 I think we've mostly got our seats, good morning everyone I'm Stephen Butcher Chief Executive of EduServe and it's my pleasure to welcome you to what is the sixth EduServe annual symposium. It's not the only meeting going on in London this morning but I'm sure this is at least stimulating and forward looking as anything going on in Downing Street today. Mae'n ddigon i'r sympoedd yma yn yr ymdau cyffrediwn yn unrhyw, ac mae'n ddigon i'r ymdau cyfrifyddiol yn y pwg yw Andy Powell, yr ysgrifedd ymdraeffraith rhai, yn meddwl am ystod. Mae'n ddigon i'r ddigon i gweithi yn ymdangos, yn ddweud o'r ddigon i gwybod yma yw'r ddigon i'r bodi'r ddigon i gyd-digon. And it's perhaps worth explaining why we want to host these kinds of events. Very briefly, Edge's service started very informally in the 80s, as the name might suggest out of the education sector. Universities in particular providing co-operative services. That was institutionalized towards the end of the 1990s, a we were institutionalised then as a not-for-profit company governed by the charity commission. We don't receive any significant grant funding, we have to earn our keep from the services we provide. What's been curious about the last ten years of our history is that, in fact, nearly all our growth has been significant growth over the last ten years. Nearly all our growth has been not in the sectors from which most of the people here today come from, but from central government. Over the last ten years we have developed web sites and we have managed hosting for a variety of central government clients. To begin with primarily the education department in its manifestation then, I guess it was DFES, and then through to other educational departments and agencies. That has driven a threefold growth in EduServe over the past ten years and now we host a virtualised, shared virtualised infrastructure that DCSF, as it was at the beginning of the week, BIS agencies and so on and so forth, use. Those services have both necessitated and justified our development of the first phase of our data centre site in Swindon. That's all very exciting and fine and dandy, but it leaves us with a little nagging concern that we're not exploiting those kinds of capabilities and capacities for the sector from which, for the sector from which we originally sprang, in other words the university sector. Now clearly the needs of the university sector are very different from the needs of government. Government are demanding enough, I can tell you, but it's no doubt a different kind of demand from what universities need. The importance for us of events like this is that it is part of the conversation we need to have with the sector about how we should be leveraging our capabilities, our capacity, our skills for the sector. So that, for me, is the long-term game. Today, more specifically, and is set, I think, a tremendous programme, as I was saying earlier, about what mobility means, what it means technically, what it means institutionally, perhaps even what it means as it works, essentially for universities. And I'm very much looking forward to that programme. Andy said I mustn't talk for more than six minutes. I'm now going to hand over to him. He'll also, I think, do all the domestics and so on. Andy, I've lost you. Where are you? Over to you. Thanks very much.