 Alright, thank you James for allowing me to present the Computers and Geosciences Journal and James is very active also as board member. So I think the topic of this meeting is also quite relevant to me, I'm personally working in a subsurface and more of an engineering type application and decision making on the uncertainty. So this is certainly very relevant. So let's talk a little about the Journal of Computers and Geosciences and the scope which is written here. So we present original research in the interface of computer science and the geosciences. So what that means is basically that publications need to address modern computer science paradigm so we look for considerable sophistication there. When I started doing my research I was programming in Fortran 77, this was in 1988. So we are now way beyond this kind of programming or sequential and procedure programming and the Journal also started a little bit like that is sort of while people made a couple of programs and let's make that code available and then people could use that code and it was all static and things like that and I think over the years we've seen a tremendous growth in computer science and certainly my research has become much more computer science than I ever thought it would be. So these are some of the issues that we deal with. As I said, considerable sophistication we look for in computer science, I think this is a change that I made in the scope when I took over the Journal in 2011, when the Journal was still a little bit, well we used computers to do something. As I said, we're looking now for several things, in particular I'm very interested in software design, high performance computing of course, computational methods, numerical modeling, we have a big section on artificial intelligence and soft computing, database systems, graphics visualizations and the worldwide web internet of things. The other thing that's very important and I don't have to, I think, motivate you for that is geosciences. When I studied engineering back home and this was in Belgium, I thought it was all very boring, you know, mechanical engineering, collection engineering and I wanted to do something natural and I did mining engineering and that's how I got to know about geophysics and geochemistry and gosh that was all much more interesting than engineering. So I look for clear and explicit applications of geosciences as well, sometimes we get submissions that are sort of tangentially geosciences, well geosciences is an afterthought and this group is really, I think, one of the premier groups that we target for publication. So in that way, in both geosciences and computer science, we no longer do standard applications. So I use GIS to solve this problem. I wrote a Fortran code or I wrote a C++ code to solve this and that problem. We no longer do that. We really look for new programming designs and the kind of things that James has been talking about as well, sophisticated benchmark problems. I think this is also one of the things that I work on a lot because same in my work in subsurface reservoir, there are so many people doing so many things and there's no benchmark. And so as you said, you can always tailor your solution to your problem and then write a nice paper but does it really solve anything? So these are important things to note. We have a really good team now, I would say, most of the people here, I was able to attract to the journal, there's a new editor in chief just two weeks ago. So I don't have to deal with all 800 publications any longer. So that's the good news. The other good news is that this editor is really a world-class leader in geoinformatics. Edzer Bevesma, who just became a member of the team and he'd be looking more at the use of geographical information systems, the World Wide Web and things like that. He is also director of an institute in geoinformatics in Münster in Germany. And as you notice from our editorial team, we have an extremely wide variety geographically as well as people from various fields, people from the industry, people from academia, people from NASA, government, etc. So there's a lot of people on there. So we, and as I took over the journal in 2011, the journal was starting to pick up as an interesting journal. I think a lot of people in geosciences had started to discover computer science. And there was a problem, a little bit, with the management of the journal. It was still sort of done by an editor-in-chief and the secretary and Elsevier, of course now offers very impressive services for us and manpower behind the journal to allow us to do that. So the speed, which is something that some of you are interested in as well, particularly when you're a student, you're doing your PhD, you want to get this paper out. I get those questions a lot. When is this going to get published as well? Let's first review it. But we are now very fast, I think, as you notice here. We went from 35 weeks in 2010 to six weeks in terms of review speed. We are really a top journal intern around right now, so I'm very proud to have that. It doesn't come with a cut in the quality, actually, the quality has dramatically, I find, improved and this is not my doing, that is your doing. And so the impact factor has definitely increased and we went from sort of middle of the road to now in the top 25% of 200 journals in our field. So data and software, this is something that's very dear to me as well. I work on software. I mean, this is my academic product to the industry that is using this as well. So I created, we had this static uploading of code on Elsevier website and then zip files and it was just a mess. And then people said, where is the file and the code doesn't work and this and that. So we work with a code repository GitHub, some of you may be familiar with that, where if authors want to make changes, I can give them access to the code repository, but of course, we keep track of the changes being made. So in other words, new publications, new code changes will still reflect the old code, which is attached of course to the publication. We're also rethinking this and Edser has some really great ideas. We want to make software more citable. We want to make data more citable because you spend a lot of time writing publications, but you also spend a lot of time working on data and massaging the data and doing the data, I mean, this is 80% of it is sweat, basically. And how you got to this data set, the nice pictures you just showed in the videos, it's a lot of work. We all know that. And so we are working on creating maybe a portion of the journal that we become a data portion and a software citable portion. So we're still thinking about that. We have to negotiate that with Elsevier. There are other organizations like NSF and others who are working on that. So this is one of the new plans. Special Issues, and James already put that up previously. Here's that previous special issue that was published in 2012. It's one of the most popular special issues that we published in the last three years, the most cited special issue. Special issues are great. They basically have greater visibility, greater impact, greater everything. And I think it's very important to get that together. In terms of publication time, it doesn't really matter. Papers get reviewed. They get submitted to the guest editor. Chief editor makes decisions. And as soon as the paper is accepted, the paper is online. And then after a while, as all the papers are in, they get grouped together. And it becomes an issue on its own. The thing, of course, today is that paper is going out of the window. I don't even get a paper copy of computers and geosciences. So this idea of issues, it's sort of becoming a little bit irrelevant. But I think grouping it together and making it something special is great. Because also it gets greater visibility on the website. Elsevier loves special issues and promotes those. And if special issues have great impact, it will go even further and promote them even further. So these are things to remember. I just kind of copied and pasted a few keywords. I should have done a cool slide, like changed it at the beginning. Now I realize, and I know there's all the kind of software to do that. But these are sort of the keywords of the last special issue. And you notice there's a great amount of computer science and great amount of geoscience. And that is really what we're looking for. So that's where I want to end. I'm here for the next two days. And if you have questions about submitting to the special issues, submitting to the journal, just come up and feel free to ask me questions. And I do welcome very much a proposal. And the proposal will have to be sort of put together. The way it works is that there will have to be guest editors. And guest editors will have to come up with a proposed set of titles. That we then go forward and once I have those titles and the guest editors, then we can go all set up and get started. Thank you.