 Good morning, everyone. I know we've still got some people coming in. Guten Morgen. Bonjour. I have to use all of them. Welcome to Cloud Foundry Basil Edition. Thank each and every one of you for being here. We're so excited to be in Switzerland this year and hang out with all of you here. So thank you. Before we start today, I have to give a shout out to all of our amazing sponsors that make this possible. Pivotal and SAP and SwissCom, thank you for allowing us to have this event space, the food, and an opportunity to bring everyone close together. Today, I'm going to talk about Cloud Foundry, the momentum in our community, and some big announcements we have coming up. But first, I wanted to ask each and every one of you to think big. In the 1800s, Barron had the idea to fundamentally change logistics and transportation in the transcontinental United States. But it wasn't their idea that made that happen. It was the thousands of creators, the engineers, the architects that fundamentally changed the landscape of the United States, or a little bit later in the early 1900s, when an architect had the idea to build a bridge connecting Marin County with San Francisco and helping people that were previously coming only by boat to be able to drive and connecting those two cities. While an architect had the idea, it was the thousands of creators, engineers, architects that made that possible. It was those creators that made the Golden Gate Bridge one of the modern marvels of the world it is today. So you see where I'm going with this. Let's take it to a more recent past. In 2007, the iPhone came out. And that was really cool and really interesting. And it was fun. You could take photos. You could text. But that's not what made it really interesting. It was 2008 when the app store came out. And the applications that were written by the thousands of developers fundamentally changed the role the smartphone played. How many of you here have a smartphone? How many have two? Exactly. Today, I would rather lose my wallet than lose my phone. Because with my phone, I can check in for my flight. I can find the next bus, the next train. I can order food. I can order groceries. I can do everything on that. I can pay bills. I do everything on my phone. And that's because of those developers that created those apps. Those applications have fundamentally turned the platform into the invaluable technology that it is to each and every one of us today. So I'd like to posit that developers are the heroes of this story. It's the developers. Each and every one of you that are fundamentally changing the role technology plays is fundamentally changing each and every one of your organizations. We often call it digital transformation. And I know that we've used this word a lot, and some of us are probably sick of hearing about it. But it doesn't change the fact. Each and every organization are finding ways to be more innovative, be more responsive to customers, fail faster. They're asking their organizations to be more innovative, leveraging software to change the entire business. One of my favorite examples that are representative of digital transformation is the banking industry. And I like this one because it is the most tangible, and it impacts each and every one of us every day. Five years ago, if you told me, I would be doing 100% of my banking on my phone, I would have laughed. But yet, here we are. I do all of my banking on my phone. I deposit checks, transfer money, send money to friends, pay bills. I do all of that on my phone. And that's possible because my bank wrote an app that sits on my phone. And that small application represents so much more because it changes the way that I engage with my bank and it changes the way my bank thinks about technology because that software represents a way for them to be connected to me in new ways. But it also represents a fundamental change in that bank. You don't just put an app on the phone and let it sit. How often do we update them? Sometimes every month, sometimes every week, there's constant updates to applications. And so that small app also represents my bank investing in continuous delivery practices, agile practices. They're adding in feedback loop with me as a customer. How do they iterate on that application? So that small app represents a fundamental change for my organization, my bank's organization, and many that are like that. For my bank, it's an opportunity for them to rethink how code is written, deployed, and iterated, and continuously changed over time. But it also represents a way for them to rethink how systems are managed, secured, and then scaled as these applications gain and usage. Each of these organizations that are leveraging software in new ways want to give their developers that freedom to create. To give each and every one of you the opportunity to get an idea and get it out into the market as quickly as possible. So earlier this year in June at the last summit, we announced that Kubo had been formally donated to the Cloud Foundry Foundation by Google and Pivotal. As a refresher, Kubo is Kubernetes on Bosch. And it combines those two amazing technologies to bring together the opportunity to run your applications and containerize workloads in new ways. Well, today I want to announce that we're renaming that. Kubo is now going to be known as Container Runtime. And Container Runtime offers you the opportunity to run those containerized workloads within Cloud Foundry. But more importantly, run them alongside what was formerly the Elastic Runtime and is now going to be known as Application Runtime. So running those two, Container Runtime and Application Runtime and Tandem, supported by Bosch, is part of the open source Cloud Foundry. This allows you to leverage Cloud Foundry but still have the opportunity to have the right tool for the right job. So as we think about giving developers that freedom to create and giving developers the opportunity to take an idea and get that to market as quickly as possible, that's where we come up with Runtime. And now you have the opportunity to use the right tool for the right job all within Cloud Foundry. But the coolest thing about Cloud Foundry is that it's open source. We're here at an open source conference. And what does that mean? Open source means that we're able to bring together diverse people from diverse organizations to drive real innovation. And I want to take a minute to step back and really talk about what that means to me. Diversity is important. Diversity and inclusivity are important in an open source community because it's important to hear every voice from everyone in the community. But more importantly, that's where the innovation happens. We cannot innovate and truly drive the best of breed technology without having every voice around the table. So as we think about the potential we have both as an open source technology but as a Cloud Foundry community, we have the potential to allow many voices to be heard to really make sure that Cloud Foundry is the best of breed technology. So we bring together the Runtime, the container Runtime, the application Runtime to allow the