 Roeddwn i'n meddwl i chi'n fwyaf i chi. Mae'n meddwl i chi, mae'n meddwl i chi. Roeddwn i chi'n meddwl i chi i chi fel yw chywethaf yn ychydig. Mae'n meddwl i chi'n meddwl i chi ddechrau y profesor. I will see how far I discharged that. So I'm here with two roles, I've got 20 minutes. I'm going to give you a lightning tour, a degree of evangelism, about a movement that we're seeing emerge globally that is very much to the point of the open agenda, and it's around open data. I have a couple of roles. I have a role with the British government. In fact, it started from the last government, has been continued under the new coalition government. I'll talk about that, but I'm also a professor at Southampton where I research a next generation web technology. So here's the context. Sometimes you're lucky, sometimes you catch a wave, and this whole notion of open data is something that's erupting everywhere. There are hashtags everywhere on open data, link data, open Gov. Government, cities, organisations, individuals are releasing data for reuse under all imaginable contexts. We were asked by the previous administration, Tim and I were asked to try and do something for the United Kingdom's non-personal public data, government data, make it available, easy accessible. It was partly prompted by the work that the Obama administration had done on coming into office with this transparency initiative and data.gov. So there'll be a data.gov.uk. At the end of this meeting I want to ask why won't there be a data.gov.fr.d...