 So, before I leave you with much smarter folks than I am, I'd like to give you an update on the state of the community. It's been two fantastic years, albeit we were apart. So much has changed. I see many new faces here, so I figured giving you an update and some plugs to some of the conversations that we're going to be having today might be useful. So as John mentioned, since the last time we were here, the foundation has grown drastically from a membership standpoint and from a support standpoint. I think last time I was here on this stage, we had 26 members supporting the foundation. So in the last two years, we have doubled the number of our members. And I look at this slide, I'm very proud not only to see the financial institutions that founded us six years ago continue to be the core group of support and adding more and more representation from the global largest financial institutions. But we've added so much support from technology organizations, fintech firms and big development companies. In the last year, John hinted to ISDA, we've been starting working with industry consortia. This is an industry that has been familiar with open standardization efforts through trade association and consortia. And I think the very exciting part here is we are now recognized as an open source enabler for the whole industry. We want to collaborate with existing consortia, we want to make sure that we can accelerate the standardization process and through open source, bring the standards to life, bring the standards to the hands of developers so that they could be adopted much faster and much more effectively. And so in the last year, we added 17 new members. If you're counting well, there's only 12 logos up there. And so I'm very excited to announce today that we are adding five new members to our representation, starting from our associate members, the EDM council, ISLA and Mojolup, three very different organizations, organizations focused on data compliance, you know, lending and financial inclusion. We have an opportunity to make a difference through open source and accelerating pan industry progress on so many areas, we think. We want to welcome Synagron as our silver member and then White Source, who's been a longstanding contributor to the foundation as a gold member. And I'm very excited, those of you who were here for the members meeting yesterday to also welcome Bank of Montreal as a platinum member of the foundation and welcome back actually Kim Prado to our governing board. She's our former vice chair and another great leader and supporter of the foundation. But we're not measured in revenue, we are a nonprofit. And the great news is that over the last two years, we have grown across pretty much any dimension. As I said, we passed 50 members. We have now reached almost 50 between projects and special interest groups. We have reached about a thousand, over a thousand contributors over time from where we started around an Italian dinner in Palo Alto that's pretty outstanding, we think. And of course, our team has grown. I wish, you know, I hope today you'll meet all the new faces in the Phoenix team and of course the Linux Foundation extended team that we're now part of. Fortunately, I don't have a slide comparing to 2019, but a lot of our growth really started in 2020. For those of you who are new here, as John said, from 2016 to 2018, we were the Symphony Software Foundation, Symphony's been always a great component of our growth. Since we launched Phoenix in 2018, for two years, our contributions were mainly coming from vendors, as you would expect. There's an industry that takes some time to start contributing. But it's been with 2020 that, as John hinted before, we started seeing massive contributions from financial institutions. Not only legends, not only morphers, but we've had contributions from original intellectual property from Citi, Deutsche Bank, JPMorgan, and several other institutions in our foundation. And so, you know, while I would love to take credit of it, and I certainly will take a little bit, I think the Phoenix team did a great job in enabling this industry, you know, the pandemic has also accelerated this process. And so we are now today looking at eight of our top eight contributors coming from financial institutions. This is pretty unprecedented. I remember, you know, talking to some of my fellow leaders of the Linux Foundation, you know, contributions from banks are pretty rare, used to be pretty rare. And so we think that what Phoenix is enabling is not only valuable for the industry, but also for the broader open source community at large. This is an industry that has been leading in technology. Now we have the opportunity of influencing upstream components that the whole world depends on. John mentioned OpenSSF, a very important software supply chain securing effort by the Linux Foundation that is now, you know, participated from the largest technology companies and now financial institutions in the world. What we are seeing is really an industry that is living, what I would say, an open source awakening. This is an industry that has been consuming open source forever, but it's an industry that has now realized that in order to take full value out of open source, you need to be contributing. And the reason is mostly innovation. These are stats from our state of open source and financial services survey that we produced with partners and the Linux Foundation research. If you look at that number, 84% of our respondents understands the strategic value of open source to drive innovation. This is on par with other industries and so the why is pretty clear now. And the areas of collaboration are very aligned to what we are doing as a foundation. I'm going to give you a couple of bits, tidbits today, but hopefully you're going to hear much more today through our sessions. And even upstream, as I said, there's so much potential for this industry to influence the broader open source ecosystem. I'm not going to go through all the highlights of 2021 because frankly, there's been so much going on. But not only without the new members, a project or a special interest group has been added to the foundation pretty much at the once a month pace this year. So there's plenty of opportunities for you to engage. We've launched trainings. We've