 Alright, so thank you very much for listening to me this morning. Today I'm going to focus on just like everybody else, storing, accessing and exposing research data at JCU. And storage, we have quite a few different options that we make available to different researchers. So we have HPC, so all researchers can apply for an account on the HPC and depending upon what they want to do. They can use it for just storage or also for compute purposes. JCU is very fortunate to be an RDSI original node. So this gives us two petabytes of disk storage that we have here. And access to the RDSI storage is available through an application process. And we tend to encourage people who want access to larger disk storage to apply for an RDSI application. And the other storage we have is a system called Research Data, which is really, it's a red box that's publicly exposed. And this one's designed for completed datasets. So as there's a self-submission process, the old workflow that the users can go through there, so they can completely... They can attach files with a total size of up to 50 megabytes. So this is typically things like Excel spreadsheets and zip files that we normally see. So I'll just move on to my next slide. The other thing I was about to say is e-research can also store files on a system that need to be kept private. And we can expose them in different ways as well depending upon which system the users want to use. So for access, again HPC standard access applies. SSH, SCP, FTP, some of this is challenging for some users. So we try and use other systems to make access to their storage easier. And this is very helpful to us. We have, I guess for RDS storage, we can mount that on the HPC for processing or compute access. We have quite a large number of users here at JCU who are using spare shares. So for those of you who don't know, this is web-based access to RDSI storage. And this can be for tens of terabytes of data, if you wish. This has been very helpful to some users in that if they're at a location where connectivity is poor, a spare shares has been able to give them good throughput in terms of loading their data and accessing it. There is also a functionality to provide a sync type functionality using a sparer. But as Christopher pointed out quite earlier, it's dependent upon you having the local storage available, especially if you're dealing with many terabytes of data. MediFlex gives us lots of options. We're focusing on portals functionality for MediFlex and we're currently working with architecture on improving this. So it's a way that we can quickly create a mini portal to expose research data and to have access restrictions on that. And we can also create virtual machines to expose research data via different websites, depending upon the projects or the requirements of the user. And as I said, the other option I mentioned earlier is research data where we can attach the 50 megs or up to 50 megs exposure. So this is where we tie it all together. And mostly at JCU, the system for exposing it is research data, which is our rare box instance. So it's probably available and there's a feed that happens once a week where Anne's harvest the records for research data in Australia. There's another system called the JCU research portfolio that is used and records from research data are displayed under a tab on research portfolio. And this is to provide information about JCU researchers but also to see what sort of research data is available from those researchers. And the information in the research portfolio is built using the JCU research management system. So maybe I'd just like to give a bit of a quick demo for I can switch to my web browser. So just to try and show you how it all ties in, here's our publicly facing red box instance. So I've pre-searched for a record that I know has got some links to data. So we just rely on the researchers adding URLs to expose where the data may be. And in this example here there's a public link to where the actual publication has been made but the data is stored with that publication. And also here there's a link to insider research which is and actually the data sitting on our HPC. So the user can then download those zip files. And again if there's something similar for data on the RDSI we can expose that data using a similar method. So if we want to show you just JCU.me. So this is the research portfolio so if you go to JCU.me it redirects to here so you can search for a researcher. So we can go just use Jeremy Van Der Waal who has lots of records. And as I said if they have any data in our red box system or research data this tab will be generated and you can select the records from in here. So what we can do is then click on the record. It's very, I'm live so let's have a look. So here we go. So this is just a listing of the information you would see in red box. And if you wanted to you can go off to the actual red box. Actually this is the actual data so here's just a directory listing of the data that you can download. As we've probably all seen this before but here are just the records that Jeremy has in Research Data Australia. I'll just pick let's say some of his bird information. So click on data provider. So same links, similar topics.