 The new WordPress editor, and we've done a talk on this, I think I did one a few months ago on this, which is up on the engineers.sg site, but actually it might be easier if I just mirror this, so I'm not looking at that screen. So if you just go to WordPress.org or Google WordPress Gutenberg demo, this is essentially a public version of the editor as it kind of sits, so you don't have to necessarily install it on your site. You can go have a look and play around with this and kind of see the live version. So this is the editor that's coming to WordPress in 5.0, which is probably looking at around December at this stage. And if you've seen probably recently on your WordPress site with the 4.9.8 update, there's a big banner that comes in and says, you know, would you like to try Gutenberg or would you like to keep the classic editor? And so this is essentially what happens once you install it. A brief overview is that everything's now going to be broken down into blocks. So this is essentially a header block. So you can change this and then you have here just a normal paragraph text block, which you can change the layout of. You can, you know, move the direction of that up or down. So things are now broken into those blocks. So we have a header block here or title block essentially in this area. And if I then wanted to add, let's say, a header block or change the image block, I can do that there or I can create a new block over on this side. And let's say I want to bring through a quote. So that's a little quote section. And then, you know, you can make that bold or do any of your sort of editing that way as well. Going back up to the top, this is an image section, an image block. And then there's left, right, a line or a full width image, which is new. So you can break out of your, so your website might be 12,000 pixels wide and you can break that image out into full width, which wasn't working the last time we did a demo. Or you can go back and that just centers the image within your content area. So it just makes kind of publishing a lot easier if you're publishing, you know, nice, nice full width images and things, or you can break it out a little bit further. It doesn't go the full width. You can do wide width as well, or you can sort of change the block type. If you want a whole gallery in there, you could bring out and then pick in additional images and that will create a gallery directly for you. And if we switch that back to that demo version, you can then on that side, sorry, you can move things up and down. So I move the quote up, I can then move that down again and drag and drop things that way. I think on this side over here, there's a settings window. So if I was looking at the quote section, there's a couple of advanced items there. For example, if I had a class called blue, I could add that in and then the CSS would allow me to change that background to blue and the text to white. Something like that makes it a lot easier. There's some other options here which are for the complete document which is the page. You can set the featured image, you can set the excerpt and you can turn on and off as well. So if we then look back on the image itself, I can write the caption for that image here. I could link it to a media file and attachment page and you can change from advanced things here by applying a CSS class as well to that gallery. If it was an image itself, I'd be able to link that specifically to a URL but since we changed it to a gallery block, it doesn't give me that option anymore. As you scroll down, you see there's some basic options here. So this is a gallery, we have four GIFs and then we have some titles, captions under those sections as well. So you can change your crop, you can change your columns. So it just gives the WordPress experience a bit more control rather than just dealing with a normal HTML editor which doesn't really provide you that much of an experience. There's some button styles, some other paragraph styles, some spacing styles. So as you can see up in this corner here, it's a gallery quote paragraph, some audio cover images, you can bring in files. There's some common blocks which is what we're looking for, sub headers, videos, some formatting things if you wanted to bring in some code or you had some custom HTML. There's a table module but I think at the moment, last time we tested it, it was only a four by four, a two by two table. You can do another one. It's not that advanced yet but that stuff will come with more time and more development. There's some columns, so that's in beta as well. Page break spaces and you can kind of play around with this or you can bring in widgets and other things that you've installed. So if you wanted to bring through your latest posts, obviously there's no posts on this one so nothing will be shown. Or if you had any embeds, so this is kind of new. It's a lot easier just to grab Twitter, YouTube, Facebook. You don't have to necessarily go and grab their embed code. It's using O embed so all you'd need to do is grab your Instagram URL, pop that in there and it will embed that directly into your site. So it's a lot easier to share that type of information across your site. There's quite a few there. The strength I guess in coming time around this is developing custom blocks and you'll see that there'll be plugins developed that will extend this further to make it a lot more usable for you. But at the moment it's kind of just mainly being used for posts. I'm not sure if it's default on pages as well. But you can change those settings around and then if you have custom post types with books, music or whatever, there's a little bit of code that you can use to bring that through as well. So if you have a look at that WordPress.org process, Gutenberg, you can check that out. Or if you go into your site, you can go through and install that directly and play around with it. It's at a stage now that it's stable enough to be used. There's still more development coming, but it's coming thick and fast. So if you're looking at kind of playing this space a lot further then it's something to invest a little bit of time into because it's definitely coming and it'll make a lot of changes and a lot of this kind of content editing experience a lot better on WordPress, especially once they kind of nail a few other the bigger bugs. It has integrations with things like Yoast SEO and things like that. Instead of the normal WordPress page will give you an editing window then a whole bunch of gray space at the bottom. Your SEO plug-ins and things like that will just come out as a block that will be displayed at the bottom of the page, the same with custom fields and things like that. So it just gives you a lot more control. I'm nowhere an expert but I'll take some questions if anyone has any. Otherwise, we're all good. Alright, thanks guys. We'll mingle around for a bit.