 Thank you so, so, so much everyone who has organized, attended, participated, presented. It's been another amazing mess with Fedora. I know I've heard it at least a hundred times during this, but we would have loved to be in person with you all, but we appreciate the participation virtually nonetheless. So yes, thank you from the bottom of my heart for coming and being a part of this, this great event. Yeah, I don't have anything to add to that. Oh, wait, are we... Am I in trouble? I got excited and started advancing now. Yeah, so since I covered this in the opening, I'll cover it again. Just a reminder that we have a code of conduct. Everyone that I saw was very well-behaved, and that's what we love about our community. You know, the Friends Foundation is really important. But remember that as you go forth and do awesome things in Fedora over next year, code of conduct. Is Ben's audio sad? Yeah, it's Ben. I thought it was my problem earlier, but it's definitely been. You've been turned into a robot. Oh, no. But yeah, I'll just riff on what he was saying, which is this conference is so great because everybody is so amazing. And just the chat and the hanging out in the museum and all the social times, it makes it an online event that doesn't just feel like more meetings. And that's thanks to all of you and all the energy you bring. So that's amazing. Yes, Ben brought the slides. So when he left, he took the slides. They'll come back. I left the schedule slide on there. If you're a speaker and you have your slides available, please add them to that wiki page so people can go back and look later. Hopefully it once the videos are up on our YouTube channel. I don't know if anybody's going to go through and like individually link all 50 something talks, but there will at least be a link to the playlist there. So it's just a good place to add something there. I'm planning to drop a reminder for speakers to share their link to share like a link to their, to their side deck on the flock ticket, flock repo ticket. So there will be a reminder there as well, but we would love to be able to share your side decks with your presentation. And don't forget to claim your badge if you haven't already, although I saw that maybe the link has expired. So if you haven't claimed it and you need it, let somebody know and we will get that taken care of for you. Let's see. I bet I could get it real quick here. So while Murray's doing that, go ahead and ask her. I was going to answer the hat question, but I see that. So yes, this is the red hat you get when you start at red hat. That's nice. Up here, some of, I don't know who all was responsible for this, but some of you here, when I got a promotion with a kind of funny title of distinguished engineer, they thought that the Fedora wasn't quite classy enough, so decided that I needed this. So this is a community gift to me that I really appreciate. And because I'm not really like a steampunk gentleman sort of person, I don't normally wear it out. It just lives in its place of honor on my shelf there. But I, there was some scheming earlier to put together an entire steampunk outfit to match for me. So I don't know. I wouldn't say no. I want to see that. With coat tails and all. Yeah, I think that's like, senior distinguished engineer has to have that. I thought distinguished engineer was the peak. There's another. There is a senior of it, yeah. And then actually above that, there's a thing called red hat fellow, which is, we do not currently have any, I don't believe. And although I should actually know the answer definitively to that before saying, but it that's interesting. Well, today I learned something. Yeah. Speaking of learning things, the Apple folks would like to learn from you as a Apple user or maintainer. So please take that survey for them. Similarly, the docs team would like to learn things about how you interact with the Fedora docs to help inform some of the changes we're trying to make, to make the doc site more usable. So please take that survey as well. Surveys for everyone. And as a reminder, we talked about that we are looking for a new fcake that processes in the works, but you know, we do need somebody to try and take over the wonderful job that we have done. Create a new job in their own, in their own way. I think it's going to be an image, right? No. We should change the title slightly with every fcake just to make it clear that we don't expect one fcake to be like another. Yeah, I don't know. I actually asked Marie, which she started, if you wanted to shed that baggage, but it's kind of a tradition at this point too. Fcake is fun. I don't know. I didn't dislike it. And there is cake. So that's important. But also, there was the important thank you so much, Marie, for everything you have done in that role. We should have a special round of applause for you at some point here. I don't know. I know you're going anywhere. I think that, yeah. There we got it there. I got ahead. It was there at the bottom. I don't know if that text goes keying off of that. Yeah. I do want