 So now this is the Phonetic Keyboard Group, the Phonetic Keyboard Group, the hardware counterpart of Google Transliterator means we can say one keyboard and many languages. So friends, please proceed with your presentation. So good evening everyone. My name is Habe Khosla. We are the Phonetic Keyboard Group. It's my friend Akanksha, Vinita, Neha and Sheena. So the project given to us was to develop a hardware solution of the online available Google Transliterator. So because many of the village schools don't have internet connectivity and we have very brilliant children sitting there, tiny minds with a lot of ideas in their mind and they want to express their ideas into their native language. But they have no solution if they don't have internet connection. So for that we have developed the Phonetic Keyboard which is the hardware solution of the Google Transliterator. Next slide please. So the motivation behind the project I have already told you. It is currently for Linux OS and it types in 10 different languages and no internet connection is required. So talking about the project details and its implementation, the first part is the input part. The first part is the input part. It consists of a keyboard and then we have the processing hardware and then we have the PC. The protocol which we follow is Akanksha, previous slide. The protocol which we follow is the conversion from ASCII to Unicode which helps us type in various different languages and my friend Sheena will explain you about Unicode. Sheena. Good morning everyone. I'm Sheena. Okay. So we know Unicode so we will proceed further. So we will be giving the students a character map of all the phones which we have. These are the characters on typing on which we will get the corresponding word on a keyboard on our screens. So next slide please. So the languages which we currently support are Hindi, Bengali, Punjabi, Gujarati, Orya, Tamil, Marathi, Telugu, Kannada and Malayalam. So next slide please. For the implementation of difficult words we have combinations like everyone knows that Khur is pronounced as K plus H, Kharaab. So we have implemented it when you write K, Khur will be printed and if you write Khur will be printed. SH is for sure and K plus S plus H is for sure. So the future work which we plan to implement is we plan to implement it for Windows and Mac OS and we also plan to implement it for ECR languages like Chinese, Japanese, etc. So action speaks louder than words. So here is our demo. We will play the video. So this is our keyboard. So this is our text editor where we will be typing our things. So we will type Bharat in Hindi, then we will type in Bengali. These are the function keys for selecting the language which we want to type in. So this is Bharat in Bengali. Now we will write Bharat in Punjabi, now we will write Bharat in Gujarati, then in Odia, then in Tamil, then in Kannada, sorry Telugu, then in Kannada, okay we also have a live demo. We will show it to you soon and then we are in Malayalam. You can pause the video and show it, yeah one second sir, gada, okay sir. First write kamad, capital L, shri, shri, shra, sir, like in peyar, adai, adai, write prithvi, gyan. So we haven't defined the unicode for this, what do you want to type in Telugu? Odia, Punjabi, Punjabi, Vella, right Vella, V-E double, yeah, V, Punjabi, F3, F3. So this is Vella, it's fine, adak is here, Vella, type gal, gal, Vella, okay, type V-E double L-H-A, double A, V-E, is it fine, Vella, okay, V-E-H, sorry, V-E-H, V-E-H, double L-A, double L-A, it's correct now, phones, yeah we have the phones, we have all the phones. All you have done is Google translate rate, hardware solution of that, whatever Vella, Vella is doing, if I type that in Google translate I will get the same thing, yes it follows the Google standard input tools, so actually I got confused with the spelling that's fine, they are going to type, Daboo, D-A-P-P-U, Telugu F8, D-A-P-P-U, what's wrong in that, what is wrong, Daboo or Daboo, it is capital U, Daboo, Daboo, I heard Daboo, so actually we don't have any Telugu, any one of us, so yes you can come, how will we understand, no you can write this pronunciation in English so that we can understand. Yeah, in Hindi it is, in Hindi you can type anything, in Punjabi you can type anything, in Odia you can type anything, but we don't have other people, so it was difficult for the grammar rules, to understand the grammar rules, yeah, some other words till then, yes sir F1, F1, F1 is right, oh, this is in Hindi Daboo, first type Daboo in Hindi, first type in Daboo in Hindi, F1, huh, first type it in Hindi, is it correct, you want this in Telugu, right, okay, one second, same thing you type in Telugu, yes sir, type Type An. Yeah, yes sir. Show sir. Type An. In Hindi, in Hindi. Yes sir. Yeah. Type Netru. Type Siddhartha. Siddhartha. So Anna. Anna. Type that other thing. Bana. Anna. Type Ana. O double. Anna. I think they have proved their point. They have proved their point that they are not complete multi-linguists. Sir, you can type anything in Hindi. Type Satya. Sharyantra. How do you spell it? Sharyantra. Type Siddhartha. The half character. Type Siddhartha. Sir, this can be compacted into a small chip. Sir, we have developed the prototype for that. It's very easy. Sir, because if we have to give driver to anyone, then we can come up with the software solution simply. Because already, softwares are available. So we wanted to come up with a hardware solution. I am typing here. No sir, there is no driver. Sir, we are implemented. We don't have a driver, but normal people. Normal. I have a driver. Yes sir. It's a keyboard. Yes sir. Which? Actually what we wanted is that we wanted to reduce the complexity. So just, but this is just plug and play. Yes sir. It will be exact. Instead of doing the hardware, I can have one software driver and that will do exactly the same job of that box. Sir, this is... Yes sir. It can do it. Thanks. So you can call next. Okay, thank you. Thank you. Thank you.