 So we're at Lund Institute of Advanced Neutron and Electric Science and we have a mission to establish a centre between Max4 and ESS for X-ray and Neutron based science and doing this by attracting outstanding scientists in different subject areas to to the environment around Max4 and ESS and also to promote the science and education of research using X-rays and Neutron. This is a part of what I'll talk about most of that now and a major part of this is creating these international networks, so linking the international community to the Swedish and community and the community around Max4 and ESS. The community just quickly is starting out from from the university, but with core partners of Max4 and ESS but we have fellows affiliated to many institutes around the world and we collaborate with a number of national international initiatives and we're expanding this community. So just to give you an idea of what we're talking about here, so advanced studying is a way of working and brings researchers together outside the normal work in place and hopefully outside the normal working community so they can interact with people from different environments to come up with new ideas or to educate people in methods that are used in their research that will be applied in different areas. One example of the sort of advanced study is the famous Solvay conference in Northern people like Albert Einstein where they spent a week locked away discussing stuff and come out with great new ideas. A more modern example would be Carvely Institute in Santa Barbara which has similar aim to links. But most importantly, what do we mean? So what we're trying to do with advanced studies instituted links is to develop new interdisciplinary connections. We want to bring together theoreticians, modellers and experimentalists and this questions in these collaborations. But we also want to advance and widen the science around X-rays and neutrons. So bringing in new groups and bringing them forward, connecting them with existing researchers. And so we want to advance their raw community and bring in new communities. And so how do we do this? So we organise larger symposium and meetings in the usual scientific way but we also organise a technique specific workshops to educate the community and hackathons where we bring people together to develop the community and educate in a more hands-on way and in a more interactive way. And then we also involve with doctoral schools and for obvious reasons now we're developing quite extensively our online presence and our online activities. So I'll give you a few examples of these more education-based aspects of technique specific workshops and hackathons in the online. So one example of a technique specific workshop, we've given a good example which we cite often as this X-ray fluorescence workshop where we we focus on particular technique that brought people in from different backgrounds and we went through how the technique theory of the technique but also went into detail sample preparation and the measurement protocols but also how you could have to apply for time beam lines. So this if you're interested in this I think we can develop more techniques specific workshops to educate the community but also to bring together the community around the technique. In terms of hackathons, a good example we've had is in the MIMG analysis hackathons where we get people together for two to three days with some experts and then people with data that they want to have analysed and then we get together and we work together to interact to come up with new solutions or to analyse the data. The hackathon can also be on preparing experiments or preparing data analysis or software and the idea of developing new collaborations but also new connections between different areas. Doctoral schools, we've been involved in a number of these, most recent were the Northern Lights on Food Masterclass which is a good example for now because this is actually online or mostly online as some people present. And so you can look up this on the website and find the details. And with these we can have either technique focused or scientific focused events. We generally cover the background theory but we include a lot of practical examples and generally we also discuss the possibilities of facilities and how people can access interviews and have the right proposals for example. And then so and then we try to publish the results and these are the talks and things online so people can people look at these at a later date and we have an online presence. And then in recent times, not just because of COVID but also to access a wider community, we've developed a webinar series so to give people more people the opportunity to get involved without having to physically come to links and this is actually aimed at early stage researchers, mostly, and to provide the fundamental background to the techniques, but also guidance on how to perform experiments, how to prepare for experiments. And so these are being a big success and we would like the community to propose more topics. We can adapt these to the community. This is something I think fits into this discussion now. For example, how to write beam plan application but also your specific technique then we can focus on that and have a webinar on that. And so we have a plan to the autumn we have some before the summer, most of those are online, and we have a plan to the autumn for new webinars, including one which more towards Excel but includes be my proposal writing for example. And we're trying to develop the educational material online till we have a more long term trace of all of this. So we restoring the, as much as we can the information from the courses in the doctoral schools and recorded webinars, plus some links to external courses. So this is the educational link at links, for example, the ones listed below. Not all things are recorded depends on the community and the people presented. And so, most of our activities and educational activities as well are framed within the themes. So, if you look at these and you can see the imaging dynamics and structural biology plus the new materials, the new theme. So you can contact the leaders of these things to get involved in the existing activities but if you have a suggestion to what you'd like then please contact us to develop new activities and so we can fit the demands of the community.