 Ie. I'd like to now welcome our second speaker, Dr Adrian Harrington, who is chief executive of the Ludgate Hub, and she'll tell us more about that story. So, thank you very much, Adrian. Good morning and great to be here. I was thinking, as I was preparing my presentation, that we were taking two of the boxes in terms of what I'm talking about is how we're creating, helping to create a sustainable community across West Cork on the back of digitisation. And the third theme of security wouldn't really apply. But then I was thinking this morning, it just came back into my head. Rumour, informed rumour, has it that a spy operating on behalf of a European country bought a house on about 200 acres in Skibrin back in the 1970s to prepare for a possible invasion of that country by the Soviets and that the government would operate in exile from Skibrin. So, I suppose in the 70s, if it was considered to be secure, maybe that's still the case there. So, it kind of turned gentle in a way. Skibrin, I'm kind of conscious that not everybody in the audience will have heard of it. Can I just do a really quick show of hands as to how many people have actually visited? Okay, it's more than I thought. And I know Alex White came down and turned us out for us a number of years ago, so great to see you back again. It's a long, long way from Dublin. It's a lot closer to a lot of other places. 340 kilometres, over four hours driving time, and it strikes me, I have a meeting at Skibrin at six o'clock this evening, so I'll be heading at the door very quickly. But I will, it'll take a lot of you getting back to wherever you are from in the Nordic Baltic area. A lot quicker journey back than it'll actually take me. We're at the most southerly town in Ireland and famously, in our view, Ireland's first one gig town. So that is a view of our hub, the co-working space element of it, and I'm going to quickly take you through the timelines of our achievements since 2014. The first conversation about the possibility of a hub in Skibrin was had in November 2014, and as a way of reversing the brain drain and the number of young people leaving Skibrin and not being able to come back to high quality jobs, the building was donated by a local businessman and his family and refurbished completely with private investment at that stage. We also worked as a board to bring one gig connectivity to Skibrin, making it the first one gig town in the country, and that really has been fundamental to what's happened there since. We now have 58 people based at a Ludgate on a permanent basis and a smaller community of about a dozen people who operate on a casual basis with us over the course of the year. Next week, for example, we'll get a major influx of hot deskers being midterm, and I suppose we're effectively full now at this stage. We have, say, for example, sold 450 desks to holiday makers over July and August alone, so it forms a large base of what we do down there as well. We have those 58 people that are there. We have two companies that are Dublin-based that have opened their second location with us, and we're seeing it increasingly as a phenomenon across the country, where companies in growth mode in the cities just either can't find or can't afford accommodation, or their employees are suffering what we all know about high prices on affordable accommodation long commuting times in the city, so there's pressure coming from companies and also from the employees there for remote working, so we are accommodating that. We have then an additional 85 jobs then across the town facilitated by the connectivity, and it's interesting to look at them like you would imagine that they're going to be all high-tech jobs and a number of them are, but we also have jobs, and say, for example, a local family furniture-making business that has found a niche in five-star hotel redevelopment, so, for example, it did the refit of Dremoul and Castle, does a lot of high-end luxury cruise ships as well. It obviously works on CAD designs, and it has really large emails over and back to its clients. Before they had the 1Git connectivity, it took 24 hours for an email to go to one of their clients. Nothing else happened electronically within that company. They've now got the 1Git connectivity, they've been able to expand their base, and in the context of Brexit, they've been able to expand their market as well across Europe, and have taken on 15 employees on the back of that, so it just shows the impact that connectivity can have. A lot of you will hear ads Morgan O'Driscoll, the first Irish art auctioneer to go online and how the 1Git has transformed his business model as well, so it's not just tech companies, it's companies across the town that have actually taken advantage of the connectivity. There's an additional 170 indirect jobs created again in the town, and overall an annual contribution of 13 million to the local economy, and that's really significant. Skibrin is small, it has a population of 2,800 people, so that kind of contribution to the economy is really significant. We also have our own seed fund, which is attracting seed startups in the region as well, which is an important part of what we're doing. This map will mean something to some people, others will mean nothing to, but it's really important to us. Where you see that 50 is where Skibrin is, and this is where the impact, those people in those 140 jobs in Skibrin live across this region, so it's really important in terms of creating a sustainable region, and that's very big for us. In terms of community benefits, we have a very strong schools outreach programme, really important to us in terms of securing the talent of the future. So we have coder dojo, coding for girls, really important to look at student placements on transition year. Silver surfers, so that we're introducing the older population as well to the benefits of digitisation. We've worked with six or eight social enterprises this year on an incubation programme, and had visits from 75 towns and villages across the country, and across Europe and the US now at this stage, who want to see what we've done and how they can replicate it. Our next phase then is a second hub, we'll open that next summer. We're building the next phase of what we're doing on the back of three different pillars, business development, attracting further remote workers, second site locations, et cetera, down to work with us. Start-up campus again to encourage start-ups and the education outreach element as well. And what we see over the coming years is an additional 300 jobs created with an additional 15 million euro impact to the economy. And this importantly then is the non-economic impacts of this, building a bigger, stronger community, rural regeneration, reversing the brain drain and giving young people the opportunity to return, skills development in our schools and sharing what we're doing at national level as well. I'll very briefly look at this in terms of what we're offering in terms of a base for businesses, and we're working very strongly on talent, which is a big pinch point for companies in the city, how to attract and retain that, lower business costs and lower costs of living, a much easier housing supply education places, a fabulous quality of life and of course the connectivity. And we're not naive. We do have challenges and we're looking at these and we're learning from what's happening in Dublin and in Cork as well in terms of a housing supply and having a ready available supply there. Looking at our infrastructure, we're a long way from places. The road system is not wonderful. We have limited routes out of Cork airport. And while we're very lucky in terms of our one gig connectivity, it's not the same at all across the rest of the region. Integration, I think this is a really important thing for us if we're attracting families and people back to the region and into the region, how do we integrate them as part of that community and make them feel part of what West Cork is all about and then talent supplying. I don't think I need to talk too much more about that. One of the things that we're looking for at the moment and I'd ask you to put your thinking caps on about this is opportunities for partnership. We're at the end of phase one after three years. We're about to launch into phase two. We'd love to talk to some of you about opportunities to partner with you, particularly in terms of what digitisation can bring for regional development and to remote areas of your own country. So happy to chat about that at any stage. Thank you.