 Alright, hi everyone. My name is Paul Selicourt and I'm a co-founder of NSAC, a startup company based in New York. Today I'm going to introduce to you the integrated sensor data management system that we develop at NSAC. The ISDMS is essentially hardware and software framework that streamlines the process of sensing a variable, annotating the values with metadata, shepherding the result into a management system where it is made available to the end users. So the idea is to address the goal in demand for poor disciplinary data integration and interoperability, which our system tries to address both at the hardware and software level. Our hardware platform, we call it a transcoder-warded-on-a-decaloguer because of its advanced capabilities. First of all, it is able to capture its deployment context metadata and it can store them on board with also control vocabularies. It is designed to serve sensor data and associated metadata in the network to be like local network or over the internet. Contrary to a data logger that you tell about the sensor that's attached when you program it, it works the other way around for our transcoder where the transcoder reports on the sensors attached to the application that is used to prepare it for deployment. Because it's a new concept, we have developed a virtual version of the hardware so that users can try the whole process of configuring and programming the transcoder for deployment. We've developed a software tool named T-Cas which is sent for transcoder configuration and autoprogramming software tool that is used to prepare the device for deployment. It is designed to facilitate the provision of metadata to the device and also its autoprogramming. Basically, T-Cas eliminates the need for computer programming skills and it also integrates control vocabularies developed mainly by the KWAC group and the metadata are encoded in standardized formats like the IEEE 1451.0 and water. We also have a sensor information system behind the T-Cas application. These are some who use graphical user interfaces although we try to use T-Cas. They are also available in the virtual transcodex. Once the device is deployed, what happened? The device is deployed with knowledge of an API that we've developed and it submits both the captured data and metadata to our API and when the data and metadata reach our API, they are organized in an extended version of the KWAC observations data model. Once the data is in our database or in the user database, what happened? The user can use or the owner can use our tool named transcoded which is to create networks of transcoders. It's basically virtual networks and also the user can specify data sharing options. If you look at the first screen, we create a web service endpoint for the user and also the user can specify information like citation and also we capture some other metadata that describe the network. And for the data sharing options, we provide a high level of granularity in terms of what you can share. If you look at the right screen, you can see that you can share one variable from the site but you can also share the whole site or the whole network that you've created. More interestingly, Google uses its tool named data set search so we've realized that with the metadata that we capture in our system, we can automatically register the user's data set to Google data set search. And once you make your data available in transcoded, it is available to our tool named data vault that is used to access both public and private data that are unrelated with metadata. And we can use the KWAC control vocabulary set and we also encode the data in whatever format among other formats. And we've also developed the data analytics tool, which is a suite of tools for the analysis and visualization. And it also provides you with some sort of diagnosis about the health of your transcoders that have been deployed. And we've worked with some technology partners, business partners, and at this point we are doing our alpha testing and we will exhibit at the American Geo-Visical Union conference. So if any one of you will be there, you can visit our booth. It's number 957. That's where my presentation ends. Thank you very much everyone.