 Hello, my name is Dan Young. I work at a UK Cloud Foundry Consultancy called Engineer Better. I'm hoping in the next five minutes you'll get an appreciation of Bosch, not just as an operational tool, but as an abstraction layer that can change the way we look at public clouds particularly. Watching the talks today, I noticed there was a couple of points that set me up quite nicely. The first was when Julian Fisher was talking about his business experience with having to desperately get off OpenStack very quickly, got revenue generating service on OpenStack Cloud that he had to move to AWS. He was able to do that, he was able to lift up his entire production platform and drop it somewhere else and save part of the business. The other thing I noticed today was Nick asked the panel where could Bosch go in five years and I'm hoping to maybe explore some of that question a bit further. The first thing I'm going to ask is what makes Bosch special? Some would say it's the dubious honour of being simultaneously the best and worst software in the world. But I think there's two other reasons that it's special. The first is it's open source and the third reason is it works just like this travel adapter that I'm carrying on me that allows me to move around the world and I have to think about where I'm going to use my laptop. I just take it for granted that I can take an electrical appliance anywhere, plug it in again, it's going to work and I don't have to think about that. So to sort of think about how we got to the point where I can take that for granted, you have to think a bit about the work of people like Simon Wardley. So he's basically been educating the world for over a decade on commoditisation and commoditisation of IT particularly and how computing is basically evolving to a state of being a utility service and you can say that cloud computing is just a marketing term for computer utility. And it's all driven by commoditisation, it's all driven by competition. So the only way to stop this process of things evolving up that chain is to stop competition which obviously isn't going to happen. So all IT activities are sort of moving somewhere along that line and when you throw open source into the mix it dramatically accelerates the evolution to a higher state. Now we've all been watching this sort of one horse race for a long time and we accept high costs going into AWS and we just live with it. But in possession of Bosch you might be able to see the world differently when new competitors start to arrive. And even in a one horse race that one horse can still have bad days and building distributed systems at scale is hard because people make mistakes and even when you can hire the best engineers in the world things still go wrong, a cat will run across your keyboard and set off some cascading failure, things will break. Systems that the suppliers operate in are themselves fragile. So there is no institution on earth that is immune from global, political or economic events, I think we've learnt that from the banks and if your supplier has one name it is effectively a single point of failure. So really I think we get to a point where when Bosch is brought into this picture where we've got multiple hyperscale clouds and we can feasibly use them we're imagining them as modular building blocks, Ziaz building blocks and we don't just have to lock ourselves into one of these silos. And open source is powering that new multi-cloud era. So hopefully you'll all start using Bosch CPIs and contribute to them and hopefully we can accelerate that a bit further. Thank you very much.