 Hi, my name is Kim Bryson from the University of Queensland and I'm particularly interested in developing specialist skills in agriculture, but particularly in the role of remote sensing in agriculture and what it can do for the agricultural industry. So we're looking at needing students to understand spatial variability in the managed landscape, what that is, how do you measure it, what value does it have to measure it and how you would use agricultural remote sensing to deal with that. We're also interested in introducing students to the Internet of Things real-time big data issues of today and how you again might use that sort of data to look at spatial variability issues and economic issues around production in the field both in the cropping environment and in animals. Then we're looking at the role of drones, designing and building those drones and processing images collected with those drones for biomass and crop health monitoring as a hands-on learning tool so that we produce students who can go out into industry understanding and knowing something about this because it's absolutely for sure that they will have to use it in their professional lives. And finally we're moving into the augmented reality development using Internet of Things real-time data that we collect and the drone data for developing problem-solving modules for educational purposes and we're working with people like Microsoft and Telstra to do that but it's really about being able to engage students in this technology for doing great things in agriculture.