 Wel, mae'n ddod o'r gwybod, mae'n 10 min yn ysgadol, ond mae'n gwybod. Yn ymddych chi'n gwybod, mae'n ddod o'r gwybod o'r cyffredin iawn. Mae'n ddod o'r ddod o'r cyffredin iawn, oherwydd mae'n ddod o'r cyffredin iawn. Mae'n ddod o'r cyffredin iawn o'r cyffredin iawn. Mae'n ddod o'r ddod o'r se flirtingau yn y diwrnod o'r gwerth tyddion fwy ynais. Mae'n ddod o phanethu'n mwynhau fod bobl ar線 heb y mynd neu sagenw מy或ch hyn. Mae tewch chi am ei hanrol gwaith a mewn gw'r alchynig newydd. Dwi'n eu meddwl yr ystabili, rydyn ni'n s高u ar ddod o thoredw場io'r g mentality. o adegwydio ocaf o gyr complementary, neu sydd fe wedi adegwyddysgol mor spynion â'r adegwyddysgol, ac mae'n gobeithio a fyddio'r adegwyddysgol a'r adegwyddysgol a ddau i'r adegwyddysgol, mae'n gobeithio golbu ddiwedd yna yn cael cael ffondol mwyír diwedd. Felly, wnaethau iddynt i chi fod i hyn? A dyna dweud i chi wedi bwysigodd iddynt, boed maen nhw ddim yn addysgol dwi'n ddydd i chi. Gwyd ddim yn dod y tuol, gyda'r oes i fynd o Gwyddoedd OPE Nice sy'n gymwyntio a CYMT, ac yn gyfeiliadau gan gyllideb ar y Pwyrnau Gwyllfa Eindrae. Ond ystod os gweithlo fy nhw, o'r gwych gyfo'r arnau Gwyddoedd OPE toysig o'r sgolwyd a Gwyddoedd OPE. Felly mae'n beg yw'r aglwyd o'r Gwyddoedd OPE, oherwydd mae'n gwych yw'r So, a big technical infrastructure, it supports the discovery and sharing of research results in open access and easy-funded research results. And you can connect them to data, publications connected data to funding details, related publication, of course affiliation and things like that, which is crucial for such infrastructure. So, this is how open air supports you. Now, we have several stakeholders. And of course, first of all, we have the researchers that we wanted to help. And project coordinators who are in between researcher and research administrator because they have a lot of administrative work to do, project coordinator. So, these are some of the stakeholders that we want to support. Of course, the data providers we want to support. Because if you're in your own institution, you have a repository and we want to make it open air compliant, we can help you with that. And it makes easier for researchers to put information in that repository and automatically it's harvested into a print. So, the more seamless connection we can make and the better it is, of course. And also the funders are a good stakeholder. We want to initiate more complex with funders because what we have set up in the first place for the European Commission is interesting for every funder of research, of course. So, open air is an open access infrastructure for research in Europe. That is what we are and that is how we can support you. It is a key service now to no longer only a pilot, but with supporting of the size of the horizon 2020, we support you better and better. Who are we? I said infrastructure, which is operational, of course, 54.7, with 50 partners, so that's a lot of people involved. There are open access experts, there are more technical people responsible for the infrastructure. We have legal experts because you know very well that there are lots of legal aspects to this. And data communities, since open air plus more data repositories are joining us and we have several community data communities in the open air project to learn how we can better support and integrate repositories in the infrastructure. There are 33 countries involved in open air. 33 countries, you see all the names here, most of them from the European Union, but a few connected countries, associated countries like Turkey, Serbia, Norway and Iceland. So it's beyond the European Union that we work in Switzerland, I have to say in colour, isn't it? That is the human network. This human network is important for everyone here in the room. We have national open access desks in all of these countries. These are the people who get contact with questions on the rise in 2020 policies, on our support that we give, how can we help you, ask us lots of questions because in that way we can support you even better, make better fact sheets, better guides, better things you can use. The other part is the technical infrastructure, of course, and I said this is based on repositories, with data repositories, with research information, repositories with publications, open access journals, we have contact with them and we gather the information. Not only gather it, but make it better and rich it. So clean, duplicate, infer and validate, connect the information in several repositories. For example, if you have two records in different repositories, they can enrich each other and this makes service even better. I'm limited all into one big Chris system that's open air. We add the Zenodo to this whole environment. Zenodo is a repository for those who don't have access to a subject or institutional repository themselves. They can use Zenodo for this purpose. And then there's a lot of services coming out, services for several stakeholders, lots of APIs you can use for project coordinators. You can embed the project list, for example, in your own website. Reporting is made easier and then we add some more information. So there is a lot of information in that system that several stakeholders can use. It's not only about gathering the information and just make it an administrative burden. It's absolutely open air's purpose to give you services, services that you can use and that are useful to you. Repository managers are an important key in this whole network. So contact repository managers in your institutions for national contact points. If you hear about researchers complaining or just telling you that they have problems with repositories or getting information in open air, try with them to see if they didn't have repository data. They can use and if not, they can go to Zenodo so their information is available for everyone too. This means when the information is in open air for project coordinators, we can help with reporting. There's a connection with QoDIS. You can have nice reports about your publications. You can generate publication lists and we'll talk about that later, Pablo, when you do that. There is an FV7 post grant of access pilot that is a pilot on the ABC's article processing charges after the end of the project. For example, this is an image of a publication list but the tools will be explained later on. How can we help researchers through the Harvest and Open Air to get more visibility of their own work but the connection into that whole realm of research, research output, into that project, into the connection with data and enriched data. Your work is more visible and even better findable but also creates a nice context of your research and your research project. As I said, you can link your research results. The tools will be shown later. For funders, there are a few funders in the room or people having good connections with funders. Our own Belgian funders still want to convince them so it would be nice if we could have FWO or FNRS publications connected with publication information in Open Air so that we can monitor. Monitor, for example, how many of these people publications the percentage is really open access and which is not. And my statistics, we always like my statistics. There are already other funders doing this, for example in Portugal. In Portugal they use the system already so that's already for three years or something. And also ERC is using the system to follow. Okay, so we have project consistent things like that. Monitoring open access policies. And ultimately what we want to do is give access to the full text and to data related to it and other related information so that we have a rich, easy funded research portal or other European funded, no, passionately funded projects connected to all this information in the portal. Now this is a quick overview of what Open Air can do for you for the open access mandate of the European Commission. And Pablo will show you some tools that you can actually use.