 I will start the closing with an advice for the next organizer. So if you have instructions to give in restaurants, in rooms, whatever, use a megaphone, microphone, whatever, otherwise you end up like me. It's been a lot of fun for us, and we are now closing this version of your basic one in Paris. I was very happy to organize that with Antoine. So you are actually more than 300 coming here. You want to have the exact numbers in the Eurovision Foundation talk in the end. Those numbers will be lower than the exact number because a lot of people showed up directly without registering. So basically we are closer to 340 than to 300, which makes us the biggest BSD event ever I've been known about, which of course proved that BSD is dying. Anyway, such an event couldn't be possible without the sponsors, so I want to thank all of them because Paris is expensive. So the partners, the Furies, PC Engine, NETS community, ZIO, NETBSD, Modzilla, who hosted the Furies-Dev Summit, Arola, who hosted the NETBSD-Dev Summit, please thank all of them. You can see them around. Say thanks to them. Our borrow sponsor, PeePro, Scale Engine, HAProxy, NetGate, Gconf, who are very professional streaming, all those events, D2SI, Google, Furies-Dev Foundation, Gondi, StormShield, Extinfini, Modium, thank you to them as well. Trivago, Intel, please thanks. And a very huge thanks to Van Priveu, who was a Platinum sponsor this year. And of course we want to say a bit thank you to the organization committee of the conference. So thank you. And thank you again to Rodrigo Azorio, who gave us a huge amount of help preparing and handling the conference these few days. Thank you, Rodrigo. Thank you to the program committee, obviously, who came with a very nice line up, I think. Surprisingly, when the head of the program committee is an OpenBSD developer, we have more OpenBSD talks than in other conferences. Thank you, of course, to anyone else that was involved helping us or involved in some way in this conference. Thank you very much. I also hope you like the small cartoons. So thank you, Tanguy Rao, for the small sketches and drawings. And I think someone wanted to thank someone else, Michael Lucas, I think you wanted to say a few words. Don't rush, we have time. I just wanted to say, last night on the Metro, I had a unique Parisian experience in that my wallet was lifted. Mobbed on the phone, trying to get credit cards shut down, and I received more offers of help from random people, some of whom I knew, some of whom I didn't. If you're in trouble, this is a great group of people to be surrounded by. So I just wanted to say thanks to every one of you. And really, having gone to a lot of conferences, if the worst person we have is Henning, we're really doing pretty well. So thank you all. So I think that you all know Graf Zagot now. Graf Zagot deserves to not be, how to say that probably, he deserves a new keeper to keep his sanity. So Benedict? So yes, after many, many adventures with Michael Lucas, Graf is now on his way to Taiwan for BSDTW. And Marius Zaborski has agreed to be the keeper. So Marius, you want to come get Graf here and take good care? He comes with not only a beret and a backpack full of all the conference badges from previously, and a dog tag in case he gets lost, but there's also a British cravat from his trip to BSD Can and various other interesting things. Badges from Wright, from Peter Hessler a handy little carrying bag because he's got too much stuff now. Graf has luggage. I didn't suppose that Graf will have more clothes than I do. And I don't believe I will have the same connection that Michael Lucas had, but I will try my best. So beside your BSDCon coming, so let's try that a little bit of word about them. Lee Wen? You want to talk about BSDTW? Right, so everything I want to say is on our page, BSDTW.org. So I hope you can memorize it. So I have only two things I want to mention. First is on the right top corner there is a register now, but you cannot register now. We are going to open registration on October 1st, which is next week. And another thing is, please click on the sponsors. Can you? Sure. Sponsors? I should not go there. And go down a little bit. Yeah, there is the dragonfly, but yeah. We are still looking for sponsors and your sponsorship will make this conference success. Thanks. So another event that is coming is FOSDEM where we usually have a BSD Dev Room. FOSDEM is a very important event, so it's very good if the BSD can be well represented outside of the BSD world. And Rodrigo will spread a little bit of word about it. Hello everyone. We'll give you a short view about what's FOSDEM Dev Room, because I saw on Twitter some people ask what exactly do FOSDEM Dev Room and what we're doing on it. So... I have no idea how your stuff works. So the FOSDEM Dev Room is a room we have for a full day. It's allocated. We have Dev Rooms for every big project. And the BSD has a room for a full day, usually. Sometimes we have just a half day because we are missing projects or talks. So everyone is allowed to apply after the CFP comes for the Dev Room. So if you have a talk, discuss about something, have a question, answer, session, or whatever, please apply. And we will see if it's possible to put it on the schedule. And I think it's in February. 