developers to take an idea to market as quickly as possible. Combine that with open source, the opportunity to bring together diverse minds to drive real innovation. Together we get Cloud Foundry. Now I'm going to transition here for a little bit to talk about our users. We just completed a user survey a few weeks ago. And I'm so thrilled to say that we had nearly 800 users respond. And that survey represents more than just an opportunity to talk about all the amazing work you're doing as users. But it also gives us as a community insight into what people use Cloud Foundry for, what's valuable, what is the importance of it, and what are we going to do with it next. So I grabbed a few snaps of some of those results, and I wanted to share them with you today. Who uses Cloud Foundry? Well, 49% are large enterprises, which is not surprising. But what was also exciting was to see that 39% of users are small and medium businesses. So there's power in Cloud Foundry to hit every organization and enabling every organization to have that platform for developers. We've also seen a significant change in the community this year. And we've seen a lot of new users come in, a lot of new use cases. We've also seen, based on the survey, that 45% of users that responded to the survey have only been using Cloud Foundry in the last year. So this is exciting because it really represents that not only do we have so many new users and so many new people that are participating in this community, we have so much more potential. And the future is looking really bright. One of the last data points that I thought were really interesting were what I, as people, were running Cloud Foundry on. What infrastructure did they use to take advantage of the power of Cloud Foundry? What we found over half are multi-cloud. Over half of the users are leveraging Cloud Foundry both on-prem and across public clouds. And so as we think about the power of Cloud Foundry and we think about the enablement, it gives you that flexibility, that opportunity to run your workloads on any cloud, both on-prem and public. Today, over half the Fortune 500 are running Cloud Foundry. And I wanted to call out a couple of use cases because I really want to do showcase the amazing power of Cloud Foundry but also how it's changing organizations. First up is Volkswagen. And Volkswagen has done a lot in terms of taking the technology. They have a hybrid cloud infrastructure. They're running both pivotal Cloud Foundry as well as the open-source Cloud Foundry across multiple clouds. For them, it represents an opportunity to be more responsive to customer needs, provide easy access to multiple cloud providers, and finally, give a consistent access to all of their brands to a single platform. To use their own words, Cloud Foundry enables us to combine our internal on-prem cloud with several external cloud providers. The beauty is that we can move workloads between providers. And for the developer, it's always the same, same platform, same methodology, the same environment. And that's where the power of Cloud Foundry sits, is providing that consistency across any cloud. Another use case I want to highlight is Home Depot. Home Depot is a home improvement store. And it's not the first place you would think of when you think about cloud native and innovation around the cloud. But yet, in the last couple of years, Home Depot has gone from zero developers working on Cloud Foundry to over 2,500 developers that are writing code on Cloud Foundry. With over 2,000 applications in production today alone, the momentum is strong. Their platform can now handle over 2 billion service calls a month. But most importantly, they took their application deployment from six weeks on average to six hours. For them, it fundamentally represented a new way to work in a new way to write code and leverage that code across their organization. Cloud Foundry gives us control over the way we deploy and scale our applications. And isn't that what you want out of a platform? Something that allows you to write code, get it out there quickly and scale that effectively. Now, we're here. It's been a year since we were in Europe last time. I want to talk a little bit about our community growth. We've had five new members join just in the last month. American Airlines, Home Depot, Volkswagen, but also Influx DB and ComSisto. We're seeing a huge growth in diversity in our community and our membership. At nearly 70 members, one of the most interesting things is that end users represent 40% of our membership base now. So what that means is we think about digital transformation and the power of open source is more and more companies are not only wanting to leverage software and become software companies, but they're also wanting to participate in open source. So the power of open source is also helping change these companies one at a time. Also in our community, we've seen a tremendous amount of velocity. We are still one of the largest, highest-velocity open source projects and continue to grow in terms of contributors, lines of code, but even repos because this is a large and complex project. We've also seen the self-organized groups grow around the world. At over 200 groups with over 70,000 members, there's a meetup near you. This is an opportunity for more people to share ideas and collaborate, but also an opportunity to make this a grassroots movement as well. So now on to some announcements. The first one is the Foundry. This is live as of this morning. The Foundry represents an opportunity to pull together all of the services and the capabilities inside the ecosystem. This is where you can find someone to help on integration, a training partner, or the many services that are available in and around Cloud Foundry. We're starting off with just 600, so we're seeing that scale as more and more services are available within our community. And for users, this offers you a singular opportunity and one place to go and find out how you can get support, help, or grow your Cloud Foundry deployment. Also in June of this year, we formally launched the Cloud Foundry certified developer training program. And I'm proud to say that since June, we've had nearly 10,000 enroll. 10,000 people have signed up to take either the massive open online training course, the self-paced training, and the certification. This is such an exciting momentum, and it was something that was a long time coming, and we're super proud to see so many people wanting to participate and take advantage of and build out their Cloud Foundry knowledge. In other news, Fujitsu is the latest certified provider. K5 is Fujitsu's Cloud Foundry distribution, which brings us to seven certified distributions of Cloud Foundry. With Atos, Pivotal, Huawei, IBM, Swisscom, SAP, and now Fujitsu, there's a commercial Cloud Foundry distribution everywhere in the world. This represents an opportunity to make sure that we are able to provide Cloud Foundry consistently. So when we say certified distribution, what that means is when you leverage a Cloud Foundry distribution, you can be assured that there is a consistency to that deployment, and you have choice.