 All right, you will feel that I've already said good morning to you, so I won't be labored at that point. It's a pleasure to move into our first session, and that's signaled by gathering of the four of us around the table and will be joined by others in due course. This is a session on the dynamo of cities. I think we're going to play on electricity themes for the whole conference. Density, technology, and ideas already on the table with this issue of the density of interaction that is going to make Silicon Roundabout's new building into a cyclotron. The speakers that we have for this session are Dejan Sujic, the director of the Design Museum in London. Dejan was the founding director of Blueprint Magazine, directed it for many years. He was the editor of Domus and the architecture critic of the Observer. Before joining the Design Museum in 2006, he was the dean of the Faculty of Art Architecture and Design at Kingston University and a visiting professor at the Royal College of Art. He was published widely on design and architecture, including the book The Language of Things, published by Penguin. Edward Glazer is the Fred and Eleanor Glimp Professor of Economics and the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University. Now that I'm a university president and in charge of fundraise, and I always mention the full names of everyone who gives to an endowed chair. Ed has taught at Harvard since 1992. He's the director of the Taubman Center for State and Local Government, director of the Rappaport Institute of Greater Boston. He's published dozens of papers on cities, economic growth, law and economics. In particular, his work has focused on the determinants of city growth and the role of cities as centers of idea transformation. He received his PhD from the University of Chicago. Saskia Sassen is the Robert S. Lind Professor of Sociology, though I happen to know that Professor Lind did not, in fact, give the money. And nor did Fred Lind, actually, Craig. Co-chair of the Committee on Global Thought at Columbia University. Sassen's recent books include Territory, Authority, and Rights from Medieval to Global Assemblages and a Sociology of Globalization. Her books are translated into over 20 languages. She serves on several editorial boards as an advisor to international bodies and has come straight to us from the airport. Saskia writes regularly for a variety of international news media, including Open Democracy in the Huffington Post. She's currently working on a book to be called Ungoverned Territories, which will be published by Harvard. And we will proceed in this order with Dan speaking first.