3 and 4. And the call for participation will come in a few weeks, I think, as soon as the Dev Room will be validated. And aside from the Dev Room, we have other BSD events around. We have a Dev Summit for free BSD and also a boot on the FOSDEM, run by the foundation, I think. I am right. Okay. That's it. So thank you very much. I want to apologize about some troubles with the application. I heard some people report that there's problem with the schedule on time. In Brussels time, sorry. This is very... Sometimes happens. Times is misery. Thank you very much. Can you talk to us a bit about BSD CAN? Certainly. Hi, I'm Dan. I run BSD CAN. It's hard to compete with Paris. We do have Poutine. I'm going to like this. Oh, in the light, in the light. They don't want to see me. So we have Poutine. I went over that. I hear we also have Schwarma. There's quite a few people that come to BSD CAN and really like the Schwarma. We have Schwarma in Paris. Do you have beaver tails? We're not crazy. We have beaver tails. BSD CAN, it's two days of tutorials and two days of a free BSD Dev Summit before. We're also looking to host Net BSD Dev Summit. We've done that once before. And I'm sure we can get enough open BSD folks for them to have a crazy time as well. Then we have two days of talks on Friday and Saturday. So come along. It's a good time. And there's a lot to see not as much as Paris. And as our usual BSD conference happen in Asia and Sadassan is going to talk to us about Asia BSD CAN. Thank you. So I am Hiroki, the organizer of the Asia BSD CAN. The Asia BSD CAN is held in Tokyo every year and it is, I think, 13th anniversary. And yes, we have actually beaver tails finally. Yes. And a good sushi. And yes, you can imagine the good dishes of the Japanese cuisine. So yeah, this is a poster of the Asia BSD CAN. And yes, we will have similar format almost the same as BSD CAN and the Europe BSD CAN four days, two days to do on the meetings and two days of paper sessions. And we are collecting actually not a talkable about only but also paper. So you should write your results into the four pages or the five pages or the six pages papers. Because most of the Asian country people do not read English. So they do not read or they cannot listen to English speaking at all. So we are trying to teach them. So we are using English. So Asia BSD CAN is held in English only, no Japanese. So please be relaxed if you decide to come to Japan. So we are welcoming the western countries, people who speak English. So thank you. So in all the BSD group, we all have foundation to support what we are doing. So the first foundation to talk is the Free BSD Foundation. Please come to talk about it. Well, that's probably one of the only times I'm taller than everyone here. So this is awesome. My name is Deb Goodkin and I'm the executive director with the Free BSD Foundation. And I'm really happy to be here. This is the first time I've ever been in France. I know we don't have a lot of time, so I just want to tell you a little bit about the Free BSD Foundation. First, we are very happy and proud to be a silver sponsor of this conference. And this one, the best ways for people to learn and share knowledge on the BSDs and other technologies too. But we've been around for 17 years supporting the Free BSD project. We have a U.S.-based 501C3 and that means we're a public non-charity. And we're based in Boulder, Colorado, United States. And I'm going to tell you a little bit about the key areas that we support. One is software development and operating system improvements. And we have a staff of two full-time software developers on staff as well as we also keep two interns on staff. We support the release engineering efforts by having a full-time release engineer on our staff. We support events like this as well as various Free BSD developer and vendor summits. And we do a lot of advocacy and training and education and that's one area that we're trying to increase. And we do have a full-time marketing director who's actually now in maternity leave. She just had twins and so that was exciting, but you'll also notice that maybe we're not promoting things as much while she's gone. We provide legal support for the project and that's for the core team as well as protecting the Free BSD IP. And then we support face-to-face meetings and conferences and summits. And so that includes not only conferences like this, but also working with commercial users and helping facilitate collaboration with developers on the project. One thing is first, face-to-face opportunities. I wanted to mention that we do have the Bay Area developer or vendor summit that's coming up in the San Francisco area. We're referred to as the Bay Area and that will be November 2nd and 3rd and actually in Los Gatos. We're sponsoring those but Netflix is providing the venue and the food and so we really appreciate that. Let's see, what else was I going to say? But anyway, we can't do this without you. We're 100% funded by donations and that's donations from individuals and organizations. We do have a new partner benefit program and what that means is that at various levels then we're providing some support and opportunities with these partners. And so lastly, what I'd like to do is a couple of times a year we do like to recognize people who you've contributed to the FreeBSD project. And so I'm going to call up one of our European board members who is Bendick Ruchling, who is our vice president of our board of directors and we're going to recognize some of the FreeBSD developers and contributors. Thank you. Hello, I'm Bendick, you might have seen me on BSD now. A little bit, yeah. So we have a bunch of people to recognize and it's always nice, it's like Christmas actually to give people a little recognition for the work that they're doing and so the first person I want to... Okay, so don't take everything away. Yeah, so it's important to... I mean, we have conferences and we have all these nice