 weekies where the content gets scattered and visible. So one of the things that we want to work on is to have who's active with what's happening very soon. That's true, you're right. And we have a mailing list with all the managers of the user groups. It's still, I mean, I know that it's not the most visible and most. So list.openstart.org has got the full list and it's called community. Yeah, I share some experience to how to kick off your local community at first. I think the best way is to bring back what you see and what you learn in this summit, including the slide. Then be the first topic you can share in your local community. As for the promotion channel, you can try to connect with local organizations like some kind of industrial association. For my experience in Taiwan, we connect with industry association. Then we just promote through their channels. Then you can get a response. And you can get at least a lot of people, what you say. And the third one, instead of inviting some figurehead from the state to your country, you also can try to invite some community leaders nearby. Maybe, for example, in Asia, we get speakers from Japan user group. And we try to invite some, maybe in the future, from China user group, then to share with each other. That's another. It's a very nice, actionable item for one of the presentations that you've seen today, one of the things that you've seen these days. And bring it back home. One of the first things that you can do is say, hey, I've been there. Some Monday, it's going to be Tuesday. Sure, right? The country is also talking about is there any such a meta user group, or only Japan such a? Are you asking in other countries, sort of overall overarching groups? Yeah, absolutely. I mean, it's one useful thing that I say about meetup.cointerest soon, it will be. In this case, I think it's very easy to start. Meaning, submitting papers or submitting proposals to speak at some other local events is one of the way of getting interesting suggestions so far already. Definitely, we need to work on this best practice to promote the cloud in developing countries. This is something that is not just developing countries. I know Italy would have places where the cloud. And I think even the US, there is a, I don't think it's really, it's very common. There's still a lot of people that don't understand the cloud, and that's normal. So it's our job to educate them. To use OpenStack because the digitalization is VMware, so they think it's simple. Not just Italy, I mean, as I said, there are lots of places also in the US that have the same problems, the same mis-comprehension, misunderstanding. Regarding the point of translation of the documentation, I think it's something that we have to do it regardless of, and also we talked about error messages and all of that stuff. If it's more accessible, more people will feel less intimidated to buy the technology. And well, even if they, yeah, sure, they need to understand English somehow, but one person of the team is, like we said, it should be something like an exercise for tools to do that. I saw that the whole UI thing is crowdsourced, everything is translated, a penon is key. I don't think we have a good excuse not to do it. It was a discussion, really recently, about isolating and putting error codes instead of. Maybe you can steal some code at the Mooges and it's fully translated, and there's all Python beneath it. It's an example of how it affects does it. I will look into it and definitely. Another question is on the case studies slash references. So when we sell this, I mean, we give this to the communities in Vietnam, we've got to show them where is a similar user. The case studies for users, they're on openstack.org slash user stories, there will be more. There's a schedule. Yes, and the cool thing is that we already have the CMS already supports translation. We just didn't have the resources until now to do it. As I say it, all sorts of nations to build all sorts of clouds based around this technology pull themselves from the proprietary solutions. I know this is very popular in China because it was conference there was that openstack will smash the monopoly of the Western cloud providers. And that was a government guy that came out and said that keep feeding the ideas back up to us and we'll just go. So we can compete in the Western IT giants through our source in the color computing area. I think if we in the next five years, if you want to do our business or do the virtualization nail business, you must employ over source, over stack. Or you will be, or you'll be naked out by the market dominated by when we are. So I think this is a very great opportunity. Do your stories and send me an email.