 Daniel Good morning. How do you guys? Hello Daniel? Good good afternoon. How's it going? Can you hear me? Okay? Good afternoon? No, I'm good. Yeah, yeah, we can hear you well and super good morning to them What's what's the time right now and we're joining us from today? I am in Connecticut about now We're East New York City, so it's a 425 a.m. From here right now Isn't that brutal? Thanks for thanks for joining in. Yeah, no problem. It's funny. I was in India actually just two weeks ago So I'm still adapting back to being on this time zone. So Okay Daniel and So guys Daniel Daniel is a CTO chief technology officer of Call for code and it's a multi-year competition So I would like to more know more about this Daniel And I think in today's call you're gonna talk about how you are solving some world's challenges with with global developer Audience using the call for code competition and initiative by Daniel. Yep. That's right. So I'll talk to the program Yeah Please help us introduce yourself and and and and let us know what is called for cloud and and how people can can get to it Okay, I'm sharing my screen. So I've got them. Thank you. I slides take through. I'm sure we can pull those up Wonderful, okay. Looks great. Thank you. Yeah, so my name is Daniel crook I'm gonna be talking about call for code which is a tech for good initiative that IBM and Red Hat are very closely Integrated into as the founding members So if you want to connect with me, I've got my LinkedIn QR code up there I'm also on Twitter and GitHub too. So you can kind of see some of the activity and news about call for code Through my social connections there So I'm gonna talk a bit about what actually call for code is What sets it apart from other tech for good initiatives and I'll highlight a few of the more recent Projects and some of the great technology that has driven a lot of interest in India So there's some technology there for clean groundwater detection assessments earthquake resiliency wildfires pandemic safety and post disaster rescue So there's some great technology some great open-source projects you can learn about be inspired by and get self-prepared with new skills for next year's call for code event so part code is a It's a partnership between IBM With red hat as part of IBM the United Nations the Linux Foundation and David Clark cause so it started out as an initiative in 2018 and It started with a single global multi-month hackathon or our competition Where we wanted folks to take on some of the world's greatest challenges with open source and IBM and red hat technology and What really sets it apart from other tech for good competitions where we recognize great innovation and winners is that we want the solutions on particular the top solution each year to Be incubated to be brought forward from the raw innovation that it won the competition with through testing and implementation To eventually be something that can live on as an open-source project and make a real impact in the real world So delivering on that promise of innovation Getting the support and actually putting it to work. So what it's been doing over these years is connecting developers the world's 24 million developers together with experts in major issues humanitarian issues climate change issues disaster resiliency pandemic issues and Inspired them to take on those challenges and really create amazing solutions and direct their skills towards these important problems So we did launch in 2018 with the global challenge focused on how do you address natural disasters? With that we've evolved towards okay Let can we look at the health and well-being of people affected by disasters such as those battling wildfires the firefighters to keep us safe And then in 2020 in our third year the global challenge. It was a completely unique year on many fronts We launched with a focus on climate change So the source of many of those disaster resiliency related Challenges and we also add tracks for How do we address the social and business aspects of the pandemic? And how do we take on racial justice around the world? but particularly with a focus on what we can do as I've you know read employees in the United States with the reckoning that we had last year that continues to go on right now and We did just wrap our final Fourth global challenge and one of the teams actually was from India that won the entire competition So we're very excited to support them in 2022. So if you look up Call for code on Google You'll see a lot of great projects that have come out of the initiative a lot of challenges taken on not only through that Yearly global challenge, but also through what we call spot challenges. So things that shorter term hackathons that come up Just like one we just concluded with Samsung Around how do you help first responders? How do you help frontline workers like teachers and delivery folks? use technology Based on a mobile application and Android application To take on some of the world's greatest challenges and Samsung put together Put up as a prize one of their their brand new z-fold devices as an award and many of the call for code Winning teams and each of actually these global challenge finalists this year receive a cash prize Softwater the one from India that one received two hundred thousand dollars they'll get support from the Linux Foundation and The IBM service core to help them deploy and test their solution and the other solutions another one from India as well Was in third place one from China was in second place and two from Australia were in fourth and fifth place also receive cash support and They do have an option to deploy their solution through the Linux Foundation as open source projects when they're ready for that So are we focused on climate change yet again last year particularly looking at zero hunger clean water and sanitation? Responsible production consumption and that's where you'll see that soft water really addressed that clean water issue sustainable development goal from United Nations number two So if you want to check out the most recent innovation has come through call for code You can check out the awards replay kind of hear some of the great