 That is a wake-up call. OK. Well, everyone, please take your seats. And then we can start. We have a tight schedule today, so I will be severe on the time speakers get. So don't blame it on me. It's the time schedule we have to respect. So welcome here in Ghent. I hope you already had some time to enjoy the city, because, well, Ghent is one of the most beautiful cities in the world, as I may say. But today, we'll have to be here and listen to very interesting conversations, looking at data management, and how we can do that. I have here next to me, Najeret Berk, who is our scientific project manager of OpenAir. And she will give us a brief introduction to the day, and I'll give the floor to her. So welcome, everybody. Good morning. I think we're waiting for a couple of more people to come in. But I'd like to warmly welcome you and thank our hosts here at Ghent and this wonderful conference center, which I hope is going to pick up some of the wonderful sun rays that are coming in. It's been a wonderful day yesterday. I hope some of you managed to enjoy a bit of your time in Ghent. Just to set the scene a bit of background, in OpenAir Plus, which is a carry-on project from OpenAir, we have a series of three workshops. And the aim of these workshops are to explore some issues to do with open science, open access, and to give us more of a knowledge as we build our open access publication infrastructure. And we're linking out now to research data. And we need to be able to understand some of the issues behind data. So last year, we held a workshop in Copenhagen on policies for data management and that included many different stakeholders who are creating different policies for data management. We then focused on interoperability in between infrastructures and that was in Minya at the beginning of the year, this year. And that was a fairly technical workshop. The final workshop we have in November in Vilnius will look at legal and sustainability issues for open access infrastructures. So back to today, dealing with data. After Minya, we started to plan it and it was going to have more of a technical focus on linking publications to data. But by popular demand, a number of people said we'd like something more hands-on, please. A lot of the OpenAir community is based in research libraries, so we wanted to explore issues that research libraries would face in terms of dealing with data and the data research management lifecycle and how we're going to plan linking publications to data. So that's the background. So we have a good program today and I think the background behind it was to give you an introduction to the whole research data lifecycle. And most importantly, we have some scientists and researchers themselves from different disciplinary backgrounds who are going to tell you about their work and how they create data and perhaps touch on the expectations of the library and their data creation process. Sarah Callahan will give us a good overview of the data lifecycle from a research, from a data center's perspective. And then we look at the data publishing process and this will be interesting in terms of crediting scientists for publishing data and how that's published and where the library might touch in that workflow for publishing data. We then going to go on and have a look at the actual research institutions themselves who have done a lot of work in creating tools and helping researchers and librarians plan and train for research data management. So we'll have three different institutions represented there. We're then going to have a look at services, a couple of different tools for technical, for managing research data. So we have Zinodo and Seacan and many of you might be able to take tips back from this, maybe use them in your institution and understand better how they work. And then we have a final round table discussion that Kevin Ashley from the Digital Creation Center will chair and we have, that's a Libre and Open Air round table and we invited a series of experts, mainly with library backgrounds, to give us an overview on what they think the library has to deal with when it comes to managing research data. So that's meant to be an interactive session. So please, I know the room is long, but please ask as many questions as you can and get involved. In terms of the outcomes of this, we want to write a report, we want some future recommendations and to understand how Open Air and Libre as initiatives can support the research institution managing data. So the hashtags, there are three different hashtags. There are some other boot camps and things going on with LA today, but I think it'd be interesting to use those hashtags anyway, the LA one. So try to use all of those, primarily the LA hashtag and the Open Air and the Libre one. That's really all I have to say. I'm very grateful to Inge, who I've asked to moderate, who is an excellent moderator and I know will keep us to strict timing. This event is being live streamed as well, so welcome anyone.