 Ready to go? Okay, welcome everybody. The good news is our room this year isn't flooded. You were here last year, you remember, we got flooded in the middle of the session, so we've allowed to evacuate and go to another room. The bad news, as you can see, is we have a smaller room, so it's going to be pretty tight. So hang on to your seats. Make sure you're running the compression algorithm every time. Hopefully we can accommodate most of you. So, the MySQL Debron began... The first time we had MySQL talks at custom was in 2002. And then the first actual Debron, I'm getting the day strike, was 2009. 2012, it became MySQL and friends. And last year, it became MySQL MariaDB in friends. My colleague, Fred, has been running it for many years now, and he has an intro to give you. I'm sure many of you have been asking about the number 77, so we'll all be able to be able to. Yes. So before the first talk, so thank you again. So we are managing the room together, so if you have a question for, let's say, facilities or whatever, just come to us. And so what's this number? Just keep in mind the number, right? So first I want to say thank you. Thank you to all of you, and a good first time, of course, because this is something people are forgetting, I've seen. Usually at first time, you don't say good morning or good day. You always say good first time to everybody. So if you say somebody outside, tell them good first time from MySQL, from MariaDB, from whichever place you like, but tell them good first time. So I want to thank you to be here, but I want to thank the committee who selected the talks. I didn't put all the names. You can find them on the, on our website, but thank you very much already. Thank you to all the submitters that submitted talks for the room, because without speakers, we don't have room. So thank you to all speakers, so that accepted to talk today. And of course, thank you to you coming here and make it a success for their room, right? So remember that number. And it's more than 1,700 submissions for full event, right? So we have 70 tracks, complete infos them. So dev rooms, lighting talks, main database track, the keynotes, all that. So for example, for the main track, there is 182 submissions. This is for all projects, all main tracks projects. This is the amount. So it's quite a big amount. For containers, something very, let's say, popular these days. They have 46 submissions. For CI, they have 44. This is all stuff that developers like. And because we should not forget, this is a developer conference, right? 41 for Go, very trending programming language right now. So they have 41 submissions. 37 for Python, which is a room bigger than us, usually completely full. Please follow the sign, guys. If it's full, it's full. 28 for JavaScript, which is also something very, let's say trending these days. Internet of things, 26 and 77 for our dev room. So this is something very important for us. We got 77 submissions just for this, for today, for this room. And this is why we have a so large amount of talks, very teeny, to let, let's say, the maximum of people speaking today. So I don't want to, I won't say any other name, but you see how popular is our database, right? So thank you for our great community, because it's not only MariaDB, MySQL, but also all the developers that make the dev room. It's also all the people using it, all the developers using MySQL, all the users of MySQL and MariaDB, that makes this great community. And this is why it makes it so successful for us, so we are very happy about that. So thank you again, and now we're going to welcome Peter Seidsef for the first talk of the day. Thank you.