 I'm Tom Everett. I am the curator of communications here at the Canada Science Technology Museum. I'm currently curating two exhibitions for the new museum. One is called Sound by Design and the other is wearable tech. The wearable tech exhibition is all about technologies that have been designed for the body. Today we have a tendency to think about wearable technology solely in terms of body worn devices that hook up to computers and connect to the internet, but there's this whole world of technology that may not hook up to computers or may not connect to digital networks, but is equally innovative, extremely complex and really important to the ways that we live our lives. What's cool about this exhibition is it allows us to showcase both. So you can expect to see things like smart watches, augmented reality glasses, biometric clothing, but you can also expect to see things like spy cameras, underwater diving equipment, prosthetic covers, and you have baby wearing technology. We even have a whole section devoted to animal wearables where you can find things like pigeon backpacks, canine search and rescue gear, tags that have been designed to listen to whales underwater. What brings these objects together is not necessarily a shared reliance on computers or digital networks, but a shared goal to allow our bodies to go places and do things that we couldn't do otherwise. So one of the first things I think people are going to notice when they walk into the wearable tech exhibition is just how interesting it's been designed. It's a super dynamic space and the artifacts really really stand out. So on the one side you'll have the nute suit, this underwater diving suit, which seems to be moving through the space. On the other side you'll have a canine search and rescue dog being lowered from the ceiling. So it's a really, it's a really inviting place to be in, a really dynamic place and I think people are going to have a lot of fun there.