 Now I'm going to turn it over to Dan for the live Q&A portion of this session. I haven't seen any questions come in yet. So I think let's start with a few questions that we often see come up. Dan, maybe can you share with us if there's any way people can customize the auto DevOps flow? Yeah, absolutely. Great question. So the auto DevOps workflow that you see, the pipeline that gets built automatically is customizable. That is what you saw was the out of the box capabilities. It's very easy to get that template that's being used and put that into your repository and then customize it to do whatever you need at stages, at different jobs. So that's very doable. And I'll also take this opportunity to point out that auto DevOps and that flow is not the only thing that you can do with GitLab in general. You can run any type of pipeline. You can define it in a gitlab-ci.yaml file, which is where we define it, right there in the repository next to your code. And then structure it yourself to handle whatever types of builds and tests and deployments that you want. There's also many other templates when you create a new file. There's also many other templates for pipelines there for different languages and different system structures that you can also start from. Awesome. Thank you so much, Dan. I still have not seen any questions yet, so let's maybe go for one other one that we often see. So we offer self-managed versus kind of like managed service. So can you share the difference between GitLab.com and our self-managed service? Absolutely. So GitLab.com is our SaaS service. It has four different tiers that you can, like with our self-managed, it has four different tiers that you can use it at. There is a free tier and there is a starter tier which has more capability. And then a premium tier, I'm sorry, I'm thinking of the self-managed. So there's a bronze, silver, gold tiers. There's actually four free bronze, silver, and gold. And those are quite directly to our self-managed because we actually run the same code all the time. So the self-managed that you can get and self-managed is what we used to call on-prem. But with the cloud, you might choose to run it in the cloud and manage it yourself. So we do have a cloud-native deployment available. And when you do that, then you have the tiers I was talking about, starter, premium, and ultimate, and then there's also the free tier. And so those are quite to the online offering. And between those different tiers, you get more capabilities. For example, when you move to premium, you start getting capabilities for enterprise such as geo-replication and other such features like GHA. And then at the ultimate level or slash the gold level, if you're doing SAS version, you get capabilities around like the security scanning, which you can do at the other tiers, but it's more integrated in. You get more data from it tightly integrated into the whole process. Awesome. Still no questions? Come on, everyone. We are opening up the floor for any questions you have. And I guess if we don't have any, maybe we'll try to wrap up with one last question. And maybe what the most famous questions that a lot of people sometimes wonder is, what's the difference between GitLab versus GitHub? Yeah, we do hear that more than we'd like to. Glad that we can get the opportunity to make that clear. So GitLab started as an open source version of GitHub many, many years ago. GitHub, as many of you might know or might not know, is proprietary software, even though it is a force around supporting open source. So GitLab started as replicating all the capabilities of GitHub. And then we very quickly surpassed those capabilities and provided a better by industry definition and by what the analysts told us, a better SCM offering. And then added CI and integrated in directly. And then now we continue to add to that so we have the entire DevOps lifecycle covered. So while GitHub is still focused on the source code management and kind of some of the periphery pieces around that like issue tracking and maybe issue boards and a little bit of code review and discussions, GitLab has all of that plus the ability to run your CI pipelines, to run your CD, your release pipelines, do packaging, Kubernetes integration, infrastructure management and configuration, deployments tracking, monitoring and security scanning. So quite a bit more. All right, still no questions. So I guess we will... Looks like we do hold on. We do have a question. So Sunny is asking, the monitoring and the review features seem to be focused on the web-based apps. Do these also handle non-web-based apps? Great question. So yes, the monitoring and review features are focused right now, out of DevOps in particular on web-based applications. You can use absolutely GitLab. We have many thousands of customers using GitLab to do non-web-based applications to compile code that goes to embedded systems, to compile just regular software. But these new features are particularly the monitoring of the apps for example and the review apps which are actually spinning up a running version of your web application. Those are particularly web-based app focused. But again, I want to stress that GitLab itself, putting aside all the DevOps and the whole demo you just saw is very capable of running any pipeline for all sorts of software development. Okay. All right. So thank you so much, Dan. I'm going to wrap up since we only have four minutes left if there's no other questions. So this demo, unless you're in a session, is something new that we're trying out. So we'd love to hear what your thoughts are on today's session and would really appreciate your responses to our survey, which I'll drop in the chat. We'd also like to invite you to sign up for a free trial of GitLab Ultimate. I'll chat that link as well. And finally, if you have any other questions, don't hesitate to reach us via our sales contact page about.gitlab.com. That's all for today. Thank you so much for joining us.