 Hey everyone. We're here at Chrome Dev Summit. The keynote has just finished. I'm here with Darren Fisher, the VP of Chrome. So for anyone who watches your talk after the live stream, what are they going to learn from your talk? Oh, I think they're going to see that we're really committed to making the web very successful. There's a lot of interest in activity, excitement around progressive web apps. Not only are we putting in a lot of new improvements, but you see just a lot of other partners and developers out there seeing success on a large scale with progressive web apps. You see that we were working on improving core experiences like add-to-home screen and when you look at features like push notifications, it's exciting to see that there's over 50,000 domains adopting this feature so that the web is really about the long tail. The point here is that you could be really successful building for the web, building for the mobile web, building progressive web apps, and we're really here to help you. There's a lot of great content. Yeah, and obviously we've got all these things where we're finding everyone's getting better user re-engagement and offline support. Everyone's benefiting from this work. Oh, yeah, absolutely. You mentioned offline just now. I think it's really great. I think it's almost counter-intuitive that you can build such great experiences that work well even under poor network conditions. There's a lot of times you think about the web. Of course, you need the internet connection to get your experience in the first place, but the web is really well designed to allow you to stream down your application piece at a time. And thanks to new APIs like the Service Worker, you can cache that experience and as a developer, you can control how the cache works. And that just gives you a lot of ability to create a great experience even in the presence of poor network connections, like 2G networks, 3G networks, and so on. And that's going to be huge for the web, just like a entirely new way of building web apps. So you can still watch the rest of the live stream with streaming it to YouTube, the Chrome Developers channel, I believe. You can subscribe below. Otherwise, you can check out all the videos when you post them after the event. And thanks for watching. Follow along with hashtag Chrome Dev Summit.