 All right, it looks like we're up on the screen. Hi, I'm Scott Sissel. I'm a product manager at VMware. And I'm here today to talk to you about, obviously, backstage and what VMware Tanzu is doing with backstage and the backstage open source project. So before we could jump in too much, what I want to talk about is my background in open source projects through the years and how that I'm seeing some of those learnings take place in the backstage community and seeing like what kind of things that I notice in those communities that will help backstage continue to grow and kind of the trends that we're seeing. So I've worked in backstage for about the last year before that I worked from Cloud Foundry, Knative, and Cloud Native Buildpacks. But obviously kind of like the key thing that we see with any community is how it engages developers and how it engages making tools for those developers to contribute to the product. Every healthy OSS project has developers at its core. So we've definitely seen that here. Like the numbers we saw earlier today, it was great to see how much it's grown over the last three years and all the engagement with the room today. So surprised to see how this big of a room for backstage is just great to see all the people here. So developers are coming to this. They're excited. They're engaged. They're contributing to the core project. But really what we want to do is make those developers' lives are easier. And obviously, backstage is all about making developers more productive and making it easier for them to start developing software in a secure way. So what we want to align to is kind of this concept of developer flow and really enable developers not only contributing to backstage, but the developers who are servicing backstage too. We want to get them into a state of heightened focus and performance and heightened creativity called flow. So if you've been a developer for long enough, you've achieved this before, and you've had this, or you really know about those times when you're really just honed in, and you're shipping code, and everything's productive, and everything's going right. So what we want to talk about here is I really want to focus in on this last item here is the feeling of total control over a task. And at its core, backstage is helping you get the information you need and actually move the barriers to actually developing that type of code. When we talk about a successful community in backstage fulfilling its mission, I mean, I literally pulled this from backstage.io is we want to allow product teams and developers to ship high quality code quickly without compromising quality or without compromising autonomy. So giving developers and users either the community contributors or developers in the organization the ability to make the choices and the decisions they need to make. So that's kind of the key step that I see and the key kind of thing that's taking hold in the community that I see as a positive signal so far. And it's great to see how much kind of developer autonomy we are creating through the tooling and the experience in backstage. But the next thing I want to focus on is the plugin ecosystem. And it's exciting to see all the talks today and all the conversations we've had so far about the plugin ecosystem. But really what I want to focus in on and the trends that I've seen with any successful open source project is the extensibility of the platform itself. It's not just contributing to the core branch or the core kind of source code of the ecosystem. It's extending it in a way to make the ecosystem work for your use cases and your developers and your end users. And making it work in a way that it keeps on growing has that network effect. And then kind of creates this flywheel effect as well while you're feeding back into the ecosystem. So with that, though, comes complexity and more need to actually kind of control that plugin, that customization, to meet your developers and bring it back to them to help them solve their problems quickly and getting those new plugins and those new experiences back to them to help them build the software and solve their business problems. So with that, I want to thank everyone here because you are the reason why this community is so great and it's continuing to thrive and to grow. All these contributions everyone's making and all these contributions that we're seeing into the community, seeing that graph that Meg just showed was great just to see how much this community is thriving. So what I want to talk about now is how Tanzu is kind of taking on that challenge of helping maintain that plugin ecosystem and bring it to your users. So with that today, VMware Tanzu is announcing the Tanzu Developer Configurator is now officially GA. It's a fully customizable backstage instance, or allows you to fully customize your backstage instance to be a single declarative configuration file. So it aligns kind of with what we're talking about with the declarative integration, CICD getups principles, and also we're aligning it with the OSS declarative integration initiative that we're talking about today. So bringing that project in our commercial forum via the configurator and the open source project together to create this system of customizing and quickly getting out a custom backstage instance for your users in a secure and declarative way into production. So you can backstate or you can customize backstage in minutes instead of weeks or months. So you can go through and do it via a single configuration file instead of having to actually go in and update the code and integrate it yourself and rebuild. And then we already have a handful of support for the listed validated plugins below and that list will continue to grow, as well as you can bring your own custom third-party plugins into this as well. So I know we're a little bit close to a break right now, so I wanna end right now, so I'll give you guys everyone's time for their full break, but I'm happy to take questions or talk to folks outside afterwards. But thank you so much.