 So the idea is, in the year 2000, we had the first big announcement, that was the announcement of LibreOffice being open sourced by Sun. And this happened almost 20 years ago. And 10 years ago there was the LibreOffice Board. So in 2020 we will have two overlapping anniversaries, 20 years of the free office suite and 10 years of LibreOffice. The idea is to combine the two events and to have a big year of celebrations. This presentation is a number of ideas. The basic concept is that we can have a low cost anniversary because we do everything internally and we manage the events and we try to be at events without moving too much people around the world. And on the other hand to have an escalation of course so that we can fly people to more events, have events at events and to organize events ourselves. So the idea is that we start with a very restricted budget, basically not increasing our usual budget for marketing and community. But of course at the same time to find sponsors that are willing to help us in making this a bigger event. So these are the basic ideas. The first one is of course to have a logo. We need a logo for the 10-20 anniversary. I have already written a briefing paper. The briefing paper will be shared in the private marketing and in the member mailing list probably in the next few days. There will be, I would say, one month and a half. At the end of November we will have to decide the logo because we need to start creating a swap for a poster and we need to do that in December. To avoid any discussion, any, I will decide the logo. So in a very extremely democratic way I will consult with myself and decide the logo. So if people want to blame someone they will blame me, not the community, not the discussion. So we avoid flames, we avoid every kind of other stuff. I will democratically choose the logo. Of course based on the logo we will have a swap for the entire year. We will see what we can produce. For sure we will have t-shirts, polos and odys and the classical thing. We can have a logo, we can have some stuff which is additional that people can buy. Of course and all bodies will go to TDF as a kind of sponsorship and collect for their open source collectibles. So at the moment we will start with what we know is the classic swap of open source software. But we will try and we will collect ideas to get some additional stuff to produce. As I said before, we will only produce stuff that we will be able to sell because we don't want to have to invest significant budget in this kind of stuff. Another thing, during the year I've made a list of conferences, I will share it. There are I think around 60 open source events which are really community events because we don't want to go to open source events that are business events like Linux Foundation events. Although I will try to talk with Linux Foundation and ask them a keynote spot because I think that 10 years of LibreOffice are significant for the Linux environment in any case. But I don't want to go to events like unfortunately FOSSAsia which is a very good idea but it's a completely commercial event. So I prefer to go to the Japanese community open source event to the event in China that will be organized by Kai Wanshe's salary for the pronunciation but it's their open source association because we want to be with the community. It's a community celebration. It's not a commercial celebration. Then of course, if companies that make money out of LibreOffice want to make this commercial celebration, we are happy to work together with them to also a commercial side of the anniversary. But TDF has to make this a community celebration, not a commercial celebration. So I've chosen a number of events and there are a few ones that are key events of the community. Let's make a few names but they're just an example. Debian Conference, KDA Academy, Gwadec, the Fedora meeting, I don't remember how it's called the open source meeting. And there are others around the world. For instance in Italy we have Linux day. There are Linux days in Germany. There is FOSS in France, in Paris. And there are others around, Chemnitz, Linux Tage. There are quite many. As I said, there are 60. And we will try to be at least to propose a talk to the most important ones. And see if they accept. Of course, I think that 10 years of LibreOffice deserve a keynote at events. Of course we will accept to have normal talks, speeches. But I think that I've just exchanged a few emails with FOSS, the organizer. And they said that yes, 10 years of LibreOffice and 20 years of the free office with deserve a keynote. Of course it has to be a keynote which is consistent with FOSS, the focus which is more development than other stuff. So I will share all these ideas. I will share the list of conferences. If there are conferences that miss, that are not in the list, please do not hesitate to add them. For instance, I found some events in Asia, but many events have the website only in Japanese or Chinese. And for me it's difficult to understand if they are community events, commercial or not. So do not be shy, add them. The idea is to, at those events, to prepare a basic slide deck where we have a number of slides that are, of course in a short way, summarizing the history of LibreOffice, providing milestones in the history of LibreOffice. So, for instance, all the .0 releases, the first one was 3.3, but then all the .0 releases where we have changed development focus or at least we have communicated that we have focused our development on a different task. What we will ask to people that will do the doxing in the different events is to use our slides and then add their slides. Because, of course, we don't want to, what we think is important is to have a consistent basic message that is the same in all conferences. And then, of course, to have the local message from the local community that says, you know, join us at these events, become a member of the community and so on and so forth. We will try to organize events in areas where we traditionally have been less active. So, together with Sophie, we are building a kind of main list of people in Africa. And we would like to be in Africa to some open source events. Of course, we will have to decide, when we will have to fly people there, we will have to decide which event is more worth than others. Then we will do specific fundraising. For instance, Mike came out with the idea of give 10 for the 10th anniversary. But we can have other ideas. Of course, in some currencies, 10 is not enough. So, we will have to ask for a multiplier of 10. But let's put together different ideas that will help us in collecting money. Of course, we will say fundraising is specific for this project. So, it's not a replacement for the usual donation that we ask. So, after 10 years, probably, if you give 10 euro per year, maybe this year, think about giving 20, because it's 10 euro that we provide you with a product. And last thing, I will coordinate a book about the history of liberal office, but about the history of the free office suite. I'm not going to write a lot. It's mostly going to be based on documents already existing and available on the net. So, for instance, starting from Sun's announcement on July 19, 2000, as I say, we have decided to open source the Star Office code, and it will be called Open Office. Also, interviewing people that have made a significant contribution to the project. Many of these people are with us today, in the sense that they are members of the liberal office project, but some of them, for other