 Now, you know, our goal here with Visual Studio Code from the very outset has been to be open. It runs on any platform, you know, Windows, Mac and Linux. It supports developing apps using any language or any technology as you saw. And one of the things I'm really excited to announce today is we're going to take that open approach one step further by officially releasing the source code of Visual Studio Code as open source as well. And we really think, you know, as you saw already from some of the demos, this is really going to enable a much broader community of developers to be able to contribute to VS Code, to be able to leverage VS Code, and to be able to tune VS Code to work great for literally every community of developers and every developer ecosystem out there. And what I'd like to do, since now that we've announced our intent to officially open source it, is actually invite Eric Gamma, who's been led the engineering and architecture team from the beginning with VS Code, to actually officially make it open source live on GitHub in front of your eyes here. So here's Eric. Thanks, Scott. I'm really happy to be here for this very special moment for our team. So I'm here on the Microsoft VS Code GitHub repository page on the settings page. I'll dive down into the Danger Zone and I make this repository public by just confirming it. And understand what this means. You can all view it. And even more important, you can all contribute it from now on. Okay. So today, we're not opening up just the core of VS Code. We also opened up some extensions. And you saw there are already some interesting ones in the gallery. What I want to show you now is a sneak peek of what you can do with our extension API is an example of an extension for programming with Go. Go with system programming language from Google. Let's quickly do that. I switch to code. I have here a Go application. I navigate to some code here. And I do. And you can see we have the same for Go as we have for TypeScript for Go. What's behind that is the Go community has already many tools to analyze the Go language. So what we did is we used our language extension API and integrated Go tools in code to give you that rich experience. But we didn't stop at the editing experience. So what we did is we went further and also enabled debugging because the code extension API also includes debugging support. So I set a break point. I press F5, debugging start, break point gets hit. I can step through code as Anders has shown before. Hover over values as you expect from a debugger. Okay. So that's just a sneak peek. I hope when you go home, you try it out yourself. Write an extension. It's fun. Happy coding. Great. Thanks. Thanks.