 And my presentation is called It Takes a Team to Make a Fund. I'm a designer from Russia, and Ola in Russian is Privet. My founder is called Cereal, and it means Cereal Oatmeal plus Cyrillic. And Cereal designs Libra fonts from Russia, Ukraine, and Armenia. It is a collaborative platform, and the structure is designer, curner, and hinter. The only people who are not friends here are the curner and hinter. So far we have 27 open source fonts available for download and use at the Google Web Fonts library. And here's a showcase of some of them. This font is called Patkova, and sometimes we have outside contributors who use our fonts and modify them and create a fork or branch. And one of them is Fina Fonte, a Polish foundry that released a localized Polish version of our typeface. And I'm very happy about that. Another font is Laura. It has four styles, and it's very popular among the Google Fonts collection. It works very well in text. One of my favorites is Wolhov. It's also a family of four styles, and it is the body font for the LGM Fieldbook. Thank you. The fact that our fonts are open source makes them available for use in mobile applications, embedding in mobile applications. Marvin App is an eBook reader, and it uses Laura and Wolhov. Here's a website that uses Laura. Another website is Ukrainian type meetups. It uses Laura. All fonts are released under the file license. And I need your help identifying this font. Yes, that's Lobster, and here are some samples of Lobster that I collect. This is a clothing store in Moscow. The Cyrilk version was designed by Cyril Foundry, and here's a poster of a design workshop in Moscow that uses Lobster. It's a logo for a state project set in Lobster, Cyrilk. This is a student assignment in students from Moscow. Yes, another assignment. They use Lobster as a web font. This is a clothing store in Ukraine in Lviv. Burger King uses Lobster. When I was flying to Madrid, I found a magazine, and it uses Lobster in a logo. Then another online in-flight magazine, and it also uses Lobster, Cyrilk. Lobster has ligatures and terminals, which also work in Cyrilk. Another font is Jacques François. It's a revival of Rolls-Royce typeface. It also has a shadow version. You can combine these two fonts by mixing and matching them. Wire one is a modular font with dot terminals. Yunga is a revival of a calligraphy based on Gunter Yunga. This is a hinting test, and Yunga was published in Typeodarium. This is a bidon typeface called Vidaloka. This one has Cyrilk. Artifika is an open source typeface, and Vernon has released a typeface called Tien, which is a mixture of Artifika and Joyd. One of my other projects is LearnSyrilk.tumblr, where I publish articles and research on Cyrilk, and with aim to openly spread knowledge on educating type designers to design correct Cyrilk. Here's some of the work that I do. This is a collaboration with Eduardo Manso on his Cyrilk typeface. This is a collaboration with Ebi on Ebi Garamon's Cyrilk, and if you design a Cyrilk typeface, you can email me and I'll be happy to provide feedback. I'd like to invite you to a constructivist mother typography workshop, which is today at 1430. This is supposed to say... Any questions? Questions? Two questions. Why is it doing that? It's a PDF. My real question is, what are the practicalities of assigning different... in the workflow when you're collaborating? How do you deal with different people doing different aspects of a typeface? Well, sometimes the hinter spots a design mistake and tells it to the designer and consultant and we fix it as a team. We say four eyes, better than two. And it's interesting that contributors from outside, they ask permission to modify the typeface and there's two possible solutions. They can release it as a fork or they can send us their product, we'll review it and release it as the official update. We have requests for Browler Bolt from a designer from New York and she's working on the Bolt version. Do we have any other short questions for one minute? Does the fact that you collaborate on open fonts change anything in your way of working in comparison to a traditional type agency? Well, the fact that we are open to collaborators, well, the fact that more people are involved, I think, is when you work on a non-open-search project, it's very closed and you don't want to share any trade secrets. But I'm thinking of pushing all projects to GitHub, so it will be easier to commit. So I know maybe it's a short one. So what would that imply for your workflow if you were to... Do you need to change things, for example? I imagine, for example, like you need to, for example, do you plan to work in an interchangeable format on GitHub? Or I imagine this also has implications for your workflow, I imagine. Oh, yeah, yeah. Well, yeah, if we push projects on GitHub, we need to provide sources in different file formats, like Fontforge, FontLab, and so more people, so it will be easier to collaborate. Because some people work in Fontforge, some work in FontLab, and other applications. So, yes, it's time to go on again. The next speaker, please.