 Airship is a life cycle management project that enables kind of a combination of bare metal virtual machines and containers within a single environment and it does this in a way that's very repeatable and highly automated. And Airship is one of the projects that had a major release this year, Airship 2.0 came out in April. And really Airship 2.0 was a very big release and a lot of advancements over the first version of Airship based off of what the community had learned from running Airship 1 in production. Especially the AT&T large production deployment of Airship brought a lot of real world operational knowledge into the project. And so Airship 2.0 is a great release and it follows a few of the trends that we've been talking about. It combines Linux, OpenStack, and Kubernetes so this is another example of Loki. And this is also with Airship 2.0, this is also a project that enables hybrid cloud scenarios. So you're able to put your workloads on physical servers or virtual machines or Kubernetes environments that you may be running on premises, spread out around an edge, also you're able to manage those workloads across public clouds. So a very big update that the community put together and released in Airship 2.0 this year, really exciting to see the progress there. And if Airship is a project that you are interested in getting involved in or learning more about, this next segment will help you out on that front. So we're going to have the Airship OpenStack from Ashley Ferguson. Thanks, Mark and Jonathan. Hi, I'm Ashley and I am the Airship Community Manager. Like Jonathan mentioned, Airship 2.0 was released earlier this year and it's also certified Kubernetes under version 1.21. The community is always looking for new contributors. So if you're interested in getting involved, there are weekly design calls and bi-weekly technical committee meetings that anyone's welcome to join. And another way to contribute is to fill out the Airship User Survey. Whether you're considering evaluating or using Airship in production, we want to know about it because providing feedback helps the community improve the software and your overall experience with it. You can find all the info you need to get involved at docs.airshipit.org and you can also find the community on IRC in the Airship It channel on OFTC and also on Slack at airshipit.slack.com. So we look forward to welcoming new contributors to the Airship Community. Join us.