 Look, hello everyone and welcome to the 2021 open-source strategy forum. I'm really excited to be kicking things off today. We've got a great program lined up for you. It's been a long road to get where we are. I remember first meeting GAB at our very first board meeting somewhere in Silicon Valley, what seems like ages ago now, but I think it was actually about six or seven years. At that point, as GAB mentioned, we weren't Phinos yet. We were the Symphony Software Foundation, and our mission was to support open sourcing and collaboration around the symphony ecosystem. But already, I knew that we had something very special there, because for the first time, we had engineering representatives from the major cell side firms and already some of the by-side firms sitting down together in an open forum to talk about software and collaboration. That had never happened before. In particular, at the end of that board meeting, we were all sitting down at an Italian restaurant in Palo Alto somewhere that GAB had recommended. I will say this, always follow GAB's recommendations on Italian restaurants. You will never go wrong. Anyway, we were sitting there and we had had a lot of great food, a lot of wine to drink. At that point in the evening, everyone was pretty satisfied. I see GAB call the waiter over and whisper something very quickly and Italian to him. One of GAB's criteria for picking an Italian restaurant is that everyone must be fluent in Italian. He calls the waiter over, says something quickly to him, and about 10 minutes later, three enormous platters of steak appear. We're done at this point, and three enormous platters of steak come out. That's when I realized GAB is not messing around, and he always has bigger plans for you. That's how we ended up in 2018 with the FinTech Open Source Foundation that we all know and love, his spin-offs. Look, our mission still includes a deep commitment to collaboration around the symphony ecosystem, but it's also much broader now, encompassing all aspects of financial services technology. Our membership has expanded dramatically over those years. We welcome to many more FinTech and buy-side firms in the organization. We have major contributions from multiple companies, and we're in discussion with regulators about how they can collaborate with us to ensure that the transmission of financial information is as frictionless as possible. We're talking to ISDA about contributing their common domain model to FinNOS. You'll hear more about our OpenREGTECH initiative from GAB in just a bit. Look, and now we're part of the Linux Foundation, which is incredibly exciting. Joining the preeminent Open Source Foundation was a no-brainer for us, and it helps us integrate the special needs of financial services, the broader Open Source community. Having the level of support and community building that the Linux Foundation brings is a huge win. Tools like LFX Insights are already proving hugely useful to us. We have greater opportunity to explore synergies with other LF projects, like the enterprise-friendly blockchain of Hyperledger, the cloud enablement of CNCF, security focus of OpenSSF, and the standards-in-a-box approach of the Joint Development Foundation. Before I hand things over to GAB and the other speakers this morning, I want to touch a bit on what I think are some of the most exciting recent developments in FinNOS. I'll hopefully set the stage a bit for some of the talks and panels that you're going to see throughout the day. In particular, I want to focus on the role of data in financial services. I often joke with people in the tech industry, by which I really mean the social media and search industry. You guys don't really need to find the right answer. In fact, there often isn't a right answer. They just need to find the cute enough baby picture, a controversial enough news article to keep you scrolling and clicking. In financial services, we need the right answer, and there is a right answer. And we need to be able to show exactly how we got that answer. And that often requires a different set of tools. Look, there are two recent FinNOS contributions that help financial services firms do exactly that, at Goldman Sachs. We recently open sourced our data modeling platform, Legend, which you heard about last year from Pierre Debelin, Legend's lead architect. And at Morgan Stanley, they've recently open sourced Morpher, which is a system to capture business logic in a technology-agnostic manner. Legend is central to helping firms organize, understand, and query their data in a fully reproducible, traceable, and explainable manner. Morpher lets you define your business logic in a data-driven way that allows you to transform it to various implementations, visualize it, and explain it. Neither of these tools at their core have anything specifically to do with financial services. You're not going to find a mention of bonds or discount curves in the core of either of these products, right? But they very much address the specific needs of financial services around rigor, transparency, and auditability of our data and how we arrived at it. Both of them bring some really cutting-edge technology to bear on the problem, particularly in their use of functional and side-effect free programming languages. Several panels today are going to address these issues, right? One deals with the exciting prospect of how we can integrate Morpher and Legend, right? And figure out what the synergies are there. Another deals specifically with data governance, enabling data governance using the Legend platform, right? And here's what I really want to emphasize. This simply wouldn't have been possible without Finnaws, right? Now, Goldman Sachs, we've been building Legend for over 10 years now. Morgan Stanley, I'm sure, has been working on Morpher for quite a while, right? But without Finnaws, there was no real mechanism for us to figure out that each other existed, right? And there was certainly no mechanism for us to be able to share those tools, right? For one firm to use another firm's tools in that way, and then to be able to get together in an open forum and talk about how to integrate them. Finnaws has made all of that possible now. And Finnaws not only provides a forum to open source software and collaborate, but it provides an unprecedented convening power, right? Which we're seeing right here today to bring players from all over the financial services spectrum together to talk about how to make our industry more efficient, more streamlined than ever before. And that's the power of an open source community dedicated to financial services. And that's Finnaws. Look, and thank you all, and have a great time today. And I'm going to head it back over to Gabb. Gabb are you, it's like the Wizard of Oz, here he is. Come in, come in. Thank you, John. Thank you so much.