 So, so far what we've seen in the demo has been the actual creation and alteration of the code itself in the inner loop and the application of the outer loop using Tecton and Argo CD. Now, that's the end-to-end process in terms of actually changing the code and deploying it to production systems and the like, but what we're going to see now is automated processing and deployment to other environments. In the next phase of the demo, we're going to show the creation and deployment to mobile devices and the creation of edge devices or edge operating systems and the deployment of the application to it using Ansible. You're also going to see some fantastic new technology called Tecton Pipelines as code, which is an easier way to actually orchestrate and build the pipelines and tie it into the source code repositories themselves. So with that in mind, I'll now pass you over to Jafar, who will then pass you on to Anshil to show you those two features of the demo. So in the previous section, we've seen how we can build our e-commerce application with OpenShift and test it and deploy it to multiple environments. And in this section, we are going to focus on the mobile version of our e-commerce application. So as we can see here on the right, we have a hybrid application, meaning that it's composed of a web application, but it also has native capabilities. So for example here, it's running on an Android emulator, and it could also run on an iOS device. So what we are going to do here is we're going to make some code changes to our application and trigger the pipeline that is taking care of building the mobile app and deploying it on OpenShift for testing purposes. So let's go ahead and make some changes to our code base. And as soon as we do that, this should trigger a new instance of the pipeline that we can see just here. So in fact, the pipeline is fetching the code, building the application, then deploying it on OpenShift. And because this is a web application or a hybrid application, we have the ability to publish the application on OpenShift directly to make it accessible for the developers, for their testing purposes. And so we can see here that we have the application running on OpenShift, which is exactly the same application as the one we had running in the emulator. So another nice feature that we wanted to show you here is the bidirectional integration we have between OpenShift and most of the source code repositories. And namely, in our case, it's going to be GitHub. So we can see directly from the application source code repository, all of the iterations of the pipelines that have been run on OpenShift. And thanks to this bidirectional integration directly from GitHub, we can get to all the previous runs. We can see the results directly in the GitHub pages, and we can access detailed information on each and every step of the pipelines as we can see here by checking the logs directly to OpenShift. So this is a very nice capability that allows us to provide all the information from the OpenShift pipeline runs directly into the source code repository, making it easier to understand what happened with our CI-CD testings. All right, so that concludes the mobile CI-CD capabilities. And we're going now to see how Ansible allows us also to extend our delivery options to even further devices like edge devices.