 We're embarking on a project with partners about disclosing the medieval manuscripts that we have in our collections. People who've been to Gend through the Triple F event have noticed the big tower. It's on this historic map, it's on the top left-hand side. We built a book tower on the top of the hill, overlooking the city's churches and abbeys. There's a specific reason for that, because we hold most of their collections now. Napoleon did that, not we personally. But I'm not the only thing from the same area and from the same epoch. There's some remarkable medieval library still existing in Bruges. In the city of Bruges they hold the abbeys of the Gondane and Tardust and these books are still kept there, but not yet scanned. So from these four medieval monasteries, who were very important in the book production in that time, they had very productive scriptorian and big libraries containing the bookkeeping and all the economic activity of the abbeys, lots of religious material, of course, and also lots of texts and documents about just the way of the world and what they knew about the world. Of these very big libraries, we still are aware of, we know, where almost 740 manuscripts are available. Most of them are in Gendt or in Bruges, but some of them are in the strangest places in the world. So we set up a project and you're starting to recognise the scheme. We have been looking very carefully at some of the projects that have been done in Trip Life community. Amazing projects in ecodesies and Biblicima and I'm missing many of them. The Durham Library construction. And we set up this project with the religious authorities and the two big libraries holding most of these books to digitally reunite these libraries. And for us as a university, the big goal is, of course, to inspire people to do more research with that material. Throughout the community for Trip Life, we really want this project to be a catalyst for more optic and more Trip Life usage in museums and libraries in Belgium. We have a first stage grant now that's running and the first things first. So we're digitising most of the Bruges manuscripts. And we set up in Gendt, we set up a service called Chat Canvas, like a triple IF hosting service, reusing our existing infrastructure to be able to make it more accessible, more easy to use for our colleagues. Of course, the first milestone will be have all these manuscripts online and start building some contexts, some explanations, give people an idea or first glimpse of the richness of these libraries. Next of course, we'll be working more on metadata. But in our project, we really want to express everything in Trip Life, not start to build a big knowledge base like the Beatsomers building, but really limit ourselves to expressing things in Trip Life and using them in Trip Life presentations. And that way we'll really be advocating more the use of Trip Life for research, for education, for all kinds of projects. Building up user community really. And then back to you. We've been looking over your shoulders, looking at some of the projects. You may have some of these manuscripts in your library actually. So would you be able to scan them and share them via Trip Life? That would be very useful for us. But it's not only just about the books that have at one time physically been in one of these abysses. It's also about the history of these texts and the tradition that is encoded. There might be related text materials, there might be similar illuminations or decorations or book bindings or ways that these elements relate and make sense. But that's also very interesting. We're looking actively for any kind of link that could work and that we could express as a Trip Life collection. And that's the last part. We already saw a few lightning talks about discovery tools and discovery mechanisms. So we're really looking forward to knowing more how we can use Trip Life collections for that. So that's our lightning talk. Thank you.