 So thank you again for being here. Thanks for sticking with us. I know I am the last thing between you and well-deserved drinks. We actually have a reception here and one off-site, which we're going to talk in a couple of minutes. It's going to be brief, but I just want to say a couple of words to close the conference. It's been a very energizing event for us, for the team. I hope it has been for you folks. And actually then move to the favorite part of the conference for me, which is not yet this one. No. Just a second, folks. There's a little bit of an issue here. Don't see it. You haven't seen anything. So clearly it was perfectly rehearsed. So I just wanted to kind of remind us that this was just eight years ago. I think we've made a huge inroads in the industry. I hope you're living energized today. We've heard it from financial institutions, regulators, individual developers. I hope, again, this is something that is going to leave you with a good feeling about where this community is going. And in case you want to have numbers, again, final shameless plug. You've heard us using these numbers today, pretty much all day. And we actually have a report out there that we can use as a base. And we plan to run this on an early basis. We'll appreciate your collaboration in the next years. But take a look at that. It's creative commons. Feel free to quote it, retweet it, do whatever you want. But most importantly, use the data in there to drive your decisions. There's so much to be done yet. There's still a long way to go. That said, I just in the last month, and I've shared this with our members yesterday, the members meeting, but just in the last month, we've had, you know, the world and new constituents realize what really we have been saying for many years, which is that open source can really revolutionize financial services. Anderson Orvitz put out that article on the left about a month ago. We see a huge potential in bringing in the FinTechs through open source, really creating a new financial services stack that is modular, that is developer driven. I mean, that article was so inspiring, we think FinTechs are another huge constituent of our community. All the way on the other side of the Pacific Ocean. The China regulators, Chinese regulators are recommending banks to not only consume open source, but to contribute. They're saying get free and open source software happy. This is again, pretty unprecedented. Again, it shows how this can be a truly global community. And last but not least, I mentioned it a couple of times today. The open source security foundation from the Linux Foundation has been joined of a platinum, sorry, premier and a general level by several financial institutions. Actually, Brian Bellendorf, the executive director was here today. Again, once more reminding us of how important open source and open source security is becoming in this landscape. And so, just want to leave you with a couple of the themes to look forward for the rest of the year, for next year. Also, with the purpose of getting your feedback, we are an open community. Whether you are a member or you're an individual contributor, we take your feedback very seriously. And so, you probably have seen these teams developing, and I hope you have seen these teams developing throughout the day. But again, we're still working through our planning and strategy for next year. So please let us know if there's anything else we should be working on, and most importantly, you can contribute too. We'll continue enabling the financial institutions to become more open source ready, more cloud ready, more inner source ready, even from a cultural standpoint. Starting in turn is a really great stepping stone, but it makes sense to open source. We see, again, developers playing a much more central role in this industry, very much like we've seen in many other industries. So we'll continue through our SIGs, like inner source, open source, DevOps mutualization, cloud service, sorry, compliant financial infrastructure to continue enabling that. You've heard about legend, I think you guys did today. You've heard about FDC3. Clearly interoperability and workflows across the industry have organically become one of the areas where we've seen the most traction and the most even potential for cross industry participation or partnership with consortia. So APIs and data standard will continue to be really the connective tissue that allows us to bring all the projects together. I think one of the magic aspects of in-person conferences is creating these point-to-point connections that I was saying this morning are really hard to make in an online setting and we're seeing our projects more and more integrating with each other. I hope you sort of grasp that today, not only because it's added value but also because it's a sign of maturity of our community. This is not 15 independent projects. There is an actual path for these projects to combine and deliver value to the industry. And then finally, we talked about that this morning. We will continue to try and up-level the value that we can deliver through open source and through open source collaboration where there is in the ragged compliance organization and with the regulators I found and I think your feedback has been overwhelming this morning. Having Sultan, the head of the