 So we're here with Jonathan Breedon, the guy behind Neon, and what have we got on the table today? So on the KD Neon stall today, I've got the KD Slimbook of course, which has been a very successful partnership with our friends over there at the Slimbook store, and they've created this beautiful shiny machine that you can buy with KD Neon pre-installed, so that you can be certain that we've tested the hardware so that it works with the software, which is not usually the case with installing Linux. And specifically on this machine, I'm showing the Neon Docker images, because I think that's a great way to test and develop with KD software. So if a user reports a bug, usually you go, user, that's the old version, can you please test it with a new version? And they go, well, my district doesn't have a new version, so no. But using Docker images is trivial to download the latest image, and you've got a new version right there. So it's one gigabyte download, and then you just run one command, which is just the Neon Docker command. And then unlike a virtual machine, it doesn't take ages to start up because it's using the same kernel. So it starts up as fast as your normal desktop system will start up. And there you can run a full plasma session within your existing plasma session, except it's a completely separate environment. So that's using the unstable version. You can see we've got this new user interface, QML interface for system settings there. But meanwhile, I can say, well, give me the latest user edition, which is the latest released packages. And you can start that at the same time. And that gets built daily by Neon. And it gets automatically updated from updates on the Deno.kd server. So it's got the latest release software. So it should be bug-free and perfect. And you can see that it's running a different version. So it's got the older or the currently existing system settings interface. And so depending on what version people are reporting bugs against or version you want to develop against, you can easily try them both. Excellent. And so I have to ask, is this already a distro or not a distro? I mean, there was this controversy about if it's a distro or not. Call it whatever you want. What do you call it? I just call it a continuous integration project. Continuous integration project. And because we only care about the KDE stuff, so a distro will typically care about 10,000 different projects from 10,000 different open source projects. And we only care about KDE and everything else is just there to support KDE. So it's a limited use case if you want to use the latest GNOME software or whatever. But if you're a KDE fan or interested in our software or you're actively contributing to our software, then this is the good stuff. Brilliant. Thanks very much. So over here, we also have a display of plasma mobile. And so this we've been developing for a number of years. And it feels like quite a slow moving project at times because unlike developing on the desktop where there's your typical standard IBM PC Intel stuff. Here, of course, every single device has its own differences and challenges. And we're using the Google Nexus 5X, which is a pretty open and readily available device. And it's also working with Project Halium, which means that now plasma mobile is working with the Ubuntu community team and a couple of other mobile teams working on a common platform. So the whole platform and device support should be the same across those different projects. But this is our plasma software, which shares 90% of the code base with the desktop, but of course has a different form factor. And thanks to Qt and Kirgami and similar technologies, it's pretty easy to make a user interface that works across multiple different devices and different form factors. And so while it's nowhere near consumer ready, it is hacker ready for people who want their traditional Linux system. But in a mobile environment so that the applications can work across them both. That is about all I have on this stall. We're also working on snappy packages in Neon, which is the upcoming container format. And this week we're going to be planning on how we slightly step back from our existing packages which have been based. And for kitty applications we want to make snappy packages for all kitty applications within the next couple of months, which means that it will run on any desktop. So we'll take away the question of which underlying system you're running because everybody will be able to run the latest kitty stuff. Okay, brilliant. Thank you very much. Good night.