integrated with the Linux Foundation LFX platform for managing our growth and for you to be able to monitor that growth from your organization. So much has happened this year and I hope today gives you a really good sense of how far we've come in the last three years since we launched. I want to touch on a couple of projects just to tee up some of the conversations because it's not just about the new projects. It's important to make sure that we continue part of our role is to foster success of existing projects. So, FDC3, probably many of you are familiar with it, is our Desktop Interoperability Standard. This year released the 1.2 version. We just announced a free training yesterday. This is a big plus of being part of the Linux Foundation. Go check it out. It's really for both business and technical audience to really understand why would you want to buy into an open standard for interoperability. And finally, we're bringing the standards to the developer. The FDC3 workbench gives us an actually really powerful way of developing applications. Again, it's an actual piece of code that helps you build FDC3 compliant apps. So, our standards are maturing very much like our software projects. John touched on legend. Legend is a logical data modeling platform. It's been now evaluated or used in several firms. And I think the key point I want to make on this slide is something that really changed our perspective. We are also hosting the legend platform to support collaboration in our project. So you can actually go to phinos.org slash legend and get access to it. That has enabled us through our financial object, special interest group, our collaboration with ISDA, to invite not only technical folks to collaborate in the open, but, you know, a public audience of business users, data modelers. That really means that anyone in the organization can participate to open source communities and open source collaboration. There's much more than code to open source. So I hope you hear a lot today. I'm sure you're going to be hearing a lot today about legend and love, you know, to hear your feedback. So come and hit us up. Another strategic initiative that we developed in the last two years is our Open Rectic Initiative, which we run with our associate member, Air, the Alliance for Innovative Regulation. In fact, today you're going to be hearing it from Joanne and Sultan, the head of innovation of the FDIC. We think there is a huge opportunity in collaborating in the open on regulatory implementation, whether you're a financial institution or a fintech, you know, there is a huge potential for mutualization there. But in the long run, we hope regulators will start partaking to the open collaborative process. And who knows, maybe just maybe writing open source regulation at a certain point, hopefully before my kids grow old. So on this note, we announced last week an exciting partnership with the EDM Council on the Cloud Data Management Capability Initiative to really create an end-to-end open source cloud compliance suite. Come and talk to us. We're actively recruiting maintainers for these projects. We think there is a huge potential here to deliver, you know, transparent and fully open source proof of regulatory compliance for your cloud deployments. So as you have seen, whilst most of our collaborations start out of the technology organization in these firms, you know, for the values that I think we're now mostly familiar with, you know, attracting talent, increasing efficiency, reducing the, you know, vendor locking and brisk in your strategic technology investments. As you hopefully have seen from sort of a sample of our initiatives, the value that we are able to deliver through open source is up-leveling. It's moving towards the business. We are enabling, you know, faster response to client demand, better interaction with regulators, collaboration with your peers. And we're starting to see actually firms leveraging open source on a truly strategic level. You know, I argue that open source should be a technology pillar very much like cloud. And we're seeing some firms, you know, really adopting big tech list kept secret, which is open source. So I hope to see more of that in the next couple of years. And as we continue to up-level the value that we deliver, the open source readiness and maturity of the firms, it's key to unlock the value. And so, you know, we will continue investing in that area, which has been really how we got here. Just to give you an extent as to where we are from an open source readiness standpoint, again, these are stats from our state of open source and financial services. While most firms have a consumption policy, I would say it's about time. We still have a huge way to go from the standpoint of structuring your governance through an open source program office, and most importantly, having a clear strategic communication and lines of, you know, clear lines of communication within your organization when it comes to driving open source from really the C-suite level. And so, I hope that you're going to have a great time today. I hope this last two years, you know, being apart certainly didn't seem to have stopped our momentum, but as we have talked a lot on the corporate value of open source, I want to close on a different note. An interesting finding in our survey was that, you know, ultimately has proven that communities are made of individuals. You know, there's a lot of individual motivators for collaborating in the open, and you know, you are here not just because it's, you know, valuable for your firm, but because it's fun, because you have a personal interest in what you're doing, because you have a passion. And so, I hope that between, you know, the value that your organization can have, whether you are a FinTech or a financial institution, whether you are a regulator, or whether you're just an individual that is passionate about solving problems in the industry, or you're a user of the financial system, or a developer trying to get its new job, we think there is a huge value for you, and we hope that today you're going to be able to discover that, because we think open source is a positive sum game. It's not just good for you, but it's good for the whole industry. So thank you so much for being here, and we hope you will enjoy the day.