 Hi, this is Shusheta Koshal. I'm from Kolkata. I work as a developer in the language engineering team of Vicky Media Foundation. Most importantly, I love helping people use their computers and the languages they're most comfortable with. My talk at JSFOO is on how your web apps should talk not just in English but in Spanish, Cantonese, Swahili and Oshomia too. Essentially, if you don't know English, a majority of the internet is not particularly accessible to you right now. You might stumble around and find your way just like an American tourist lost in the middle of Beijing or something like that, which is not particularly a very pleasant experience. So to give your users a better experience, your web apps should be available in languages, whatever languages they most prefer. This is actually a very good idea because this would also open up a new set of audiences which were not particularly possible before. And as a developer, I'd say that this is not really that hard. OpenSys applications have been doing this for quite a while now and have been doing this quite successfully. And your applications could do it too. This talk is to show you how. I'll be focusing on front-end itinon. This talk is an introduction to itinon. So I'll be talking about what itinon and itinon are, why you should do it, how you should do it, and how arguably the largest multilingual website available right now, Wikipedia and its sister projects are doing it. So to talk about how to use itinon from JavaScript, I'll be using jquery.ie, a very nice library created by the language engineering team of Wikimedia Foundation. We'll also talk a little bit about the language selections and how to do it right with the universal language selector, which was also developed by the language engineering team of Wikimedia Foundation. So that's it. I hope to see you there.