 I will just go very quickly to the schedule of today and the next two days. We're going to present to you the ideas for the hackathon, the rules, introduce some mentors and the judges criteria, and then you will have a workshop on Suzy AI at 4.30. Dinner will be served at 7.30, and then we all need to leave the space around 10 o'clock. For tomorrow, Saturday, we start to open the space at 8 o'clock, and then we finalize our team at 10.30. We have another panel on the year of Indigenous language, and then at 11, we have mentors from IBM who will be around to support you, and at 11.30, we have Indigenous mentors from UNESCO who will be around here again to answer questions. At 1.30 we have another workshop with deployment, AI deployment on communities, and at 3 o'clock all the mentors will be here again to answer the question. Okay, so tomorrow the panel from 10.30, tomorrow we'll move over beginning of the hackathon. The UNESCO office hours instead. Yes, so that's going to be from 10.30, the UNESCO hour. Do you want to listen? Yeah. And then on Sunday, important time. So exactly at 2 p.m., you need to submit your code, your work, and the presentation is going to be from 3 to 3.45. After that, we have the ceremony at 4.15. Okay, so we have some very simple rules. First, be excellent to each other. We want to see the outcome. So we want to see code, we want to see demos. So work together, build something. You're supposed to write your code here. So if you have done some work already before, we do not encourage that. It is a hackathon. So the code should be delivered inside this hackathon. Code orders, we have mentors around so who can go over your code. We build something new. Present the project you submitted. You have every team need to give a presentation at the end of the hackathon. And team size, so maximum five members in each team. Somebody come to me and ask if it's possible to have SIG, it's not possible. Use open data and your code is open, which means that you need to publish your code on one of the sharing platforms. GitHub, GitHub is up to you, but it must be available for everyone to use in the future. Are we clear about the rules? Yes? We have five prices that we're going to give up at the end of the hackathon. We have audience price. We'll be voted by the audience. We have open site and price, AI development price, indigenous price and cloud price. All the list of the prices, I will go into detail. All of you have signed up on DevPost. You can look at the data, what exactly is inside the package over there. Mentors on stage. So I would like to invite the mentors to be on stage to say a quick word about what. Mentors, if you are in the room, please go on stage. So the mentors will introduce quickly their expertise. So whenever you have any questions, if you build an Android application, web application, so they will talk a little bit about their expertise. So you know who you should approach in case you have questions. So I will start over here from the video. Hi, David UNESCO. I work also in the project for indigenous languages here. And also I'm a former coder. I'm a programmer basically. So I'll be happy to help in any ways. Also for where to look for data. For example, with the data from UNESCO for example. Hi, my name is Michael. I work for the United Nations Foundation and I work on open source projects. So if you're interested in looking at or working with existing open source projects focused on the developing world or the global south, let me know. Or if you need help tapping into those communities to take advantage of some of the things that they've built in whatever you might be building, let me know. Hello. Hi. I'm Joey. I'm a JavaScript developer here in Singapore and a fan of Linux. I'm here for technical support. So if you need help with React or Node.js, TypeScript, Git, NPM or Linux shell scripts, I can help. Or your development process, if you want to speed it up, I can help with that. My name is Mitch and I'm mostly good with hardware. Simple, too complex, but I'm pretty good with software as well. And I'm really good for helping groups clarify their ideas and bounce ideas off of. And motivating people, like as you're doing a project, there are ups and downs. If you're in a down, come and get me. And I can give you a pep to bring you up again. So yeah, I'm here to help you do the cool things that you're all going to do. So hi. My name is Jonas. I'm from Daimler. I'm a general technologist, I would say. So I have a little bit of knowledge about all the kinds of stuff that are currently in. But I'm not deep in it usually, where I'm really deep in is currently the whole blockchain thing. So if you have questions about that and want to stir indigenous stuff for human mankind for all time, then we can do that. Hi, I'm Max. I'm working at Satsware, a Singaporean company where I do machine learning and backend engineering mostly. So I'm glad to help in those areas. Hi. My name is Marco. I live here in Singapore. I run a few courses on Python, machine learning, some data science. So maybe if you have questions, maybe regarding machine translation, stuff like that, you can reach me anytime. I'm also the guy down there with the robot kit and the PS lab guys. So if you go to the exhibition area, I'll probably be around. Hi, my name is Andrea, as you know. I'm a software developer and developer advocate. I work for IBM. My background is mainly in open source and infrastructure is a service type of project. So containers, your tool machine, serverless, this kind of stuff. I've got