events but there's also a lot of people who cannot come to these events and the only thing that they can get is Twitter feeds and other social media things but it's really the people afterwards saying oh, this is a nice picture of you that you did there or you had a very good shot taken there but it's also a question who took those pictures and so there are a couple of people who sometimes stay in the shadows and walk around during lunchtime and taking pictures at least at BSDCAN and at EuroBSDCon maybe there will be some pictures at AsiaBSDCon at the same quality in the future year so what I'm getting at is that there's a guy doing this for a number of years now and he's providing a lot of galleries for people to see and reminisce the good times we had at conferences so I would like to honor Olivier Robert. I knew I would get him with this one. Real surprise. I'm doing just doing that for fun and I like taking pictures and to take pictures of people in some situations and... Thank you. That was the easy part. So next person is a little bit more technical so many of you are using BSD natively on your laptops and a couple of years ago there were problems getting graphics to work properly and there was always complaints like this other OS over there in the Unix space they have so much better graphics and we want to be on par with them at least or even overtake them somehow and there was one person who helped us a lot we had a very good interaction with him two years ago at the FreeBSD Dev Summit in Stockholm, Sweden and he's been busy ever since with the graphics stack and X11 and KMS stuff so I would like to call up Jean-Sébastien Petron if I pronounce that correctly. Sorry. See those surprised faces? Do you want to say a few words? You've been also taking pictures here at the conference. Thank you very much. That's a surprise for me. A nice one. And now I feel obliged to continue to do that in the future. Motivation is everything. Next up I would like to call up someone else who has been on this stage before for doing outside of his normal work on the FreeBSD project a little bit also in his company that he's doing he's currently managing his small team at wheel systems and he's doing a lot of work in the Capsicum area so I would like to call back to the stage Mariusz Staporski. If he hasn't run off with the goat yet so thank you for all your Capsicum work that you're doing and I hope this is a nice way of saying thank you. You want to say a few words? Thank you very much. I'm also very surprised. I don't know what to say. Thank you. And last but not least as we were talking about Capsicum there's also other applications in the cloud that are using Capsicum and this person has done a lot of work while also finding a company around his product so I would like to call up Ed Scouton with a cloud API. I love surprises. A few words maybe? Well thanks a lot. I'm not expecting this. Well Ken come and hand me an extra backpack because we have a lot more stuff that we need to take back to the Netherlands so thanks. Alright and we would like to thank you to Baptiste and Antoine for organizing this conference and everyone else who helped so thank you very much and I guess we have a couple more foundations. Thank you. The NetBSD project is also a foundation to support it and Alistair is going to talk a bit about it. Thank you. It's okay I'll just speak from this. Thanks Baptiste. I believe I've only got 22 minutes left. NetBSD and Package Source both fall under the NetBSD foundation. I am here to tell you about this. Package Source is actually 20 years old this year and I've been a developer for 20 years old with NetBSD. As usual it runs on 23 platforms quarterly branches for 13 years. We believe that's a good frequency for this. As of now the Package Source repo is frozen in preparation for the 2017 Q3 branch. The branch is expected by the end of the month. We've had BGP signature validation for two years and some of you caught Corbin's talk in hardening Package Source as an excellent introduction into the ways that we're going forward with some of the security features that we have. Joyent has got some release binary packages for Linux, macOS 10 and Illumos. I think there's over 15,000 packages in each of those. We've got plans for signing TNF packages from the project for i386, AMD64 and for ARM based things. As you can see we've got a fancy animation up there. NetBSD released news. We have the 7.1 release that happened in March 11th this year. 8.0 is currently in the process of being released. We started that on June 6th and the current status is it's about to be released real soon now. For some value of real soon now. Thanks very much to Jared McNeil for doing all the work to bring sanity to our ARM ports and there's a huge number of evaluation boards system and chips and things like that which you can see in the screen right here. One of the things looking forward as well is that we have now got support for the VacStation 4000 turbo channel USB and GPIO. So that's something that's really coming in handy for anybody who's got a spare VacStation hanging around. LLVM and Clang are entry. Version 5 maintained by Yorg. Still optional and off by default mainly because of the architectures that are supported don't really map to the ones that we have with GCC 5.3 at the moment. One of the interesting points about that is that the LLVM builds and the Clang builds Yorg does them regularly for 64 for package source bulk builds and they're particularly good at finding compiler regressions in that. Camille has been doing some excellent work on behalf of the TNF on a contract basis and his talk