 Okay, everybody is going to be a quick romp through research data Australia and I'll just reiterate from earlier talks, this is not the research data commons, it's one small piece which looks at bits of stuff that are in there, it itself is not the research data commons. It's a window into it, yes, a little viewer. So this is our home page, just get used to this, okay, scroll, it's not my laptop, as you see there are several parts to it up the top, we've got various menu items, and online services which I'll show you a bit later, I'm used to a Mac, so when I do my two finger thing it doesn't work, so to speak. Okay, so at the top we had the menu bar, over here on the left we've got two different groups of two areas on the page, records by what kind of entities they're describing, so you can see our four kinds of entities there, collections, parties, services, and activities, and how many records we have. We are at the moment don't have a lot in there because our projects are really just ramping up, but there's enough there to get a good feel for the kind of things we have. Down the bottom on the left records by grouping, and when I mentioned the group element earlier, this is actually attribute, this is where it's used, it's used to group records according to whatever group you put into the record, so at the moment we're mostly using this to group things by institution, although you can see down here published my data category, those are records which have come in through that individual researcher method, they're grouped there together, but really they don't actually have much in common other than the way they got into the database, sorry I'm a bit slow, there's alien technology. Over on the right hand side we have at the top our search box, underneath that it tells us how many things we found with our latest search, which in this case is 318 records, and it's showing me the first six, and down the bottom we see a map which has the locations of the first 25 search results, any spatial coverage information that was included in those records gets displayed on that map, and what's interesting to people who design these interfaces is that this right hand panel doesn't go away, so if you selected one of these things and went to that record, the right hand panel would stay the same, which can be annoying or it can be great depending on where you're up to, so I'm going to once again, another tribute to TARDIS, search for a scabies mic, because I'm pretty sure this record will be there unless something has gone wrong since this morning, I just searched for it, the way that the search results are ranked depends on where in the record the search terms were found, but in this case obviously it's only one, so it doesn't matter at all, and here is the record in all of its glory, it's got a title, it's got a type of data set, if we wanted to know what that meant, we could use that little I thing and it would tell us what a data set was, we could probably make these help things a little bit better, but this is where we're up to, here's the about which has come from the description element, slow, slow, slow, and there's a big description, here's the URL that goes back to TARDIS itself, back to that detailed metadata record that I showed you this morning, an address which you probably didn't really need for this record, a whole lot of keywords and things, and I guess the issue of how he's getting there is quite an important one, possibly from project proposals in cases where that's available, so this thing here is the field of research from the Australian, New Zealand standard research classification, and then down here we have obviously subject headings, we've got a relationship to a party of TARDIS who owns this record, and we have a link out here to PubMed, some related information, which I'll take a chance and click on. Well I think this sort of demonstrates the value of these kind of aggregated stores, because you can see from here a huge amount of other information, including pictures and lots of other information, so we're really just an aggregation which can get you out into the bigger web, and yes you could get that from TARDIS yourself of course, but maybe you didn't come in from there, so from here you can get back to it. So from the point of view of ANZ, this record which we can't see much of due to it being big, it supports discovery because it's got a lot of lovely keywords in that beautiful long description there, so although this description isn't necessarily describing the data set as I would personally prefer, from a point of view of discovery that's probably not important, because it's probably not a single relevant keyword that doesn't appear in this description, so from that point of view, discovery is really good, it's got its subject headings, it had its field of research so that it could be grouped with other similar things, it links through to detailed information about the data set so that you can, if you want to reuse it, you can go there and get to it, find out more, so it supports all the Vans of Skolls. Navigation, we've got standard breadcrumb thing at the top here, so we can go back up to Collections if we wanted to, we can sort of click on any links obviously, and something I only found when I was doing a training session recently, I realised all these headings are also clickable, and if you click on one of these, it pastes itself into the subject headings, sorry, into the search box and does a search on it, so if I go back over here now, I'll have different stuff, hopefully, yep, I will have, so those subject headings are all built into the search, linked into the search, and the other thing we have down the bottom, view the complete record, the record that's displayed in Research Data Australia is not the full amount of information that you provide to us, it's a subset, a lot of the stuff that's not displayed are some of these dates, for example, the key is not displayed at the top level, but all of the stuff in this bottom next