 Hi all, I'm Om Shankar. First of all a very big thanks to JSFU for giving me this wonderful opportunity to speak at their conference. I have been following JSFU for a very long time and I have known people who have inspired me and I've seen them speaking at JSFU giving wonderful seminars and tech talks and conducting workshops. So I'm very very glad that this is my first time opportunity at JSFU and I also got a chance to contribute to what JSFU is doing. About myself, I have been a web development engineer right from the starting of my career and I have been working with companies which are into the web. I was with Adobe Systems and then Walmart Labs and then right now I'm at Amazon as a web development engineer and a user interface specialist. So I build products into the web and most of it is most of the time and intelligence is spent in rendering the product into into the browser and that is nothing but your front end and then there comes a lot of JavaScript. So JavaScript has always kept me excited and yeah, so the topic I'm bringing over here is at this conference is WebRTC collaboration with HTML5 and JavaScript. I have been inspired by HTML5 when I was in Adobe Systems and they are doing a very good work in HTML5 and I believe that HTML5 is the key to the future of web applications. Right now we don't use just websites. We use web as application. We drag drop files into the browser. We play music like sound.com or any other website that you know. We also do a lot of things which are not just consuming the information. So we would say web has evolved really a lot and all of the all of this power comes from HTML5 features and HTML5 features stand on the JavaScript base. Why? Because most of the features that you work into HTML5 are only accessible using JavaScript APIs. So the very reason to this talk and why people should attend this talk is that it is related with JavaScript very much and HTML5 is the new happening. So all the JavaScript developers should not be refraining themselves from it and they should be very well apart of this new happening. They should contribute to the web. They should let the web move forward and bring in more features, more cool stuff so that we have a very, very good internet ecosystems in which we can deploy our applications and make those applications publicly accessible on multiple devices. A lot of things are there and I'm really excited by HTML5 and this talk would therefore only be successful to only those people who are equally excited by either HTML5 or JavaScript or both or at least they want to see cool stuff. So that's it to it. Thanks a lot and I hope you'll enjoy this talk. Thank you very much.