 Now, since you were talking about CNCF, I also want to talk a bit about the role of foundations because if you look at open source, there is code which is, with foundation, there is code which is owned by certain companies. Both are right way to do open source, but sometimes when the code is owned by companies, sometimes their competitors are worried that, hey, they may get locked out, the license may get chilled, or the company might have more influence over the code. So they feel more comfortable leveraging code base which is available through some foundations. And there are some great foundations like Apache is there, Linux Foundation is there, Open Infra Foundation is there. And these foundations have held accelerate the adoption of open source. So I want to hear from you to tell our viewers the role that you have seen. These foundations have played in making open source, you know, more popular and they're getting adopted across the board. They are extremely important and foundation meaning that, you know, it's there to stay in the fostering so that that licensing, like you said, can't change, can't become privatized later on. And I'm especially a huge fan of the Linux Foundation. Just I feel that, and I would say the same about the Apache Foundation, but with the Linux Foundation, especially, they have a huge place in my heart. And how critical I feel they are for securing the future of open source and vendor neutrality in this industry. There have been some interesting projects and advancements in the area of decentralization. But the tech industry overall is very corporate and has a centralized model and rife with proprietary vendor locking products. So something like the Linux Foundation and Apache Foundation are heavy influencers to keep open source alive and well in this space. And in doing so in a way that fosters advancement and training of that open source ecosystem and a vendor neutral or vendor agnostic way. And these ecosystems of tools and as you mentioned, you know, create that level of playing field that vendor neutrality so that all these commercial organizations feel comfortable using them because they're not using each other's products. And it's just creating a more collaborative space overall.