 So, we're here to talk about what we did in the Hacker Space this last year. Basically, we did a whole bunch of carpentry. And the reason why we did it was because we wanted the Hacker Space to be nicer, but also that we wanted to get people more involved into the actual Hacker Space itself. But first, we had to do a whole bunch of planning. Sorry. I'm from the also Hacker Space, if you're wondering. And planning happens in front of a whiteboard and ends up with a whole bunch of discussions that tend to not lead anywhere unless you use, come on. Yes? No? Maybe? Pace down. Pseudo power. Yeah. So, once you get past that stage, you can start with small stuff. Like painting a table with your Hacker Space logo. And result is kind of sweet. Why was it that you did this? So, the reason why we actually started with this at all is because some genius spilled black paint all over our tables. So, we just had to do something and be creative about it. I'm not that smart. I wish I was. We have a lot of geniuses at our space. And then, once we did the small stuff, we started doing some bigger stuff. Of course, everybody who wasn't doing this was pretty annoyed by the, at the person who had painted over our white screen for our projector. But it turned out really pretty in the end. There you go. There's some mountains and some sky there. It's kind of hard to see on a, on a dark picture like this. You can also see our like sound system which was made by the Hacker Space as well. There we go. This again just brings out from the table painting when I was bored and just like, I want to do something. I want to change the room into something better. So let's find a paint entire wall. And then you get other things. So after this, we made a projection screen because people were definitely annoyed. So just by starting doing one thing, you will get like an infinite change of other things you actually need to do. And it's a good way to motivate people to actually get shit done if you can manage. You basically start shaving the yak. And when you start shaving the yak, people are like, why are you shaving that yak? I don't get it. And then you're like, well, you know, I started by going out for pizza. Dot, dot, dot, dot, dot, and like, and about an hour into the story, they get into it themselves and start helping you shave the yak. So the pictures are all black because you can see the top on the bottom. I don't know why. There we go. It's because I, yeah. Here we go. So the next thing we did was fix the bar. And the way to do this is to ignore all the mess in the back. Yeah, all the mess in the background, all the stuff that you know you need to do, but don't want to just ignore it. And then you start doing the one thing that you want to do. And this is our our friend, Sub. He's he's going crazy with with hammers and screwdrivers and stuff. You also need to feed that Italian guy with lots of espresso and grappa. And then he will start doing things. That's how it works. See, and, and next slide is, and then we did the backyard. Yeah, we figured that would be nice. We have a very crazy backyard with a lot of crazy people showing up in it because we share it with a bunch of other people, culture hearts of anarchists. I don't know. And so to show them that we actually care about the space, we put our logo right there. That was pretty sweet. We got a lot of help doing that from other people who are sort of in the community. And then because we care about having community events, among other things, lightning talks and workshops and whatnot, but also music events, social events where we just, you know, have fun or invite a lot of musicians or people who like to do like presentations and stuff like that, we built a stage. And now I'm going to go through an assembly of the stage while you talk us through it. OK, really quickly because here you have pallets. We went on a little adventure to steal pallets, actually. It was fun. We had to go all over town in Oslo. And we figured out his car actually fit 16 pallets in one run, which is amazing. And here we are just carrying pallets. High quality pallets, Euro pallets, actually. It's a pretty good standard. You learn a lot about pallets when you actually start researching it. We went really cheap on this project, and so we ended up building it with regular floorboards and pallets. And a really good electric screwdriver, essential, completely essential. Always get a Makita if you have the possibility. Yeah, this is close to the end product. And we built it modular so that we could move this thing. Do you imagine how to move 16 pallets, each of them 25 kilos or something like that? And the end product is actually it's 20 pallets. It's a 2 by 5 and then 2 in the height. So it does weigh half a ton or something like that for the entire stage. But it did cost nothing, so it's good. We modularized, and each of the sections is individually carried. I think there's four sections. Each one weighs only 100 kilos. And the end result looks like this with drum kit and whatnot. And no. It's no more pictures. No. Did the slides fuck up? Continuously having the yak, I think. I did. No, actually it fell out. That's it. All right. We might as well just talk about all the rest of the stuff we did while we opened this. The rest of the stuff we did was we figured we needed to paint the floor, which we really did. There we go. And so to paint the floor, we need to wash it. And the floor was in a natrochet state. And so I didn't want to force people to work that hard, because really you have to scrub the floor seriously hard. And you don't want to burn everybody's energy on doing something really shitty. Because then they're just not going to come back the next day. That's five minutes now, so we should. Oh, it's five minutes more. Sweet. And so what I did instead was we went out and we rented a automatic washing machine, like a floor scrubber. Yeah, we spent a lot of money on it, but it was worth it. Nobody had to scrub the floors. It still took a bunch of work, but nobody had to sit there with a brush and go like, ah, I hate you, I hate everybody. We did have to do that with that five-year-old duct tape that was stuck to the floor. Yeah, don't stick duct tape to your floor if you care about it. It gets really, really sticky and messy. Let's move that mouse there. There you actually see the difference between a clean floor and so clean and dirty. It's not that good contrast on this. Your logo like that. Yeah, right? We're going to just not paint to the floor, though. Anyway, this was necessary to paint the floor with epoxy, which I thoroughly recommend. It was pretty cheap, and it will last forever. And ooh, that's a big jump. Anyway, there went the results and some lighting that we put in there to finish out the stage, right? The big part. This is just like cheap stuff you will get from when staging companies merge, and they will sell all their old equipment for like 15 quids for each light, which is really, really nice. So apparently they came out of order, but whatever. Here's us actually painting the floor, and me looking a little bit confused. And back here again, what? And the end result, yeah? And the end result looks pretty fantastic. So this was worth it. And this was very worth it once you have an event like this, and a whole bunch of people show up and enjoy your space. And then what did we do? We went on a vacation. So that's it for the lightning talk. And I think we have a little bit of time for questions. Thank you. Actually, we changed the policy, and now only people with the key get in unless we have a workshop or talk. Multiple times. But that was before we closed the door, I guess. But they just steal silly things like a broken mixer, for instance. Yeah, it's really weird. We get like break-ins, and we find the door is open, the lock is destroyed, and then nothing's gone, or they took the broken thing. It's very nice thieves in Oslo actually. They're very, very helpful. I think they're kind of confused. They go in, and they see all this stuff, and they're like, ah, I don't know how to unplug all of it. Yeah. Any other questions? We'll break it off then. Thank you. Thank you.