 Hi Alex, my name is Martin George, I'm the Infrastructure and Web Services Manager at the Library at the University of South Australia. What field of research does or did your ANS project relate to? Our ANS project related to the Architecture Museum at the University of South Australia. That museum is interested in collecting artefacts related to architectural research and it typically includes architectural plans and diagrams or it might include metadata stored in documents that talks about particular architectural projects, for example, housing constructed during the war. Great example. The next question that I have here is what's the challenge that your project was seeking to address? Probably to disseminate these artefacts to the wider audience because although there's a lot of information, it tends to be in paper form and it tends to be locked away in cabinets and it's not widely known about, perhaps it is within the discipline but more broadly and the other problem we were seeking to address was the metadata was stored essentially as Word documents and they called these finding aids. So if you were a researcher and you were interested in some architect, you would go to the museum, you'd say, I have an interest in work of a particular architect and can I have a look at that and in order to discover more about the work you'd have to find the Word document, go through the Word document and learn, you know, that would be the descriptor for that particular work. That's made it far more accessible. Far more accessible. So now we've developed a project which is based on a software system which enables a researcher to go on to an online web form, do a search, much as you would do a Google search, that will search through the metadata that we now hold, it basically gets uploaded to research data Australia. So the researcher can do a search on that. So yes, this is the sort of information I'm interested in finding out more about and I can now find the plans for that particular architect or whatever. Great. So how have you gone about resolving that challenge? Well the main thing we, one of the primary things we did was to convert the finding aids into metadata that wouldn't be more easily searched, so an index solution. We also provided a front-end interface for the administrators which in this case would be researchers within the museum itself so that they could enter that metadata originally and link it to the data that the metadata was describing. So why is that important? It's important because it makes the, not only the metadata, but the data itself more accessible to the researchers or anyone else for that matter that has an interest in the product. And how has Anne's played a part in your project? Anne's was very helpful in helping us come up with a reasonable set of requirements because Anne's already had goals in mind that they wish to meet and by providing us with the opportunity to complete a project like this, not only us but other institutions, we've been able to meet Anne's requirements but by liaising with Anne's we've also been able to come up with a more complete and precise set of requirements. Excellent. Well enjoy the rest of your day and thank you very much for your time. No worries Alex, thank you.