 Hi everyone, my name is Ben Nuttall, I'm Raspberry Pi's community manager, I write for opensource.com, I'm based in Cambridge in the UK and that's me on Twitter. We've recently sold over 10 million Raspberry Pi's since launching our first product in 2012. Okay, if I go over the time it's your fault for clapping. Many people think of Raspberry Pi as a hardware company but in fact we're an educational charity. In 2006 the Raspberry Pi Foundation was founded with a humble goal to get more people studying computer science at Cambridge University. The proposed solution which was a small and cheap Linux computer went down quite well with a large number of people on the internet and since 2012 educators, hobbyists and industrial users have been making the most of our range of devices and importantly passively funding our educational programs. All profits made by our trading subsidiary go to the foundation. Our mission is putting the power of digital making into the hands of people all over the world. We do this by providing low cost high performance computers that people use to learn, solve problems and have fun. We provide outreach and education to help more people access computing and digital making. We develop free resources to help people learn about computing and how to make things with computers and we train educators who can guide other people to learn. These are the current models of Raspberry Pi. The Pi 3 is our headline product. It's a 64 bit CPU with a gig of RAM which is not just a good computer for $35. It's a good computer full stop period. The Pi 0 shook the world last year when we released it for just $5 and we even stuck a free one on the front of our print magazine, the MagPi. If you use the Pi in 2012 it might have felt a bit sluggish and looked a little ugly. Today it runs fast and looks quite sexy. We recently released the new Raspian, our Debian based distribution with a new desktop environment called Pixel which looks like this. We provide a set of free learning resources on our website. There's plenty of fun activities of things you can do with a Pi. They're free in every sense of the word and you can contribute on GitHub. Pi Academy is our teacher training program. We run in the UK and the US. Educators apply for a place. They're selected. They do a two day course and become Raspberry Pi certified educators becoming part of a global community. Raspberry Jam is a community event set up around learning and sharing with the Pi. They're family friendly meetups and anyone's allowed to start their own. Have a look at our map on the website and if there isn't one near you get in touch with me and I'll help you get one started. Another of our programs that we run is called CodeClub. It's a network of after school coding clubs for kids aged 9 to 11. Anyone can set up a code club and we provide training, support and resources. Check out the CodeClub World website for more info. Thank you.