 Ron, may I ask you to come on stage? So Ron is going to talk about Swarm. Ron is an app developer. He's working for over a year now to bring the Swarm storage to Next Cloud. You're going to talk a bit about that with us. Oh, OK. Thank you. It's an absolute pleasure to be here. And I know it's the final presentation. So I'm Ron. I'm from MetaProvide. We are an organization that we are providing basically technological tools to help the well-being sector. The well-being sector being therapists, linking therapists, well-being service providers with people who need that type of service. And we're providing online tools for that. We are a very diverse team made up from various different professions, some volunteers, and also from various locations in the world. So I'm from Portugal. I come on board MetaProvide to, as a challenge, to make some more tools for this organization, we have an active involvement with Next Cloud. We are admin.org, is up and running. And one of our team members is also a contributor to the Breeze Dark theme. And as a team, we've developed the talk feature in the talk app, which allows video recording. So that's not why I'm here. We've developed our next phase of our mission as an organization. And that's swarm. Anyone here? Put your hands up if you know I've heard of swarm. Good. And anyone running a node? A B node that accesses the swarm node? No. So some of us know what swarm is. Our challenge here was to bring swarm to Next Cloud through the external storage files, which we all use as part of a common feature in Next Cloud. So it's built on PHP. It's got a view to a JavaScript front end. And we've really worked to seamlessly integrate that into what is existing today for file storage. We connect to the swarm to be nodes via the fswarm client library, which is all open source. And what is swarm then? Swarm, we can define that as a self-sovereigned, decentralized storage built on the Ethereum blockchain. It has many features that is a viable alternative to Google Drive, Dropbox, and other main centralized storages that we all use today. And this is an alternative, which is open source, borderless, fault-tolerant, and resilient. And it's a step closer to European data strategy of Web3. Victor Tron is one of the main contributors to the swarm technology. He is very active as the initial founder of Ethereum. And this is really bridging the gap using blockchain, Ethereum, and decentralized storage. So how does it work in Next Cloud? Well, we need a working B node. As I said, it's open source. It's on GitHub. We can download that. We can run it on a Raspberry Pi on any Linux box. And it's once installed. It's a very, very easy install. There's a lot of good documentation on their site. Once installed, we need a checkbook. That's a wallet. And as it's tokenized, there's a self-sustainability feature of it. We need some tokens. Once we have the token set up, we have our decentralized storage accessed privately through Next Cloud. So we can configure various storages on one Next Cloud instance. And the main part of our development was actually to allow you to administer the node through the administration settings. So what does that mean? We have a node. We have an IP address and a port. And basically, we just configure that inside the administration settings. And another feature is that we've added status and monitoring of the node inside Next Cloud. So the real challenge there was to make it seamless. And once set up, you use it just to like any other file storage. It appears on the files. And it appears as a folder. You download. You move copy files from other storages. And we're working on a lot of other features as well. Every time there's an upload, the actual B node returns a hash reference. That hash reference is your unique identifier of your file on the B node network. And that can be downloaded within Next Cloud. Or you can access that and share it with your friends, share that resource. So we're working on a lot of other features. It's available now on the App Store. And we're very excited to be able to launch that this week. And there are a few flyers around that you'll see downstairs. We're on GitHub, so that's a simple also access to the work that we're doing. So I've kept this short and sweet. But I really invite you to click and explore and have a B node running for your own private use. Thank you. Excellent run.