FDIC has been a potential game changer. We actually think that way and we will continue investing in that. I was hoping it would be a major announcement in Q1 next year. And of course, as I mentioned, fintechs are becoming a huge part of the next layer of the community that we want to bring into our world and whether that means expanding into other areas beyond investment banking, that is something that we will explore and ultimately it's going to be influenced from you folks. If you have interesting projects that you think make sense to open source or to collaborate in the open, we'd love to hear from you. That said, if you don't like any of those, just remember that 11 projects, almost one project a month was contributed this year and that anyone can contribute to the foundation. So again, if you don't like what I just said, this is an open source community. You have the opportunity to influence it in the right direction. And so before we move actually to the awards, I'm going to have to go back a little bit back and forth with this keynote so I'm looking at the run here. How do you get involved? There are so many ways you can evaluate, download the projects, they're all apache to licensed or Creative Commons licensed, you can consume, you can participate. Again, participation is open to anyone. You can contribute, we'd love to contribute. We can help working with your organization to make sure that you have contributor license agreements in place. And finally, we'd love you to lead initiatives. That's how we think we can grow by scaling the organization and you can actually get visibility in this industry. Before we move to the community awards, I'm just looking at the slides here that might be an issue. I have to go back here. Unfortunately, I think we're having some technical issues. I'm not seeing the awards slide. I actually see only one, which is good. We can get started, but we have actually five awards to give out, which I might have messed up with the presentation. Please advise. We can go without the slides. We can actually take pictures later. We actually do have the awards. This is my favorite part of the conference. So I'm pretty bummed that I messed it up by making last-minute edits to the slide, as I always like to do. So let me start by saying, again, yesterday we awarded our member companies. Today we are awarding individuals. Communities are made of individuals and we really are thankful for what you do here. So I want to take this occasion to not only introduce you to some of the wonderful contributors, which will be awarded today, but also to some of our team members that, as you are new, you might not have met before. And so I want to bring up our first team member, Maurizio Pilitu, to deliver the new camera award. And I'm going to let you guess where Maurizio is from. Hello, everyone. Where am I from? New York City. So a new camera award. This award goes to a person I work with nearly every week for the last year. And although this is an individual award, this could not have been possible without the support of one of the most talented teams I had the pleasure to work with. So for the contributions to FINOS through the legend project, I am giving the new camera award to Ephraim Stanley from Goldman Sachs. Well, the new camera award is given to the newest contributor, sorry, to the contributor that had the most contribution this year as a new camera in the foundation, as a new contributor. So again, thank you, Ephraim. I won't have the slide for now, but I will want to, and by the way, Maurizio runs our infrastructure and the WAPS team. So if you have any requests on release management, build, how to help your developer experience, Maurizio Guy. Next up, I would like to bring up, well, unfortunately we don't have a slide for that, but we'll take pictures later, okay? Don't go away, especially to the winners. I want to bring up our director of community, James McCloud, who lives in London, to give out the next award. James, welcome. Thank you, Gab. So I'm probably one of the luckiest team members within Finals, because I get to work with a lot of our community directly in projects. And over the last maybe 18 months, I've been working across the cloud service certification, which is transforming into different cloud initiatives with the CDMC now. Now, on the project calls, we've got maintainers from Deutsche Bank, we also have JP Morgan, who are actually really good at putting opinions forward. But it's always really nice to have members of the open source community kind of step out and also be opinionated and guide people and coach people, including myself. We all need to be coached. And so this award goes to somebody who I've been working with over the last year. He knows everything there is to know about how to test. This goes to Eddie Knight from City Hub. One more. We've got 15 more to go, so we're good now. Just kidding. For the next award, I want to bring up on stage a relatively new team member of Finals. She's our community manager. She's based here in New York. I want to welcome Julia Ritter to deliver the outstanding leadership award. Thank you. Hi, everyone. First time being on stage. Yeah, this is awesome. This award is a special award. I'm so happy to present. I'm new to the community and just working with you and seeing your dedication and