stories of that call for code and get yourself ready for next year's competition Which will probably launch Around the March or April time frame So go check that out Now as I mentioned, it's not just about the prizes the recognition the awards event What we really do with each of these top teams is we make sure that they go from that really exciting moment of creating innovation and Working with the IBM service core team, which is a set of volunteers from across the company and hardware expertise software expertise Branding business models architecture and things like that is we incubate that top solution We connect them with partners on the ground, whether it's a university whether it's a large a non-profit organization such as the UN or other Folks that can help them learn more about the issue they're solving Test out their solution give them feedback and bed their own client as it were within their agile team To flesh out and improve that solution So we work them on the functional non-functional requirements we connect them with the partners do field tests and We help them get to a point where they can live on as a startup or maybe they've improved their own NGOs mission If they come from an NGO or if they're part of large enterprise such as Infosys in India Maybe they create a product around that or create a framework for something else that they can use in their line of business So really this is what sets call for code part is this this pre seed incubation that gets them ready Not only as sustainable organizations, but also as the open-source projects that are released at the Linux Foundation And so if you go to the Linux foundation or website here Actually, just go to the Linux foundation or if you just pull down projects, you'll find a link to call for code as well It's up there next to the CNCF and in Kubernetes As many of the Linux foundation projects highlighted there You'll find 14 projects that have come out over the years that have gone through that incubation process And they're ready for you to learn that technology whether you're interested in IOT data science analytics Java Lots of Node.js projects in there as well Learn about the tech build your own skills And then contribute back to them Ideally you want to see these be improved with your skills the ones that you have in various different backgrounds To bring these forward and make a difference in your community. So we've got the github repository I can kind of click through that in a bit here but you can check that out and Of this 14 you do have Seven are focused on the call for code for a justice initiative So these came from red hat employees came from IBMers originally Not through a competition framework, but using the call for code model for incubation testing in deployment And so these have been really important this year helping make positive impact on issues like justice and policing versus the The problems we've heard around using facial recognition in negative ways The point here is to use this technology in a positive way to expose injustice To provide information that can be used by citizens by law enforcement to make a positive difference And closely related to that is the inclusive naming initiative Which is kind of ways to to be more sensitive when using terms such as you know primary and replica service And and their previous terms things like that In particular on the IBM side what we do for each of these projects is We help folks learn new skills as mentioned if you want to learn data science if you want to learn IOT if you want to learn React if you want to learn Android programming All of these projects are based in open source themselves in addition to being open source products So now you can check out the readings for each of them learn about the project We generally have tutorials where you can learn how to for example use a visual recognition process in Watson studio to train a Model that can identify construction elements, which I'll talk about in one of the projects And then there's contribution guidelines so you can learn about the existing communities Who's involved meet some colleagues and maybe start to find some job opportunities through these open source communities So just a great way to build skills make a difference and and meet others So let me dive in to some of the existing projects. We have that might be of interest to you and in particular Some of the ones that do have communities already in India that could that you can join so Project OWL was a team that won the global competition in 2018 and over the past few years They've they created a business model and released their core technology as the cluster duck protocol with the Linux Foundation So you'll see a lot of call for code projects have two names That's because the Linux Foundation as a neutral home of open source projects Has its own owns the trademark things like that. So there's usually just like with Red Hat You've got Linux as kind of the open source project and Red Hat the company That's kind of the way many of the call for code projects work is there's two names like that So what Projdal created through the cluster duck protocol open source project is an emergency mesh network That can be put together quickly and cheaply Based on very common IOT standards Development tools. So Arduino based you can build it with platform IO GitHub actions and Travis do that within GitHub to build it out for many different boards And if they also provide an analytics dashboard so you can see all of these mesh nodes for emergency communications and You can use an Android app to detect one nearby what it does for communities is After storm when there's no connectivity at all it provides a layer of just about one to two percent connectivity just enough So people can send some messages over the network And what it uses is the captive portal already on your mobile device when you join a Wi-Fi network that login screen it actually overrides that and that's the app you use for communications and They want a grant from the World Bank Bank this year deployed this. This is why I was in India a few weeks ago In him a copper dash we deployed 45 cluster protocol project down nodes in