 So we're here at the Linaro Connect, so what's the latest that you've been working with? Personally at this Connect I've spent so much time in steering committee meetings, supervising all the segment groups, discussing with all our members, trying to provide as much value as possible because Linaro is all about collaboration with our members. So it has been a pretty intense week, we're all tired, all got cold, their conditioning is pretty strong here, spend very valuable time together. Even we had social events in the evening and those are very good opportunities for networking regardless of being in a nice venue with good food, but you continue discussing, talking about priorities, talking about things to improve or things that have gone really well, so very intense week. I'm very pleased with the keynotes, lots of good stuff. We tried also to have something new, different. We had Qualcomm present artificial intelligence into drones, self-driving, everything and it was really exciting, forward-looking. We had Hadamica discussing about software licenses, open source. How the open source license is going to stay irrelevant forever basically because if some people are excited about it, who knows what will happen with the next generation. That was exactly the topic of Hadam keynote. All the open source contributors, they own a copyright and within the licenses, even within the GPL, they grant use of that code to the developers who receive the code. But now the question is when the first generation of developers, of contributors, will they move to a better phase of life, somewhere up? When they get upstreamed. They get upstreamed there. Yes, that's a nice way. Their hairs will own those copyrights for 70 years, at least according to the US law. You hold a copyright until you get upstreamed and for 70 years. Will their hairs be as good as favorable with the open source community? Or will there be any rogue contentions trying to make money out of it? This is what Hadamica was raising in her keynote in a very clear and positive way. Was she suggesting to cancel all copyrights? No, she was not. No, she was not. She proposed a few solutions. I'm not an expert in the domain. I'm very interested in the software licenses, but I'm not an expert. So I'm not the one who can explain those proposed solutions. But there will be fixes, I'm sure. And today there was a keynote from Yan Rabe. That was also one of my favorites. I hope people enjoyed it. If not, I'm the guilty one. Because five years ago I attended a keynote by Yan Rabe at the University of Lund in Sweden. And I was completely fascinated by his keynote, by his communication style as well, his vision. Five years ago he was envisioning connecting IoT devices, sensors and more, not just as we do today in a one-to-one, a sensors giving you a temperature or counting how many steps and telling it to you, and that's it. No, his vision five years ago and he was already working on it. So this comes to ten years ago. He was envisioning connecting all these sensors and distributing tasks across the sensors and possibly having the sensors coordinate by themselves just like bees in a swarm. And this is the swarm, his vision. And now Linaro is making this real. So today, fast forward, and today this is for real, the swarm OS. This was the demo on the opening keynote. So the swarm OS is a kind of coordination framework, software framework between the IOT nodes and there are students and professors like Professor Zufo from Brazil who are prototyping these on the Linaro 96 boards. And so since at Linaro we started working on Internet of Things, my dream was to have Jan Rabe come and connect and give a talk about the swarm and about the future. And the vision is going forward. This morning Jan was talking about expanding this network of nodes, the swarm, even more and having humans part, humans part of the swarm. We all carry our phones, but we should do more and be connected, which should be smart humans connected to the swarm. That was very fascinating. Hopefully it will be a positive swarm, another aggressive swarm. Yes. It will be our friends. Our friends, as Jan said. And as my boss says, yes, we love the idea, but my boss says he loves the idea but he wants to become a smarter, connected human. Well, maybe the next generation when he's not anymore. So it's fascinating. The keynote was really great. So thank you, Jan, if you're watching this. Professor Jan Rabe, thank you for coming and giving such a fascinating keynote. So what's the other stuff you're working on the next few months? What's going to happen? We had a great day with the ARM data center today. We had a lot of companies coming and talking about their products. There's some pretty cool chips coming out. Thunder X2, the new Qualcomm chipset. I'm sure you can add links under this video with links to those companies talking about their chips. It's been many years in the making, many years. Now, seven years. Correct. Have you worked even longer than that on the server ecosystem stuff? Linaro started seven years ago. And you? I started with Linaro seven years ago. I was with SDRyxon in the Linaro board and then moved to Linaro five years ago. And we started working on servers five years ago. And so now it's maybe the year that things are going to shake up a lot. And all this work that Linaro's been doing is maybe going to pay off one more. It's all coming together. So if you see, we have LEG. We have the developer cloud. The developer cloud is a full blown cloud instance running complete full open source. So at