 Hey folks, what's up? It's Rob. I'm using my inside voice, because we are here at Polymer Summit in the lounge area. This is where folks are going to decompress in between sessions. We've got foosball and Polymer beanbag chairs, and all sorts of other crazy stuff back here. We're also streaming all the talks for everyone to catch. I'm here with Taylor Savage right now. Taylor, you're a product manager on Polymer. Just gave the big opening keynote, and you covered a bunch of stuff in that keynote. But do you want to give the folks watching maybe a quick summary of some of the highlights that you touched upon? Yeah, absolutely. So overall, we're at a really exciting moment right now. Web Components v1, custom element v1, shouted on v1, shipping natively across multiple browsers in Safari, in Chrome, which means that we can take advantage of these new really great low-level APIs in Polymer. So we're also working on the next version of Polymer, Polymer 2.0, which will take advantage of custom element v1, shouted on v1, and everything built with Polymer 2.0 will be a truly native low-level custom element. And so the other big thing is communities starting to grow around web components. We're starting to get a lot of excitement. Other people building web component libraries. We're going to frameworks. Web components themselves. And so I'm really excited that we got to roll out the new beta.webcomponents.org catalog, where anyone can submit a web component. It'll show inline demos. It'll show documentation. And so just a really exciting place to share web components. Cool, cool. All right, so you mentioned there's a new catalog. And so I know that Polymer has its own catalog, and then there was, so how do these two, are we reconciling these worlds, or how does that stuff work? Yeah, yeah, totally. So we have had the elements.polymerproject.org, Polymer element catalog for a while now. But that's just the Polymer elements. We've gotten a lot of people asking, can I put my element on there? And it's tough because we ship those, and we work on those elements as the Polymer team. And so we want to have a certain kind of level of quality and support for those elements. So we can't just kind of start putting all the elements in there. But that's a bummer, because we want all the elements to be in the same place. We want everybody looking for custom elements to going to the same place, get all the traffic going in the same place. So totally. So right now it's beta.webcomponents.org. We're still working on it actively. Lots of new features to put in. It's all open source, so please do send your contributions. Start working on that catalog with us. But as soon as it's ready to ship, we're going to move over all of Polymer's elements. They're actually already on there from the Polymer element catalog to that web components.org catalog. And that's where you will go to get all of your web component documentation, all your downloads, searching for new components, setting up collections of components. All that stuff will be on that catalog. Right on, right on. Very cool. OK, so for folks watching, if there's one thing you could have them go do, what would that one thing be? Yeah, so I'm going to cheat. I'm going to go two things. One is kick the tires on Polymer 2.0. It's in a branch Polymer 2.0 preview on the GitHub slash Polymer slash Polymer. And then the other thing is start building components. beta.webcomponents.org is live. It's open right now. You can submit components right now. You can check out all the cool features. You can build in my demos for your components. You can get really great structured documentation. So start building really great high quality components to minimum to that catalog. I can't wait to go on there and see all the cool new components going up. Right on, right on. All right, so Taylor, thank you so much for being with me today. Thank you all for watching. Again, if you're watching at home right now, ping us on the live stream or on Twitter with hashtag Polymer Summit. Keep the conversation going there. Hope you're catching some polymon at this point. And I'm Rob Dodson coming at you live from Polymer Summit. Stay with us.