 So we're here at the NERA Connect, and who are you? Well, I'm Conrad, I work at the Canonical, I'm an assignee at Light Group. And what did you do at Canonical? You work through lots of IoT stuff? Well, yeah, at Canonical I work in a system enablement group, so basically we are enabling Ubuntu for our customers, for their commercial appliances. Like Snappy? Yes, it's mostly Ubuntu Core on commercial-grade devices, this is what we do. And what are you showing on this one? So this is like the joint effort of what Canonical is doing at EJECS and what Canonical is doing in Linaro at Light Group. So we are part of an EJECS and in the Linaro Light Group we have been working on having the EJECS run on ARM, which is this Raspberry Pi, which was a bit of a problematic because EJECS is mostly based on JVA and due to performance, it doesn't really go well with those kind of small devices. So in here we have a cross-hose setup. We have a major part of EJECS running on the Dell Gateway, which is running Ubuntu Snappy Core. And then we have a device service of EJECS running on ARM, which is based on Ubuntu in this time server. EJECS is an IoT framework from Dell, which has been open-sourced earlier this year. IoT framework, open-sourced. Hi Dell. There's a consortium built around it and Linaro is a member, Canonical is a member and we all are interested in developing in the future. And so this is a part of the Light ecosystem? Yes, because the Light Group is about gateways and EJECS is for gateways. So Linaro has made a decision to contribute to EJECS as well and we've been working on it for several months now and we will continue for the upcoming demo. And how's it going with the Ubuntu Core, the Snappy, and what do you think about the Zephyr? Well, Ubuntu Core goes really well with Zephyr. Zephyr works on the endpoints, like in a small farm-form sensor devices. And the Ubuntu Core runs perfectly fine on gateways, like this, for example. What gateway is this? This is Dell Edge 5000. What CPU is in there? X86, Intel. Intel? Yeah. It could be ARM, but in this case it's Intel. And Zephyr is like the client side for Ubuntu Core Appliances because it's run sensors that connects to the gateway. So there's a lot of activity, you're very busy, and there's much more to happen in the future? Yeah, of course. We will work on this demo for next connect. We'll polish it and take it further. There's an ongoing effort on rewriting the EdgeX device services in Go for performance reasons. But what does it do? Well, this is the device service. In the EdgeX world, it's responsible for interaction with the end devices, which can be Zephyr-based. So we could have the, like, an NXP Freedom Board in here with 1504 or Bluetooth. And if they would connect, they will connect to the EdgeX device service. And this is the part that will run on the smaller devices, ARM-based. And then there will be a master gateway run on a little bit more beefy hardware in this demo. This gateway, it could be an ARM server. It doesn't matter, actually. Cool. So it's an exciting, light group. It's very active and a lot of stuff happening. I mean, well, it is. The EdgeX is a brand new stuff. So it has been released earlier this year, and we are right on it. So it's everything that's newest comes to that group.