 Hello, thank you for coming. I am Mohamed Karas from Turkey. I will talk about ODEF and Vibrovis adoption in Turkey. Just a status report. I will first give some numbers and talk about current status. Then mention some major places taking part in adoption of ODEF and Vibrovis in Turkey. Give some talk about some example cases, good and bad cases. And try to discuss points of common failure. Then I will also talk about some recent events and fight about Vibrovis and ODEF and also grooming. The current state of public sector is actually going good. There are institutions, public institutions, ministries, municipalities and also military. Some are in process of ODEF and ODEF. Some are already using. There are many institutions, public institutions wanting to be great to Vibrovis and some are already using. In the public sector, ODEF as I know, there are more than 100,000 computers from producers. Actually, it is, I think, nearly 2,000 recently, but contract number is 100,000. There are 26 different public institutions in process of ODEF and Vibrovis. Most of them are also migrating to the new units completely or considering the migration. Some are in feasibility state, some are already migrating. And there are also another 50 institutions waiting in line for getting in the process. They have applied to Tripitapuapin, which is a periodic adoption of Vibrovis and ODEF in Turkey. And there are also private sector adopting Vibrovis and ODEF. I know, I have been told, there is a bank considering for migration for Vibrovis. There are some small businesses already using Vibrovis and ODEF. There are some private schools and there are some private institutions and schools shy to share their needs, because they are not in the sphere. I said, Tripitapuapin is spirit of adoption and migration. Let me tell you a little about Tripitapuapin and TARG project. Tripitapuapin is a Turkish network and information center. It is a research institute made by government and semi, we can say semi-independent. It is currently taking part of the project, which is a Debian-based distro, a new Linux distro. And trying to spread powerful solutions by also spreading powerful news. And it also supports development of Vibrovis directly and indirectly. I am working there and some of my contributions are paid by of Tripitapuapin. They are also giving contracts to private sector for development of Vibrovis. For ODEF, for spreading the ODEF and providing support and knowledge base for institutions Tripitapuapin has prepared a website. It is ODEF.org.tr. It consists of usable information about ODEF and Vibrovis mostly ODEF. It describes ODEF, it gives some guidelines for equations. There is also a part trying to answer frequently asked questions. There is a follow-up, people can come and ask their questions. And they can also directly contact Tripitapuapin for their needs and questions. There is also Halesan, which has been lately got involved in Vibrovis and Armaged Regulations. It's an affiliate company of Turkish Armed Forces. Again, we can say semi-public. It is a company, but owned by Turkish Armed Forces. They are targeting both private and public sector. Turkish Armed Forces need the targeted public sector, but Halesan is also a targeted private sector. They have contacted some workshops and training programmes to train people about gununinus farmers in Vibrovis. They are mainly focusing on large migrations, I guess probably because of financial reasons for the most income. There are also some companies in the private sector which are giving support for migrations to Vibrovis and gununinus. I think consultancy companies, they are in different cities. Most of the providers of support are fortunately contributing to upstreams, limited companies. And because some of them are shy to share their name, I decided to exclude all names. And I would like to give some examples about institutions which are migrating or have migrated to Vibrovis and all parts of the community. There is the example of panic municipality in Istanbul. It is a small municipality in Istanbul. They migrated on their own without substantial support from the institutions. We of course tried to support them, I never did, but they mostly did it on their own. And they are also leaving eight other municipalities, near municipalities, to migrate to the non-linear farms, the non-linear factories in Vibrovis. They are even organising a local conference or open source taking place this October in Istanbul. Another good case, panic municipalities, migration is almost over. As far as I know, they have just some data is left in non-opening sites and they are trying to also migrate them. Another municipalities, Karaman Parish, it has just started the migration process. They are working directly with Tukta Kolabdin and Parvus in the process. They are very enthusiastic and eager to migrate to open source solutions. I have personally visited a family that is meeting with them. They have highly technical staff and they actually agreed to invest in upstream movement after their migration. We will see if they will actually do that. I will follow and remind them about their promise. There is another good example, which is as part of Ministry of Justice, the courthouses. Ministry of Justice is using in the courthouses all of courthouses, all in Turkey. The courthouses currently, at first they migrated to open office, they used that for a while for a few years. Then a few years ago they switched to the courthouse. They have about 100,000 computers and 75,000 active users. From judges, lawyers, all people in the courthouse system are using ODIF and legalities. But they are on windows right now and evaluating their state to see if they can migrate to open source. And there is also a bad example for obvious reasons, I will call it unneeded institution. They switched, actually they tried to switch, start the switching process, immigration process. A few years ago, both pharmaceutical news and legal office, they have about 2,000 users but so far all the half of them migrate successfully. And recently the number is in decline, some of them are returning back to windows and MSOIs. There are many causes for this, some of them are, I think I know some of them, there are definitely some of them I don't know. And some of them are coming for these migrations, I think I would like to talk about them a little. One of them is OISMN compatibility, because these government institutions are exchanging documents with our