 Okay. So we've been referenced a couple of times in the previous presentations. This is going to be a presentation about the digital and online platform we're building to be able to host multiple different research frameworks and allow them to share information and questions and work together. So to answer the question of this whole session, yes we can. This project at the moment has hundreds of contributors. It's covering the areas of Northwest England, Northeast, East, East Midlands and Southeast Scotland. It's funded by Historic England. Southeast Scotland is not part of England, but they're helping out with the beta testing and this is through our organization Lambda Research, but we are being supported by Open Contacts or the Alexander Institute, which is based, I don't know if you guys know Open Contacts, Contacts. It's Sarah and Eric Kanza. They're doing some great stuff. They're helping us with the link data aspect. And so to start this project, we went out to all these different regional research frameworks and asked them, what would you guys like? And this is just a random set I just grabbed. We had over about sort of close to 50 different sort of things that this platform was suggested that it could happen and what it could do. People wanted the ability to be able to comment on questions or on paragraphs so you could have a discussion online. People wanted to have accessibility. So if you have a screen reader or something like that and you don't normally go through the website like most everyone else, you'd still be able to do that. Pretty URLs that don't have like 6, 12, 13 bunch of numbers and letters and random and that you just can't remember. So these are the requests we got and we started pulling this all together and in the last year we've built basically a feature list and we started building the website. When we came to deciding on how we're going to build this website and this platform, we were looking at a content management system. Basically we didn't want to reinvent the wheel and also create something that everyone else had to relearn. So the big sort of websites that control a lot of things about more than about two thirds of all websites on the internet as far as I can tell use one of these three systems and they all use the same sort of coding language and so we've actually built it at the moment on top of WordPress but shouldn't a couple of years that change? We might go to Drupal. We've tried to use at least this amount of like tried to basically tie it into one platform. We don't want to have that problem of vendor locking where we've designed this and then in a couple of years everyone abandons WordPress and we're stuck with WordPress because we get everything WordPress. So ideally hopefully this doesn't happen and we stay with the system for a while but in a couple of years if we need to we'll be able to change it. And basically one of the sort I'm just going to pick out sort of three major things when we have 10 minutes to go over it. Right here is basically one of the requests that we had was from the various different partners is they wanted to be able to theme it. They want all the sites to look exactly the same. So this is the one from Southeast Scotland and I did nothing of this. They've done all the design. We basically have a platform that they can use and they choose whatever design they want and you know it varies a little bit so it has their main logo colors but basically anyone who's using it can choose how they would like it to look. Here's the one for the East Midlands. So this is the one where we're sort of moving over. Basically kind of see there's this checkered links sort of thing on the new one and that is because the old one had the same one. So we've basically taken most of the thing from an old website. So if you are moving your website over to this platform there's not going to be that sort of change shock of suddenly you go to that URL and everything's different and you're like what's going on. So basically we've designed something that each local framework can sort of take and adapt how they'd like. One aspect that we've sort of learned about with doing sort of a living document is version control. So let's say specifically this is going to be one example your local authority archaeologist and you're saying okay you put a condition and you say they need to answer or try to answer these questions or maybe it's a commercial company saying we're going to do this project and we're going to try to answer these questions based off the pages on this research framework. And then you know projects take a couple of years maybe something goes a bit wrong. People they can go back and try to find what this is and it's changed and they're like wait you're referencing this but it's not there. So we've created basically every page has citation and then a link to the internet archive. So basically when you're using this research framework and you want to cite it you could cite it right there and someone will be able to access it and see it exactly as it was on the day and time that you last saw it or when you first cited it. So the idea there is basically it's going to change. It's meant to change. We're hoping that before using this making comments changing the questions changing you know adding new data adding new text everything like that. But for practical reasons you could still go back to that time when you were using it at that very moment and without any issue. And then this is sort of basically it's all focused around questions. So here's just sort of the Roman period and here's a question which is way too small for people to repeat. But the question is not important it's about people coming over in the conquest period. But there's different parts so there's all sorts of metadata so you can add to the question why is it important? Why should we be answering this question? And that comes with that question. Different things you can highlight is you know has this question actually been answered or is it still active? So we think it's a really good idea to have the ability to say actually this question was answered but you could see a list of everything we've done and you could actually start to sort of plot out gee are we actually doing anything with these research frameworks or we just added more and more questions over the time and they're answered anything. So that's a lot of things you could do we're linking it into periods as well. There's a lot of linked aspects as well. And then also things like down here is where was this question first asked? All research frameworks can borrow questions from other research frameworks. So if you have the same question or near enough that you're willing to use the same question from other research frameworks why reinvent the wheel? Just take the question and use it. It'll be a credit but also when you're searching you'll be able to see actually these three different research frameworks are trying to answer the same question about the Romans in the third century or whatever your question is and that's the thing. It also has things like if you think this question has been answered who decides that? It's all sorts of bits of metadata. And so one of the things we're doing as well I'm really glad Peter talked about this heritage data. We have the capillaries and basically you'll be able to tag any question with one of these capillaries and be able to search across again research frameworks. So if you have the category of say a Roman period and you want to see all the related questions across all the research frameworks everywhere you could choose that or you could do Roman period in a specific region and just see the questions from that. That's based off the heritage data and we're using all the capillaries from there for people to be able to choose topics though as of Wednesday we've decided that you could still add your own term for those topics if you wanted to you still have to use an underlying concept but some people have different terms so you know maybe it's ceramics maybe it's pottery as long as it's linked to the same sort of term you could use wherever you want as long as there's some sort of concept that everyone's understands. And again open contacts helping us to link data you'll be able to pull anyone who wants to be able to pull these questions off there'll be an API hopefully other organizations will be able to use this information and incorporate it so there's talks about the new oasis eventually when you're going to the forum you will see all the questions they're in your area and say actually we've answered that so that's pretty much it. I just want to end with so we're in the middle of passing this out so it's still in process but I think this is probably sort of the best feedback we've gotten so far it was just a surprise of it's just a website which from like a designer point of view is exactly we want to hear because it meant we made it easy enough someone's like oh yeah no it's a website I can do this I can do this um and that's what we're trying to do is make this user friendly enough that basically anyone will be able to use the research framework you don't need to also be an expert in computer science and archaeology to try to be able to use online research frameworks so that's our goal and thank you and thanks uh for the funders as well