 Hi, everyone, and welcome to the OpenStack OpenSnack. I'm Amy Marish. I'm a Principal Technical Marketing Manager at Red Hat. And I serve on the Open Infrastructure Foundation Board of Directors as well as the Technical Committee. So let's go ahead and talk about OpenStack. And what is OpenStack? Well, OpenStack is infrastructure as a service that utilizes a common API and authentication to control large pools of compute, storage, and networking resources in one or more data centers. Now, more recently, you can use third-party services like Kubernetes or Cloud Foundry in addition to the OpenStack SDK and Horizon Dashboard to manage your bare metal virtual machines and containers which reside in your environment. Now, OpenStack is made up of various projects that comprise different component areas in order to create a comprehensive cloud operating system. Now, some of these components are compute, which are NOVA for virtual machines and Zoom for containers, for example. Now, we've got storage, and we've got Swift for Object, Cinder for Block, and Manila for Shared. Networking is neutron, but it also contains Octavia, which is load balancing, and Designate, which is DNS. Now, we've got a hardware lifecycle with Ironic for Bare Metal and Cyborg. And then we have various deployment lifecycle tools that you can use to deploy your clouds and maintain them. Where did the code in OpenStack come from? Well, over the years, there have been over 110,000 contributors, 486 organizations, 186 countries, and 23 million lines of code. So who contributed to Xena, which is our most recent release? And during the recent Xena release, we had 680 contributors, 125 organizations, from 125 countries, and 9,775 commits for 1.4 million lines of code. Now, there's several different ways you can contribute it to OpenStack. You can do code, documentation, and translations, or you can mentor, give operator feedback, or help run meetups and events. And for more information on how to contribute to OpenStack, check out HTTPS docs.openstack.org slash contributors.