 Hello everyone, my name is Irina Boepp and I will be talking to you about the Lunar Intermediate Community in OpenAir Connect. So, I will try to give you a vision that is complementary to the actors, if I'm sure to, because I can see that I'm in the great job presenting the dashboard. So, I will present to you the community and some complementary tools. So, within the OpenAir Connect project, the Lunar Intermediate Community is represented by members of the France Life and Age Anger collaboration, and we focus on E-plus structure services to enable interoperability between individual image acquisition platforms of the national and international level, such as EGI. And we use OpenAir Connect services and promote their adoption across the informatics scientists with the aim of generating and sharing the packages at the search artifact. So, that's the local presentation. Now, if you have a very quick look at the new informatics dashboard, well, it shows you more or less what you have already seen with the numbers. You have a number of applications to search data software projects, company providers. And the three managers of the community, who are Camille Moumé, Christian Vario and myself, and I have to tell you that I'm not really a new informatics person myself. I'm more on the services side, but I'm in charge of a platform that serves the new informatics community. So, that's why I'm here, but Camille and Christian are much more on the informatics. So, the dashboard, I don't know if I can say that's the top of the iceberg, but the dashboard is somewhere here. This is a slide that I wrote for my colleagues from OpenAir Connect, which blocks the overall vision of how they manage the harvesting of artifacts and their integration into the dashboard. And what you've seen until now is mainly the dashboard here. With the researchers and the research community operator who handles the dashboard. But what's very interesting, and what we're also interested in as an informatics community, is that OpenAir Connect relies on different repositories in order to harvest, influence and harmonize the data. And we thought that we could use OpenAir Connect services to make our own tools, our own platforms, repositories, or publish our data so that it's visible in OpenAir Connect. And let me show you how we do that. Before, I will show you two platforms that are tools for the informatics community to process and store data. Shamar, or Black Cat in English, is an open-source web platform for neuroimaging. It allows researchers to store neuroinformatics data and visualize it online and do some other things like support for clinical diagnosis or scores, user access control and so on. So this is a tool for researchers neuroinformatics. And it manages lots of data, so it would be very nice if we could somehow interface this tool with OpenAir Connect services. A second example is the virtual imaging platform that I'm in charge of. This is a processing platform. And basically what we do is that we take software that researchers need to use in order to analyze and process their data, such as free-serve or neuroimaging. And we integrate it in VIP as a service and then researchers have to click on the right icon and give the right input and then execute the application. So it works quite well. We have more than 1,000 registered users and we have used distributed resources from EGI. But once again, it would be nice if the software, the application used in this platform could be made available in OpenAir Connect. So in order to do that, we want to be able to describe our software, our applications in a standard way and a way that is the same across platforms. And this is why we use Boutique. Boutique is a very simple thing. It's a descriptor, versatile JSON format, which is quite common in applications that relies on the use of light instantaners to facilitate application installation. And Boutique comes with a number of tools among which something which is very useful to us, which is Bosch Publish, which allows us to publish the descriptor to Zenodo. And here you have just a few examples that have been recently published to Zenodo. These are neuroinformatics software descriptors published to Zenodo. And now that we have all that, how do we link all this together? Well, the two examples that are shown to you, the virtual limited platform and the Shamar database, can do two things. First, they can be kind with themselves providers. So if I came back here to this slide, they can be here. They can be the providers from which OpenAir Connect harvest data, harvest software data, such as Boutique pipelines and dockers. And the second thing that these platforms can do is that they can upload such products to Zenodo and in exchange with the UI. And this is quite easy to do if you go through Boutique because Boutique's already allows us to publish things to Zenodo. And by doing these two things, I do believe that we will enable interoperability and reproducibility. Because basically other platforms and other users may use the software and the data to reproduce the results. So if I conclude, our aim in the neuroinformatics community is first through the dashboard to gather and search for all kinds of research artifacts from the neuroinformatics community. And I insist on all kinds of research, literature, data sets and software, they are all important. And the nice facilities that Stefan told us about linking and statistics and so on are of course very important to us too. So linking data sets and software and the other statistics. But in addition to that, we also want to go further in publishing artifacts automatically and directly from our computing platforms, from the platforms that are the tools of research we use daily on a great basis. And thus enable ordinary, noticeable science. Thank you.