 Hi, I'm Gabriel. I'm 23 and currently working with our GUI. So what I do is, the very good thing, what happens is, I always felt that there's tuition for maths, tuition for science, tuition for English. Why not tuition for electronics? So what I do is I go to home to teach. So it's very interesting how your clients, so clients feel about me to make a pair. And they randomly contact me through Facebook and then I go to homes every Wednesday and Friday. And I teach electronics to kids. And these kids are not your random kids. They do not go to school. They are homeschooled. So I teach kids from as young as 7 to 18. So I'll just try and work with them. So today is a very special day. It's the birthday of Samuel Morse. So Samuel Morse created wonderful inventions. If not, I want to say anything interesting for Samuel Morse. Samuel Morse invented morse code when he learnt about his white side. He was a wave of hope. And what happened was, someone came on a horseback to deliver a message that his wife passed away. That's when he felt that there was something he could do to help people relay messages across five sentences to people. And then he took someone's bag for a morse code to invest. And today is his birthday. He took two years on that day. And it's also about going back to the basics of what morse code is about. And he felt that getting to experience morse code at a very raw form to get them excited about coding and decode it. And a lot of things which Gabriel will share about the wonders of morse code. Okay, sure. So what is morse code? So basically I would just say it's like the SMS of 19th century but way more complicated. So each letter is represented by a combination of dots and dashes. And the whole word morse code is very interesting. It was a major form of communication. So last time there was no e-mail there was no SMS or RF where you could just send English over the network. It had to be decrypted. So at first they used morse code during World War I and World War II. So this is the morse code. So each letter is represented by dots dash. So A is dot dash. And each letter is represented by morse code. So The interesting thing about morse code was that the topic morse is enigma where it was able to say different words in different ways. So even the Germans invented their own morse code also. So I think it was very inspired and people were telling me it's only 7 last week it's only 7 do something do something great. And then I'm like what do you mean? We want the kit to be small easy to build affordable and have a focus element. So I built something called the Cologne. Yes, okay. So this is 1, 2, 3D circuit. So the processor from as big as this which is an Abino Uno I'm using 8 speed IC chip which is very small. And through this dot and dash it's a way where kids can really focus and decode what the message all about. Go back to my slide. So it's program between 80, tiny, 85. So a dot is represented by blue and a dash represented by red and a letter of period that is represented is represented by green. So the thing is this the problem when I took the code from retractables was that it just turn on the same color. So what I did was of thinking this will be very difficult for kids as young as 64. So what I did is I coded the whole protocol and did this. And the green is very important because if you have 5 dots it can mean various letters. So by having a green and a period it tells it get a letter and it transmitted movie blue, blue, blue, blue and then green and then for blue will be E which is 1 and then for L it will be dot, dash, dot, dot and then same thing for L and then O. So at point is this is way where we want to see kids really could understand how most could work. So It's dash so sorry. Typo guys so sorry. So what I point was because it's very interesting let me clock at 3 night the kids try to decipher a code and then I want to go back and say can you give me some time so my 14 year old student was deciphering more code and then they could decipher a message and I think it was really, really great because it really change the focus because if you miss a dot and dash it's a whole different message and I think that how I think SMS email was all based upon the initial mosfet and to show that now technology sometimes taken for granted but it was so wonderful that if this was really invented during World War 2 a lot of things could be solved. Okay it's not later I will show you guys okay so this is very interesting this is the enigma so enigma was a machine that was invented by the Germans to send messages in a different way so for example hello or a word or a message can mean many, many different ways so people couldn't decide people could get the most code dot and dash but they couldn't really know whether it's a correct message or not so this is enigma and then we have the war hero Alan Turing he invented Turing machine if you guys watch the movie imitation game you'll see that for small to decode a small machine like enigma he had to devise a very big machine to even decode the enigma and he saved at least 100,000 lives but the thing was I'm very sad as an engineer and I could really understand how he created this thing Allah people didn't know about Alan Turing when he was there but after he died people knew about him he was treated very badly by the government because he was gay so when he was gay people knew accepting for him but he saved a lot of lives and the idea of computer also came from a Turing machine so I came to the FNC we will say our most good challenge on the trainer April on Facebook to able to decode it we will give a special Moscow kit you want to show? after he get play in a Moscow his mom start to communicate with 15 Moscow she say I love you every day in Moscow I can't take it and talk to Moscow the thing what we did together with a drop design we make it very fun so we make it very cute very cute so they can see different components and then even the story of Moscow it was very funny when he was trying this kit out with rock scuse of good families this little girl came up and read the story of Moscow and how was invented and shared it with the dad so we see we want them to feel elektronik is not something very dangerous or something like this when they want to assemble so different kits have different ways of using the paper sometimes they will really lead to the way of assembling actually it's like Lego they just drop it in and a lot of configurations can be done when there was one time when a boy was so immersed in the train he wanted to see the train and we wanted more inventors so this is for the studio through and a brand where we build learning aids together we collaborate he came out in elektronik so if your geographer or you know someone in a different field collaborate and design to come out with more energy i realised that a lot of times we learn a lot of concepts in design but there's no hands-on element and this is one way to get real so this is the prices of our kits and i also like to challenge you guys to create your own Moscow language for example a dot can mean clap and that can mean double clap so it's really cool Moscow language and this is a little preview i'll be presenting in the next hackware it's a humble plea for a parent to teach kids how to build their own wireless xbox so i'll be sharing about this in the next hackware and i hope to meet you guys next time thank you very much thank you i think we are really buzzing with lots of ideas so thank you to all the speakers and thank you