 All right that is it for our demo. Now I'm going to turn it over to Dan for the live Q&A portion of this session. I have not seen any questions come in so you know don't be shy if you have any please submit it and meanwhile maybe as we're waiting I can have let's you know maybe let's ask Dan if you know some of the questions that he have encountered any popular questions then that you maybe are willing to share with the audience here. Sure great thank you, thanks for that. Thank you everyone for hanging in there we apologize again for those technical difficulties. We're trying to scramble to get this to you. Are you guys hearing me? Actually there's a question that came in so maybe we'll just go with that right now. So we have Jay Green. How tightly bound to Docker and Kubernetes are the DevOps flow features? That's a great question. So pretty tightly bound right now for that specific flow that you saw which is a feature we call auto DevOps where the built-in pipeline which is actually this CIML file has been carefully scripted to work with Kubernetes and it does rely on Kubernetes functionalities and makes API calls to get information such as the IP address of the Ingress server and things like that. You can in general use GitLab with any infrastructure whether you know it's Kubernetes or just straight Docker or VMs or bare metal but this particular feature that we showed during this demo is pretty tightly tied to Kubernetes. You can run auto DevOps still without Kubernetes. You would get up to the part of the pipeline where it runs a series of tests but you would not get the automatic review app, dynamic application security testing and performance testing which do rely on spinning up the environment. So again we very firmly believe that Kubernetes is the future with respect to dynamic infrastructure. But again we do work with other than Kubernetes for just the general stuff but this particular feature does not in its entirety. Great question. Thanks for sharing that. Any other questions out there? If you can hop on the mic I'm not sure if I can but put it in chat but in the Q&A I would be happy to answer anything you saw or anything about GitLab in general. I'm happy to have that discussion. Maybe you guys are thinking of that and writing down your questions or typing them in. So Agnes what you mentioned some of the questions that we get answered when we show GitLab one is you know what's different between you and GitHub. I hope during the demo you saw quite a bit of stuff that you probably would recognize there is not available in GitHub. GitLab did start as a open source version of GitHub of an SEM system and grew very rapidly from there. We added CI and got in 2017 Forester's very top of the CI wave so market leading and then added all these other features as well around that to build out the full DevOps lifecycle. Something that is not really available in the competition. Question from, let's see, from Keles. Thank you. Does the current EE so that's enterprise edition self-hosted solution currently support all the demonstrated features? So it does. That would be the what we call the ultimate version if it's self-hosted. We actually call it self-managed now because you might be putting that on Amazon or Google's cloud or some other cloud and that's fine. But yes, so the current enterprise edition of GitLab with the ultimate tier and so that's the case that there's different levels of tiers and you can get different levels of functionality with the different tiers. So there's a core freeze tier. There's a starter tier and a premium and an ultimate tier. So when we get to premium, you start getting things like HA and geo replication and then ultimately add the security scanning and other features like that. So yes, those are available though. If you go on to GitLab.com right now, for example, and start an account there and you have a public project, I get the free gold tier, which is equal to the ultimate tier, the top tier, and you can have all that functionality. All right, so we're at 1130 then, so 1132. So maybe, yeah, we'll take one last question from Hugo since we did have some technical glitches earlier and then we will wrap up. Great. Thanks Agnes. So any new features worth highlighting on the planning phase? You showed a board. What else is there to help the team with work management and continuous improvement? Great, great question. So all of our new features and everything that we're working on are available on our website in our roadmap section. We make that very open, including pointers to the issues and that we're actually actively using to work on the features. Regarding the planning phase specifically, there are many new features that I know they're working on. We're doing a lot of big push towards value stream management. So there's a lot of new visibility and built in monitoring, sorry, graphing and reporting capabilities that are coming and a lot of good stuff there. So check it out. And thank you all. Agnes. All right. Thank you so much, Dan. So we are moving along and to wrap it up. So basically, this demo and live Q&A session is something new that we're trying out. So we'd love to hear your thoughts on today's session and would really appreciate your responses to our survey, which I'll drop in the chat. We also would like to invite you to sign up for a free trial of GitLab Ultimate. I'll chat that link as well. And finally, if you have any other questions, don't hesitate to reach us via our sales contact page about.gitlab.com slash sales. That's all for today. Thank you so much for joining us.