 My name is Radu Jepang. I'm doing a four-year M.H. course. Hi, I'm Matt. I'm a third year past graduate. I study computer science and I'm in the engineering industry as well. Hiya, I'm Elena Elencovo and I come from Bulgaria. My name is Tomo Simionov. I'm doing computer science with the industry experience. My name is Martin Borizanov and I studied here until last Friday. And my project is about making a Raspberry Pi controlled robot which you can drive using your smartphone. And the title of my project is developing multilingual text mining workflows. I was working on peer-to-peer database over Node.js. That's a system which allows you to store and retrieve information from the web using only browsers and browser-based technology. My project is analyzing social networks. So I look to the visualization of social networks and what we can learn about social networks by their visual structure. It shows a third year project which was entitled Business Process Decomposition with web anthologies. The best thing about my project was the fact that I got to build something really interesting using a different range of technologies. So I was really keen on learning how to build Android apps because they shape the smartphone industry. My achievement was proving that it's actually possible to do half a database running in the browsers. Getting it working, proving that it's something viable, something that could change the features one day. My supervisor was Dr. Liping Zhao. She was leading a software engineering course in my second year and that's why she chose her. My supervisor David, we met every week to talk about where I was at in the project, talk about ideas and developing them ideas further, what would be a good thing to do, what maybe isn't quite working. He also, if I was having problems, his door was always open. I got the chance to learn about manufacturing technologies and some of the pieces you've seen on the robot were designed using drawing software and then I got the chance to go with FabLab, have a meeting there on how to use the machines and then the pieces were laser cut. The big skills I learned from this project are time management, self management, task management, stuff like that. I learned how important it is to have some sort of routine of managing yourself, managing your work, which helps a lot in the long term. I had to work with this external tool, which was server-based and sometimes it just threw some exceptions, some errors and I couldn't, like, I didn't know how it worked. Time management is the most horrible thing. You need to learn how to divide your time, to learn new things, do the work and still have a particular life outside the university. There was a few challenges for my project because this was actually a joint project with the School of Social Sciences. I had an advisor over there, Martin Everett, however he went on sabbatical in January so I sort of lost his expertise after a couple of months so I sort of had to do a lot of research myself. Never presume that you have enough time because things happen. Never presume that you know everything because you're done. Do something that you're not that knowledgeable in as well because I think you'll learn a lot more about yourself and a lot more about that area. My advice would definitely be to do something you're actually interested in. So if you're passionate about a particular segment in technology or some particular areas of expertise then go away, read upon it yourself and that's how you will get to do amazing things. Go. There we go. That's it.