to take a moment. I don't think people realize the amount of effort that Marie has put into Nest and all of the events she's done over the last three years. And Matthew and I are on stage here with her, but it's like 80% Marie. Yeah. And this is her last Nest, hopefully, because she'll be taking a new role. So I just wanted, you know, everyone to just take a moment and just thank her for all the awesome work that she has done for our community and will continue to do until the day she dies, hopefully. I mean, it's a long time from now. That's weird. I'm sorry. Yeah. Well, I have a mini speech, which is, I guess, being with our community action impact coordinator has just changed my life, my career. And I've connected with so many people across the world in ways that I had never really imagined and face challenges. And I would like to think had victories over them and definitely haven't been perfect in every single way. But I really just appreciate the people in Fedora so very much really have changed who I am as a person, helped me grow. And I'm so glad that I had the chance to support all of you. So much cheering and the animations. Wow. Okay. Sorry for taking things out of order. Wait, wait. Go back to more slides. Yeah, sorry. Yes. So at the beginning of this, we're like, we're going to hit a thousand K, you can go to the next slide though. Registrations and we were so darn, so, so very darn close. I actually just refreshed the page and it's 992 right now. I don't know if someone took my 93. But I'm just going to call it, you know, pretty. That's less than 1%. Right. That's a very, very solid effort. And thank you all for, you know, tweeting and sharing your social media and sharing it in your networks. And the really cool part is we had a 76% turnout and I was just like curious. So as I was preparing for this, I took a look and most industry events are showing a 50% turnout. So we are way above and beyond that 50% turnout. Also, I was looking at like how long people stay in events. And it's usually like three hours or, you know, like 30 to 40 minutes a session. But we have like nine hours and 45 minutes is the average amount of time spent at NEST, which is awesome. And we beat last year's, which was nine hours and 20 minutes. So that's pretty cool. And any mathematicians, statisticians who would like to quibble about how we're calculating averages, you can do that as a talk for the next event, I think. We also had a higher peak attendance of 284 attendees all at one time. So that's pretty cool as well. And that was above last year's of 250. Yeah, it's amazing to see that like these going up after three years of doing this because I continue to be tired of virtual events in general. And my enthusiasm for them has gone, you know, after the first three months went down pretty low. But this one's still is energizing for me and I'm glad it is for other people as well. Why does that not show graph? Or I had the slides there. Maybe you, I don't know, I could see it on my side. But maybe. Invisible, protected data. There we go. So just some fun from other stuff. The top areas by attendees. Last year your state of Fedora talk had 249 people visitors. So we beat that by 60 some odd people showed up for that. And top areas by chat messages. That's not as interesting. And I guess the expo booth and for Lenovo and Das was the most popular. It's not really an expo booth kind of conference. Although we continue to support to appreciate our sponsors. They're not here for the expo booth really. Right. I don't want to go through all of the polls or all the ones on the screen. But, you know, I think maybe this would be a good com blog post it or several at some points talking about some of them. I did like the fact that hoppin allows one option polls, which is kind of cool. But I included a few that were kind of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little you rather have infinite coffee or infinite chocolate closeness was close. I really worry about people who want infinite cottons. I don't even like having one around, but sure, and knock yourself out. I'm a favor of a larger but still finite number. I think that's what we. Finite Ben cottons is okay. I did want to just highlight the Thora social channel because a lot of people apparently hadn't heard of it or don't like fun. We do, you know, it's open all the time, but we do have weekly social hours that I think I don't very attend very often, but when I do I really enjoy them so you should definitely do that. For a while we had a no talking about Fedora rule at the social hour in order to make it continue to be focused on the social aspects and we often talk about all wide-ranging topics, but sometimes it gets Fedora, you know, tech focused. Talk a lot about food. There is. Yeah, but we've been doing it for two years now, I guess. Forever, ever times, but it's on it's on Thursdays and we alternate later and earlier in the day from my perspective to accommodate people of different time zones around the world. So show up. The chat room is there all the time, but