 You're not meant to respond. Welcome to TalkSys as Max Content, our first attempt at a conference. We've been running TalkSys for two years now as a regular monthly meet-up. The reason that we're here today is because we like to play live on the hard difficulty level. We've never worked out how to do things easy. And in the absence of CSS Conf, we decided to do something of our own. So this is like a half conference, but it's still the full conference, with everything you can kind of hope for that packed into three hours. We started doing this with no real idea of how to put that together, because we don't have any clue about what we're doing with anything, which is pretty much our motto. We don't write it down because we're not that organised. If this works out, we're going to trademark any house. All of this started by accident two years ago anyway. We were sitting on the CopyJS Slack channel, wondering why there was a Singapore TalkJS and there was no Talk CSS. So what's Java? What is that anyway? Is that even the language? So we created Singapore CSS in about two hours. We had our first meet-up set up, we had a logo, we had everything. Two years on, here we are, and we've got our mini-conference with actual speakers. Because the failure is, if no one else turns up, it's always waging on myself. So we've managed to fill the line-up, mostly enough during that today. So that's been really good. We're not housekeeping bits anyway. You've all got good drinks at your seats. There are some cookies outside. If you haven't got one, you can get one during the break. I think there's coffee here. Is there coffee here? There is coffee here. So you can get coffee at some point. We're going to have a break halfway through anyway, so that's definitely coffee time. If you haven't got your t-shirt, if you register late, you can pick up yours halfway through. Toilets are all the way around the side. Is there anything else I need to cover housekeeping wise? I don't think so. We've put together what we hope is a pretty wide range of line-up today. I've got Andy Clark, who always comes in from the design angle of things. Because we are here and we talk CSS is not necessarily the hardcore coding side of things. It's always CSS is somewhere in between the code and the design. And that's where we live in our work lives, and I'm sure most of you do as well. Because of that it's always difficult. It's not an easy thing to work out what we actually are. And our line-up today reflects that. So you'll see some code, you'll see some design, and hopefully out of this you'll get some inspiration and go back to work tomorrow and do something really awesome. I will jump across to our sponsor video, which is the awkward bit. The sponsor video isn't always awkward. I don't even know if the sound was actually set up. This is Mozilla, who very kindly helped us exist. So let's try this. They set up a roadshow here in Singapore early this year. Last year. Last... I don't know what year it is. We're going to try this anyway. We'll try that again. Anyone still got hearing? I'm Vanessa Redd. I'm the co-founder of S4 Alliance. We promote industry development and so we help to bring the VR-AR ecosystem here in Asia. My name is Charity Keith. I'm a web developer and co-founder of a design agency Brighton and England, called Clear Left. My name is Clark Do from Singapore. I'm being in Clark Studios. So I'm here at Mozilla Roadshow in bed. And then we're trying out the game frame and heating. Right now I think everyone is pretty much styled. So designers are doing their own events and they're creating their own. And we love to see developers and designers coming together in this community. And it was great to see at this stage to have more diverse voices and people from different backgrounds to come and create VR and AR. I think that VR, AR, the platforms are still siloed by itself and the web would definitely help bring this creative community together and showcase their projects. And I think the power of community is huge. When you want to adopt the technology, what questions you should be asking of that technology? I think it's really important that we have a healthy competition amongst browser makers. We've been in a situation in the past where we had one single browser dominating and that was a bad situation. And so the more browser makers the better and I'm really excited about what you can do in a web browser these days that previously you would have had to written a native app. So in the next five years, I'm just imagining we're going to see the barriers blur between native web. It won't matter, people will just use whatever is handy. And yeah, it's exciting times. I guess now in the 21st century we want to take that art form into the virtual world into a more expressive, you bridge art, design and now comes technology into the place. Be connected with technology like right now it's important for us to move forward. So yes, with A-Frame or A-Painter it gives us the opportunity to actually give our clients or the public a sense of a new environment. You can go as small as a model or as big as a building. I guess my favourite part of the A-Frame and A-Painter is all the strokes are being made within the movement. You need to see the artist move around 360 degrees. Without art, the technology is just a body. Thank you all for the sponsor video. Our first speaker today is Annie Clark. We basically set the line up today by thinking about who our favourite speakers were that we want here. And I think Annie, strangely enough I've never seen you speak before, Annie. I know. I've sent people to workshops. I've tried to hire you a couple of times with it. Years ago when I was, I'm originally from Perth in Australia and there was nothing in terms of any meet-ups or anything else like that. And my team used to sit around and we'd read these blogs from people all across the world seeing what they were doing and people would share things. This is the early 2000s. It was a pretty exciting time in my plan. CSS was still pretty new. Not many people really adopting it. And there were a handful of people at the time who really raised the bar consistently and blogs were the place. Everyone had an RSS feed and you'd stay tuned for the next blog from someone. We used to sit there and we'd see someone's launched a new site design. So the whole team would jump into their web browsers and load the browser and pull apart everything that's been done. Annie is one of those people who's continued doing this for years. He's always been that step ahead of where the rest of the world is. And I'm really excited today that he's coming here to try to inspire all of us to follow in his footsteps and just really step beyond what we usually think about when we're doing web design. So without any further ado, any clock.