 So, my name is Gustavo, I'm from the Ibero American Community, a concept that I will explain to you in the next slide, and I will present to you the Latin American Conference of this year. So, what is the Latin Conference or the Latin American Conference? It's an event that has the Latin America as a geographic area, but another important concept for us is the Ibero America as a group of interests. What I mean is the group of interests is not only the people from Latin America, but also from Portugal and Spain. We have a lot of people from there contributing with our community, and our main languages for sure are Spanish and Portuguese, but also depending the location of the conference, another language as, for example, Guarani, that is a native language from Paraguay, and also an official language. And the goals of the event, you know, it's simple, it's reach the local communities, make new connections among the members, encourage new contributors, meet the community. It's like our event here. There's no difference. The main difference is because it's an event hosted in Latin America with the main focus in the Ibero American people. So, our first edition was in Asuncion in 2019. This is the official picture. It was an amazing conference. You can see many people here. Italo Shisco is here, Daniel Mauricio from Mexico, me, yeah, Enrique Castro from Bolivia, Olivier, and the local people, the group that was responsible to translate Iberia Office to Guarani, oriented, mentored by Olivier in many workshops. She here is the Minister of Native Languages from Paraguay. So, it was our first and important event to do a step to think in big things in future. So, after the success of Asuncion, we started to think to have our event, our next edition in Costa Rica or Mexico, to have one edition in the south of Latin America and another edition in the north of Latin America. So, we had two interesting alternatives. Costa Rica, where we had a great migration project with a great documentation at the University of Costa Rica and Mexico, where we have a great community and nice connections with local projects, free software projects, I mean. But the problem was the pandemic in Latin America. So, we didn't have alternatives to have the event in person. So, the alternative was have online meetings, managed by Daniel from Argentina. We had around four or five events and also a specific track of our conference, online conference in 2020. We have a track for Spanish and Portuguese speakers and with content from our group with our community. And it was really interesting because we keep the engagement of our community with these online meetings. So, this is the announcement of the first one. In Spanish, we call charlas en tiempos de aislamiento and it was well received from the community. Well, and during that time, Olivier was made a great job involving the Brazilian localization team in weekly meetings to discuss about the project, the product, the community and other topics. He invited the community for a kind of meeting, kind of online meeting called Papo Libre that was, that could be translated as free speech to talk about, yeah, free chat or something like that. To talk about the interest of the members of the community, not only TDF members but from all the community and this strategy engaged the community during the last two years in documentation and translation. And when this year starts, for sure people wanted to meet in person. Finally, with the end of the critical period of the pandemic, these people, these members of the community in the picture in the slide, want to meet in person. So, they started to discuss about alternatives to have an event to meet in person. So, as we had three members of our community in Brasilia, one of them started to talk with the Catholic University of Brasilia. Brasilia, it's a great place to have an event in Brazil and also in Latin America because the city is in the center of the country and it's a beautiful city with many places to visit with good infrastructure. Then the university opened its doors to receive the idea to have the event and we started to discuss with them to have our meeting. So, we started online meetings, a telegram group specifically for our team to discuss the event, the idea of the event, and a WhatsApp group to involve the people from the university. They don't use telegram, but they use WhatsApp. Okay, no problem. So, we have a lot of meetings here. Luciana Olivier, the professor of the university, Professor Wesley, and meeting after meeting, we decided to have the event in August 25 and 26. So, for sure, we started to, this is real. We invited you members of the TDF, key members, Gabriele from the membership committee, my colleague at the membership committee. We invited the board representation. Emiliano wants to go there, but unfortunately not. But Lotter came with us instead and did a great job there. So, we started to think about the event and at this moment we already have the idea of the Latin American, the second edition of the Latin American conference. That was my suggestion and I'm proud to share this with you. Because we won't have time to have two events in the same year. So, the group embraces the idea to have a regional conference instead just a meeting of the group. Building the program. So, we started to think in a program for our conference. And as I said, we invited speakers. We invited Italo Shisco from Spain. It's a natural invitation. Lotter came with us representing the board. And, well, our idea was increase the experience of Asuncion. So, we focus it in our skills, Python and extensions. We have many good people in Latin America working with this topic. We have