level down is actually searchable, so if you searched on, say, that key, you would still find the Research Data Australia page, it's just you wouldn't know why you'd found it unless you came through down to this lower level, the same with all of these identifiers, so this, for example, is the Protein Data Bank Identifier for this crystal, we haven't got that displayed on our top page, but if you searched on it, you would still find this page, and this Identifiers area is where for the parties in the future, if this was a party, which is not, you'd be putting your NLA in party identifier information in the future, not now, well you could do it now, I won't go there. So we started at Research Data Australia, we came back down into this record within our database, a view of it, from here we can also go to the RIF-CS that's underlying it, the actual XML that was supplied to us, which looks like this, which I'm sure you've all seen before, it's worth saying this XML that you give us, we do not change it, right, so we don't take your information and then do stuff to it, we might choose to display part of it or to give it a different label or something at the presentation layer, but we never, ever, ever go in and actually alter this information that you provide to us, so it's exactly as it was provided, from you to us, it stays that way forever unless you change it. You can do quite a lot with the maps as well, some of our programmers have really got excited about the whole mapping stuff, so from here these markers can also be clicked on, if you want to, you can see the Great Barrier Reef is a bit heavy, heavily overloaded, you can expand the map of course to make it easier to pinpoint the area you're interested in, click, click, click, you can put your thing on there and move the map around, and I'll choose one just for the point of, I'll choose something, something interesting with a piece of land near it because it's easier to see there, and you can see the mouseover also told me of something about it, I knew I shouldn't have got that map. The record itself displays the map, you can change, it looks just like a Google map because it's built on the same technology as that, so you can change sort of the display to look different, you can muck about with these scrolling in things, you can look at it in Google Earth if you want to, if you've got it installed, I won't try that, you can, this little thing shows you the context, which can sometimes be helpful if your thing shows up in the middle of the ocean and you can't really see where it's close to, and these red navigating things, this square one here shows you that it's the centre of a region, some of the others were diamonds, those are actual locations, so that's described here, tells you about what kind of place Makret is, so this interface obviously is a work in progress, we're constantly building on it to make it more useful, but again, we're not expecting this to be the sole point of discovery, it's very important to realise that you can go right back from here back to the original metadata source where this, all this data came from, which in this case is the Institute of Marine Science, they store it as geographic metadata standard, and you can see there's a lot more information here than we've got in our portal, much more detail of the data itself, how it was all collected, there's often lots of rights information, keywords, we haven't got all of those, it wouldn't be very meaningful to display all those on our site, because it would just obliterate the whole display and you wouldn't be able to see your way through it, lots of legal information, massive amounts of supplemental information and so on, so that's the kind of underlying metadata that would be needed if you were interested in reusing this yourself, and it also shows pretty clearly that we're not trying to take over what these people have already achieved, and they've got this whole portal that this is a part of, which is very, very well focused on this from a discipline perspective, but Marine Science is something which is very cross-disciplinary in its nature, and so people who may be interested in this information may never have heard of the Institute of Marine Science and would never think to look at this portal, so that the purpose of ANS really is to be a more cross-disciplinary finding tool I guess, and the other bit I was going to show you, ANS online services that you get to at the top here, on the left you can see the login, if you're going to be using any of our manual interfaces, or if you're going to be a data source administrator, that's where you would log in and Shabin might be able to talk to you. I don't know if he's going to talk about that, but certainly he's an expert on this whole issue. If you're using our sandbox, it looks exactly the same as this except it says sandbox on the top, so the functionality is exactly the same except no one else can see it but you. We also have some additional search capabilities on this page, which are focused more on what a data source administrator would want to do, so instead of looking for stuff by what it's about, here you'd be able to look at it more from an administrative perspective, so you might want to specify your group as Monash, and then show me all the Monash services records or something like that, so it's still a bit relatively clumsy level but it might be useful, but we also have this far more useful set of web services, which are for people among you who are technical, which is I think most of you. All of these services are available for you to use to get records in and out of our store and any other O-A-O-I-P-M-H type stores, so there's quite a lot of pre-organized services here that you can use, search engine index, no idea what that's for, it's outside what area of expertise, but certainly there's quite a lot of stuff there that is available for anybody to use, so in a nutshell that was Research Data Australia, and that's basically all there is to tell you about it.