 Hello. Yeah. Hi, guys. I'm Dhananjay Sathe. I just joined direct about eight months ago into a little team and something came to my attention, right? So we've had a two-day conference where we've talked about making life easier in general. We've been talking about making life easier for the developer, for the end customer. Just give him something, right? That in all fairness is what our job is supposed to be. Great. But there's something that we have observed out here. There are a few trends that I observed and we, as a team, work to solve these very problems, right? We, as a team, develop solutions for the ops folks, for your L1 and L2 engineers, for your other managers and stuff like that. So there's a very common trend that people have, hey, you know what? Our company graphs a thousand graphs a day. Let's face it. You have two eyes. You just cannot handle that overload. Yes, we are robots. We react to an event loop with an FLS condition. When something breaks, we try and fix it. Somehow, whatever we do, we analyze logs, we check everything into LogStash or Kibana or whatever we do. It's always, it always tends to be reactionary. It's always finding a solution after something happened for the first time, right? And there's a very common perspective that most of us like to share is that, you know what? Screw this UI. I'm perfectly cool with using a terminal command prompt and I'll get my job done. That is true. At the same time, you have the view that, hey, you know what? I really like the new iTunes. Okay. So there are a few things we did and they really, really work well for us now is putting the convenience and the knowledge of all the information you have. So issues in infrastructure, in large infrastructures tend to repeat themselves. And when a person looks at an issue, which is an incident page where you could correlate events from discrete infrastructure along any axes you choose to, and now you could comment on that. You have a knowledge base where people solve certain issues. You need not wake up your teammates at 2 a.m. at night. Your folks are much happier. You don't waste time going into your wiki. You have solutions right there. They are auto suggested to you as you look at an incident. Data never lies, right? So take all this data, put it over there and proactively make sense of it. Don't wait to analyze your data after something has happened and try and figure out why it happened, how can we prevent it? You should have a system that's smart enough to tell you that you know what this could happen. And that is what we should be working at, right? We've evolved in the kind of software solutions and platforms we provide, but we've not improved on an equals footing on the tools that you provide to your ops folks, right? And this is something that really, really needs to change. We implicitly love pretty things. There's no point of having a really complicated interface where you manually type in each server. You don't think of clusters as five or eight discrete servers with their names. You just give it a common generic name which follows a regular expression. And you say, you know what, if a few of these nodes go down, probably it means that there's something going on in this reddish cluster, right? That's the way you think. And that is the way your UI should be intuitive enough to allow you to configure something like that. Last but not the least, again, come up with this data, visualize it in the right way. I mean, even a color of a graph or how what is presented in what context of the page could make a huge difference between finding a solution and not finding a solution. So these are probably the founding principles to which our team works and what Slant is actually really about. And hopefully we'll be able to show you more things and announce it soon. So yeah, it's just a little rant, a little opinion that we have that we invest so much time in developing stuff for software developers. If we spend some more time and some resources in developing great tools for your operations and society folk, they will actually have more time to help you do other stuff better. And I think we should look into that aspect. Thank you.