 Hey, everybody. This has been Sherman with Carol apps and this year at our hackathon just a week from now. I'm going to be leading a new group called for next flow and plugins with my colleague, Jordy Dupont. And I wanted to share just a quick video with you guys to basically go over some of the stuff that will be available to work on. So this group is going to cover both the next flow code base and next flow documentation, you can see down here. Then also a growing ecosystem of next flow plugins, which basically allow next flow to integrate with all sorts of different technologies without being tied to the next flow release cycle, right. One of the biggest ones that we're working on right now is enough prof, originally developed actually at last year's hackathon. We've since taken it over and we've added some major improvements to it recently, notably the bio compute object format. But then there's also more stuff we want to do particularly our crates, which is probably what I'm going to be working on, but a couple other small things. We've also got the quilt plugin so our friends at quilt data. Also, they developed this plugin around the same time last year. And they've just recently I know this issue says open here but they actually just recently updated their plugin to be fully native to Java so you don't have to install the quilt Python package anymore you can just use this plugin and it works. I think they have some other things that aren't here yet that they want to work on. So I'm sure they'll be available for that. And there's just a slew of other plugins. We spun off the web log feature into its own plugin so that it can be sort of independent and there's a couple minor things that can be worked on there. We're also working on test integration so the task execution service this is part of the GA for GH standard. So we're trying to update that to the latest spec, which will address some limitations that next flows had with tests in the past. And then yeah a few issues here with documentation. Of course, if you have other ideas about ways to improve the documentation of course were open to suggestions. And I tried to find sort of a smattering of issues that are not necessarily easy issues but I would say that they're all pretty well, well defined in terms of what the problem in the solution is. So these are all some great ones to get started. And so yeah if you have some experience writing groovy or Java, which you probably will if you've written some next flow pipelines, and you want to learn a bit more about the next flow code base itself. Jordy and I will be here working on something on here, I'm actually excited to see Jordy sort of a wizard in this space I'm sort of excited to see what he ends up working on but we'll be working on this stuff. And one more thing I'll mention here is that if you want to get started. The best thing I would recommend is to check out the latest version of the docs. I don't know if the next flow docs are going to be updated to this by the time that we get to the summit. You can, if nothing else, you can clone the docs yourself so clone the next floor repo to your machine, and you can build the docs locally. And then, and then serve them, I've got it right here this is so this is what the, the latest next floor docs looks like you said we've got some nice green in some sections here, but the main thing I wanted to highlight was that we have this new contributing information, which has some information on things like. So if you want to use IntelliJ like the IDE setup. Also just some more general information about how the code base is organized. We've got information about like groovy software dependencies, how to build next flow locally and test it run tests. And then I've got these, these class diagrams here so for some of the major packages. We've got tried to build some class diagrams just to give you a basic guide like sort of like a high level overview of the code base, which can maybe help you figure out like okay I'm going to work on this particular feature in the next flow code base so I'm going to go find this group of classes right. Of course, anybody who wants to get involved and help out with this stuff. I can help you sort of pinpoint you know if there's something you want to work on, I can probably point you to the two or three classes that you need to look at to get started with that. All right, so I think that's everything so with all that. Thanks for watching and looking forward to seeing you out the summit.