 We are essentially a software-driven company. We have about 65,000 engineers and more than half of them are working on software. Tizen is a Linux-based operating system designed for connected devices. It is hosted at the Linux Foundation and is open to all developers. Today, we are releasing the preview of Visual Studio Tools for Tizen so that developers can explore what they can do with Tizen and .NET. The whole collaboration was kicked off by a Samsung engineer. I love C-Shop. I built a prototype with Tizen and .NET for our company Hackathon and I got the special innovation prize. Tizen is embracing .NET because it is a completely open-source project. .NET can run everywhere unless developers do things that they couldn't do before. Beginning from 2017, Samsung will ship .NET on Tizen, including all our core Tizen products. Developers will be able to publish their apps on Samsung's Tizen app stores. We also will be contributing to Jammarin.Forms so that developers can share common logic and UI across Tizen, iOS, and Android. We want to actively participate to grow the .NET community. We have become one of the top contributors. In today's build, out of 160,000 tests, we are failing only eight cases. We want to invite .NET developers to become Samsung developers. Great companies like Microsoft and Samsung are working together sharing their technologies with developers all around the world. With Samsung devices, .NET is going to be everywhere.