 This is the right one, okay. Okay, so a few statistics about the project in general and a few information about the project. First, it's important to remember that we have an annual report providing a lot of information about the project. Of course, the annual report is about the last year, but it provides plenty of info over the last year. You can download a low resolution, a high resolution and the original German report from the links provided in this slide. Which were the source of income of the PDF in 2019? As you can see, the majority was donation by a PayPal and then donation by a credit card that then there is a smaller percentage of other donations, advisory board member fees and other income, which is really minor percentage. So basically almost 90, over 90% of all the money is from donations and these donations are mostly from individuals. This is something that we would like to improve in terms of not stopping individuals from donating but having also organizations either donating or paying money to companies in the ecosystem because at the moment the situation is rather unbalanced and it's a little bit of a pity that individuals are giving a lot more than enterprises to LibreOffice. These are expenses, so the biggest chunk is for the team of people that are working full-time to or in some cases part-time to keep the project going. Then we have community, tenders and other expenses of course in 2020 the numbers are a little bit different because we didn't have travels. So the next year the numbers will be slightly different. Unfortunately for a reason we all know that the limitation that we have got so far have not been really an advantage for a project like ours where meeting face-to-face in some cases is quite important. These are donations per day per month. Each small chunk, a small brick is a day. As you can see, we had a significant improvement since September last year when we started showing every six months a banner on top of the LibreOffice start screen where there was an invitation to donate. Immediately after this was shown on the LibreOffice start screen we had a 25 to 40% increase in donations and I would say not only in terms of numbers but also in terms of amounts. So the numbers have increased but also the average amount has slightly increased. And the LibreOffice had a real, was growing quite significantly during the pandemic. As you can see March, April and May are the three months where we got more donations and we got more downloads of LibreOffice. Probably many people locked at home, install LibreOffice on their PCs. These are donations by quarter. We keep track of this because of course it is important to have a regular income to guarantee that the project has solid basis. And this is a comparison of the amount of monthly donations with previous years. So 2019 is yellow, 2018 is red and 2017 is blue. In 2017, as you can see, we had a drop and we this triggered a change in the donation page and in the way that donation were promoted after downloads. This is the amount of total recurring donation and PayPal and Stripe and these are the total amount of donations, so not just recurring which are those monthly, quarterly or yearly. These are including also one shot donations. And it's a very good results so far in 2020. These are downloads, 2019 is missing, is not missing for a mistake, is deliberately missing because in the first six months of 2019, there were a few episodes which screwed up completely the numbers. So it was completely meaningless to compare the numbers of 2019 with the numbers of the other years. We probably had some bought triggering false donations up to getting numbers which were double or triple to the of the current real ones. In 2020, numbers are have an additional level of cleanliness. You must work very hard to clean the numbers. So the numbers in 2020 look similar to 2000 to 2018, but they're probably the 2018 are slightly higher than the reality. And this is a comparison with downloads with donations. The red line are donations. As you can see, it is very difficult to predict. We had spikes of donations over downloads and we have spikes of downloads over donations. We try to keep track. This is updated on a weekly basis. Donations are updated on a daily basis. We try to be responsive of any change. And these are downloads by continent. So 63% is Europe. The other continents are accounting for smaller percentages. We are probably the only free software which is downloading Antarctica. There is a person that updates LibreOffice in Antarctica every regularly every three months. So we have four downloads in Antarctica in 2020 so far. These are bio-operating system 80% is Windows. There is a large percentage, almost 10% of unknown. Maybe they are behind a firewall or something that doesn't allow us to guess the operating system. Then we have Mac and GNU Linux. These, the GNU Linux is increasing and it's growing in general terms. We see numbers in Linux, but not only in for LibreOffice, but in general growing. And then there is a smaller number for other operating systems. In term of estimate, we can say that the mix has slightly changed. So Linux has increased, Windows and Mac OS have slightly decreased. So the figure that we consider, which is around 200 million user, is still the right one. And it is important to underline that of this 200 million user, probably half of them are not unique users. Some notes I already told about 2019. It is important to say that for every download of LibreOffice from TDF there are between 0.5 and one downloads from other sources. They don't tell us their numbers, but we know that their number of downloads for LibreOffice is quite high. And this is one of the reasons why they don't give us the numbers because they usually associate the download of LibreOffice to advertising on their website. Linux downloads are negligible. The majority of our Linux users get LibreOffice from the distribution repositories. These are, now we have some figures about development. These are Git comments by organization in 2019 up to the end of September. So Collabora is the biggest one, 37%. Then we have 25% volunteers, 21% Red Hat, TDF, CIB at 5%. And then we have the other organization contributing smaller numbers, but they are all important. This is important to remember that all contributions to an open source project are very important and are key for the health of the ecosystem and the project. These are the top 20 committers. We will have to give some kind of, I don't know to do trophy to Kaolan which was been leading this list for years and years. But it's important to show that we have new contributors and people that this list is rather dynamic and not all the same people are showing up every year. These are the same committers on Git. Some numbers are different, some are exactly the same. These are the top back submitters. And