 Now, it's my honor to invite Mr. Jeevanandan Paraisamy, founder, CEO, climate smart technologies, former World Bank consultant and ex-UN FAO consultant and staff, Koyamato to address the participants. Very good morning to Professor Surupah Honorable Vice Chancellor of Anayana University. Professor Anil Sahasrabudde, Honorable Chairman of AICT. Dr. Sendil Kumar, Dean Anayana University. Dr. Raja Samwal, Principal, School of Social Work. Dr. Lakshmi Jagannathan, Chief Operating Officer of Derby Foundation. Dr. Prachikodi, HOD of Pharmaceutical Technology. Dr. Annapurani, HOD of IT and CSC departments. Mr. Dignary Trees, Professors, Staff and the participants of the hackathon. I was a UN emergency officer, was placed in FAO in Rome to work with Avian Influenza between 2007 and 2009. We were dealing with a number of pandemic scenarios across the world including China, including the Wuhan University Institute of Virology, which was supported for collecting blood samples from the bird flu. And we were given a lot of pandemic preparedness training for many hotspots worldwide. We used EPCR and CPE kits that are now new buzzwords for everybody. At the most we imagine the perimeter of 3 to 5 kilometers. And worst case scenarios were basically maybe a country, maybe a few countries together. But never in our wildest dreams we imagined the entire humanity will be locked up. And COVID has done that. And it has not only done that, but it has brought something very different. That we all were kind of hesitant to take up digital technologies. Again, you know, for a long old generation, like many of us, we are a bit hesitant to adopt digital technologies. But imagine now without digital technologies being locked up, no TV, no smartphones, no apps, no websites, nothing. How would have this entire pandemic would have been? So this COVID-19 has instilled the sense of wealth, health is wealth. And also very importantly, that we should all stay inside to stay alive. What has this done is basically it has brought a lot of multiple disciplines to work together, which is very difficult in a normal business as usual scenario in any country, any department, any institution. It was always a nightmare. However, this pandemic has made that possible. Medical professionals, community organizers, IT professionals all have to work together to find a solution. So this major COVID lockdown, I see as the start of the industry for revolution, which industry revolution pretty much happened almost pre-First World War. Now, 100 years after that, industry for digital revolution is happening through COVID-19. And we all anticipated in World Bank or UN or ADB, which I worked and I still work with some of them, that it will take about 10 years to 20 years to get the digital technologies, you know, adapted in all countries. This COVID-19 has done that in three months, with nobody asking or forcing it down there. So today, all non-ICT disciplines, which were in the periphery of the technology are now coming together to work together with ICT technologies. So coming back to my expectations from this event is very, very simple. In this 10, 11 days, if we can develop three to five immediately usable app or web applications in this open book context, we have asked the participants that they can help from anybody to complete this task and build an app, which can complement the widely used ROG CETO for other government departments who can issue passes or who can help in identifying labor or skills. How do we impart skills or how do we talk about education? All this. What we do today, being a dominant force in IT, can be useful for many other countries across the world. So what I see this is a great opportunity for Indian ICT professionals, particularly faculties and students, to take up this opportunity to learn new technologies and help in building a community health information system that encompasses disaster risk management. Just yesterday, my team, which was originally working on disaster risk management, we had done a few apps for Odisha, Tamil Nadu, Kerala during the flux and cyclones, then we expanded to Indonesia and Mozambique. These countries I had worked in the past. I asked my team of three students to complete a DRM framework for all the countries in the world. Yesterday evening, they finished it for every single country in the world. So what I'm saying is that with limited resources, particularly with ICT, you can achieve a lot. And from an entrepreneur's perspective, and having worked globally with many governments in disaster risk management, climate change, agree business, COVID-19 has now up the expectations for each and every computer science, information technology, students, and in addition, every department or every discipline must know something about digital technologies. So they are also supposed to learn all these technologies. So now there is a word called full stacker who knows to do all the elements of an app or a web. But in five years time, the ultimate tech app, a person who can develop a web, a person who can develop an app, a person who can connect it to IOTs, will be the minimum basic requirements in digital technologies. And above that, they will have to build a lot of artificial intelligence, deep learning, machine learning, for operating robots, drones, and other technologies. So for me, this COVID-19 hackathon is a starting point. As Professor Sakhasarapudi said, smart India hackathon, this bioinformatics hackathon is the way to go forward. And hopefully, we will come up with good results in 10 days time that we can all find it useful. And I thank for the 768 participants who got registered and got selected, and most of them got selected. And we were looking forward to work with you all alongside doing 10, 11 days to make this event a success, not only that, the success of this event relies on the usable products that this particular event will bring out. All the very best to you all. Thank you very much, Jay Hind.