 We live in a highly interdisciplinary world, a world in which I believe that art, science and technology will fuse together into a single culture. The British Library is a fantastic place for nodes because anything you want to look up, any kind of information, it's in there somewhere. Creativity comes from many places. Fantastic. It was really, really good, really thoughtful, really got me thinking about things. It was superbly organized by the speakers, it was just incredible. It's cardboard, it's cardboard. I only live in your imaginations. I think I learned that the brief front of context is that the villain is actually the bad guy which is constraining all our creativity. Our consciousness is all interrelated and interconnected. So it's really just trying to manifest that idea physically in a sculpture. This is a site-specific piece and it blends with the architecture of the British Library. It does a really, really important job this competition. We asked PhDs and early postdocs to pick one of the nine articles to summarize the article in less than 800 words in a way that an interested member of the public might understand it. I'm hoping for people that are interested in finding out stuff that may be interested in the technology behind the British Library. What we've done with this show is we've created a show and tell of all the coolest stuff we have found in the library. If you get a ladder out of the legs, you roll that one up and you deploy the third leg. It's now amazing. Why was this never a talk to us in school? We're laughing and learning. You've got to treat your own theories with the suspicion that you give to other people's theories. And that's not very human. You know for an instant that you know something that nobody else has ever known. Definitely come again. Every minute we're all spent. If that's reflective of what the library is producing then that was just for the long long.