 We took the most awesome of the submissions yesterday, which was a K-12 challenge for OER, and we're posing an annual K-12 OER challenge, which builds on the idea of having a weekly webinar that shows each of the OER's brief and helps them introduce it into their own practice and promotes at the end of the year a contest for the best OER that anyone can meet. We did submissions for art, class materials, texts, and general teacher class projects for teachers to do with their class. And not OER and OER submissions, but they all commit to being open if they win. The winners will get recognition as long as we are anywhere, publication deals and other general prizes. It will be hosted in coordination with something like the Open Ed Conference or the Oxcars in Barcelona, which is a huge pre-culture conference, which already get a lot of traditional media, and the OER itself will be broadcast online. The end results will be published and distributed as a free download, representing the quality of openness. And we would combine support from government organizations, founder foundations like Fulett, hacker organizations that already teach people how to make their own things, and stars who are already promoting open education, like James Franco, if you guys saw the handouts for the open video. So the success of the year will be having this happen as a draft sometime this year, and then having an opposed community. But we wanted to make sure this was included in the hack day, even though it's not polished like the others, because I really appreciated the work that teachers put into coming up with this yesterday. The two groups, class and 20 and class groups, have already committed to running the weekly webinars. They're gonna do it anyway. So we're hoping to make it even more awesome. Thanks. Can I make this? Same of our challenges are already going up. So there are a lot of small challenges that are not very popular. There are challenges in narrow areas. There's nothing that looks like the pinnacle of all the open awards that are out there. So there's nothing that you or I could name, which is a little sad. We really care about the space. There should be something that is big every year that draws at its finalists, the winners of all these other contestants, and that attracts some big sponsors. I think we try to encourage contestants that they're currently known within their very narrowly defined space. We try to give them more attention by saying, here's this amazing thing that the Wikipedians have this picture of the year. They put hundreds of hours into their own teams. We recognize it, and we say, they're finalists into this global event that's judged by some Nobel Prize winners. For those of you who are fighting.