 So that's not my job here, but I'm linked with my background, but also by passion. So I always look at how language works. And I know there's people around this. There's probably deviant opinion about whether you should use a script in videos. I can have heard both being given as almost the obvious solution. Obviously, you should use a script, or obviously, you should use a script. I've been, as part of a rapid movement session, I've been watching lots of academics and non-academics, lots of other different people recording videos using rapid movement, with and without scripts. In my experience, most people can actually, in particular, lecturers can speak fluently for 10 to 15 minutes on a topic they know well. And so the script often gets in their way. But sometimes a script is necessary. You want to keep the video short. There's good reasons to have scripts on occasion. So they don't always work. But if you do have to have a script, certain how you want to go about it, how do you go about writing it in a way that it's easy to read? And it sounds natural. As if rather than reading out text, you actually, it's as if you're speaking. And it turns out if you look around the internet and it has this question of Google, that you won't find an answer. Nobody's done that research. Lots of people will tell you how to format a script for a movie and how to make sure the characters are structured and everything. But nobody talks about how do people actually speak and how is it different from when they're writing. So I did a bit of research. And I've looked at, I've observed a lot of people trying to read out scripts where they find difficulties. I had already done a lot of research on comparisons of spoken and written language. And I also look at some tools that perhaps might be of help. So there are three tips. There are many, many tips. But the three key tips that I came up with is to have shorter chunks. And so often what you do in written language, you chunk things into sort of compact chunks. Then, so for example, some like business process improvement approaches. And it's really hard to read. It sounds very formal. So you want to insert some sort of a verb in there, something like approaches that can be used to improve business processes. So you want to have something that just sounds like, and something you would say. And that's kind of very good. The next tip is use verbs over nouns. Written language loves using nouns. So when I was inviting you, I may have said something like in the email, upon arrival, you will attend a building walk around or something like that. But actually, when I speak to you, is when you come, I will show you around the building. That's what I'm going to say. I'm going to use verbs instead of all those nouns. So that's another useful tip. And then the other thing that written language does, it uses lots of what's called, and some of you may understand, the other concept of subordinating conjunctions versus coordinating conjunctions. So written language uses subordinating conjunctions, like whereas, which, and so on. In a spoken language, you often concatenate things together with and, or but, or, or. So it would say something like, George, the bird, and it flew away. So it often, but the problem is when you write it down, it looks very inartificial. It looks like childlike language. So people are not afraid to write like that. But that's how people speak. That's one of the differences. One of the other things that you, because when people have, they sort of, the hard language they get, there's also sort of pauses and they end up stopping. And so that's, so those are the key three tips that I would give to people. There's other two tips that are not on here, and which is, which is, you'll lots more pauses than you think is natural in reading. And then, and the, and the other one is, is to have language that have more words than few, rather more words than few, because you sort of have more words when you speak. Now there are some tools that can help you. So instead of writing your script, you can do the voice dictation, office size dictation, office dictate or Google voice typing is really good. You can do it on your phone. Power up, you can dictate your notes in the PowerPoint. Now the latest version of the 365. But a much better tool is to, so this is what it looks like. This is what I was doing when I was testing this out. But much better tool is to use YouTube and you can record yourself first and then upload the video onto YouTube and then get a transcript, download the transcript. And, and that transcript will then help you. You can use it as a script and read it out. Then it will be much, much more like what you would actually say. But there's not even a better tool for this because YouTube formats it as captions, but there's a service called Otter which uses the Google speech recognition engine. So it's the same quality, but it would just give you a really nice text. I highly recommend trying that. There's many more, so I'm gonna be doing more research on this but this is just like some of the first observations. And so that's, I did not manage to be on time but it's, we've got close.