Shimla a very mountainous region prone to disasters earthquake activity landslides and Really tested it in that challenging environment of mountains and how do you relay? Radio communications around that so this is a really great one if you join a community you can learn about that deployment and other ones They have planned for India in addition to what they've done in Puerto Rico and in the United States. So IOT analytics UI frameworks, this could be the project for you to join Another interesting project this one's built on react Originally was react native to build mobile apps for Android and iPhone But ended up being actually more of a progressive web app So something that was just built as a web app could be deployed any platform and the intent here is For someone to just set up a reservation list to some of joining a line somewhere Maybe it's a large store. Maybe it's a small store And just getting the information is you know, I'm here. Maybe they're voting location. I'm here call me in when it's safe to do do so and You know in a way, that's not something you have to log into not something that holds on to personal information all based on Just joining a queue and being notified through a web socket or push notification So this project is probably kind of graduated out But the technology within is always something that's going to be I think important as the pandemic grows on So if you're interested in cloud foundry platform as a service Learning how to use visual recognition geospatial Things like that check out this project. You can find that through The github which I'll point you to in a little bit the winner from 20 from 2019 it came from a team in Spain and What they did was they addressed an issue of wildlands firefighters being exposed to chemicals Not necessarily through fighting a fire that's happening For example in a building that they're responding to but when it comes to wildfires a lot of it is preventive work They do so they are they have a day job where they go out into an area they set fires and these firefighters are setting fires to preemptively burn crops Things that would otherwise burn in a real wildfire so they're exposed on a daily basis They don't have the apparatus you see in an urban wildfire firefighter and so what this solution does is it uses an IOT device with some sensors baked in for Carbon Oxide nitrogen dioxide it uses that information uses Bluetooth to connect to an Android mobile app Which in turn relays it up to what's an IOT? Where can be displayed on a react? dashboard so really cool Way to explore end-to-end what you can do to build a sensor solution that ties to a mobile app emits data to the cloud where it can be analyzed through data science to share information in real time about what's going on in this particular IOT system so you can learn You can see how this could be applied in you know a factory situation personal situations things like that so Pro tails the solution Pira is now the open-source project Agrily is one that won in 2020 and I see we do have a question about prizes. Yes, each of the three I've just talked about They won 200,000 US dollars CQ was a finalist and they won 25,000 so they won the cash they can use that To invest in their their project they can do that to you know spend this as they wish Or if the project is not something that carries on so whatever they want to do with the prize money But we do want to see them carry on as the open-source projects. So another one here. Agrily Winner before this year They create an information for low literacy farmers They tested it out in Mongolia and Brazil for farmers who are being affected by climate change changes in The weather that impact when and what they should grow And provides a preemptive guidance. This one is currently underway as an open-source project not yet released So they've been doing field tests in India Through a couple of NGO partners. They've already tested in Mongolia and are releasing their app in Brazil next year So if you're interested in kind of learning about the impact of climate change So predictive analytics using weather company NASA data sets This is a project. It's gonna be interesting for you in the future. Again. This also is built on a framework for Platform mutual progressive web apps Android apps things like that And so a couple more projects here, but Isaac Seymour, this is the one I was mentioning about Earthquake resiliency it actually came from a team who was responding to the 2015 earthquake in Nepal What they do is assess buildings that have been affected by the earthquake to see if they need to be torn down If they're safe to go back into or if they need to be retrofit or fixed So based on their earthquake based on scanning a building They can see whether it was a go or no go for going back into it They take their engineers expertise help scale that to people to actually use the app and do that assessment themselves So it helps build change the organization behind it Better better serve their communities and what's really interesting about this one is they built the variation of it For assessing how that work has been done to fix a house afterwards And so for example by looking at the spacing of bricks How much mortars between them how they fit relative to the window You can use data science to find the centroids on each of those bricks Find out the variation of deviation from the normal and use that to assess the quality of something Same with rebar that if you have the shape of it, which reinforces concrete you do it a certain way It's it's more safer more strong if you do it versus another way So data science visual recognition Watson machine learning This project is is looking for contributors to add different types of building homes to it and things Potentially that are in different parts of the world where different types of building standards building materials exist So it's built originally for Nepal and Columbia But could be you know brought to India or elsewhere for someone interested in this project Liquid prep is one built on understanding when Crop should be watered in India was actually a use case for this my colleague Gaurav went back interviewed farmers