 All right, you know, I guess we're running on Israeli time. So a little late, but let's get started. So first off, I want to welcome everyone to essentially the first official Cube Day that we're hosting this year, and we're happy to do it in Tel Aviv. So welcome, everyone, Shalom, as you say here. So this Cube Day experience has been something new that we've been doing in CNCF to build regional events, all over the world, and kind of meet our community where they are, and we continue to plan to do these. So I just want to do a brief welcome. And as part of that, I want to discuss a little bit about some interesting facts that I've kind of been discovering around the Israeli cloud native community. So many of you have seen this lovely diagram, you know, this landscape. I'm not going to go do a keynote and welcome about, let's go through every little box on the landscape. The whole purpose of this thing is to show that we have a very large, diverse community of many open source projects, products, and so on that kind of compromise this whole cloud native ecosystem. We have over 200,000 contributors that contribute to this corpus of 160-plus projects that make up cloud native. It makes us one of the largest open source communities out there in the world, if not fully the largest from what I know. So today, we have about 500 people attending our first Cube Day Israel, which I'm very, very excited about, which is close to capacity. So thank you, everyone, for coming here and supporting our first event. You know, when I was talking with some of our lovely program chairs, I was kind of trying to analyze what really makes up the kind of Israeli cloud native community. And so diving through the information, we have this thing called community.cncf.i, or Client Native Community Groups. We have 2,000-plus members from Israel. We've done 30, at least, community meetups. And there was a lovely Kubernetes Community Day Israel organized recently, not to be confused with Cube Day that had about 400 people that attended. So it's a great, growing community. If we look at our over 800 members that are part of the CNCF, we have about 31 that are exclusively headquartered in Tel Aviv, sorry, Israel. And big chunk are in Tel Aviv, for sure. And these are a great set of companies. Obviously, I think there's maybe a heavy security bias with some of these companies, but truly all different parts of the cloud native stack. I think another interesting thing is these are just the 31 companies that are headquartered here, but major international companies have very, very large development presences here and obviously are contributing to the community. The other thing that I was doing that I was like, you know what? Let's try to map the overall contributions to the CNCF ecosystem coming out of Israel. And if you look over the last handful of years, every year there have been more and more contributions coming, and there's been already 10,000 contributions this year so far to CNCF projects. But if you look at this, you look at Israel, the country, GDP, you're like number 33 or something overall. And if you look at the overall contributions to the CNCF ecosystem, Israel comes in as 17th overall of the country to all of the CNCF projects and to Kubernetes itself. It's the 21st largest contributor. So in my opinion, you are definitely punching above your, let's call it weight class or GDP class, if you look at it that way. So totally, it's about 1.6% of the global contributions are coming from here in this country, which is super fascinating. Then I kind of started to dive into which projects? What are the projects that are obviously contributions coming to? So we have a handful of projects that were actually born in Israel from CNCF. We have things like Teller, CubeSpace, CurieFence. These are obviously, oddly, I don't know why CDKT comes up, but seems to be very popular in Israel. But most of these projects have a bit of an interesting kind of clown-native security bent, which is always fascinating for me to see. But thank you for everyone that is contributing to these projects and ensuring that we're kind of democratizing clown-native infrastructure. So without wasting any more time and kind of continuing with the program today, I kind of want to end with just a final welcome and kind of thought here. So I've always admired Israeli culture. There's always been this kind of community aspect to it, whether things are culturally, you have things like Kabitz's, right? Then you have these things called Sundaka charity boxes. So there's always been this kind of culture of giving and collaboration. And I think if I kind of look at CNCF itself, I view it as kind of almost a modern form of a Kabitz in some ways. We're all working together and contributing in our unique way. We have some very talented engineers. We have people that are great at organizing events. We have people that