 Okay, thanks. I'm just refreshing my browser to make sure things come in through. Okay. Everybody, welcome to credit for April 2017. We have two demos today. The first demo will be from Nestlehan, who is a person who worked on an outreachy internship with Wikimedia for a project called Wikiradeo. I'll let Nestlehan speak about her project, and then she's recorded a demo that will play. Hi, everybody. I am Nestlehan, and I work on outreachy round 13 this year, and my mentor was Edum and Mirzar. We made an Android application, which is Wikiradeo, which is a radio application, and which plays from comments, audios, and text-to-page files from Wikipedia. It selects random summary files, and converts them to audio, and plays them randomly. And it's roughly working, and I would like to present, and later we can talk about it. Okay, Byron. Nestlehan, you're ready for the video to play? Is that right? Yes. Okay. Byron, I think we're ready to have the video playback of the demo. And please, follow the subtitles. I think the subtitles isn't shown properly. There is an army in fighting for peace. I know that it is hard for Americans to realize the magnitude of the war in which we are involved. Okay, and I think that is the conclusion of the demo. So if you didn't catch it the first time around, you'll probably want to replay the stream and play close attention to the captions to get a sense of what the internals are, for what the application is doing, as it's playing back random audio from comments, and random lead sections from Wikipedia articles. Thanks, Nestlehan, for your work on the internship. It's been a pleasure working with you on it. It's same for me, too. Thanks. You're the best mentor ever. And did you see the subtitles? Because I didn't see them, and I didn't see the buttons on the screen. But does everybody see them? Because otherwise, it is not made meaningful. I did see them. I was checking the YouTube stream. It's just that we're in the hangout right now. And so, like, the bottom of the screen was getting cut off. Yes, maybe we can share the video URL and everybody can watch the YouTube screen. Yeah, we'll definitely do that. We'll send out a note after the meeting, and we can include a link to the credit showcase itself as well as the specific YouTube video. That should be no problem at all. And if anybody has any questions, please enter them in the etherpad. You'll also find the link to Nestlehan's project on GitHub, where you can read the code and maybe offer some contributions, if you're interested. Yes. Thanks a lot. Okay, Jan, I think you're up next. Yeah, that wiki radio thing seems wild. I'd be a little afraid to play that all day, but it's a really cool project. Anyway, so what I've been up to, I'm going to present a little widget that I made for the search results page on Wikipedia that is meant to present Wiktionary definitions on the search results page. So if you somehow search for a single word that has a definition on Wiktionary, that definition will pop up on the search results page on Wikipedia. And this is a user script that I made, so I'm just going to share my screen now and your search results page. And let's say, just want to look for some stuff. It's the regular page and oh, in pops this definition. And so you can see it has some pronunciation with that little cool button and just a few first definitions, but more can be expanded there. So yeah, this is, and this is using an API that was originally made for Android, which also has a future like this. So yeah, this is what I've been working on. Very cool. It's great to see the API is being used on multiple platforms. Interesting that stuff came from a web backend to a native client front end and now it's being repurposed on the desktop web. It's awesome. Thanks. And where can we go to see the code on this? Sorry, I linked a ticket in the Etherpad and that has a link to the user script that you can install on your Wikipedia account if you want to see it live in action. Awesome. Thanks, Jan. I think that's it for this month. Thanks again, Neslahan. Thanks, Jan. And thanks, Byron, for setting up everything on the stream. Have a wonderful rest of the day and talk to you next month.