the Fedora social hour is twice a week. Sorry to make that clear. Once a week. What? Once a week. Yeah, see this is two time. What is it even? And if you want to know when next week is you can read Friday's Fedora facts on the community blog because it's listed in there along with all kinds of other useful information. The one person who says they read it and doesn't have what they need, let me know because I'd like to make it more useful. And the 52 people who say we didn't know we had a community blog, that's sort of the semi-official way that we publish, at least at the council. All of the project level announcement kind of things like policy changes and stuff like that from the council will go there. So it's a really good place to follow. There's typically only a few posts a week, so it's not a heavy inundation. And in one small thunk at the problem of all of our information being decentralized and everywhere, it is mirrored to the discussion that Fedora project at our site in the announcements category. And also all the comments go there, so it's not split. So you can also follow it on discourse and therefore by email with your discourse notifications, or I think you can also subscribe on the com blog directly if you want different ways to get the information. So that's a pretty useful thing to follow if you want to be kind of more involved. It's the inward facing blog rather than the Fedora magazine, which is going to outward user facing information. And 34.7% would like to be more involved, as well as 24% who are not involved, but would like to be. So this could show some opportunities where you could get involved. And the other thing I just threw up here, I thought was interesting, was the geographical one. One person who is probably lying, but maybe not joined us from Antarctica. But there's definitely a heavy Europe and North America presence, which I don't know how much of that is time zone and how much of that is like an accurate representation of our community. But it would be cool to, you know, see more people. We do have geographies. There is a Fedora project contributor who I think lives in Alaska now, but and he's not been active for a while. He keeps saying on Twitter, he'll come back. So we need to poke him a little bit. But who did actually do stuff from Antarctica at the research station down there. So Antarctica, it could be another person. If it is you or penguin, could be a penguin, but could actually be legit. So definitely massive. Oh, Matthew's gonna go ahead. Go for it. Sponsors. Thank you. Thank you, Red Hat. We really appreciate, you know, everything they provide hop in for us here, which is, you know, that's, it's a nice platform that makes it possible for us to do this with as few people as we do really. And, you know, a lot of other stuff for Fedora, and gold sponsors, Almo Linux, one of the other downstreams that rebuilds from the, the CentOS sources, the rel sources to make a rel like distribution. And they are trying to do it in a community banner. And it's nice to see them around and kind of interacting in the third community. And of course, Lenovo makes the laptop that you cannot see, but that I am using to talk to you now, came with Fedora Linux preinstalled. It's awesome. If you haven't seen that session, find that in the recording. Mark is really involved in the Fedora community. And it's awesome to see. OpenSusa, one of our, you know, nearby sibling distributions in some ways that has a lot in common with the way Fedora works and a lot of the technology we use. And so I like to see the collaboration we have back and forth and some overlap with OpenSusa, you know, contributors and Fedora contributors even. Datto, who sponsored one of the Hatch events. That's great. GitLab, they're giving us GitLab access for the docs hosting and a bunch of other things. And you know, that's, we're having, I'm having a conversation with them about making more things open source on GitLab coming up sometime soon too. So I don't know, hopefully we can, we can push there. That would be kind of exciting. And I cannot see the other one because it's behind my camera. Oh my goodness. It's DOS keyboard. That's awesome. Wait, where did my keycap go? I hear one lonely key that has the Fedora logo on it. And I need to get a keyboard that this can actually fit on. In the meantime, I do have this little Arduino device. It's not plugged in right now. But I can put the key on here and then have it do something, which it's running circuit Python. So I could pretty much make it do anything. But I don't have a particularly useful idea. So if anybody wants to suggest what a Fedora button should do, you know, yeah, I also need to get some other like not white keycaps to match it here. But this is what I had lying around. So they also, this is from Adafruit. And they have a one key version of this as well. But it was out of stock. So I went with four. So I don't know, maybe I'll look and see if the one key version is back in stock again. I don't need a key to ping myself on matrix. That is not useful. I open