 So, bonjour, and hello, my name is Fabian Deutsch, I'm an engineering manager at Red Hat and a Qvert maintainer, and that's the role I'm speaking about. I want to speak about containers and AI, but not here. Containers and AI usually inspire us to look at the future. But I want to speak about virtual machines. They, on the other hand, have existed for a long time and need to be carried into some future as well. And with the landscape changing, we're looking at how can compute look and future. So, we're at KubeCon, so it's quite obvious, right? With Kubernetes being the answer of how to do compute and future. It's already running containers, and with Qvert, it can run virtual machines. Everything you know about Kubernetes becomes immediately relevant for virtual machine as well, nothing new to learn. So, instead of having different platforms for different workloads, you can unify on Kubernetes alone, reducing cognitive complexity. So, with this unified platform, you're able to benefit from this community, but also from the rich CNCF ecosystem. Now, a little bit more technical, Kubernetes is our platform for Qvert, for scale, but at the heart, we rely on KVM in order to do our virtualization. It's our virtualization stack that's been there for two decades in the open source community, and that's empowering many other virtualization projects down there. Qvert itself is in the CNCF sandbox since 2019, and we moved to incubation in 2022. Today, Qvert is developed by 150 developers from 20 companies, and the platform providers are adopting it as much as end users. And one of them is with me, so Mike. Thanks, Fabian. So, I'm Mike Kaniek, and here to talk to you about the journey we've taken with Qvert. So, it feels like a long time ago, but it was at an event much like this, where we first saw Qvert being highlighted, and it caught our attention. I've worked on server-based virtualization for almost 17 years now. I can't believe I just said that. And over that time, we've seen a lot of products come and go, and a lot of technologies come and go, including things like Kubernetes. But we do think Kubernetes is here to stay, and as such, it makes a good platform to build a future upon. So, when thinking about what does a platform look like to run VMs, what is really key to us is having a strong, secure API. And that is what I really view Kubernetes as providing me. Hopefully, you all agree. So, it's funny being here on this stage at KubeCon, talking about virtual machines. Hopefully, you all realize that virtual machines are still a very useful and trusted form of computers. And you'll find it's a great substitute within the environment today. And you'll find it broadly at a lot of enterprises. No matter how much people are talking about, we're going to containers, we're going to the public cloud. Public cloud a lot of times, it's really just more virtual machines. So, as we move forward in this journey, we have to think about what are the things we value? In looking at running VMs on Kubernetes with KubeVirt, we're doing a few different selections. One, we're selecting to enhance our own skills, enhance the skills of our colleagues and also of the organization at a broad level. And realistically, based upon all the things that have happened over the last few months, this might become the coming out party for KubeVirt and running VMs on Kubernetes. So, what makes that work for us? Well, it's a few things. It's first the strong ecosystem that CNCF already has at our fingertips. So, some of the key things that I leveraged today include Argo CD, thinking about it as a great way to manage our configuration broadly. Operators, another tool to help keep the software that's running in the software that's running in Kubernetes up to date. Following on, leveraging the CSI platform to pick what storage solutions really work for us. Now, there's many virtualization platforms out there, but often they only work in one way. They require you to have storage that looks like this, networking that looks like that. The beauty of Kubernetes is that you can choose how you wanna put things together and optimize it for yourself. And it's very useful when you're now really talking about putting Kubernetes on a bare metal platform to offer this back to your clients. Thank you very much, Mike. So, what's next? KubeVirt has been out there for a while. We're going through graduation just now. So, if you have adopted KubeVirt, by the way, please step up and open a PR in our GitHub repository and help us to get through that phase. We're really interested in your use cases. We're working as part of that. We're also working in governance and we're trying to look forward and continue to innovate in that virtualization space. As Mike said, virtualization is there to stay. Last call out, so come over and join us and talk to us about KubeVirt and why compute should be in Kubernetes. You can find us at the Red Hat booth in the project panel and later this week on Friday, there's the KubeVirt workshop, which you will find in the schedule. Thank you very much, good seeing you. Thank you. Thank you.