Essentially what this does is help with water management knowing what the current soil conditions are using several cheap sensors deployed into a Farm a farm or field and Assessing that up against the upcoming weather that's coming whether they should water now or wait a day perhaps or Or otherwise make better plans around water and so IOT This is also enjoyed in this progressive web app as well And you'll see many of these projects. They actually cross pollinate with each other They use some of the same types of technology So you can build many new things based on the solutions that are already out there Another earthquake related one is is open EW earthquake early warning system This is one that uses really cheap accelerometers that for example could be in your mobile phone You know when you play a game or to do something with your phone it can tell the XYZ axes So instead of a really expensive billion US dollar earthquake monitoring device Single device that is at the country level. What you can do with open EW is create many of these little sensors Deploy them throughout a country or location. For example, we've got 50 of these deployed in Puerto Rico They can each detect a little bit of a vibration around them when installed in a building and work together on a consensus Algorithm to determine. Yes. Was that really an earthquake or was it just a large truck driving by? So they've got some really cool IOT features lots of interesting correlations and data sets and this organization has been around for four years. They've got a huge AWS Data set that you can use to study earthquakes Learn about the algorithms of the different types of waves that come out of them deep underground or travel through land and it has Again a carbon-based dashboard built on react So really cutting edge open source framework for that sort of thing that plots them on the map and of course is alerting apps too that can be worked on so this this project is Working through some new deployments in Haiti and Mexico and Nepal right now but in the beginning of the year they'll release version 2 and Really looking for new contributors to help expand this network on the pre Himalayan foothills Where there's a lot of earthquake activity both in Nepal and India Drowning is an interesting visual recognition based system This one was inspired by what happened in Puerto Rico where after the earthquake with no connectivity no power people resorted to making messages painting on parking lots in white paint on black asphalt or Using logs to draw out symbols that you know the typical lost on a desert island and drawing out help in You know palm leaves or something like that This solution standardizes and puts in a kit potentially a set of based on UN Standards of things that people could have in their home lay out on a bed sheet or draw or hand create one of these symbols Explaining, what's the issue how many people are affected and what I need? So this is a really cool visual recognition project. It was based on drones But you can also apply the same visual recognition engine Into satellites into civil aviation into mobile apps so if you're really into visual recognition and Potentially how this can be used to help people or even build a company around creating these kits there's a lot of great opportunity and drone and Finally software So soft water was this year's global challenge with it Really exciting solution from a set of students from all over India. They met at the What they met through an IBM internship program four years ago? And a few of them go together to the University IIT Madras and Chennai and The other ones are based in in Goa and Delhi as well. I had the pleasure of meeting them a couple of weeks ago They came through the NITI aug incubation engine there They're the atoll tinkering lab for IOT solutions a few years ago and are deeply involved in the innovation community And not yet quite an open-source project for contributions But really a great story inspired by an issue that affected the developers The contamination of groundwater Suddenly by arsenic which affected one of the developers mothers And in fact all five team members have had some sort of impact by that groundwater quality issue And so what they created was a system for that can be plugged into the pump that comes into a homework community Alert people to changes in the water quality and alert them over SMS. So they don't have to a monitor dashboard Which their community manager can do but they can get SMS alerts if something radical has changed So we're gonna be working with them through the service corps to test this In different parts of India we've talked a bit Bihar we've talked about on near Chennai or in Goa itself So really inspiring project a really great team behind this and really represents what we want to see in call for code People inspired by an important issue that affects them locally that create an open-source project that affect the issue globally and That they live on bring that innovation together and inspire others to to learn new skills and put them to use Not like a sushi I'll said knowledge and learning is really core to what we do with call for code So with that, I'll wrap up if you do want to find out more about Upcoming competitions like the global one or the spot challenges that happen on a regular basis Or about those open-source projects that are available now if you don't learn about Attribute to and improve you can do all of that through developer That IBM comm slash call for code, which is the link that Karan already posted in the chat there So really hope to see some of you join the slack communities Either the global one we have with 25,000 people for call for code in general or through the ones for example for open EW or for cluster duck that that are looking for new contributors as well And as I wrap up Check out, you know the GitHub projects if you go into this project catalog one Which I'll drop in the chat You can kind of see each of the repos for them as I mentioned there's there's developer which has the list of challenges the competitions You can learn about previous winners the open-source projects kind of how they've all been deployed In