Linaro, we have collected all the open source packages. We have made sure that they all run on ARM and all the patches are upstream. It shall just work. No local quirks. It shall just work. And so the developer cloud is running these open source software with all the patches pulled down, for example, from the OpenStack Color project. It's upstream. There's no hidden patches. And so we have a complete data center that is running on ARM servers full open source. That's the best proof that we are ready. So it's coming. You're ready? It's coming. It's not just the swarm. It's also the servers. Everything. And as soon as the chips are qualified for mass production, they will go in. That's the hardware side. And the home group is pretty busy. The mobile group is still busy. They're all busy. They're all busy. We're all pleased about the way they are progressing. There's a lot of interest in the home group in continuing on unifying the media acceleration set of boxes, smart TVs, OTT, digital home devices. And Linaro with OptiE, the open platform trusted execution environment. We are in a unique position to have a complete open source, secure solution. We have integrated Microsoft Whitevine, Microsoft Play Raid in Google Whitevine. Apologies. We have integrated them with OptiE. We have a complete open source solution for the security and the DRM. Of course, deploying these into products requires the right licenses with Microsoft and Google, of course. So that's not just their legal implications that people should comply with. But we can implement it with open source. And so we can combine the unified work on media acceleration with a secure solution and we can achieve a complete open source, secure data plate solution. These can be applicable to smart TVs, OTT. These can be applicable to both Linux. We have an open SDK, which is a collection of open source components into a complete media reference framework with open embedded Yocto. But also Android TV. We can help our members interpret the secure solution within the media acceleration for Android TV products. So all the industry is super happy with the work that Linaro is doing. So, like, you're probably watching this video and saying thanks a lot for what you're doing. No, thanks. Thanks to you, Charlie. And you're probably telling them you're welcome. Just come over. And maybe you can't just solve everything. Maybe you're too good and you solve so much. But you always have new challenges. Another very exciting announcement was from our CEO last Monday, the associate program. So we want to widen the base of companies collaborating with Linaro. It's beyond the Silicon vendors, the commercial district vendors. We want to help to have the OEMs, ODMs, building products. They can be part of what we are doing. They can help share valuable feedback so that the Silicon vendors and the ODMs, they can build better products, better time to market. They can help influence the... Yes, correct. It's the kind of the voice of the market. So there should be hundreds of associate members by next connect. I don't know. I don't know. Potentially we have this in every segment group and it looks exciting. Cool. And then there's also a lot of cool stuff happening with the networking. Now every base station is going to be on par, running some of the cool new networking solutions. And this has been working for years also. I let those companies who are providing those demos. I'm sure you have filmed the demos here. So the demos are pretty cool. Whether base station will run, I let you check with those companies. I cannot speak for the companies. But it's exciting. It's exciting that the open data plane acceleration is showing the full potential. And this shall not be just an ARP only thing. We really want to break this assumption that ARM is ODP and Intel is DPDK. It's wrong. It's a wrong setting. We do work on DPDK as well, on ARM. And we would be pleased to share best practices from ODP to DPDK. It's about collaboration. So Llinaro, we want to collaborate with any project. And ODP has been proving a lot of increased value. Already at last connect in Budapest, last March, we demonstrated a complete high PSEC acceleration with ODP. Integrated with open fast path. And that is tremendous. So you can expect more to come. Networking is looking at SparkNIC, Edge devices. It's exciting. There's a lot that will be coming. So that risk idea really paid off. And Sophie Wilson did a nice little implementation of the instruction set. And everything is great, right? Now, you know my next stream? Last Tuesday, you saw the announcement of the social next, the developer box. That is super cool desktop machine based on the social next 24 core chip. That is running Linux. You want to put that inside the DBC computer? I want to port RISCOS on that machine. Port RISCOS? RISCOS. RISCOS is the heritage. It was developed by Sophie, Sophie Wilson together with the first ARM chips. So RISCOS in 1988 had anti-aliasing and vector rendering and drag and drop. We discussed this last few months ago. RISCOS now is an open source project with the RISCOS Open Limited, if I'm not wrong. Some friends in UK, they parted it on the, I think, on... Dragon board? No, I'm not sure. I would love that. I would love that. So I would like to see RISCOS ported on the social next PC. That would be the new RISC PC or the new... Can you invite Sophie Wilson to do the keynote at the next Linux? That will be a dream come true as well. Why not? Why not? Hopefully, Hong Kong loves a nice place. Why not? Why not? That's a great idea. Thank you.