reasons, have led the project, but they still can provide a significant contribution. Starting, of course, from the guy that started everything, so Marco Burris, he is now in Berlin, but I already wrote him and I said, we would like to have you in some way for the 10-20 celebration, and he replied and said, happy to, of course, happy to discuss if I can contribute to this. So, that would be interesting at least to interview him and ask him how the hell in 1984 you started it out of the blue when probably people thinking about writing a productivity software where a dozen in the world. So, it's just to have some background on this. The dates, July 19, 2020, is a Sunday, free office, 3.20. September 28, 2020 is on Monday, it's going to be the other date that is specific to the liberal office. Okay, logo, community contest, we will announce after the conference, deadline for proposal will be November 20, decision will be taken by marketing team, so if I will have a small doubt, I will ask Mike. But that's not going out beyond marketing team. Now it's democratic. Exactly. No discussion will be accepted. We all know where people that submit the logo leave. Okay, so we have been friends that can settle any discussion in a matter of seconds. According to questionable styles, but they settle up any discussion in a matter of seconds. Fundraising, for example, so for instance, creates basic stickers for fundraising. You give a few euros and we send you a sticker saying it's probably contributing to the 10th anniversary of liberal office or something like that. Of course, blog posts about the 10 years contribution significant contribution. There are some that have, you know, there are anecdotal, like the first batch from Koei Yoshida that was accepted, I think, months after it was presented the first time. So maybe have a chat with Koei and say, tell us what happened when you pushed the first, your first contribution and you saw that it was not merged into the main software. So we will interview the first batch of people after the liberal office conference. We will make a list with Mike and we will probably, I think is the most practical way, is send a written interview so that you can send back. You have time to send us back sentences. For some people we may decide that the answer is so brilliant that then we can organize a video interview using GC or, but of course we cannot have huge number of video interviews also because we, what we can have, of course just talk this, we can have interviews in the native language and use subtitles. Because of course if we do the interview in English the English has to be at least decent, not because we want to judge the English but otherwise no one would listen to the video. At first conferences we have a list. In addition as I said, reach out to the team board and so on. I will send a message to all organizers. I will agree on a common message that says it's 10th, 20th anniversary, we would like to be at your conference. Give us your feedback, tell us what you think. First one is FOSDEM. FOSDEM call for paper ends at the end of September so this is the first one where it's going to be five to try to be in Jean-Saint so the main room at FOSDEM with someone talking about the anniversary. Of course when possible the idea is to have a keynote that is more about the project and the vision and then maybe an update. So a second talk that says how LibreOffice has evolved during the 10 years. Let's be flexible and maintain the possibility of having the keynote that includes this part or not. Of course the main idea is to try to be the more pervasive that we can during the year so to be the largest number of events, open source people met at other events and so the idea is to have you seen the presentation of LibreOffice for the 10 years when they talk to do it themselves. Okay. This we are still thinking about it. I didn't ask, you probably have seen the interview to Ivan Tahari, Indonesian guy. He's a partner in a shoe manufacturing company and he has a choice for GNOME. So why do you not have a choice for LibreOffice? I will immediately probably write even tomorrow asking him an idea. I don't know how much a pair of shoes can cost. So asking him an idea of how much it can cost if there are ranges, if there are... That could be a nice collectible of course. But if you have ideas, think about... I mean what I wrote is just the most idiot thing that comes to mind when you think about gadgets. So cleaning cloth, mouse, power bank, USB stick. If you have other ideas, send me or Mike an email and we collect the ideas. Of course we have to talk with a supplier and then we will have to evaluate the cost and the cost versus benefit. In some cases we can decide maybe if someone donates 100 euro maybe we can send him back a USB stick worth 5-6 euro. We still cover very well the donation. But we have not a budget for that still. July 19, 2020. Okay, there is a celebration in Hamburg. This is unfortunately... I did this presentation few days ago. So I can tell you, because yesterday evening I talked with Muhammad Karah in Turkey, that that celebration will be in Turkey. Because they have made a very interesting proposal for the conference. So that's July 19, 2020. Some release the announcement and we will organize a celebration and we will use the celebration to propagate on social media. September 28, that will be the LibreOffice celebration. So the idea is if we have money to organize a dedicated event on that day. And of course invite these kind of people. It has to be built. We have one year from now so we still have time. The book will be presented at this event. And this is the book about History of LibreOffice. I will share... I already started to collect materials. I will share, let's say, a tentative table of content probably end of October for review by people. Of course, if someone sees a clear lack of information on a specific area and he suggests and is welcome, of course we cannot write a 2,500 pages book. So we will have to make choices about really significant milestones. We have 20 years. So if we go into every detail for 20 years we write something that no one will read. The idea is to write something that people can read. Of course it will not be printed. We can have it printed on demand. But I think we will have all the electronic versions or all the e-book versions starting from PDF. So we will have the standard version, the Kindle version for people that are using Kindle and the E-Pub version for people that are using other e-book readers. So that's... We would just like that this document is shared by the largest number of people. It's not something that we do for money. We do it because we want to first to re-establish the current history about Open Office and LibreOffice. As you know after we forked there was a project, I don't remember the name, trying to say that LibreOffice was not a legitimate project. There are still a few people around the world that still say that the legitimate project is another one. They are mostly Native Americans. So I think Apache might be, I don't know. If they're not Apache maybe they are semi-known or something like that or other Indians. Indians in a sense that Indians are Native American, not Indians from India. The idea is to explain exactly what happened so publish some documents that can clarify the ideas to a few peoples. And that's all. If you have ideas etc. now, I understand that having the idea now is difficult. So this is the reason why I said after lunch maybe, I don't know, because Apache can give you ideas.