 Hello, I'm Lars Rossen from MicroFocus. I'm a fellow working in the CTO office and as part of my job as a fellow and in the CTO office remote various kind of standards that underpins what we're doing in our company. Now the the main thing that we're concentrating on is to how can you efficiently help companies in digitalizing your business. But one of the things I've brought to the table literally speaking is a three-dimensional representation of the IT for IT standard. Actually to talk about this standard in a way that none techies can understand you need to level it up and become much more intuitive about what is it that we're trying to achieve. So we built it in Lego. Yes, you heard it right. We used Lego. I had a count about how many thousand Lego bricks we're using. Some ten thousand between ten and thirty thousand depending on the version of what we're building. And it really illustrates all the aspects of IT for IT all from plan to build to deliver to running IT services and it really really has enabled us to to get much more in contact with with consumers of the standard. So the reaction to the Lego experience as we call it has really been overwhelming. Everybody loves it. Everybody has a positive experience with Lego from their childhood. Everybody wants to know what is really around and then you can start talking about the abstract concepts like value streams and what ties together the various aspects of IT. But the train that runs around the continuous integration when we develop software etc. So that has really helped and people are interested. They want to hear the story and then we can see light bulbs going up when we when we presented. Another aspect of the Lego experience is that it's based on a standard. Right. It's not the micro focus way of doing IT management IT transformation but we support that standard. So even if you're not using micro focus products it is still relevant. So that openness is very important to many of our customers and in general should be very relevant to any enterprise. It also has other advantages of using these kind of open standards not only IT for IT but also talk at an argument and other things that comes out of the open group is that it's easier to hire people and and on board people that needs to help you because if it's based on standard there is a likelihood that somebody else actually already know about how you do IT. It creates a common vocabulary that you can be using when when you speak to each other and also kind of because of the rigorous process the standard goes through. It is a good representation of what is best practice in the industry. It represents in the case of IT for IT about a hundred companies that it's contributed into the standard. So it really creates a lot of value for you out of the box and the open group standards are free and open so what's not to like.