discussion.fpo, though that seems on brand for you. Yeah, that's all right. Yeah, that's a good one. Oh, and there's so many more sponsors. Yeah, so KDE and GNOME desktop environments that are some of the key things we integrate into our desktop editions, products, offerings, spins, our technology, and we have like to have good relationships with them. So it's nice to see the back and forth there. opensource.com, which is a Red Hat blog that talks about open source and open culture and is awesome. And Tux Digital, which is, was Destination Linux Network, and they are a partner with us on the Fedora Linux or the Fedora podcast. Thank you all. Swag time. Exciting. This might be me. Yeah, so if you have not signed up yet for your Nest with Fedora swag pack, please do. We have 500 packs made, but there is more swag beyond that. I have a bundle. I have some Nest swag packs from last year. I have some t-shirts. So if you signed up for swag, we are going to get you some just depends on you know, when you signed up for it. But there is a really fun surprise item in the swag pack featuring our new mascot core. So super excited for people to get those and have fun putting them up around your house. That's what I'm gonna say. Nice. Do we know how many of the 500 have been claimed already? If Vipple is around, he could tell us. And he did. Okay, so. Alright, so there's still a chance to sign up if you haven't gotten one of the swag packs. Also just want to call out Hello Tux. They offer t-shirts, hoodies, polos with the Fedora logo. And there's a promo code to get a discount on Fedora swag there. And also the cool stuff store. Yes, we know you have to log in. We agree that's not ideal. But you can log in there and take a look at the Fedora collection. And there's a variety of items you could purchase, including a t-shirt and other things. But since you're all getting that swag already, you can just get that for now. But it'll be available for a while longer. I don't know if we are not going to ask that if I have a fast login for it because Fedora account system login, because this system is apparently going away in favor of an entirely different one. So this is Red Hat's own branded merchandise store that we were hoping to simplify things for ourselves by taking advantage of. And it turns out to have not. So we'll see. For the new one, there's going to be no login. That's my understanding. But I'm figuring out what that's going to look like right now. It might go on to the next fcake, not sure. But we're talking about what the new solution will be. Cool. We're almost out of time. We managed to go 25 minutes with legit stuff and not just making random jokes and being awkward. But yeah, thanks again. We can do that too. Yes, we can. Oh, yep, there's a good comment here that says that the QR codes in the slides are not very inclusive for people who are not able to just scan the slide because they may have you may be blind or have other issues with that. So yes, that's a good point. We have put these links at various places pinned in the event thing. But we can make them available somewhere else as well. They also I think they all went by in the chat. That's a good point. They're almost historically. Go ahead, Marie. I was just going to say that they're in the reception page for the event. And that there's going to be a post event email that'll have the swag link. It'll have a link to the replay section. But we're absolutely open to that suggestion. And I think we can definitely just have the links at the ready next time and be dropping them in the chat. Historically, we've also added them to the wiki page. I don't know if we did that this year, but some definitely something we can do is add it to the schedule wiki. Because we do want to make it super easy for people to click on the link, however it is that they click. Yeah. So are we done? I think so. I guess we're done. I really could use like a meal with everybody in a drink and I hang out. No, well, maybe after a nap, but then we should also say thank you to all the other helpers here. People doing the polls and moderating Europe and Issa and Justin and I'm not sure who all else. Vipple and yes, thank you. Issa did a ton of work coordination with our sponsors. And she did a bunch of the social media work. So thanks a huge thank you to Issa for doing that awesome work for us and making the event an even greater success, for sure. And of course, thank you, everybody for attending and speaking and everything else. We'll see you, you know, actually, just basically where we are here already, not in Hopin. Come over to chat, the photo project or discussion and we can keep talking. And the museum is like always running, right? Is that So the museum, yes, it is always running. But right now we have, you know, like a paid making sure it works for more than 15 people kind of thing. But if you wanted to use if anyone in the community wanted to use the Fedora Museum for an event or hanging out, totally can do that. All right. Bye, everybody. Bye. Talk to you soon, like next week online.