 My name is David. I'm representing here FABLA Budapest, which is an open innovation center here in Hungary. The core idea is to democratize digital manufacturing technologies such as 3D printing, 3D scanning, laser cutting, CNC milling, electrical prototyping. At the FABLA, you have the chance to manufacture almost anything you want. If you are bright-minded but you don't have the tools to make your dreams come true, to hold them, to manufacture them, it's not going to happen, it's not going to be there for you, so it's not going to be there for anybody. So we at the FABLA, we are helping individuals and small companies in the development. They can use our knowledge, they can use our infrastructure to make their ideas reality. Chris Anderson from Wired said that this is going to be the third industrial evolution when people are going to have the chance to manufacture their ideas at their home. And this is going to have a strong effect on the ecosystem, on the society level as well. I'm really sure that in FABLA, all around the world, cool projects are happening right now. And they are going to have market value and they are going to have social benefits for the whole society. I'm going to call the ITU better sooner now. So I think technology should arrive to the society and also for the industry quicker, because this is what technology is for. The ICT minister cannot do this by herself. And note the emphasis on herself, there aren't that many ICT ministers who are women, more is the shame. My name is Stuart Campo and I work with UNICEF's Global Innovation Centre. At UNICEF, we define innovation loosely as doing something new or different that adds concrete value. For us, that means adding value for women and children around the world. But it doesn't mean necessarily something shiny and new. It could be a new approach for a particular country context. Often it has a technology component, but the tech is really just a sliver of the overall solution. So it's really new in different ways of having an impact, having a more effective program response, and delivering results. One concrete example of how we're using technology to empower communities around the world is a program called UReport. UReport, the U stands for youth or U as a young person, and it's a program that grew up in Uganda and now has sort of come to maturity in 17 countries around the world and it's still growing. Very simply, it uses mobile technology, specifically SMS, and now more and more social media channels to allow young people to register as a U reporter in their community and then participate in weekly polls about issues that matter to them. Probably the best non-tech example of what we do in our innovation labs is a program called Upshift. This is a social innovation model that was developed in Kosovo, which was one of our first innovation labs. Quite simply, it's a methodology for introducing design thinking or human-centered design to young people, teaching them how to design and manage a project that addresses an issue that affects them, and then seeding that with some financial and technical resource so that they can bring their projects to fruition.