 Right. Hello everyone. Thanks for joining our Korea's open community session. We are from four different communities. Can you see me? Yeah. So, including CloudBankRever, women's group Seoul, C++ Korea, and women's Korean community. And we have only 20 minutes and we are going to talk about all our communities. So, time is running out. So, let's hurry. So, first of all, I'm Justin from CloudBankRever. So, I'm going to talk about what we are doing and why we started this community on behalf of the Cloud community. So, let's think about this number. Can you guess what this number is about? 52 million. Right. So, I will add another number. 26 million. So, can you guess this time? That's correct. So, this is the total population in South Korea. And surprisingly, the half of this population live in Seoul metropolitan area. I don't think this is a good idea because the rest of the land are utilized in efficiency. So, this is an infographic has become, which has become the popular last year, and which is about nine ways to see South Korea. And I got my eyes caught in the sixth one, which is this one. So, this is how Seoul people see the whole country. And as you can see, at the bottom, this is the Jeju Island, which is known as Tangerine. And the blue one is Busan, which is known as B.H. And can you see the red one? This is Incheon, which is known as Airport. And the yellow one is Ahol Provence, which is known as Potato. And the other place is just simply as North. That's how Seoul people see the whole country. And I live in the area of North. So, what does this mean? It actually has a sort of serious issue in terms of the information flow. So, it has results in the information only stays in Seoul. So, as a result, we've seen these kinds of social phenomenon called digital divide or digital extremization. So, it's not a level. So, all the information should be transparent and accessible from everybody. Therefore, we started this Cloud Bandwagon community to let the information flow out of Seoul. But how can we do this? We cannot do this by ourselves solely. So, we need to make a relationship with developer communities in the regional area as well as student communities. Right? And we have these six people for within these Cloud Bandwagon communities. And a few of us are working as a developer, which is a developer relations. And the other three is industry experts, specializing in like cloud infrastructure or program language or AI or machine learning. So, as the Cloud Bandwagon activities, we focus on these three categories because these are demand from the local or regional developer communities. First is the cloud technologies. And second is open source technologies. And the last one is career development. So, what we have done so far? We have a few, several of these sessions. And this is the first one. We chose in May last year and we got the target people. This is the beginning. And we ran another one in July in Daegu. And this time, we collaborated with GDG Daegu. And this is the one, another one in Jinju last year. This time, we work with Gyeongsan National University. And this is the latest one. And this time, again in Daegu. But this time, we work with local council and as a result, we got a lot of attention from the local communities. So, we just started this community. And we are, it seems to be, we are growing. But I think this is illusion because we need to think about, we need to think about how we can make sustainability. And we still need to long wait for. So, how can we do this? Please keep an eye on it. And we need your support. We need your attention. Right? So, please stay tuned. And depend on that cloud. Right? And we will be able to see and share a lot of information. Also, we can open to expand to across the whole Asian region. Thanks for listening. I'm really hand over to Yeonjung from Omanaco South. Thank you, Justin for the amazing introduction. Hello, everyone. I'm Yeonjung, AI lead from the Omanaco South. Before I get started, I would like to introduce about Women's Code, which is the largest and most active community for a technical woman in the world. So, Women's Code is an international non-frontal organization funded in 2011 to inspire and empower women and technologists. So, our mission is empowering diverse women to excel in their technology careers. And we aim to make a tech industry where diverse women and excluded people thrive at every level. Women's Code started as a small community group in San Francisco and quickly expanded around the world. As a result, we now have a strong and expanding global network with 320,000 members across 147 countries around the world. And in South Korea, we have a Seoul Network, which is one of the most active. So, I'm going to introduce about Women's Code Seoul. We launched it in May 2019, and currently we are one of the fast-growing and leading women's tech community in South Korea. Now, I'm going to share what we did for the last few months. So, first of all, First Asia. We collaborate as a community partner with First Asia and deliver a five-minute talk on who I'm gathering in the last year. And NAID-IP. We are providing information about different factors by interviewing with women from a range of positions. And next, content production. We have been creating inside-person content such as DEI, which is diversity, equality, and inclusion. And some other technical information such as screen framework, NFT, and more. So, next, translations. We translated Women's Code's official blog from English to Korean in order to provide Korean tech papers with easy access to valuable content. And Women's Code started on big events. We had a variety of interactive workshop and networking sessions that enabled women in tech to connect, learn, and grow together. And next, collaboration with Samsung. Our leaders share insights stories such as their career journey, community stories, or deep tech. And we have a networking session together with the different community in South Korea. Last but not least, mentoring session. Our leaders share their experience on front-end and AI to support and empower next generations of tech professionals. So, yeah. Still, we are trying our best to inspire more women in tech in South Korea. And in this year, 2023, we plan to organize more accessible programs to support more women in tech and focus on the global movement to empower leaders across the industry. So, please stay connected if you are interested in collaborating with us or reaching out to us to support more women in tech together. So, you can connect us to