 This month, I chose Diana Clark, who is mostly known as the chair of Picon Conferences. And namely, last year, we had the first ever Picon Canada. It was put up by a small team in something like five months, so it was really amazing. They had a great lineup of speakers, and it was a great event with good diversity and excellent topics. You should check out the YouTube pages and the Pi video website to see everything. So she's a regular engineer. She's been working for a decade on web stuff, also of her languages, mostly on Linux. She's a contributor to SQL Alchemy, which is impressive because she's the same year as her chairing Picon Canada, and she also has a family and two kids. She was elected to the Python Software Foundation as a member of the PSF, and she's an officer for the big global Python conference, Picon. She was co-chair last year, and she's chair for the next year with our Mathieu here, co-chair. I think it's important to highlight Diana because I put up a few images, and in the previous time, I just put them as enigmas without explaining them. So you can see the Python logo, the Picon one, Picon Canada, and the Pilates logo, of course. And I think Diana is impressive because she's a really human person. She's always sweet and tolerant, but she can also really drive something and be strong when needed. You always have a few incidents at conferences, and she's part of the team who handles that, and you've got to give respect for these difficult situations. And I think she's kind of a role model for all of us, not only women but also men, because she's really, to me, inspiring because I was in the Python Developers Group, and I never heard of her, and last year I discovered what she's been doing, and it's really cool to me that she can have the energy to do all that she's done, and she's an inspiration to try to contribute and to do what she does. Just a small quote from her Twitter, time zones are hard, time zones plus family is extra hard. She's not really on the web, it's best that if you're going to meet her probably at the next PyCon Canada and PyCon here, so I thought it was important that you just knew her face. And she has a Twitter where she just talks about software and family, and she doesn't have a blog yet, you can pressure her to write about interesting things, and she just links to her LinkedIn profile from Twitter. So Diana Clark, a great person, a Canadian, and a PyLady. Thank you.