 So, at the break a couple of people approached me and assured me that my perceptions of club as in country club or old boys club were not the intent of the presentation, so thank you for your calming words. In 1999 when CrossRap was formed it was all about solving the problem of reference lynching and that is being able to click on a link in a bibliography and go to the article on some other platform and so that's what we've been doing for a long time and what we continue to do that is like still one of our primary missions but it's gotten bigger and it's expanded quite a bit and I'm going to focus just quickly on that fact. We know that there's more things out there in the scholarly map than just references, data, funding, all kinds of things and so what CrossRap is trying to achieve now is to link and I don't like using that word because it connotates linking as in a hyperlink sense but connect the literature to all of this other stuff and so all of the research, all of the funding, all of the events that surround the articles that were published, this is what CrossRap is really about capturing today and disseminating that information openly. And so this is kind of the undercurrent of what we are doing day in and day out is to collect event data, collect collections that define the connections between different pieces of information as provided to us by the publishers of that content and so that is where we are principally focused today so that what can be described and we've seen a couple of other presentations here today about building this map from different viewpoints and user viewpoints. This is the viewpoint that the publisher can provide to tell us that and we can pass on to you what the publisher views as the different points of connectivity between that those articles. So all data, all research, peer review content items, all of the artifacts that emanate from the peer review process, preprints, pending publications which is a new service that CrossRap is about to launch and that is assigning a DOI to an article for the articles available online, establish the provenance of that item early in the cycle. All of these are connections between the content that makes up the scholarly map that we are all really trying to describe. And the key thing with that little button, Jennifer, the dangers of showing some slides that your colleague just put together, but it all comes together at the end in the distribution process, right? And so CrossRap has public APIs for the retrieval of all of our metadata in JSON and in XML. And these interfaces are open. The content is all of CrossRap's content or nearly all of CrossRap's content is openly available. The one piece that is not yet 100% open is references to articles from publishers who have not yet available to the public. But time will march on and change. As I've seen in the past 16 years, it takes a while and I think we all ultimately will get there. So the key thing is CrossRap collects this metadata about collections and links between content as provided by the publishers and we distribute it freely. Thank you.