 So, hello. My name is Rodon. Before starting I wanted to ask if I was thinking before making the presentation of how many countries are there or cities that do not have any next club community. And I think there are a lot of them, which means the potential of getting expanded is huge and getting more people involved in the community. So, I'm part of the Albanian Mozilla community, which Silva talked yesterday and it's active less than a year. And we've worked on some project mainly on localization, which seems to be the most interesting, let's say the most easy part to start getting involved in a free open source community. And we also started the telegram group, but we are not very proud of it as we saw yesterday in the last two days. Anyway. So, I'm from a city, it's called El Basan. It's in the middle of Albania. Some of the people here have been there for our yearly conference. It has different good things to eat. This is called Simida and Mebugaca, which is from Turkey. It's very nice, not healthy at all. This is another drink. It's called Bose. It's with flavor. It's also Turkish oriented. It's not healthy at all. It has a lot of sugar. And Balakume. Balakume is a very traditional. If you come to our yearly conference, you're going to have this. It's a traditional thing we give to every participant in the conference as well. So, if you want to have it, I'm going to share the slides. It's also not healthy at all. It has a lot of sugar and butter, a lot of butter. And this is the recipe for today. If you go to Wikipedia, we edited the page and it's quite good now. One of the things, I was born in 83. One of the things we were doing there is that we were asking if we didn't have one of the ingredients, for example, sugar, we're going to the neighbors and we're getting it, which was very, very nice. After the 1990s, 91, when the regime changed, we became really not having a collective spirit but really individuals. So this thing stopped. It was very nice at the moment. So, after this, I moved to Athens and I was feeling really weird about the things that I liked because no one else was into that until I went to the hacker space, the local hacker space in Athens, which was opened many years ago. And I felt that there are other people like me that have the same interests. I'm not a weirdo and there are people that have, you know, like what I do as well and I like what they do and we could, you know, share stuff with each other. In 2010, I went back to Albania. There was nothing there in terms of a community. And I made a trip before that in Kosovo, in Pristina and I saw that there was a very interesting conference, Software Freedom Kosovo. And Kosovo, in case you don't know, it had war years before that. So it struck me. I said, like, this is pretty weird. How can a country that had war be interested in something that in my perception back then was a first world problem issue, like free software and open source software? So I was searching online and this is from a mailing list. There were some people from 2010 working on creating a free software open source community. Nothing was done. And I found like me and some other friends who thought, hey, this is very important to have a free and to have a physical space in order to talk about these things and people not to meet only online, just like we are doing here in a conference. The atmosphere needs to be relaxed. You don't get this very important. You will not get judged if you don't know certain skills, which is a very very big issue in Albania. We were grown up believing that if you don't, you don't have to ask questions because that might be a stupid question. I'm pretty sure this is in other countries as well. But this is very bad if you want to create a community. Like if people don't interact, that's very not productive. And of course we're focused on free open source software, online privacy and open knowledge. These were the things we were focused on. But why I'm sharing all these details, because Silva, where yesterday I was, went into details about our community. It's very important to understand that every community is very different. What works in a country like Albania or a city like Tirana doesn't work in another city. I was talking with Stathis these days and the Greek community is something totally different, needs a totally totally different approach. So if you want to jumpstart a community in one city or country, you have to keep this in mind. A very cheap space is very important if you call it a hacker space that's good. But a physical space to meet people is very, very important. Cafeterias work, but if you own it, you are part of the thing. And of course support of established projects from let's say Mozilla or Nextcloud or Fedora or SUSE is very, very important. Support doesn't mean actually only, you know, let's say travel support, but also if you give swag or other elements, these are very give a positive vibe to the community. So ambassador programs for countries like Albania, I think for other countries, I was in Pakistan and these programs work there as well. I'm pretty sure they work in India because people get this, they say they're proud to be something they're rewarded, right? So being a Fedora ambassador, for example, works or also being a Mozilla reps program works and it's a very nice start for young people to get into these communities. And of course travel support for young people with caution always because it involves financial elements is also very important. Everybody loves swag. We know this and also we saw this with the stickers we have, but also not being inclusive is not an option thing. I'm very happy that this being discussed in many projects and many communities nowadays, it's not a good thing to have, it's a must. If you want to, in our community more than 60, 70% of the participants or organizers of our yearly conference are girls. And I don't think we're still that much inclusive at all. There are other social groups that are not included in our communities at this point, but it's very important. Code of Conduct, it's been discussed from many people if we need to have it, if you don't need to have it, that's debatable. But I would say for a new community it's better to have it than to avoid it. So since I think I reached my time, I would say we need to find a way of different communities and also projects just like we're doing right here now with different people doing different apps get together. I would like to see people share the ingredients of what works in one community and what doesn't work in one community so that more and focus more on communities that do not exist yet. Just to jump start what they're doing. Again that's a huge potential to go in many cities and many countries. Of course there are logistical issues there but I think we can with a little bit of coordination and knowledge sharing we can do it. Thank you very much.