 Welcome to this update on the progress on the J-Wiki. I come to you from the unceded territories of the Qualic and Comox First Nations, and I thank them for the use of their lands. Haven't been on for quite a while, actually a few months. There's been a lot of work that we've been doing behind the scenes on the Wiki. And today I'm going to just give you a quick update and tell you about some of the things that you can expect over the coming months as we start to actually get in and do the work on revamping the J-Wiki. Okay, so let's take a look at the screen. This is the main page of the Wiki and we've made a few changes already to the sidebar. We've moved the J-Wiki search up so it's a little bit more prominent. Now the J-Wiki search is an application that was written by Chris Burke and it allows you to type in things that are a little bit more J-like and actually go matching with it. So it can use a rejects match or a match case, all sorts of different things that it can do, but it's a bit better search for J across the Wiki than the traditional Wiki searches up here, this search Wiki here. So we put that up in a little more prominent position. We also included a link straight into the J Playground, which is our browser J, which allows you to do a whole bunch of things on your browser. You don't even have to download J. It's a great way to test things out. It includes labs, it includes some examples, including a neural network, which is pretty neat. Of course the plot and arithmetic and first steps for somebody who's starting out. So there's a lot of information here to take a look at. We really encourage people to take a look at that. We've also got down here, we've taken out the random pages. So if people are really upset by that, I'm sorry, but the random pages are gone from the sidebar. I don't think we really need random pages in our Wiki. But the new version of the Wiki, we've got a link here now. And what we're doing is the blue J that you see up in the corner. That's the traditional Wiki. That's the one we're going to be working on and making changes to. But we've also created a prototype Wiki, which is our yellow Wiki. And so this is the yellow Wiki you can see here. And this is the main page. This is what eventually we may end up having our blue Wiki look like. It's a little bit more icon driven, a little more friendly, a few different ways of dividing things up. But as we start working on this prototype page, we'll develop things that we will transfer over to the blue Wiki. So you'll see some changes coming to the blue Wiki. We welcome comments on this because this is exactly why we're doing it. If you get onto the yellow Wiki, you can take a look at new Wiki experiments, which is quite useful. You can see things that people are working on. Raoul is working on an alphabetical index, which is pretty cool. So just click on that. You can see it's an expandable index. That was for the small letter A. Let's see what we got. Oh, well, we can do the empty box. All that sort of information. All those things are things that he's working on. That was in a previous version of J. And we're looking at maybe bringing it back. There's a lot of work to keep it up to date, but when you actually get it up and running, I think it's a pretty useful way to access the information. And that's kind of what we're looking for in a lot of the stuff that we're doing. Oh, other thing I was going to mention is the Rosetta. We're looking to, if you know another language aside from J, and you know it quite well, we're looking for opportunities to have people do J equivalents to, right now we've got Excel, Python, and Q. And so that a person who comes in to try and learn J may be able to go to the Rosetta and see what J equivalents look like for, so for instance, Devin has done this and he's got an Excel to Rosetta for J. And it sort of gives people an idea of the different things that you could do in J code that you might do in Rosetta or in Excel. So that's something that we're working on. I think it's going to be pretty good. I think it would be quite a useful thing for people who are just approaching the language. And when you want to get back to the old version of J, you just click here and you're back to the old version of J. So I think that's about it for now. We welcome comments. If you notice up here there's a discussion page. On any of these pages, I'll go over to the new pages because that's the new version. So when you get to a discussion page, if there's something you like about it, this is a note that I left, you just click on this and then you can, if you're logged into the wiki, you can make comments on this and then we can respond to those and get some feedback on that. So that's a great way to quickly make feedback on the pages. That takes us back to the main page. That's what you see as view. And again, old version of the wiki down here. Sidebar takes you right back. So I look forward to talking to you next time on this J wiki update.