 OpenShift Commons is the open source community for the entire OpenShift ecosystem. It incorporates all the upstream and downstream projects as well as all the different products that Red Hat creates for open use with OpenShift as well as all of the stakeholders including end users, partners, customer organizations, the contributors and maintainers of those projects and Red Hat engineers, product managers, solution architects and everybody else at Red Hat that's working to make OpenShift and all of the related projects successful. The goal of OpenShift Commons is to build connections and collaborate and create spaces for collaboration across all of these communities and projects and stakeholders and to ensure the success of our customers and partners as well as the contributors and maintainers of these projects. We hope to deepen our knowledge of each other's projects and initiatives by sharing experiences with each other. Our goals go way beyond simply getting code contributions to open source projects. It's really a place for companies using OpenShift to accelerate their success and adoption of these technologies and to do this we act as resources for each other and share best practices and provide forums for peer-to-peer communications. We highly encourage you to join OpenShift Commons as an organizational based model and so if you join once for your organization, anyone from your organization can join. You can join at commons.openshift.org on the main page. If your company is not yet a member of OpenShift Commons, there are 600 member organizations already so you probably are. If not though, fill out the same form on the Commons website and we will reach out to you and onboard your organization. Then also, we highly encourage you to attend our almost daily now briefings online. You can find our calendar on the Commons site and you can check out all of the upcoming briefings. They range from things, talks on AMAs on upstream projects, new releases, talks about different pieces and parts of the products that are part of the ecosystem, talks with partners, people have built things like certified operators, as well as a whole series on cultural DevOps, DevSecOps, cultural transformation, organizational transformations that are really quite wonderful. Above and beyond these briefings, we also host OpenShift Commons gatherings. They happen about nine times a year. They're usually around things like Red Hat Summit and KUKON, EU and the North American one, as well as a number of regional ones and language specifics such as Japanese or Spanish or other languages as we onboard those. You can come again to commons.openshift.org and you will find all the gatherings. This year we have a special focus on end user and getting end users to share their workflows, their technologies that they're deploying on OpenShift, the open source projects they're participating in and having them lead those conversations. We highly encourage you to come to some of these and to join in the OpenShift Commons. At its crux, OpenShift Commons is a very wide open, transparent, community-based peer-to-peer network. We really would love you to join. When you join, we'll onboard you into our Slack channels, our mailing lists, and we will give you the podium to share your stories and give us your feedback and tell us what new technologies you're interested in. Please do take a moment, come to commons.openshift.org, join the community if you haven't already, reach out to us at Summit or at KUKON or at any of the other events, and we will make sure that you are properly connected up and onboarded into the community and look forward to hearing your stories, your feedback, and encouraging you to collaborate with the rest of the open source community around OpenShift. Thank you very much for your time today.