locations around the world some of the story that goes into them the partners and there's some of them actually do have like mini documentaries as well and Then as I mentioned if you go to the Linux foundation website just under the projects list You can find each of the call for code Projects there as well alongside Kubernetes node. Let's interpret. It's one of the top projects over there So with that let me Close it out. I believe Karan is going to help us wrap up the event All right, thanks. Thanks a lot Daniel This is this is real piece of piece of gold I would say this is amazing stuff that you and your team are doing on on ground and globally it's a global scale right? You're doing some California and and and Spain and India and other places of the world so so curious to you and thanks a lot for doing this This is amazing and I can see that we are really solving some some real real world not business But real people problem Through through technology that is important always. I mean We always are busy in solving real business problems adding more business values But this is real human problems that that you and your team are solving and I really encourage Audience to you know contribute in in the way they can I would definitely Would be interested to be a part of this. I'll reach out to you on that side So again, thanks a lot really appreciate that you're you're you're telling us about this Yeah, thank you. I'm really inspiring all those great projects and Combined with this hacking filter and for the human. Yeah, good job Exactly. Yeah, and if you use those skills you learn in solving humanitarian problems to solve those business problems Win-win, yeah, exactly. Yeah, definitely So so Daniel quick or so so is like I'm Looked like, you know IBM would be supporting these causes with some compute and Watson kind of credits Is it is it like the way it works? Yeah, so as people join the call for code community They'll get six months to use $200 in credits for some of the paid services there's a whole bunch of free services in the IBM cloud catalog and then as we define for next year We're gonna see if we can expose some of the more container based services open shift is one that we want of course people to use But um, yeah, so each year normally there's there's some credits that are promoted. There's promo codes But it depends on what the announcement is next year, but yeah, there's lots of free services 200 services in the cloud that we have and Most of those at least have a free tier or a low cost For example serverless is a great low-cost option a lot of compute on demand When it's not when you're not working on the project scales down to zero you're not being charged So lots of cool, you know technology you can use to get started for free low cost Cool and and I'm curious also to know how does this gets operationalized for example The the ISAC ISAC project that you were walking us through How can How can this be implemented on ground at a bigger scale? If for example, you know builders the house house builders at look let's say in India or maybe in someone's way How can they how can they really? Use this as a tool or as a as a you know go to go to think like I mean I get the technology We have a technology around it, but how can how can someone like a contractor? Who does not know about these tools? How can they use this while designing new houses or building new houses? Yeah, just an example. Yeah. Yeah, great question In fact, one of the cool things about Isaac Seaman I just dropped it in the chat too is it's a framework in many ways, right? So it was build build change is the organization that created it Innovated on it for a specific context in Colombia and they said we're going to focus on brick walls We're going to focus on instruction elements rebar's And before that they handle the project That was focused on the position of windows and doors on a building to understand the structural integrity So what they designed in Isaac Seaman Is a generic framework that anybody can train new models on And they can bring it into the dashboard as a Once they've trained that machine learning endpoint in Watson just provided a rest api That can be linked up to a specific mobile application So you can bring in new checks into the mobile app So if you're only interested in certain types of checks or you created your own check that you want to bring to the Marketplace of models that are available You can configure your app just to use those models So that's the design of the open source. So it goes beyond what build changes focused on themselves to say here's a here's a whole generic framework Anybody else can use or contribute to that improves it for everybody So there's still a little bit of early days for that project because they just launched this one in june with Linux foundation So just a few months ago, but they got some great contribution guidelines. We've got a tutorial on how you can use their existing models And then you can see what their needs are From from the developer community in the link. I just posted Fantastic. Yeah All right. Very cool. Very cool. Daniel. Thanks a lot for sharing this information with us If you guys have any questions, here's the time to speak To to ask any questions Daniel if not, then we are already at top of the r here and We had a great great session great speakers today And I think it's a time for us to wrap up. What do you say Sebastian? Yeah, I think so. It was an awesome day. So I missed the first session where we were It was too early for me, but that's a good opportunity to To mention that all those talks has been recorded They will be Packaged and put on the redhead developer youtube channel and usually that happens pretty fast So maybe next and maybe not next week because we are entering a pto period But I don't know maybe but soon all those talks will be available on demand for everyone So, um, yeah, I can't wait for that to catch up on the the talks that I missed. Yeah Yeah talks as well as the presentations. So so yes So so go on the duds when you when you take screenshot of presentation. So It's all open source, right? Our code is open and everything is open. Uh, uh, so yes Thank