association is continuing to focus on some new feature improvements moving into 2016. The first of many new updates aims to improve job description content, so we've been surveying job seekers to try and identify what really motivates them to apply for a job, and we're working those findings into help text that an employer can use while they're creating a job description on the site. So stay tuned for a lot more updates there, and thank you again. We really appreciate your support. Thanks, Gary. Drupal jobs. All right. Oh, I forgot about this part. Good, so I think, Phil, if you wanna talk about some of our European events, I've got you unmuted. So it's exciting when we remember. There's so much stuff. That's the good news, right? You are a little faint, but I think if you speak up, you'll be fine. Yeah, sorry, I'm coming down with the Drupal Association cold. So yeah, we did an event in Cologne, Germany. That was Domexco. Mixed success, mixed results, I think. We're still working through kind of a post-mortem on that and ways that we can improve for future events. And then next up, Festival of Marketing. Much different events. Very marketing focused, a lot of marketing attendees. And we're still kind of hammering out the details on that, working with e-consultancy, I believe, that's putting that on and an agency that will be putting the booth together for us there. So that's kind of the update on that. One done and one to come. Thanks, Phil. Yeah, so this part is these European events have been an experiment this year to figure out if we can help the community promote Drupal, more generally, so that they can go to the events and represent Drupal and not just represent their own company and see what that does for the project. The Domexco event was the first one again in September, November will be in London for Festival of Marketing. And that booth is definitely looking like it's gonna be a ton of fun. Obviously we have a Lego theme. And I think the booth is gonna look really fantastic plus the fact that we'll have lots of fun Legos to play with while we're there as well. And if you are interested in being in Festival of Marketing and one of the few sponsors that gets to join us there because it is a limited number, I think we have just one or two spots left and Johanna is the person that you can talk to about those. And I think it, Phil, let me... Sorry, I didn't see these slides yesterday, Phil, so I apologize. But let me just let you finish up with some of the other marketing related news. Yeah, so the Drupal newsletter is still going strong. Up to, I think it's actually up to about 35,000 subscribers right now, so that's good news, we're continuing to grow. We've seen kind of a flattening out on open rates and so Bradley's doing some investigation into what we can do to get those open rates to continue to grow or at least improve. Incrementally, but yeah, the newsletter seems to be pretty well received. And even though I say the open rates are low, they're good for any email campaigns. So, but we just would like to see them be a little bit stronger. Gotcha, great. And that's it, I think. I'm gonna go ahead and walk us through our last bit of news here. Thanks, Phil, which is a Drupal 8 release candidate. So if you missed it, a brief announcement in Barcelona that the intent is to release a candidate, to release a release candidate, super redundant, to get a release candidate out the door. Let's do it that way. Today, October 7th, it is October 7th, right? Get confused. So we're preparing for that and all systems look good so far, so we'll see what happens. We should be very close right in this pocket. So the association is definitely helping manage the communications around that process. And I just wanted to share that with you and thank Brad and Phil who helped put this stack together. We talked about this a little bit in Barcelona, but as a support partners, I think you guys have lots of great ways to key in here so I wanna make sure that you guys saw this content. So with our release candidate almost here, we have lots that we want to accomplish when the release comes out. Obviously we want to celebrate the part where we got to a release candidate. That's very big, right? It's not a full release, but this is a huge step for us. And we have to also get the community ready for the release itself. So this release candidate window, we have a few things that we want to accomplish and big ideas that we want everyone to key in on. So these are the key messages that we're gonna be communicating throughout this release candidate phase. So first, it's here and you can build with it. We need you to build with it in fact. And when you do, it's gonna be a better Drupal than ever. It's gonna help you make better things and that people are already doing great things with it. And we do have sites on Drupal 8 now. If you work with the release candidate, you're gonna be in joining good company. And that the momentum's only gonna grow from here that even more people are planning to use Drupal 8. So we're asking you to try it out and tell other people about it. So these are our key messages in this release candidate phase. And we are thinking about four kinds of content as the avenue for getting these messages out the door. So we're using the ARC format for communication. So awareness building, research and education, comparison and validation and choice. This is how people make decisions. First, we make them aware, help them understand what the product is, compare it to other tools out there and get them then into the choice phase. So you can see how our big ideas line up with the kinds of content that we are creating here. This was our roadmap internally. So we're gonna be using different kinds of initiatives based on each kind of content and the messages that go around it. So we're gonna be really focused on awareness and choice. So the it's here idea, we'll be getting that out by helping to put a news article up on Drupal.org, also on ADO, updates across all the Drupal social channels out in our email newsletters. And we're doing some specific targeted emails as well. That general message, the release candidates here, you know, go check it out. So we'll