 I'd like to introduce you to the idea of the freedom box. I don't know if anybody's heard of the freedom box, but it's a social networking solution, actually. If you recall how in the days of email, we had internet relay chat and listserv, there were always multiple providers. And later on with instant messaging and ICQ, there was more lock-in down to fewer providers. And now today, what do we have left? We have one provider, Facebook, another provider, Google. We have a serious situation of oligopolistic power. And the solution that we proposed from the Freedom Box Foundation, I should say James Vassil, to whom these ideas are to be attributed. The solution would be distributed social networking instead of everybody being on one social network. The general idea is to have user data on user hardware. In 2009, then such hardware became popular. They're called plug computers. They use very, very, very little current. So a large number of users could have them on 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and have all their data on the user hardware. The operating system would be a Debian. And at Debian.org, the best source of information is a mailing list, to which you can also see the archives if you don't want to subscribe right away on Debian.org, the mailing list for the Freedom Box. It's all actually a response of the Debian community and others. There are hundreds on the mailing list to a challenge pronounced by a professor of law named Eben Moglin. He's famous for actually his work on pretty good privacy. But now he's taken up the idea of equipping a plug computer with Debian software to present a social networking challenge. It would be also based on PGP and a web of trust. There are questions now. Basically, it would be Java and XMPP. There's work going on to see if Java couldn't be developed for the web to serve beyond instant messaging. MonkeySphere is a question. BuddyCloud, which had a big event at the CCC event last summer, is also in the running as is Privacy. My own particular experience has been with PageKite, which is a service run from Iceland, which makes it easy to break through a router or break through a firewall where subscribers might not be expected to be offering content. Internet service providers think of their subscribers as people who are supposed to consume, not produce. And PageKite makes it easy to break through that barrier. I have a couple of dream plugs with me, which is the hardware anticipated to be used. And at the smaller workshop, we'll do a demonstration this afternoon of how the dream plug can be set up using PageKite to get through and show what is now possible. The big remaining issues are certificates, how one Freedom Box can identify to other Freedom Boxes, and, of course, the big issue of the user interface, because the idea is to make this so easy to use for the average consumer. One minute, 10 time. Yeah. OK. The web interface. Establishing the web interface is the big challenge. The Freedom Box Foundation won some money from Kickstarter, but now we may have to be paying people to develop the web interface. It's such a huge challenge. So I'd be glad to take any questions to know what you're really interested in in the little time I have. 30 seconds. Yeah? PageKite, P-A-G-E-K-I-T-E. It's like a kite that shows where your page is located. How much does it cost? The dream plug costs $130. And JTAG is maybe another 10. And FedEx from California is $30.