institutions and because already adopted ones are minority, they have to use OISMN, continue using OISMN for shared documents. And incompatibilities, sometimes they take some documents, open in the office and they don't see the same results. They experience some issues and that's one of complex sources for users. Another one is Turkish Latvian support and joint compatibility for Zemmerec, what is Zemmerec I will explain. Turkish Latvian support is, I think no longer, thanks to Mezlet Yüce, they have raised Turkish translation percentage to 100%. There is a Java incompatibility problem, it has been reported that certain features of videos like this, fortunately most people are not using face, but they are using spell checker, Zemmerec is a spell checker special written for Turkish language and it has been used for years, but it hasn't been maintained at least the expansion art used in the video, it hasn't been maintained for a long time and it was compatible with certain Java versions and it was causing some performance issues, simply it was a strong headache for us. And I hope it will be followed with 6.2 because we have ended a Turkish dictionary to be used with legal offices outside implementation. And there is the post issue, there is a guide by document, official guide by document in Turkey, which should be complied by all government institutions which specifically need some fonts to be used for shared documents and they are MS fonts, like Times New Roman by Ariha, they are written in the document, you will use these fonts for shared documents. And you know if you don't have the fonts, it again causes some at least visibility issues. We are trying to follow this by changing the document, we are proposing to change those Times New Roman and its friends with liberal fonts, our liberal fonts. It hasn't been solved yet, but we will again follow it. And there is also use of habits, it's another sort of complaint, another sort of headache. People usually don't like to change their habits. For example, when they open the free dialogue, if they see a button in MSR, they use that button to fit the document into a page and they don't see it, they come and press the button. That's a valid reason in their perspective. And there is also lack of training and planning, which is combined with too much eagerness. Sometimes some institutions are too eager to migrate to almost all the Linux and E-Blockies and they want to organize a press conference and say, oh, we have migrated to the Linux, we are heroes like that. To be able to say that they rush the migration without proper training and planning, then it causes a lot of trouble afterwards. And after recent events, I gave numbers of institutions in process of migration and waiting on the line. As you see, there are many institutions waiting on the line, it's because of partly, at least because of recent events. Recently, for various reasons, the ruling party in Turkey issued an order saying that order to its municipalities and government institutions they need to switch to part of the new Linux and stop using MS products. And they started rushing into, to be talked about, we want to switch, we want to switch. That's why there is a long line now. It also caused some press events. Now you can see some news about E-Blockies and new Linux in news, thanks to these. And there is also a vast social media about how new Linux and E-Blockies people started to say, oh, why are we using MSO? MSO is just a lot of news, tweets like these are coming nowadays. It's because of the hype, but I see this both as an opportunity and a danger. An opportunity because we can reach to more people and more institutions now. And they have a reason to migrate a little easier for us. But also a danger because of if an institution rushed the migration and because of that rushed the migration and organize a press conference, we have created new Linux and new E-Blockies. We are using it, it's perfect that after a year if they fail and start going back to MS Office and Windows it won't be good for our reputation. Any questions? I'm very happy to hear that your Justice Department uses E-Blockies on 75,000 computers or even more. According to the Documents Foundation Migrations Wiki page, it's 75,000 users and it's only announced that it will be changed or migrated from Open Office to E-Blockies. Also, there are other examples of this here, the Ministry of National Defense. I think you have not mentioned in your... That this is not up to date. Yes, it would be so fantastic to update it and maybe although people who are lining up now would also be asking to update the migration page. And I am also especially happy about the Ministry of Justice because they did migration silently and they are using it silently. I don't get any complaints from them, they are using it. And they are working with them. Any other questions? I see some differences between migration and E-Blockies. For now, we tell people... We don't talk about competitive periods. We always say that because we tell people that it is not... It is not necessary to be competitive. Yeah, I know it is, but we have many, many... Most of the users of public institutions are injuring the people who are into our periods a lot more often. Yeah, I think maybe... I'm not sure if you would have something like this in more commentations, especially with those people who ever need to do this in the... And I think another failure... I don't know if you have a similar problem. Another failure of keeping pressure, which is in Taiwan, is that... OK, now our central government has everyone to use it. Now, Peter and I are still some people with the same ODF using Microsoft Office. And that is... OK, I gave you all the FPS, but it is still... And if you open it with Google Office, it will be another user. Yeah, but you didn't mention that. I don't know if you would have such a question. But for us, it is in Peter's direction. That is something we mentioned, especially with people who tell them that don't use Microsoft, not because you're doing Microsoft, but because they're both part of the statement. You are such a good man. You're a good person. And you just... All people are saying for you, for most people, are following you using Google Office for that. OK. And for the first implementation, abandoning co-operability and focusing on ODF, that's also in our mind, but we are waiting for giving some user base. After that, we will try to end for a second. Thank you, everyone.