 This is the inaugural three-day hackathon event that is being held here at the Ingenium Center where we have brought about a hundred or so post-secondary students to compete and develop a digital experience that could be a game, an app, a website, some sort of virtual experience basically to raise climate change awareness with youth. We're Green by Design. We are from Carleton University. We're a four-meter production design student. We've got a computer science student. We're creating a game to be played in the classroom and online at home. Encourage students to build community by making a garden together and learning about climate change through that. What we've been working on is creating a game to help educate kids in a fun, enjoyable way about climate change and help them learn what they can do themselves in their own home and in the future. We have students from a whole bunch of different universities and colleges. They're getting together to talk about something that's super important to all of them, to all of us, and it's really exciting just to watch the creativity flow. They're coming at it from very, very different points of view, and the stuff that they're coming up with in just under 72 hours has been absolutely amazing. My role here is as that of a mentor. I'm speaking with the individual groups and answering questions that they might have. There's some really bright students and some really great ideas, and I'm hoping to see at least some of these come to fruition. Being connected in real life has really been a great help to us. There's mentors walking around and everything. It really helps us, right, and this space is really great for development of ideas. All of these post-secondary students coming together to collaborate and help really find solutions to a key issue of our time that affects all of us, and so couldn't be happier. It's been an inspiring experience for the entire Ingenium team.