 So how long has been Collabora involved in the LibreOffice project? Well, that's a really good question. Of course, Collabora has been around for eight years now doing great things on LibreOffice, but we've founded LibreOffice together, as you know, at Arlo. So I think we've been involved for a long time, and many of my team came from SUSE, and were spun out and helped form Collabora to help sustain and drive LibreOffice. Can I have a productivity, I should mention? Yeah. Which are Collabora main objectives for sponsoring the LibreOffice conference? Yeah, so great question. I mean, I think really, I often go just to meet the people and understand what's going on. You know, of course, to celebrate another year of achievement, I think is always good. And so many friends and colleagues at the conference, and there's some great content there, I think, too. And, you know, inspiring technical talks, you know, exchanging ideas and sharing information is really pretty cool. And the hope is, of course, live streaming, and then we can reach even more people when we can actually, you know, gather in one place. So yeah, and we just love to, you know, show off the value of the, you know, supported versions of LibreOffice, particularly, you know, Collabora, CollaboraOffice and, you know, the value then for people wanting to migrate with actual real support from, you know, people caring about them deeply and, you know, answering their queries and questions and helping sort of smooth that transition and de-risk it for people. So we love to get that message out, but we're, you know, we can get those products out and benefit everyone, the community as we contribute back. You know, Collabora, obviously, as we, you know, employ and grow, grow, and the customers, they get just a much better experience and they sort of hit roadblocks and stumbling blocks that hurt their migrations. According to analysts, the Office with Market Segment will grow at a yearly rate of 5% during the next five years to reach a global value of $30 billion, which, by the way, is the value that this market used to have around 2009, 2010. Where do you see LibreOffice in this scenario? Well, yeah, I mean, we need to continue to grow. It's good. I mean, Collabora is growing at a small multiple of 5%, so apparently we're gaining market share according to those projections, which is exciting. And, you know, we have a great product already. So I mean, I position LibreOffice really when I think about it in five years, not only as a PC product that you can use, but as a fantastic technology and a foundation for building productivity, document applications, anything, you know, generating PDFs, doing invoicing, calculations like there's so much richness in that technology underpinning. And I think that's why I'm most excited about seeing that grow and spread into even more places. Since the launch of the LibreOffice project, the end of desktop productivity has been predicted several times and actually even before, but the applications are still alive and it looks like growing again. Which is your opinion on the future of this market segment? Yeah, so I think that's the exciting thing about LibreOffice is really its maturity and its completeness. And you often get people sitting down and thinking, oh, it's easy to write a word processor. And it is easy to write a word processor. It's just not easy to write one that can interoperate and handle that huge corpus of, you know, the whole industry's technical decisions. And it's quite interesting to see the ping-pong there, you know, one that implements a feature, another app then interoperates with it. And just this sort of ladder effect of growing functionality is then reflected in file formats and just the depth of complexity of coping with all of that. And I think LibreOffice as a technology base just has the most wonderful, mature and complete interoperability story there of any product, you know. So I think that's really, you know, that's really just a killer feature and it's never going to go away. And, you know, of course, obviously on top of that we built a collaborative line, you know, reclaim your digital sovereignty over documents and workloads and so on on your own hardware and network under your control. And, you know, we see lots of examples of that being really useful. So, you know, being able to control your documents, you know, whether it's the diagrams or the technical specs of a new car you can then show to your sales team. But without them being able to copy and send it on, you know, with their name carefully watermarked on the server overall of it. So we see that, you know, continuing to grow and reusing the technology there. But against that, I think, you know, users still will always want a PC desktop product. You know, I'm excited to see more PCs being sold, more laptops out there. Keyboards are awesome. You know, we should then use Fact Client's PC apps as well. During the last 18 months with the pandemic, Open Source Software and LibreOffice also have helped people working from home and this has increased the global number of users. Do you see this as a trend also for the future when the pandemic will be hopefully over or it was just a kind of specific? Yeah, who can say. So, I mean, I've worked at home exclusively for 25 years punctuated with conference travels to meet my friends like at the LibreOffice conference, which is exciting but around the world telling people about the goodness of LibreOffice and other software beforehand. So, you know, it's easy to work from home with a free software stack and do it from ground up. We've run an entirely distributed company, nearly entirely. There are a few locations in Cambridge and Montreal, but, you know, 150 people are working using Linux-based and of course, Collaborate, LibreOffice-based on top of that. I mean, that runs our whole business, you know, from finance, accounting, HR and all of the shared functions to the engineers are doing stuff. So, yeah, it all works. It works from home. And I think there's actually a real strength in not having clusters of people that communicate more at a higher frequency in the office. So, actually, one of the best ways to do this is to have everyone working from home. You know, it works well. And, yeah, but in that context, of course, there's also home PCs and, you know, people wanting an office suite. And so, you know, it's really thrilling to see LibreOffice being useful to people there and, you know, all of our hard work being used and appreciated by more people. So, I think that will continue. People will work from home. They love it. It saves a fortune in commuting fees and loads of time in hassle. And you can be more productive in many ways. So, I think everyone's going to work at home for some portion of their life, unless it's a very manual task. Which are the three best characteristics of LibreOffice that make the software stand out against the competition? Of course, if you have more than three, it's okay. But just to summarize something that can stay in the mind of users or prospective users. Yeah, sure. Sure. So, I mean, I think one of our huge strengths is our community. It's an open source project. It has multiple vendors and a huge diversity of contributors from all around the globe. And that means that when I look through my career, you know, I've been in many different companies. But my customers have had a continuity of support and services through some quite amazing industry upheavals, you know, through some micro systems arriving and disappearing, turning into Oracle. Now, IBM, you know, and Novell, they've had a great deal of attachment, micro-focus, you know, being spun out to Calabra. And those people still have the same excellent support and services that they've grown to expect and appreciate around the code base. So, if you made a bet on it, it's not there at the whim of any one company or what choice you make now. I think that makes it a very safe choice. No one can kill your software investment unilaterally. And the software just keeps improving as we see. So, I think the open source list is probably my top. One of the things with Calabra's mission is to drive open source. So, I had to try my second thing there in terms of the power to drive your own destiny around that. You can choose your upgrade cycle. You can choose your UX, you know, you can tweak it. I mean, we have customers who we've worked with closely. Quite difficult to deal with probably because they're extremely directive attention to detail. You know, we want your mobile phone version to have buttons that look exactly like this and do this and we're not happy with this particular interaction and we can fix all that. There's nothing that can't be fixed. I think that's really powerful and you can't get that elsewhere. Really, it's amazingly powerful. And then I think thirdly, probably just this technology base, the LibreOffice technology to build products on that. And the joy of being able to bundle and own this and put it into your own product is really incredibly powerful. So, lots of people need an office piece and you know, you can buy it in from somewhere else or you can use someone else's web service or you can try and reuse a Microsoft Office product in some strange way but you're going to end up with lots of strange deployment problems with API changes that you're not able to keep with and that are forced onto you by the exigencies of that and of course in terms of licensing it's complicated. So, I think having that base and collaboration online, we've got some like 50 plus million Docker image downloads everywhere, they're driving that collaborative document and getting it embedded everywhere from CERN, I guess to probe the mysteries of the universe to these business users sort of file sync and share needs, Moodle, it's there for people with their homework assignments for their students and you know, I think open source really is the payload control of your destiny and collaboration with others around your documents. I think LibreOffice delivers that and collaborators thrilled to be part of that story and to produce products based on the technology and to sponsor the conference. So, I encourage you to come and see what we're up to. Okay, thank you, Mike.