 Welcome to the operating Cloud Foundry track. We're actually the track chairs. So we actually selected the sessions together. So if you end up being bored out of your minds, just blame us. Absolutely. So we'll tell you a little bit of ourselves and the reasons for choosing some of the tracks. Sandy, Kesh, he's a lead Cloud Architect at IBM. That's from like a seven-year-old LinkedIn profile, which I obviously need update. Sorry. Yeah, so I work for IBM, what was IBM Bluemix? I have no idea how we brand it these days, but big, large Cloud Foundry installation. I'm also the lead architect for Cloud Foundry Enterprise Environment from IBM. And I'm also a Cloud Foundry Committer. Hi, my name is Susan Wu. I'm in product marketing. I actually work on a lot of open-source products. This is my sixth one. I was on Ubuntu, Docker, OpenSack, CloudSack. And now I'm on Kubernetes. Right before this, I was at a startup with an open-source network virtualization software called Medanet. So in cloud-native apps, it's actually a bunch of open-source products that we turned into commercial solutions. And one of them ones I'll do a quick pitch is Pivotal Container Service. Anybody know what that is? OK. Well, stop by the VMware booth later when you can. And let's talk about the track. Why did you choose certain things, Sandy? So lots of things interested me. But a couple of them, some tracks, some topics that to me seem to get sort of short shrift. Generally things like we've got some talks that deal with things like DR and HA, topics which I think sometimes don't get as much attention as they should. And as I said, someone who works on what is nominally at least the largest single Cloud Foundry deployment in the world, those are topics that are near and dear to my heart. Also, since I've worked on a number of projects involving Kube and Cloud Foundry integration, and I'm leading one right now, where at any time my eyes lit up when I saw that. And those were of interest to me. I mean, that's what drove me. Yeah, for me, actually I was a little operator right before joining VMware. I actually had my own workload for the company WordPress on MySQL. We had it on on-premise cloud. We had some on public cloud. I moved it from different cloud servers, different providers, and worked with public cloud. So I sort of have a very, very strong affinity with working with other operators. The other thing is VMware is actually very, very strong in Kubernetes now. A lot of commitments our own engineers are committing code into the Kubernetes community. We have people involved with a bunch of working groups. What really drove me, why I was so interested in Cloud Foundry Foundation, I've been in all sorts. I've been in Apache. I've been in Linux Foundation, OpenStack, and you name it. What's really intriguing about this is there are so many operators. It's like half or so are operators. I'd be sitting next to somebody and it's an operator with real problems. And actually willingness to share, which is another good thing. Most of the time when you speak with commercial customers, like arms length, right? I don't really want to tell you my real requirements. I'll let you guess at it. But in this community it's really, really strong. People are so open about trying to tell you what's being solved, what are the hard problems. And so that's why we actually have product managers here. They are going around and trying to understand the requirements, which is why it drove me to kind of volunteer for this track. Sounds good. Should we kick it off and let them hear what they came to hear? Yeah, so our first talk is operating PCF on concourse for how to sleep more and worry less by Teresa Stoll, Ryan Pei, and Yuri Litvanovich, or Litvinovich, I'm sorry, after all that practice, I still blew it. Apologies, so without further ado, why don't you all come on up and...