 Hi, this is Abhimanyu and we are here at Open Source Summit in Vancouver and today we have with us Erpit, GM of Networking and Learning Foundation. First of all, thanks for coming over to the show. Well excited to be here. So let's talk about, you know, the last 12 months, you know, what happened in the networking space? It has been a fantastic year. You know, we have seen a 141-year-old telecom industry move to open source networking, right? With the LF Networking we have now, you know, exceeded 100 members. We now have participation from almost 70% of the global subscribers as enabled by the largest of the large carriers. We have seen pretty much all the vendors active and over $500 million worth of software innovation in terms of value has been created in the open source community. So we're really excited. Projects like Onap, which were launched almost a year ago, have moved to production. Projects like Tungsten Fabric have moved into the LF Networking umbrella. So all the way up and down the stack we can now safely say that the telecom industry is going to use open source that is based out of Linux Foundation for building their next generation networks. So we talked about, you know, kind of, you know, the overview or reflecting on 12 months. Now let's look at the future, you know. Where do you go from here? Oh, yeah, yeah. We'll continue on this path and it'll take, you know, two to five years for deployment. So deployment is our main focus right now. But what is next for LF is how networking enables what we call cross-project collaboration, okay, cross-industry collaboration, cross-community collaboration. And what do we mean by that? And I'm using the term harmonization 2.0 under like that umbrella, but you know, we can use any term. But what that mean is, how does blockchain impact telecom? How can telecom networks glow cloud native with Kubernetes, right? So we showed a demonstration of Onap running on Kubernetes, right? All of those integrations, right? The most, you know, promising area that's coming up is a project called Acreno, which is an edge project. So as you know, the core problem has been solved now, telecom networks are moving to the edge and edge cloud is a big area. You know, by some analysts, it's going to be bigger than even the current cloud that has shown up because it's distributed, it's enabling 5G, it's enabling IoT, it's enabling over-the-top applications, right? Tons of new ideas are coming up because of edge cloud. So how does edge and core relate? How do we integrate edge with automotive-grade Linux and 5G for autonomous driving, right? So in a nutshell, the area for our, for my personally, my focus as well as Linux Foundation is how do these communities of these projects come together and can collaborate so that there's more value to our end users, to our members and things like that. So that's what we're working on right now. But if you look at Linux Foundation, it's kind of giant umbrella. We have all this project that you're talking about internally. So how, first of all, there's a lot of cross-pollination happens. Yes. When you come to these events like that, I mean, everybody is here. Correct. And that is exactly right. However, if you look at each of these projects, they are building their own community individually. What we're moving to a phase is how do these projects come together, right? Work together. So I just hosted a seminar with the Executive Director of CNCF, Dan Khan, right? And what we discussed is in telecom, we have this concept of virtual network functions, VNFs, right? VNFs are actual services and applications that run on a telecom network. How do you make VNF cloud-native? So we're calling, we've created this term called CNF, okay? Cloud-native network functions, right? So how do you migrate these VNFs to CNFs? And there are technology things, but both communities, Kubernetes and on-app community and networking community, they have to work together to solve this problem collectively.