are great at doing translations. This whole purpose of this organization is truly to democratize open source, modern clown-native infrastructures. And I want to ensure that everyone in this room is aware that you could contribute in your own kind of unique way. And we'd love to kind of continue to see the community here building, evolving, and growing. And we're definitely going to be back here for sure to do more. So without any further ado, I kind of want to truly kick off the program today. And thank you all for coming here today. I want to introduce one of our lovely co-chairs of this event. He is also one of our clown-native ambassadors. He has also been an incredibly gracious host in the 36 hours that I've been in Tel Aviv for the first time. So I would like to welcome Doton to the stage to kind of get us going. So thank you for the hospitality. And I'd love to be here. Amazing to have you in Israel. Thank you very much, Chris. Give him a big round of applause. Yay. And thank you all for joining us here for Cube the Israel, the first Cube the Israel. Very exciting. So actually, these are amazing stats. We're such a tiny country, around 9 million people. And seeing that we are behind 1.6% of the global open source contributions to the CNCF. 1.6% for a tiny country, 10,000 contributions only this year alone. I think this deserves a clap. Round of applause to Israel, great community. Or as I say, may the open source be with you. And to be honest, I'm not that surprised. I've been fortunate enough to be one of the organizing team for the local CNCF chapter, the Meetup Group, Kubernetes Community Days, DevOps Days, and others. And let me tell you, I see that every day. We've been organizing regular Meetups on CNCF Tel Aviv for the past four years, or maybe even more. You can see some pictures, very cool. Even through the pandemic, by the way, with the lockdown and everything else, and the community carried on growing. And then we decided that we're going to hold a full day event, Kubernetes Community Days here in Israel in Tel Aviv back in March. Who attended KCD Israel in Tel Aviv? Raise your hands. Come on. Oh, that's amazing. I see quite a few faces here. So that was an amazing event. Great lineup, as you can see in the pictures there. And great success sold out. And we have many other communities locally here in Israel. We have DevOps Days. We have EDPFIL, JavaIL, and many others. And let me tell you, as someone who's been on the organizer side involved in many of these, this is definitely not to be taken for granted. We've got an amazing community and ecosystem here in Israel. So lots of pride. Talking about local ecosystem, before we get started, I want to give a huge thank you to our global sponsors, Sensor and Terrosky. And to our local supporters, AppsFlyer, Cloudzone, DoIt, Ground, Kava, Casten by VM, Lumigo, and PerfectScale. Their support helped bringing this beautiful event to Tel Aviv. And another big thank you to my co-chair, my program chair, Dana Rosin, for working with me to curate this great lineup of talks that you're going to see today. Thank you, Dana. So as you heard from Chris, CUBE events are designed to connect international and local experts in global cities like Tel Aviv with developers, adopters, and practitioners to deliver quality educational experiences. We have an incredible day lined up in front of us, some excellent talks on Kubernetes and other CNCF projects. Today, you'll get a chance to interact with leaders in the community and with other experts in our beginner and advanced tracks. Before we get started, I want to remind everyone that our sponsor showcase is open here outside in the Pavilion 10 foyer. They will open until 7 PM, including breaks and lunch, so do stop by and check it out. Our lunch buffet will also be served here outside in the Pavilion 10 foyer. And please join us on our networking and evening event, reception event that we're going to hold here also at the Pavilion 10 foyer right after the last talk at 5 PM. At the reception, we can enjoy drinks and appetizers and, most importantly, connect with your fellow attendees. And lastly, please remember that we have an event of conduct that everyone has agreed to abide to and that we will enforce. In short, everyone should feel welcome and included. Please treat everyone with respect and professionalism. And if you have any concerns, please go to the registration desk and the event team will assist you. Without further ado, I would like to welcome our first keynote speakers. May Beisaron is an infrastructure engineer at FOTA and Batel Zoal is a developer advocate at JFrog. Today, they will walk us through the spine-tingling and frightening migration of 420 services to Kubernetes. Not everything was as it seemed, and they are here to share with you the technical constraints and hurdles that they faced. Please welcome May and Batel to the stage.