I have said this, the LibreOffice team in Hungary. Then we have people from other sources submitting bugs to our system. Yeah, this is the one. These are the main contributors to Askbot. They are providing mainly questions to, answers to questions from users. And these are community contributions. Community is more general. So it's not just about code, it's more or less about everything that happens and is monitored by our dashboard. If you don't know, all these data are from dashboard.libreoffice, documentfoundation.org. This is a geography of the LibreOffice community. We cover a very large number of countries. We would like to cover more. Dark green is where we have also members, not only contributors, light green is where we have contributors. So it's important that the dark green grows even further than current. And that's all on my side. I will unshare my screen if you have questions. I'm happy to answer them. Any question, any remark, anything I said was not, you did not agree or you would like to have some figures clarified or maybe other figures that I didn't have to the presentation. This is entirely possible, sorry. Putting all the information in one single slide deck, sometimes you can forget something. Italo, this is Ashod, I have a question. Sure. So I'm wondering the update feature that we have, do we use that to get a better sense of the numbers? Because I would expect that to work regardless of where it was downloaded or even if it was a distro repo download, the update feature would still be available. We look at it, but the experience says, tells us that it's not really representative of the numbers of active users. It is somehow giving an indication, but for instance, all the people that are using LibreOffice in an enterprise, even small one, they might be blocked from communicating with the outside or they may have the update disabled by design because there is someone that wants to control it. So the reality is that the update feature is representing probably around 60%, not more than 60% of our install base in general. Thank you. So it is, of course, our big issue is that we don't invoice anyone because by invoicing it would be easy to have the numbers. But even if in addition, we don't consider, even if they are basically LibreOffice users, in fact, they are LibreOffice users, we do not have visibility on who is using CollaboraOffice or version of LibreOffice that are provided by ecosystem companies. I mean, we could probably put together the numbers and not disclosing the numbers the mix that would help us in providing better numbers. Maybe it's something that we should do. I don't know. Of course, we as TDF, we provide the numbers very transparently, it's open source. When you have people paying for the numbers, then maybe you don't want to give these numbers. I think it's providing our real numbers is a huge challenge. It would be nice to have analysts doing this. But unfortunately, analysts, let's say there is a company that is strongly, that is providing analysts very strong reasons not to disclose the numbers of office suites in general. It'll all? Yeah. Could you show the download graph again for the week with the publishing of version 7.0 and how was it? Oh, I don't even separate it. That is on the, I don't have the link at the end. It's on the, there is a page that is showing downloads. My numbers are aggregated. So there is not a, I know that there is a web page if Gillem is listening in those all the links by heart, but I'm not as smart as Gillem. There is anyway, there is a website providing the numbers by version. If I remember well, the number of 7.0 at the moment is equivalent and I'm just thinking about the visual, the color of the two. We can say that if we divide all users, all downloads by five, four people are still downloading six and one is downloading seven. Okay. That was, that was the fact that was interesting. Yeah. Thanks. Lothar, you can go to stats.documentfoundation.org and you will have some metrics there. Yeah. I know that you, you know everything by heart, but I don't. Thanks Gillem. No, it's actually higher at the moment. Yes. It's actually higher. Yeah. Actually it's the opposite that I said it's four downloading seven and one downloading six. Oh, okay. That's interesting. I can let me, it's difficult to share my, because it's on another. No, no, no, I will have a look there by myself. Thanks. Yeah, but Lothar, you know, because you talk with a lot of users, like I do that in some cases people will update, I would say years after they should update. If, for instance, just for the people that is not familiar, but we have another that is download at LibreOffice.org for people that has download issues of LibreOffice and two out of that 10 messages, so 20% of messages is of people that try to install LibreOffice on Windows XP, but they don't have installed the service pack one. So LibreOffice doesn't install. So we get, you know, we get, no, sorry, it's Windows 7. They, on Windows 7, the two people say, I would like to install the new version of LibreOffice, but it tells me that I cannot because of this issue, as it is an internal error, Windows error, and the Windows error says, they don't have Windows 7 SP1 installed in 2020, and Windows 7 SP1 was released in March 2010. So for 10 years, they've been used in Windows 7 basically, not secure and not updated, and this represent so what users are about. Yeah. Okay, okay. I think that everything is under control on my other two screens. And the sessions are now finished somehow on the two rooms on. Indeed, and then we have pretty much on time because the next talk is here in this room at 40, 30 UTC, so in four minutes, and then we caught up with the skid. And again, apologies to everyone who's talk could not take this because we had issues. We had a lot of issues. We had a lot of issues. So I could not take this because we had issues. We're truly sorry for that, and we tried to find a solution, but for now we are in the schedule. Yeah. And just also the announcement here that at 1645 UTC, that is in two hours, we now plan a quick five to 10 minute maintenance window to further bump up the conferencing system just in case. So there will be a short downtime about 10 minutes, 1645. So we ask everyone and you talk by then because the last time we tried to wait and it didn't work because of overlapping talks. We make a hard reboot 1645 for some updates and especially bumping up DVM just in case. It works smoothly, but we want to be prepared. Yeah, Florian, let me pay my respect for this urgent change of these suits and how it works very well. Very well done. Thank you. Also Gillem, if he's still in the room. Thanks. Especially Gillem. Really cute. You did a fantastic job. And I'm really happy to work with you and that you were running that or you are running that in that fashion really well done. Thanks, team.