 So, thank you. So, my name is Joseph Zikusoka. I'm sure most of you can spell the last name, but most of you now are my friends. I think you call me Zik, right? Zik is much easier. Actually, back home where I come from Uganda, I'm also known as Zik, at least by most folks that are close to me. I'm supposed to start with a joke. Let me try to attempt one. And that is that I flew all the way from Africa to basically get to Berlin to try and increase my Twitter follow account. So, good, good. Some people are laughing, so that's great. So, but please follow me. Those listening, those in the online community. I also have a GitHub account, but the GitHub is Zikusoka, the last name. So, you basically GitHub slash Zikusoka. So, you get to see some of the work I've done, command line. Mainly, I've been really big into open source Linux. So, I've been writing quite a number of tools, online tools that I use personally and for other things. My experience and connection to NextCloud, essentially, is way back from the famous fork. I don't want to go through that. But basically, when the switch happened, I also basically switched, and I've been using NextCloud, basically to help small-sized businesses in Uganda. A couple of companies in Kenya that basically have been installing instances of NextCloud, mainly really for office use. But there are also clients that are mainly like non-government organizations really doing charity work. So, that's been nice, because they get to save a little bit of money. And then also, there's not so much of a hassle with licensing and all that with the big guys. So, NextCloud is really it. I'm hoping I can really push that when I return much more aggressively. So, thank you so much for the developers of NextCloud. You're really doing a great job. In terms of the smart home, I really do think that NextCloud really is really the... It kind of really... They match, they two really match. Because you're really talking about being local, right? With NextCloud, you're really talking about it being secure, you're really talking about it being private, right? For your privacy. Those are concepts that are really the same thing with the smart home, right? You really don't need to be literally going into the cloud to turn on the light, right? I mean, that's kind of like... It doesn't make sense. So, we've been using a bit of... Not quite open, but ZigBee Z-Wave protocols. But where NextCloud comes in, basically is really more the two... Like, to schedule, schedule reminders, schedule... Basically, reminders and then also file sharing. Because then you can have your photos, music, video files, TV shows that you can push to different devices in the home. Smart TV and all that. As far as the scheduling, you can have your birthday reminders, your appointments coming up. And basically, we use basically the calendar, mainly using the CalDAV integration. So then we pick that up and then use it to send notifications to your smart speakers around the house. Notifying if, let's say you have an appointment the following day, or you have a birthday or an anniversary coming up for any person in the home. But so NextCloud really is... It doesn't seem like the... The first thing you think about, but actually it is, because it's really the idea of it being open and being open source, being local and being private is really what you want a smart home to be, as opposed to something that is, you know, like outside and managed by someone else. So I'm really very, very grateful to you guys who are doing a great job like contributing. We are trying so much also to try and see if we can push people towards NextCloud and just in general, but also come up with cool applications. I've really met a lot of very interesting folks here, so it's really humbling for me. Thank you so much. That's it for me. Thank you so much, Zeke. Thank you for being here and for talking to us.