 Thank you Astrid and indeed welcome to the open data at the federal level presentation. If you would have some questions please just type in on the chat. If not you can ask after the show I would say. I'm not sure if the room will be closed after the presentation or if there is a possibility to keep it open for a little while. Otherwise well my contact details will be at the end of the presentation so feel free to contact me on whatever meeting you would find useful. And we can leave it open after the official session. Depends on the questions so it's all up to you guys. So once again thank you for those who do not know me I'm working for the Federal Public Service BOSA which is maintaining the infamous data.gov.b portal. If you haven't visited this is our main portal. It tries to harvest as many metadata from other portals as well. So if you are looking for data that happens to be on the regional portal of Flanders or Olinia you should be able to find it also in our portal. But that being said data.gov.b being maintained by the Open Data Task Force. It's a group of about four people with people from BOSA like me and from DAV as the agency for simplification. And as far as I'm concerned the portal is just by product. So we have full metadata exports available of the portal itself. So if you're not interested in using the search interface you can just download the whole bunch of metadata in RDF XML and do whatever you want with it. The most important aspect of the portal is actually the contact form. We try to apply the no wrong door principle which means that if you would have any question about a data set you can just fill out the form or send me an email and we will try to help you. And that goes for federal data sets but that also goes for regional or local data sets. So the citizen or the company does not have to know if the data set is a federal data set or a local or regional one. That's for us to find out. That being said the portal as you may see it's a bit outdated. So we're going to rework it this year and we're open to suggestions. So if you would have some suggestions to make it more easy to navigate or to make it more pleasant to the eye don't hesitate just send me an email and we will be happy to discuss what's possible or what's not. But we're also on matrix so if you would prefer to chat instead of sending email that's also possible. We have a very informal chat room on matrix.org so you can just join and ask your questions in French, Dutch, English, German. Very informal group and it's also free medium. What did we also do? Well there is no such thing as one portal. You may find it funny but it's the truth. So there's also a new science social science portal. It's called Soda. It's maintained by the state archive of Belgium. It's part of a consortium of European social science data archives. So if you would like to visit the website and publish open research data please go ahead. It's a very nice portal. The published data sets also gets an DOI so unique identifier that can be used for professional publications so you can cite certain data sets with a unique identifier. There's also a new portal on transport data. As you may know, there is a directive about multimodal intelligent transport and there has to be a national access point and this access point is the transportdata.b portal website. You will find there all kinds of descriptions of data about transport. It also includes some data sets provided by private sector. So for example companies who are sharing cars or for renting e-bikes that kind of transport will also be available to the transportdata.b website. Please note that not all of the data is or will be open data but at least you will get an overview there of what type of data is available and you will of course reach set of metadata so you can easily identify the data sets that might be useful for you. What's next? One of the more interesting parts perhaps is from the people from Stadbel. Stadbel, you may know them. It's the statistics office of Belgium. There are also very front runners in publishing open data. I think they have been publishing open data well before the term was coined so you will find all kinds of statistics and information on their portal or their website and they also started what they call a data lab. What's the data lab? It's actually an overview of some new ways of presenting data or collecting data or some new data sets that