was well received this afternoon. I hope you all caught that. I certainly did. If not see him around later on. There's a new board of directors I won't tell you the people on there. You can see for yourself up there. Likewise the core team we have. I'll go into some detail on the GSOC projects. There were three of them this year. One was enhancing the log based file system that we have. Leo also did an excellent job with the package source debug lives and finally we've been porting Anita which is our continuous integration test route to EVB arm PMAX, HPC MIPS and Amiga and Newt Karsh did that and he's now become an FBSD developer because of it. I think that's about all that I want to say for the moment and Baptiste is looking very, very hard at me and I think I'm going to get to thrown off here soon. Thanks very much. I apologise that the slides aren't available for you to see. I'll put them up online later so everybody can see them. Thank you. Last but not least the OpenBSD project is also having a foundation that helps its development. Ingo is coming to speak about it. Hello, I'm Ingo Schwarz currently maintaining the Mandoch toolkit that is used by all the BSDs. The OpenBSD foundation has exactly one exclusive goal that is to support development work in BSD licensed code and that is primarily done by three means, by funding hackathons by funding infrastructure required for the project such that developers can actually focus on developing software and increasingly importantly by funding sabbaticals to get larger projects done in a timely manner. Now the OpenBSD foundation is intentionally not doing any marketing it is intentionally not owning any intellectual property and it is intentionally not directing the policies of any BSD project but it is facilitating the writing of code and while most of that code is written initially in the context of the OpenBSD project much of it is concerned with fundamental innovations that sooner or later get reused elsewhere and a few programs are maintained that are incorporated into the other BSDs and even beyond I'm not just thinking about OpenSSH but also about LibreSSL, Mandoq and many other programs to fund all that work we need donations in the OpenBSD foundation both substantial donations from larger enterprises and also very importantly many small ones from individuals and small businesses so for that reason thank you for considering contributing to the OpenBSD foundation and of course also thank you to everybody who helped to have such a nice conference once again. Thank you Ingo. The EuroBSD organization is backed by the EuroBSD foundation and Henning is going to give us some words about it so you're actually giving the last words of the conference to the worst person here yeah I'm okay with that so the conference of course is not possible without you the attendance and the audience so the next two or three minutes are going to be about you the largest group this year Kelsen Fries is from France and I'm standing in the way now guess who's second which surprise you announced again Henning sorry the largest group from a country ever being sent to any conference ever in humankind of course the US the Netherlands is second and since every second counts the UK is also second two more countries more than 10 people here that's Switzerland and Sweden all the other countries are less than 10 people but it's 25 more countries can you go to the next Henning, come to the light thank you so the total number of attendees this year is 312 there might be a couple more that we don't have on the system yet yeah between 10 and 20 more even a bit more but I need to come the bags that are left we were about 320 people on the boat yesterday right? yeah so that is the biggest EuroBSD con ever also the biggest BSD conference ever as far as we know so thank you all for coming making this possible in memory of Paul Schenkefeld who's been the father of our foundation we have the Paul Schenkefeld travel grant so every year we we get one person who is not able who should be at the conference but is not able to pay that himself we got him in him or her now this year unfortunately the winner got his visa tonight so we have nobody here so but please apply for next year spread the word whoever should be here and cannot afford it should apply for the grant the board will select the most deserving applicant probably by July again or June or something like that just go to the go to the website use the contact form tell us why you should be here and why you can't afford it and we hope you have a very good applicant again to select next year now of course the one bit that you all want to know these are really going to be the last words where are we going next year I'll reveal a secret here it will be Europe okay switch to the next slide who who who recognizes that that's right Romania we are going to be in Bucharest the venue is going to be the University of Bucharest and we are aiming for the second last weekend that's September 20th to 23rd and I hope to see all of you and even a couple more there I have one last question if this is your first EuroBSD please raise your hand that's more than 20% we are sustainable awesome thank you thank you all for coming thanks again to the awesome organization by the local team especially Bob and Antoine and I hope to see most of you and much more in Bucharest next year I have a special thanks to give to you all for attending for being so disciplinated when going to the dinners when we left the room we had we were very happy not to have to babysit anyone so I thank this community because it's a wonderful one thank you thank you