 Okay, we're really glad Jacinda Scott, because now I have nothing to say. No, that's great. Basically, we come away from how many companies someone talks so enthusiastically about it. So, the hundred dollars is the money. Anyway, so, this is interesting. So, my name's Andy. I'm currently the President of the Melbourne Hackerspace, but really just one of the hackers there. So, it's basically a personal invitation for everyone to come along to the Hackerspace. Basically, they're fun. So, it's pretty much ending my presentation there. But it's an environment where you can learn new skills. You can challenge yourself by building and creating things you might otherwise do by yourself. What's quite unique a lot is the social aspect. Currently, it's a lot of guys in my garage, and they're really nuts and bolts, and have electronics to make electronics and robots. But the interesting thing is that it's very clear that a lot of the members come along for the social aspect. They like to interact and collaborate with the work that they do. For me, I was in a new position, now the other members are very polite, and they say, there's a new position that's coming around in a new garage, and the house is a lot like that. Every Tuesday for five hours, people come around to my house to do mad stuff. That's fantastic. The other week, a young student came around, and he had taken a laser printer, and he modified it physically so he could run a stiff printed circuit board through an actually laser printer, and it would print that circuit straight onto the copper, and destroy it, and the badness is the young guys just rocked up and shown us this stuff. It's amazing what people do. So, what the best thing about Hackerspace is it's taking all the things you know and like in the soccer world, and applying them to real world things. And so, just automating, making the world do stuff. From today, I think it was all just about getting electronic circuit boards and making rocket avionics and stuff that stands a bit daunting at first. But really, it's a really broad scope. Everything in the world is tackable in some sense. You can make it a case decorating machine, or wearable computing, or if you want to let your dog in and out through a dog door, or just practical problems, or you're really ticked off at some company that locks up hardware so they can't do stuff with it. So, pretty much everything can be reused. So, rather than taking things at road and throwing them out, use them again to do something interesting with them. And the environment is one where the very experienced people are very giving to their time, helping people who are new to something. And often there's someone who's maybe quite experienced in hardware, or someone who's got no hardware experience, but knows a lot about software or can mill things with a milling machine. So, everyone helps each other out. So, you don't have to come along feeling like it's only for experts. The main benefit of Hacker Space is that it's a group that works in a physical space. So, we end up having access to tools or equipment that you wouldn't normally be able to forward or justify yourself in a drill place, maybe use it once a year. But it's in a Hacker Space that gets used in most weeks. Or make an oscilloscope that costs more than makes sense to adapt to your own personal use. There's also people who've got a broad range of skills. You may know a lot about music and doing something interesting, some music instrument hack, or they could be putting Android onto some strange device or... The other area of Squid is people collaborating on projects that require mobile skills. And they've got run for six months or a year. We don't have a space for you to do that sort of stuff. And we meet... Our Hacker Space meets every week for about five hours and a week and a month. So, it's all at once that time. And you just need a physical space that gives you the ability to get around. So, that's all. Over the last two years, a number of Hacker Space has grown up in one of the major cities. I think there's even one like in New York Townsville in Newcastle. I forgot Perth, my apologies. It was there, I think I did it in Charles' day for the state. Perth Art of Hacker, my apologies. But the main thing is there's a go-to HackerSpaces.org and the wiki has a list of Hacker Spaces all around the world. If you happen to travel, basically just look it up and find a lot of Hacker Spaces, particularly like in San Francisco, which is the noise bridge, or New York NYC Resistor, or Klaus Computer Club in Germany, what all sort of began. And you'll find a friendly environment of Hacker's is doing stuff, so it's like a kind of way from home. We've had people walk up from Belgium, Germany. That's the miracle stuff. I'm pretty sure it's their time. Yeah, so basically, find a Hacker Space, come along. We have group projects that people can't think of. I think some do have group projects that can be involved in or before the new project. So, that's my perspective. Thank you. Things printed with a 3D printer. Cool. Ooh, shiny. Yeah, so I'll be around so you can look at stuff stuff. This is the project that, this will be very good next year. This is some rocket avionics. It's a general telemetry board. So you basically put it on your push bike or your cat. Where it's going, how fast that cat is, and in which name is it. That was from, this is for a general display, put push buttons inside from last year's community conference. So basically, this board, we talked to the telemetry board for Downlink. For route that we hacked, put a Nintendo touchscreen on, display and sensors, and open WRT. So, yeah, just making that stuff and having fun. Thank you.