commitment is very awe-inspiring. Thank you for this. And this award is the outstanding leadership award. And we want to thank you, Steven Goldbaum. From Morgan Stanley. Second to last. For this award, I want to bring in another relatively new team member of Finals. Jane Gabronski is our CTO. Hello, Jane. You've been a huge impact for our foundation. Please come up to deliver the shining star award. I'm very excited to be part of Finals. Today is my six-month anniversary. You forgot that. But I didn't. I'm bad. So we have the shining star award for great contributions and a very popular contribution it has been. And we've heard many stories about it. And I, myself, have been talking about it quite a bit today and before because this is one of the contributions that's been widely used and delivered a lot of value. And so this award goes for the shining star award for the perspective team at JPMorgan. And we don't have the team here today, so I believe Riz is going to be accepting for it. Can I get your award? You get to hold on to it for five minutes. I've had the pleasure of working with some of the perspective team over the past couple of years and in different aspects and also interviewing them with Tasha for a podcast. And right now, as far as our projects go, they have the most number of stars on GitHub with over 3,000. And again, they couldn't be here today. However, they just released their 1.0 version of perspective, which is a pretty huge accomplishment. I don't know if you guys knew that. And we will be talking more about that as they get to a more stable version, but I did want to put that out there that that project is starting to grow in leaps and bounds and they're getting a lot of code contributed to there. So I thank you for them. Thank you, Jane. Thank you, Jane. And thank you, Gris. And Gris pattern, you know, on the records is our marketing manager and works very closely with our projects to promote, you know, adoption and contribution. So thank you. And I hope that you give the award to who needs to get it. And then last but not least, this is the last award. And it's, you know, you know, it's a very important one. I would like to bring a very important member of our team. It's Aetana Mio. She's our manager for strategic initiatives. Welcome, Aetana. I can't do two things at the same time. Thank you. So I'm going to keep it very short and sweet because you've heard a lot about this project today and yesterday, if you were here for the, for the member meeting, this award goes out to our most active individual. And it's really through great contributors and through really active contributors like this one and many others that we really build this community and can see it grow and thrive. So we're incredibly thankful and I am delighted to award this award to Pierre de Willand from Goldman Sachs. That's also thanks. Thank you. Thank you for picking up the award. Thank you. Thank you, Pierre. And again, thanks to the rest of the legend team. You guys have done an outstanding job this year. I keep telling them that I see their commits coming in every possible hour of the day, which it's great. Anyway, moving on. Let me now skip quickly back to just closing and the reception information, which I'm sure you were all looking for. Before we move into the secret reception information, I want to bring up, we actually have a non-site reception, which is supposed to start a couple of minutes ago. So we're running a little late. I'm looking to see whether Dan Schleifer, the CEO of Cosake, is here to give us a couple of Dan. He's sneaking behind. Come here. This reception is sponsored from Cosake. So thanks for being here, Dan. Yeah, absolutely. Thanks for letting me hide offstage. I haven't been back there long, I promise. So first off, Gabb, thank you for hosting us and to the whole FINOS team and kind of guiding us along our own journey as a company and for everybody else in the audience, both in participating in Open Standards and in open-sourcing technology. It's been fantastic. Yeah, thank you guys for attending and we will be hosting the cocktail reception outside. So please stop by for a drink, wine and beer, I believe, and say hello. Yeah, on behalf of Cosake and both Chard IQ and Fensemble, thank you guys. Cosake has been a great contributor and co-lead the FDC3 program. I'm sorry, this is the project. And so, finally, before I'm sure you're craving to leave, but as I said, once this reception is finished, if you want a couple more drinks, we are actually organizing a reception really closely here. It's not in a basement. It is indeed on a rooftop and for those of you who were here two years ago, it's the same place, you know, in the same note of coming back here for SSF, we're organizing the same rooftop drink after this. This is gonna start at 7 p.m., the reception year closed at 6.30. It's at the Spyglass rooftop at the Archer Hotel. Take a picture. There is limited space, so it's gonna be on a first-come-first-served basis. We're a little bit limited by the current state of the world. Please, we'd love to see you there. The reception is gonna go on for three hours, so we're gonna have some fun and hopefully continue bonding as a community. I wanna thank you, again, for being here on behalf of the team and on behalf of our contributors. Thanks for making this possible.