 Hi, this is Andy Robinson, I'm the Extension Potato Agronomist for North Dakota State University and the University of Minnesota. Today I'm going to demonstrate the Endon Potato Blight app. This is a new app available in the iTunes Store or Google Play Store and can be downloaded for free. So once you've opened up the app, this is the first page you'll come to. It's a login screen. This is important because logging in with your own cell phone number and verification code will help keep your data secure. So to log in, enter in your cell phone number. Once you've entered in your cell phone number, click on Send Text. Once you receive your text, you will enter in the four digit code here. This four digit code is only valid for five minutes or so. Put your code in, click on Done, then click on Login. Then you're into the app. If you're on a farm with multiple people who want to see the late blight and early blight values, what you do is one person can enter in all this information on their phone or tablet. And then to share it, another person will open up the app, put in your phone number, you get the verification code and you share it with that person, and then they'll have access to all the same information that you've put in. So once you enter into the app, the first page you see is this fields page. This is where you put all your different fields that you want to track early blight and late blight values on. So you can see here I've created a few fields already. And I'll show you how to do this. So to create a new field, click on Add New Field in the upper right hand corner. Once you get to this field detail page, there is some required information that is necessary to be put in. If this required information is not put in, the model will not work. So I will show you how I do this. First, you've got to give the field a name. We can just call this Field 24. Next, we need to select a planting date. And we will select May 9th. And if it's in the future, it's okay. We can put data in as estimated dates. And then once those dates actually occur and there's weather data for those dates, then it will start accumulating the values. The next important thing you need to enter in is a station. Click on the nearest end-on station to that field. Following that, enter in an emergent state. We're going to estimate an emergent state of May 30th. And we're going to estimate a row closure date of June 25th. Once you've entered in all the required information, then the model will be validated and can run. If you are entering in information that is in the future, you will get this error. And that's okay. Just hit OK. And then click Save in the upper right-hand corner. Once you've done that, you'll see at the bottom we now have data to date. So since this is in the future and there is not data available yet, there is no numbers available. But this is how you create a field. If you've estimated the dates and those dates aren't correct, you can always go back at any time and change those dates. So for example, if an emergent really wasn't on May 30th but it was on June 3rd or 4th, you can just go back in and change it like that. Click on Back in the upper left-hand corner to go back to the Fields page. And now I've just created a new field, Field 24. Let's look at Bison 3 here, for example. And Bison 3 is a field we created with dates from 2017. And so if you have dates where weather data has already occurred and is available on the end-on website, you can see here at the bottom that there is accumulated severity value of 59 for late-light, and there's an accumulated P-day value for early-light of 907. And that's the kind of data you'll see. If you want to go in and change the numbers, you know, if the dates are different, go ahead and change it, and you'll see here at the bottom those numbers also change as far as the severity values go. Click on Back to head back to this page. So that's how you enter in fields. You can enter in as many fields as you'd like. This will enable each potato field to be tracked specifically for late-light and early-light values. And once you have all these fields in, you can see on this Fields page, you'll see the number of late-light and early-light values as just a quick snapshot. The way this app works is when you hit a late-light severity value of 15 or an early-light P-day value of 200, you'll get a push notification sent to your phone to let you know that that certain field has achieved the threshold value. So there's some other neat features on this app that I want to show you. There's this data page. The data page shows the severity value for the last 10 days in a graphical format. So it's just late-light severity values. And it has to be on a field that has data accumulated. So if I click on Bison 2, oops, that's my estimated one. So I'm going to go back and click on Bison 3. All right, these severity values currently are not being tracked, so it just gives me the latest ones from October of last year. But you can see here over the last 10 days, between the 23rd and the 25th of September, you can see how the severity value is accumulated over those two days. But this is how you can look at that. So if you've already received a late-light severity value of 15 and you're kind of tracking the weather conditions during the growing season, this is a good tool to go to to see if the conditions are favorable for late-light. And as you can see here, this is the push notification. Since I modified the dates, it sent me a new push notification for early-light and late-light. All right, another neat feature here is the weather tab or page. What this is, is it has every end on site on it. It's updated every five minutes. So if you're going to a different area and you want to look at what the current weather is near your field, you can just click on this really quick and go to any of those areas. So say we click on Hillsboro and this is the current weather data as of today. And then the last page here on this app is our settings page. So the settings page will have your mobile number in the upper right-hand corner or whoever the user is that's created all the fields. You can turn on and off these different push notifications as you can see here. So the blight line updates, we will send out blight line updates probably on a weekly basis during the growing season. And if you don't want to receive those, you can just turn it off by toggling that switch. We might also send updates as far as if late-light's found or confirmed in the area or other information that might be pertinent for growers to receive. You can turn on and off early-light and late-light alerts if you don't want to receive those or if you want to receive those at the threshold values like I previously explained. And then there is an inversion alerts. If there's a weather station you've selected next to one of your fields that has an inversion tower, it will let you know that there are inversions if they are present. And so you can turn that on or off however you wish. If you have questions, want to send a picture, whatever it might be, click on the contact us. You can choose to either contact our weather specialist, Darrell Richardson, who's the interim director of the INDON network, or you can choose to send a potato-related question to me by clicking on this lower button. All right. Other than that, that pretty much explains the app and its features. If you have questions or comments, please contact me either through the contact button or my mobile number, you can see on the upper right-hand side of this app. I appreciate your time and I look forward to using this app this summer with you all. Thank you.