you. So, uh, so Anna any any last a lot strips and devices to uh to our audience here I will thank you very much everybody for joining. Um, it it was it was great and as Sebastian said I'm looking forward to seeing the other sessions as well. Um, I've seen some Comments in the chat about helm as well. I Like helm and I'm like looking forward to like watch the other sessions as well I'm sure there's a lot to learn. Um, so it was a great great event and thank you everybody for chiming in and You know being present in the chat was a live chat. It was a really good live chat. Um, and Yeah, I hope we can make it again next year Oh, definitely. Yeah, let's let's hope that I think last year was not last year last last year was definition day India was an in person event in Bangalore and and and bar and uh, uh, uh, I think you were also there, right Sebastian? No, well, no Like Kamesh probably was there how many she has Kamesh and that's him. Yeah, so Yeah, we have to skip we have to skip last year and then this year is virtual But yeah next year, hopefully no fully we all can see uh, each other in person and can have Can you know so nothing can beat in person events? I can wait to go back to Bangalore. I have been there several times And I love it. I love being there. So yeah, I really hope next year. Let's see how he goes and Yeah, that will be awesome Right. All right, then then I have I have uh, just few few few things to share with the audience before we leave I'm so I'm gonna share my screen and just show you Uh, what's next what next you can do? Uh, uh with uh with kubernetes and how you can you know sharpen your Cloud cloud natives IQ on kubernetes. So I'm gonna share my screen. Let me know if you guys can see this I'm trying this for the first time today Okay, so uh, so number one link uh, is is my personal favorite right now is uh, uh Is uh developers dot right dot com slash learn in here You will see a lot of micro interactive tutorials built by built by our team So it uh, you can just filter out There are lots of lots of great topics in here and these are uh, you know learning by doing kind of examples So for example, if I if I go to quarkus and do a search, you know, let's see if we have Search is broken. Oh Okay, search is broken Okay, good. So uh, free talk for my team. Uh, but anyways, if you if you click on any of these sessions Any of these tile in here? No, you know We have an issue with the website. I pinged the people Um, if you open that Yeah, yeah, yeah, uh, I don't know what is happening. Maybe if you open that in a In a and conita window five Let's try that. Let's try this is this is now the real real fun stuff Let's debug it live with all all the people Seeing this let's see. Yeah, exactly make it happen. Okay. This works and if I do interactive, uh Session of 4.9 playground Oh Oh, yeah, this works. So this is a hack Daniel, uh, Sebastian Exactly. Well, you know what if I'm working like few hours back. Oh, yeah Yeah, yeah Anyway, so so guys, this is this is how you can you can launch an interactive setup Uh, uh and follow instruction. You will get an open shift environment to play around you You will actually get, you know, a curated tutorial that you can follow along and uh, uh So, yes, so this is one way one way to launch launch open shift No charge and Follow some guides the other way is Another one is a developer sandbox You can simply sign up for a developer sandbox free of cost again. You will get a full blown Uh, a cluster of uh of open shift In which you can run almost anything Right as long as uh, uh Yeah, it does not require I mean it supports serverless It supports few more operators as well But you just need to log in with your account and get grab your your free copy or not copy if you're free Free link or free account for uh for sandbox and looks like this will also work in incognito Okay, guys, so I've got my task. I'm gonna fix it as soon as I I get out of this um this live stream and uh, I'll I'll make sure this will work But yeah, trust me trust me. This was working like few minutes back something weird going on but yes developer sandbox and The interactive sessions that our team has created And to do some promotion actually tomorrow. I'm gonna speak on on another topic under definition tech talks talking about GitHub actions on open shift and how you can you know, how you can Supercharge your development loops like okay gone are the days where you're gonna run those commands manually But let's let's use it the open a grid of actions and open shift way so uh tomorrow at at 12 p.m. EST i'm gonna have join this session with with etson. So So that's all I have to share with the team here I'll show I'll I'll share those links in here in the chat And thank you so much again for for joining in and spending time with us this morning and this afternoon Thanks, Sebastian. Thanks, and thanks daniel for super early morning. And now you can go and have have a have a morning tea And and thanks a lot to all the speakers who who helped us and There was there were great topics java and and you know algorithms and who and get ops and you know Jenkins and you know call for code. So so really excited to to wrap up this session here Yeah, yeah, and thank you to all the attendees as well And as ana said the chat was awesome. That's a great thing with the virtual stuff is that we have the chat Uh, if there's one thing that I like about virtual I like in person meetings But with virtual you have to chat and people can just interact during your session because in a real conference You don't have someone standing up in the middle of your talk saying hey We're speaking with others with the virtual setup in this chat. Yeah, and built a new kind of community and yeah I love that. Yeah, but there is still one one one question unanswered. So ana what do you call? People who quote in java What java notch Well I missed that one I've seen all the other jokes with the coffee and everything. I was actually You're super serious about java and coffee I think exactly We need to be super charged. Oh, yeah, yeah super chat and supersonic Yeah Okay, all right guys. Thank you so much. Uh, and uh, uh, see you see you next time. Yeah