our official email, Women'sCodeSoul at gmail.com. So, yeah, keep turning your eyes on and support us. Thank you for listening, and I'm going to turn our work to Dongha. Greetings, folks. I am Park Dongha from South Korea. Let's start my part. There are some very common questions we may see why you started this community. Honestly, C++ program language is quite hard to study, and it has multiple standards from ISO comedy, literally, or I still chance in multi-environments. And each has some level system and you realize, for instance, in Apple platform, you have to run the Xcode in Windows, you can run Visual Studio, and in Linux, you can sort of combine multiple touchings. And most of all, the language is one of the all-days, which means the spectrum of C++ users is really a problem. You may have heard about the book series, Teach Yourself Something in 21 Days. The humorous cartoon describes how it actually works. Beginner will learn this language in 21 days and start the person's career for two years. And professional developer will use this language for about 10 years, multiple projects, and learn from their colleagues. At some point, you sort of may start learning physics and quantum gravity for another 10 years. And next, spend another 20 years to learn biochemistry, genetics, or another two genetics. Finally, you go back to 21st day and replace yourself. What a story, isn't it? Therefore, we are maintaining a place for people who want to make detailed questions and discussions in their mother tongue. Can I mean a Korean language? We started in Facebook 2013 because it was an easy platform to create community for years. If posted questions, it's constantly in comments. Of course, Korean C++ users will step up all or they're simply like sectional. After the foundation, we focused on archiving some useful learning materials, especially for beginners. Seminar, translation and readings together. After the pandemic, we wrote our code of conduct for online activity. Sometimes open a study group in video call. Currently, we are moving back to online, organizing some small meetings every two months, planning to open one-day technical seminar, and sometimes YouTube video creation. Okay, finally, this is our recent concerns. Our first goal is to follow the nonprofit cooperation. We need to gather some sponsors, and we have to have a duty to provide some clear financial reports about it. The second reason is making ease of compliance with companies. There are some long stories about this. If you are curious about it, you can visit our booth and share some knowledge with me. Okay, and the next one is for better communication. We are trying this world to support more instance chat-based discussions or questions, rather than basically. Okay, this is expert listening. This is the end. Next is Ubud Korea Community. I forward this remote control to Yongbin. Thank you. Thank you, Jongbin for the introduction. My name is Yongbin, and I'm going to talk about the Ubud Korea Community in both of its organizations. So there are many local Ubud communities around the world, and we are one of them based in South Korea, and we started our community in 2005. We usually organize some local Ubud leaders and activities to promote Ubud to leaders and create obstacles in South Korea. So we're usually active on most online and in-person. For online, we have our online forum where people can ask some Ubud to questions like Ubud to not cooperate with our data or deliver some answers, meet-choose, like the group chat also available. We have IOC and Matrix, and we also have our on-viking for documenting some specific case studies for the Korean users. For the person activities, we organize seminars where people can share their experience around Ubud to and workshop to have some newcomers to get used to Ubud to. Since Ubud itself is a platform by wide range of users, we also frequently collaborate with other Ubud communities in South Korea for some joint events. Soon in Indonesia and Ubud Summit, we also exchange with other local Ubud communities such as Ubud Japan, Taiwan, Malaysia, and much more to share and run. How do they use for Ubud to? We are mostly people of Ubud to users, so we encourage people to contribute to projects by participating local agencies or calling calls, which is important to the visibility for the Korean users. For past few years, we have been putting many efforts in Ubud, Asia, which is started in 2021 to make a place for gathering Ubud users and contributors from many countries in Asia. Ubud to local community in Asia is actually not much active compared to other region, even if it will be active, it will be more difficult to reach out, but we see success from our first two events when we are seeing many local communities getting back slowly. Ubud to local community will be a good example as they are trying to reserve their community by urbanizing Ubud-Kon Asia in South Kandah, Asia, East Aktobe. There are many large gathering for Ubud to call such as Ubud to Summit, which is formally Ubud to the development of Summit, and there are also other many Ubud-Kons in the other content, Ubud-Kon Askil, Ubud-Kon Europe, Latin America, and Korean community is also thinking about urbanizing Ubud-Kon Korea this year. While we have been focusing on global activities by this year, we are now trying to put both of us on local activities this year, starting from representing our online forum using this course, supporting a better development day, which is organized by South Kandah, South Kandah, already this year. We plan to start organizing our periodic seminars and training workshops to gather people in person. We also continue to represent our online services like Rwiki and our online chat, which is outdated a bit, or with some new approach. As I mentioned, Ubud-Kon Korea is also planned, and also, if you have any details on Ubud-Kon Asia or Ubud Summit this year, we also plan to participate and exchange with other stakeholders. So, that's for the Ubud-Kon Korea, and if you would like to learn more about us, you can feel free to text our website or contact us via email. So, that's all for the Korea Open Competition. If you would like to know more about us, you can click your phone right here, or we have our booths right there on your back. Kind, would you like to raise your hand? Yes, yes, yes, you can see that. Please feel free to visit our booths and ask some questions about us so that you can learn more about us. So, thanks for joining our session. See you around or see you at the booths. Thank you for joining.