 Dyna'r dŷnod bach o'r raioclwyddoedd, dyna'n gwylwgraid hynna i'w bryddiant. Felly dyna'n dŷnod gyda'r dŷnod mae'n ymddunias i gyfach, mae'r gwaith ffliwydson o'u bwysigau a'r絵m ddynu'n arferthi gwasanaethau. Dwi'n meddwl y cyffredin haf hynny, gallau yn ymddangos gyfaf erbyn ein cyfrnod, mae'n ddysgrifennu lle i'r llweithio, neu mae'n bod nhw'n byw'r hyn i'r raioclwyddu yn gweithio. we could not use for free in the UK circles or post codes until April 1st this year. So, we're rather proud of this. You could put in a post code now and find out what the crime rates are by you, where the bus stops are with the recently, perhaps even perhaps we might even find out what the bus timetable are but you know what when government franchises out services like transport what does it fail to keep the data. Ac mae hynny'n amgylch yn y byw gwiriaeth ym Mennangion yn gyfrannu'r ymwynhau gymuned, sy'n rhaglen ymyn mollheadd a ddysgu'r llοd yn gweithio ac'r amgylch yn inchud i wych o gyfaint y cyfrannu. Mae'r ymwybod ymwybod ymwybod sy'n cyfrannu. Wnaeth ymwysg yma. Mae'r cyfrannu yn ymwybod ymwysg sydd wediþ ymwybod hefyd, cegybeth oherwydd ei cyfrannuwn a'r ywch chi'n cyfrannu â blis. is the way to success just seems nuts. We have these local monopolies. The big news last week was the release of the Treasury Coins database, which was literally unusable at the point of release within a day and a half bunch of activists at the Guardian newspaper at least put a navigation system around it so you could browse the government the money was spending by various departments and aggregate that up. We've been working on these various standards which are open, which are W3C standards that I'd love to talk to you more about, but I know this isn't a geek fest, but it's powerful. LinkData as an open standard allows us to go across data sets using key items of data as the binding points for data sets. I can use data from our newly liberated Ordnance Survey which defines the administrative boundaries and pull the information together that relates to these administrative geographies. We've got some very cool technology to do this. I can point people to do that and we're trying to do this at the local level. Crucially, the data revolution can't just apply at the national level. We've got to go down into regional authorities, to local authorities, to the police authorities. There's lots that needs to happen. We've got a whole set of tests against this. We've got to shift the culture to be a presumption to publish using open standards. There are challenges. We'll talk about those. We will talk about some of the privacy. This has all been non-public, non-personal data to date, but there will be a push.