 I'm going to bring up stage Mario. I think without Mario, we might not be holding this event today because of all his efforts and a strong supporter of all these FOSC Asia projects. Mario is the CEO of OpenTech. He's a technologist with 15 years of experience in leading international development teams in Europe, Asia, and India. Mario helped to get FOSC Asia started and works with the community of Susie AI and open hardware solutions, including Pocket Science Lab that you saw earlier. So Mario also steers the development of the Eventier Project. Mario, a lot of things on your plate. Most of us have interacted with Mario in some form or other, but few of us know that he's also very fascinated by drums, global music, and an interest in architecture. So Mario, please take over. OK, thank you very much. Yeah, so that was really nice to have this look into the back and to the past of what happened before. And I want to look a little bit forward as well. So I want to see what's the state of OpenTech and specifically here with what we do in the FOSC Asia community. So what we saw already in the talk of Humphuk, we are doing all of this. OpenTech, open source free software. We are working on open hardware. We share what we have openly. We have a lot of data projects also, like Suzie AI or LockLock. And of course, we try to document it and share all the knowledge that we gained openly. So we're doing all this, and I'm very proud of that. So we're making FOSC and OpenTech become true. We have run hundreds of events. And yeah, we already saw some screenshots here of the FOSC Asia Summit, the GNOME Asia Summit that we did as the first large event in 2009. But we are doing more. So I want to talk about what we will do from here on. More regional events connecting with more developers locally. Then we have built a very active developer community online. We are one of the top ranked projects among the top 100 organizations on GitHub, currently number 14. And yeah, we have more than 3,000 people. Of course, sometimes people are busy. But we see that people are coming back, even when they stopped their contribution after some time, because everyone can just register for an online channel. Important is that you see the contributions So on average, there's a much pull request around every 15 minutes on a FOSC Asia project. And you can check that out on GitHub. We also have a lot of chat channels, for example, on Gitter. And yeah, some channels have more than 2,000 members. It is sometimes challenging. So we're trying to break this up so it will not be overwhelmed by the communication. But a lot is going on. But what we have to do, numbers alone don't count. So in the next years, this year, we want to also focus more on quality software development. So we have a lot of projects. Not all the projects are ready for end consumers. They run on my machine, on my hardware. And it's actually not easy to make software work really for everyone. There are a lot of different configurations. App developers know that a lot of different mobile phones. Even like sometimes the same mobile phone, but with different versions, things are challenging. But we will work on this, and we will focus more on quality. Then we have built open hardware. So now we have it. We have the Pocket Science Lab. There will be talks here at the event. There will be a lot of showcases on Saturday. We have the Open Hardware Day with a morning breakfast. So that would be nice. But here, we are sharing the knowledge how we actually produce it. So we have gained this knowledge now. We have worked together in Germany with the Fraunhofer Institute. We are working with companies in China. We tell he flew over to Shenzhen. And we've learned a lot in this process. So we can do more. So what we will do is we create and produce more open hardware. For example, we have started the project, the NeuroLab Hardware Project. A few years ago, we had our friend Willi here from the Brandrino Project. They inspired us to also work in the Neuro area. And we will work very hard to make low-priced NeuroLab hardware that can help you to scan brain waves with EEG. We will make that happen. We're working on it. We already have a few prototypes here. They should be arriving, I think, tonight. So that's what we have done. And we have worked on best practices. Some people, like some students, maybe, they participated with us in GSOC projects. I don't know, years ago. Do we have any student here who worked with us in GSOC? OK, yeah. I see a few here and there. So if you have worked with First Asia, for example, in Coteed or Google some of code programs, you will see that a lot has changed over the year. And we have defined much more of our best practices. And it's much easier, because in the old times here to us, how I have to do this and so on. A lot of free software and open source community, they have their own best practices. And it's not always the same. And we have defined them. There's a very extensive blog article that was written together with Niranjan Rajendran. And he helped us a lot to define that. So we have best practices. We share them with other communities. And we want to do more here as well, not just sharing the best practices, but actually fostering more long-term partnerships by sharing resources as well. So not just best practices. We also need to share resources. So First Asia gets resources, not just coding programs. Now we also earn income more and more. For example, through the Pocket Science Lab sales, through other projects as well. And we want to find more ways to also include more developers. And we have incubated the project. So as Hon Phuk mentioned, we had a lot of talks after last year, because we said we want to make a big incubator and so on. So we met a lot of VCs, actually Sebastian Dekas. He helped us a lot also in this process. And the feedback was, OK, you have big plans. You want to do big things. How about you do in the next year one project, make this one project successful, and go to the market and sell it. Also the big difference to, like let's say, a First Asia incubator, we are not building the multi-billion dollar business that dominates the world. Our goal is to make sustainable, fast software and hardware happen. So we want to grow the ecosystem, and we want to have a sustainable income model. So that is different, and we achieve this now already with one project and the Pocket Science Lab. And we will do more. Make more projects ready for end users and make them ready to incubate. So for example, of course, the Susie AI project, some people said, oh, here on the web app, not so much is going on. Where are you? What's going on? It's a huge project to build an open source, free software, personal assistant. It's a big task, and in the last six months, we mainly focused on making the hardware work. So the goal is that people can take the hardware and walk around, and even that a lot of functionalities we want that they work offline. So big challenge, but we've achieved a lot. And here at the event, Michael and the developers will share their progress in the last few months. So another point. We have run coding programs. We have already mentioned this with thousands of developers, actually. We found models that scale. It's very difficult to scale. You can always communicate face to face, but how do you scale? Best practice and so on is a way. But what we will do is we also have to go out and meet people. Because just because you reach 1,000 people on a global scale is still just very few people. So the question is, how can we scale? And we can't scale without having face to face meetings. So this is the great way. And we have a lot of universities, for example, that want to host us. We were here in BVRIT in Heiderbad. And they had wonderful food. It was a nice event. It was Jougart Fest. This idea of making something work. And we transferred this idea to technology. So the Jougart Fest hacked the Indian way. And it was a very nice event. And in the evening, there was also a kind of ad hoc social gathering. And when we were sitting down, there was very nice food of the university. And then one of the teachers started to sing a song in Sanskrit. And I was so, so impressed. I didn't know that people still use. Guru Swami, are you here already? Are you here? Guru Swami. I think you will arrive later tonight. And I hope we can get him to sing at the social event, a song in Sanskrit. I never had heard it before. So very nice. So to sum it up, open tech is here. It solves people's problems. It is growing. And we are doing it. So we've achieved that. So let's continue to make Fawcett Asia an open tech around the world of reality. Thank you. Good. So Mario, that's really forward-looking. I think many things happening. And you've done well to bring it this far.