also be focused on the choice message, the try it out and tell other people about it. And so we'll have lots of download D8 calls to action in all those channels, but also all over Drupal.org and other places as well. So that's where the association is going to focus. Those are the places where we have the most direct access and we have resources to put the messaging into play. But as always, Drupal is a community project and so we need to get the community and this is where you come in involved to help us share those ideas and others, right? So in particular from the community, we are looking to curate and then highlight contributions of all of these kinds. We are looking for blog posts and tutorials and if you can do demo gifs, right? Like, oh, hey, check it out. Here's the new, here's the new WYSIWYG editor and look what I can do with inline editing, right? Or videos, here's how the new content, sorry, configuration management system works, right? Any kinds of case studies from clients that you're working with that are already using Drupal 8 webinars that you're doing, we wanna collect all those and make sure that we're highlighting them in all the appropriate places and channels that we have. So in particular, we want that content, all of those pieces of content that you might be creating to focus on the research and education and comparison and validation areas. So again, what that looks like is, here in our art format, we're looking for stuff that helps us with the big ideas about why Drupal is better than ever, things that show us that people are working with it right now, that even more people are planning to engage with it and how it will help users create a better web experience for their organization, right? So content that relates to this research and education and comparison and validation area, this is stuff that we really need the community's help to get out into the world. So we wanna work together around it. So how do we plan to do it? Couple of things, we know you've already got great content out there. And if you can use the hashtag Drupal8RC1 in any social channel, we'll be collecting that content up and helping to highlight it through our networks again. And also the made with D8 hashtag. So if you have projects that have been built on D8, I would definitely like to see those. Again, we'll be scanning social media to find content with that hashtag that we can highlight in all of our channels. And in fact, if you take it a step further with your case studies, we've actually been collecting those on Drupal.org itself. So you can share some case study details there, that'd be very helpful. And again, any Drupal.org content, so you might share on social media, but you can also tag Drupal.org content with Drupal8RC1, if you're creating content on the site there, that'll help us pull that in as well. If you end up with questions or any media, we certainly want you to talk to the media, but also know that there will be an announcement on the news section of Drupal.org. So just at the homepage, there's a news area. That's where the main announcement will be. So please feel free to direct the media to that main announcement for details as well. And we are definitely looking for translations of material. So all of the content that we put out, including that news announcement, all the content that we put out on Drupal.org is licensed with a Creative Commons license. So feel free to grab it. And if you are working in a multilingual environment and can translate that information, we would love to have that translation so that we can share the message of Drupal across the entire globe, another place to help. And then as we move into the full release, we know that one of the things the communities definitely want to do is have a big worldwide party. So if you're thinking about hosting a launch party just for your office, for your community, for your city, for your country, definitely share that with us. We want to collect those launch party stories, highlight them on the website, and make sure that your community knows about the party that you're throwing so we can help spread the word about that. So there's a URL you can go to to help spread the word as well. And of course, testing RC1, right? And that comes out, the best thing that we can all do is start using RC1 and finding issues so that we can make sure that when we get to the full release, it is in the best shape that it can be. So that's a summary of what we are up to and how we hope that you can help us get involved. But hopefully we'll see that in the next day or two, or moments even, in the next moment or two. So that's all the updates from us. I haven't seen any questions. Oh, Anja, it looks like, Anja, you have a question. So I'm gonna go ahead and unmute you just to make sure because I don't see it in the questions area. Ah, you wanna offer translation services, I see, gotcha. Excellent, Anja, I will put you in contact with the right person after the webinar so that we can get you guys all connected. So thanks for making that offer, excellent. So let's see, where was I? Oh, so those are all the updates. That's all the news that's fit to print, as they used to say when we printed news. But we definitely don't want the conversation to end. Feel free to let us know what you need. You can email anyone that you work with here at the association. Feel free to reach out to me, Holly, as well. But also just know you can keep in, keep updated with the association on our blog. We've got a newsletter that goes out twice a month. We also have our board meetings, which are actually on the third Wednesday, and I always forget to update that slide, so I apologize. But they are the third Wednesday of each month at noon Pacific, follows on Twitter at DrupalSos. And if you do have questions about any of the advertising or outreach opportunities we talked about today, or if you have questions about your current programs, definitely feel free to reach out to your account managers, Jenner, Johanna, and Mark. They're all awesome people. And just again, thank you so much for all your support and for being here on this call today to learn even more. So look forward to talking to you the next time.