 The original topics were, I think, are not suitable to be talked about at this time. I was going to talk about traveling. The time converter helps for traveling. And the Joy-Cons help for delivering presentations to large audiences, which it's a bit difficult to do at this time. So this morning I decided to change the presentation. So I'm quite tired now. And I'll just deliver this edition of this talk. So today I'll just cover six features of the time converter that are helpful in the current situation. The first feature of the time converter is offline support. So the time converter I built works when you're offline after visiting it once. Whereas there's a nice infographic here. But when you go offline, this is what it shows you. There's also data you can use here. But if you go offline, that's what you get. And all of these are the same. But you can give these websites offline support as well. The next feature of the time converter is the time that I'm going to talk about. It's the time converter itself, which looks like that, which is that. It's good for remote work. I use it now. The third feature that I'm going to talk about is how the time converter deals with offsets. So when I started off, I thought I'd put the offset there at the bottom. Then I thought maybe put it discreetly on the right would be better. But then you look at everything and then it's a bit confusing. You have to do calculations, but you don't really need to. Then what happens if when you're in a different time zone from your friends online, you just want the time right now. And so that's why it's like that. The fourth feature I'm going to talk about is mobile support. The time converter works on smartphone and desktop web browsers. The fifth feature is DST. You can tell whether or not a time zone is in a DST by looking at the offset there. There's a reminder if a time zone is affected by DST. The final feature that I'm going to talk about is the time converter is free and open source. And here are some possible improvements that would be nice to happen. Better location search maybe. Accessibility support for low price devices. DST down to our although that's a hard thing to do. Format customization as in like maybe you want to do a different date and time format. We would customize that. And you can contribute or use the repository if you want to. And that's the end of the talk. I said why you weren't worried about time. Thank you. That's a cool little tool. I'm going more in depth. I think I'm giving a talk next week about the same title. And I thought I would go in depth about the code and the libraries I'm using. And about time. And I would discuss time itself in more detail. But that talk next week might be cancelled. I'm not sure about that. You've got 15 minutes. Is there anything in that area you want to describe? You've got 15 minutes. Would you like to describe any of that? Time. For example, I'm using IANA time zones. Whereas I think there's an alternative. There's only one alternative, which is Microsoft time zones, I guess. That's one example of things I looked at before. While I built the time converter originally. So what's the trade-off there? I've only ever used IANA time zones. Are there different ones? I think the Microsoft ones are less updated compared to IANA. Which is I think every year or almost. IANA time zones are very, they seem very updated. I suspect that it's rolling. But as soon as legislators make changes, it gets updated. I don't know this because the Debian group had to move time zones at one point into their ephemeral distribution because they were getting things like regulators or they were just changing time zones a week before change would go into effect. So if you had a time zone file that was six months old, it was useless. So yeah, that's a constantly evolving document. I'm just intrigued what the trade-off is and why Microsoft is using, if you know, why Microsoft is using a different database. I'm not sure about that. Please repeat the question. Please repeat the question. No, no, no. Speaker, please repeat the question. Speaker, please repeat the question before you answer it. I can't hear the question and online people can't hear the question. So say what the question was and then answer it. I think it's basically what did I do to bring my website online? Give offline support to the time converter. So I used Gatsby and it's basically to give offline support to the time converter I'm using now. I used one line of code. I think it's only like something like four words or something like that. And that's amazing because when a few months ago or a year ago I used ServiceWorkers, the ServiceWorker API, and that was a lot of work. And Gatsby does it in one package install and one plug-in, one line added to the code list. Are there any more questions? Does anyone want to... It's okay, if you want to wrap, it's fine to wrap. Bring the next talk on in ten minutes. Nothing on the channel. I think for now, because of the situation, it's been more difficult. It's a shrunk audience everywhere. Because of the topics I picked. Much appreciate it. Thank you for the talk.