 I'm Allison Randall. I'm the president of the Open Source Initiative and I also work on OpenStack at Hewlett-Backard. Thank you for joining us today on SuperUserTV, Allison. Can you give me a little bit more background about the Open Source Initiative? So the Open Source Initiative is a non-profit 501c3 organization. It was founded right around the same time as the term Open Source, and its primary mission is around shepherding the term Open Source to make sure that it's used appropriately. And that includes the Open Source definition and also sort of figuring out which licenses are able to be called Open Source. The other thing we really do is a lot of work around community best practices, helping open source communities improve the way they interact and sort of improve development practices as well. Awesome. So how does the Open Source Initiative relate back to the OpenStack Foundation? So they're independent, but I would say they're related in the sense that the Open Source Initiative is interested in all Open Source projects across the board and how they relate to each other. And OpenStack is a really, really important example of an Open Source project, especially an example of some of the newer style of Open Source projects where there's a foundation in the center that's the collaboration point for hundreds of companies. This is more of a recent development in Open Source, but it's a really important one. So what are some of the examples of how Open Source is transforming in 2015? So it's an interesting thing. So in the early days of Open Source, it was like a little bit frenzy. It was like people saying, well, people don't understand free software, let's give it a name, and start trying to gauge with companies. And then over like 2005 to 2010, you see more and more companies really getting the concept of Open Source and how it can benefit them. The interesting thing about 2015 is we're hitting a point where pretty much all companies, about 78% of companies report that they're using Open Source, and like 88% report that they're planning to contribute more in the future. So we're really at this phase of Open Source where it's gone from being frenzy to being like adopted to now it's really the central way of doing business for a lot of companies. And a really important way that companies can collaborate together, whereas if they were just out in the commercial space, they would have to sign, you know, like 500 pages of contracts just to collaborate on a project. When it's Open Source, like OpenStack, they can collaborate, and it's no more complicated than signing a contributor agreement and joining the foundation. So it really is an important piece of driving innovation. Awesome. Well, thank you again for joining us today on SuperUserTV, and I hope you enjoy the rest of the OpenStack Summit Tokyo. Thank you. Really glad to be here.