background in machine learning as well. And of course you can ask me about services in the IBM cloud. Hello. I'm Norbert. I'm from an IT company in Tokyo, but this is unrelated. Well, I'm a mathematician, computer scientist. You can ask me about similar things like from full stack development, dev ops, typical cloud stuff. But much more interesting is probably that I have 30 years of like non-Latin writing system experience and learning experience in various languages. So if you have questions about writing system, then you can ask me. Hello. I'm Mothura Vikas Tripura. I'll be happy to see the use of indigenous languages in using the open sources. So that's very much my interesting area. Thank you. Hello. I am Kuan from Vietnam. So I am a software developer. You can ask me about web programming, including backend and frontend, and also embedded programming, like, I don't know, IoT, Linux. So mentors photo. OK, so we have more mentors. Some might be now giving a talk. In different rooms, they will come in throughout the hackathon. So I will introduce them later. Judging criteria. So these are a few things that you need to pay attention to. Technical implementation. Yeah, so I think it's quite out of the box. I don't need to explain this. Of course, we're going to test your code and the application that you develop. Project adaptation. So if you read on DevPost, the website, it plans about hackathon, you understand that we expect you to develop something based on one of the First Asia project. So if you have something that builds based on through CAI, Pocket Science Lab, Apache, or one of the projects of First Asia, you will get a bonus point for that. And this is the double bonus point. Use open data and open knowledge. Usability. How easy it is for the user to use the app. It means user interface, design of the application. Solution has potential to engage a wide range of actors in the society. So not only for you as the developer to use it, but it's possible for people to contribute if they want to give feedback to the application or if they want to enhance, let's say you allow the user to collect data and enhance the application. So this is about engagement. Scalability. So is it possible only in your local language or is it possible to run it anywhere around the world? Indigenous topics. It's also a bonus point. If your application that has a solution focused on Indigenous topics or if you have one of the Indigenous participants in your team, you also get a bonus point, double bonus points for this. Lastly, inclusiveness. If you have a female participant in your team, you would also get a bonus for this. I understand. I understand that we have more male here, but please pay attention. So the thing is, every criteria, you will get a point. So if you don't have a female participant, don't worry. You can drain an extra point if you do something related to Indigenous language or you won at a First Asia project. Yes? We are clear? Okay, very good. So these are the churches. Some of them are also your mentors. So we have Mr. Orman. He's here. He's a mentor. So if you keep a good relationship with him, maybe he can give you a good point. But he's not the only churches. We have so many more. So it's just that he inverted in also different criteria. So we have Misako Ito, Yuri Metho. We have the video Storti standing over there. We have Senka Savadura. He will only be here on Sunday. So he is the Vice President and CTO of the Cloud and Coordinated Software at IBM. We have myself. We have Vino Kumar. The APEC Technical Lead for Microsoft. We have Mario Belling here. You already know him. We have Michael Christen, one of the leaders of the development of the AI project. And we have here also one of the mentors, Matura Bikas Tribura. So he's sitting right there. So these are your choices for the hackathon. Applying the latest open data, open knowledge. This is more detail you can find on the website. I already explained to you the detail, but if you want to, if it's not clear enough, you can go to the website, team building. Okay, so we have now moved to team building exercise. How many of you already have your team? Okay, so I was attracted to people already with team to go on the site or to grab a table and the people who are not clear what you're going to do. We start a small exercise here. The people who deformed the team, do you already have an idea of what you want to do? Yes? Yes? Are you open to accept more team members or you are good? Suffice? Okay, so you already have enough people in your team. So what we're going to do right now? The people who have not yet have a team, you can come up here to pitch your idea. If you have an idea of what you want to develop, you pitch your idea and the people who are interested in that idea can come and join you in a team. Yes? Okay, so let's give you 30 seconds to think about the idea that you want to develop and then come up here to pitch your idea and say about your qualification. If you are a designer, you are a developer and what kind of team members you are looking for. For instance, I could say that I want to develop an application that helps people to learn Khmer. I'm looking for an Android developer. I'm looking for somebody who can speak Khmer. So this is how I speak my idea. So, yeah? Yeah. So give you a few minutes to think about it. Stay awake. Yeah? Okay, so... Ten minutes? Yeah, okay, so ten minutes from here. So maximum is five people, but it's okay to have less. If you have two, three, four, it's five. It's just that the maximum is five people.