 I've seen a project on GitHub where some research scientists were able to control a worm by shining a laser into its brain. I thought that was pretty cool. I think GitHub is different than a lot of companies, based a lot on our makeup and where we came from. We started GitHub to make it easier for people to work together, and we started on software because that's the world that we came from. We wanted to make it really easy to share code repositories across people, regardless of where they are or where they work from. This is exactly how open source works. GitHub is a distributed company. In fact, only about a third of our workforce lives here in the Bay Area. It doesn't matter where you live or when you're doing the work, because all throughout this you're using the internet, you're using web technologies to stay coordinated. All of the information that we need is recorded in a place where people can catch up with the discussions later on. So time and location become less important. Every industry is starting to realize that software is becoming a core part of what they do. I could probably point to anything around you and describe exactly how software was involved in it being created or delivered to you. Every business that has a website or a mobile app needs to create great software. We want to make that easier. We're starting to see really exciting uses of GitHub even outside the code space. In the United States, government recently released the open data policy on GitHub allowing any citizen to collaborate on that piece of policy. What you say there can make a difference to the policy makers that are working on that piece of legislation. We want to make it easier for people to work together than to work alone. And we think that in doing this, we can actually hasten the arrival of a better future by making harder problems easier to solve. Someone who's never satisfied. Someone who sees things as what they could be and not what they are. If you think you're already doing good enough, then you can never possibly innovate. Innovating is about pushing the boundaries of what's possible. The real risk and innovation is that you keep it bottled up for too long and that you don't show it to anyone. The way that you can tell if you're on the right track is by showing it to other people. Show it to the real world and see what their reaction is. Some people will think it's crazy and that means you're on the right track. At GitHub, we refuse to accept the status quo and a big part of that is pushing boundaries. We want to give people the ability to work on things that are interesting to them even if they're not really important to the company at that specific moment. This is important because we don't know what's going to work yet and in order to create the future, we have to try out a lot of things, select the best ones. In this way, we can explore a much broader set of problems, one of which may turn out to be the next big thing for us. And that's built into the philosophy and culture of GitHub.