 My name is Roger Stern and I am here at this workshop because we've already started doing some work together with SeaCrafts. We work a little bit in our institute, I'm a statistician I should tell you, and we've been working on the baseline survey. We've been working on data management and now we're working on helping to integrate the Met services more closely into SeaCrafts activities. Dataverse is I think a very imaginative tool, it's been produced by Harvard University and it provides a tool not to manage your data but to archive your data at the end of a project. And it's particularly designed to archive the raw data. This is a weakness of many organisations that they collect raw data and after the project the data are nowhere to be found. So this provides a tool to archive the raw data together with all the information reports, the questionnaires that surround the data. So these data can be used by other organisations later, the conclusions by the research can be tested having the data available. And amazingly Harvard allows a service either that they will manage your data in perpetuity free of charge as long as you have the philosophy that you're interested in sharing information. So it's part of this open source revolution. And secondly if you really want to have your own dataverse and you would prefer not to have it housed at Harvard you can download their software again free of charge to set up your own organisation to be able to archive your own data. I really think it is a wonderful new opportunity being used now by SeaCrafts in a way that is testing and I hope it will be used more by SeaCrafts and also by many other organisations. From what little I've seen the software and the resources are of a very high standard and as I say I repeat I think it's something very very useful for the CGIR centres and for many other organisations.