Mauricio in Mexico and Rafael Lima in Brazil. So, it's an amazing moment to keep them together, to meet them and discuss about this topic. For sure, documentation with the team, the Brazilian team. Olivier, Tulio, Luciana, Anderson, Jackson, Ailiani, Timothy. A lot of people involved with the Brazilian documentation. QA with Shisco, for sure. And focus in the mainstream topics, as I said in some moments in our conference here. Woman and Fos with Ailiani talking about this important topic for us. Not only regional but global. Crypto with me. I presented a lecture about how to use caulk to prevent the market volatility. An interesting local topic about the LGPD, the Brazilian GDPR, our version of the GDPR. And a lot of other topics. But from my point of view, this was the main set of interesting things we presented in the conference. Communication, communication, an important topic because we had our event in a university. And we decided to have the event in data when the semester started. To have people from the university, the students with us. So this work is mainly responsible for... Ailiani was the main responsible for this part of the action with the support of the others, for sure. With Tulio, for example. And we made some small pieces to share by mobile. For example, the main announcement of the conference, the call for papers, some interesting lectures. And little shorts to spread the announcement of the conference also in mobile. There are shorts in Portuguese, Spanish and English. I will show you one of them or two. I will go ahead after the download, I will play the video. It's a small video with the invitation from Lota, Shesco, Olivier, I, Italo. And to spread the idea of the event by mobile. So this is the group that organized the event, the core team. You can see many names I talked. There are professors from the university, Sebastian, Wesley, Rafael, Olivier, Anderson, Jackson, Eliane, Lothar, Luciana, Daniel, Maurício, I, Shesco and me and Italo. So more pics. More pics. This is the overture session. You can see the line of the chairs at this side and at the another side. Because there's no space for people in the auditorium. Another picture here, very interesting. Nice, nice. And you can see Olivier, Olivier is there doing the overture of the conference. Olivier and Lothar and Italo and the professor, Wesley. Here is the workshop made by Shesco, a success, but a topic to improve for sure. We should talk about after. Because it is great to have a full room. Yeah, but we need to think about the next step. And I'm happy to see that it's the same that Shesco talked in one of our meetings. And this idea will be in our review. This is the Python workshop made by Rafael, also full room. This is the official picture. It was a bit different than we imagined at the start of the event. But it was interesting. A little review, speakers from six countries, Brazil, Argentina, Spain, Germany, Mexico and Italy. 18 lectures and 10 workshops. Participation from people from the FOS ecosystem, the local ecosystem, LPI, SUS, Nuclepe and others. Two certification sessions. One of Brazilian, the guy from Nuclepe. And another one from Spain with our friend Juan. And 3,073 attendees in the event. Mainly, thank you. Next time, yeah. About it, it's important. Because this was mainly students as you saw. But we can improve some aspects of the event for the next ones. We cannot, we should, streaming our activities online. People asked before the event, during the event and after. Why not streaming? It was a point to discuss with the local team in the next events. It's important. Okay, it's the last one. We should include basic lectures. As you know, we have a lot of students. Mainly, the most part of them want to know what is the library office. So we should include something like the library office first steps. What is the library office? What is the community? What is the ecosystem? What is, they want to know what is this kind of event? What is this kind of community? We also maybe should split lectures and workshops. Because we should balance the presence of the attendees. What I mean is, we had a lot of people in many moments of the event. But in the Friday, because this should avoid the Fridays, we didn't have full rooms. We have a few people in the rooms. So we can improve this part of the planning. Maybe split lectures and workshops. And one topic I was talking with Chisco. Reserve some time for the community discussion. Not only workshops, workshops, workshops, lectures, lectures, but we also get a moment for us and made a circle to talk with us, each other. So this is my view of the event. For sure, Lothar, Chisco, Olivier have their own visions. Well, if you want to share another comment or topic, feel free. Because it's the end of the presentation at this time. And we have about one minute for questions. Olivier, if you want to say something, we have one minute. I just want to say that having events of community involving universities is a great initiative to catch the interest of young people. And the free software communities and the free software philosophy is very good for them to start immediately exercising their skills. And for that we need to address the universities in the sense that the university has its priorities. We have all priorities and we have to align both of the priorities. And there is a lot of synergy that can be exploited. But you just need to take care of all the partners in this kind of event. Thank you, Olivier. Just one more thing. A big thanks to all of TDF staff. Because they help us a lot to do it. Florian, Sophie, Gilliam, yeah. Stefan is there. All of our colleagues from the TDF staff. A big thank you.