 Jmovi makes it easy to share files by simply emailing or putting in a shared box the file that you've been working on because it has the data, it has the transformation, it has the analyses. There is, however, a really interesting, more sophisticated alternative to that. And it's called the open science framework. And if you want to go here to osf.io, I can show you a little bit about how it works and how Jmovi is very well adapted to it. The open science framework is a free service that really facilitates collaboration and reproducibility and research. You can create a free account. And one of the important things here is that it allows you to integrate a number of other services. So for instance, maybe use Dropbox or Google Drive or Box. It can bring files in from those. Or if you're the programmer type, you might use GitHub or Amazon Web Services. Again, those are integrated. Now, I personally like to upload files one by one into osf. That way I have a better sense of what's there. I don't put something in a folder by accident. But this is a way to share your work, both with specific other people for collaboration, and to share your results with the world. I want to show you how this works by having to go to an example. If you go to this web address bit.ly slash Jmovi dash OSF for open science framework, I've set up a read only access to my files here so anybody can look at it. They can see what's there. They can't change it. But this is a great way of collaborating. And right now I've got the files from the first chapter on the Jmovi course. And one of them is sharing files.omv. Now you may remember what this looks like in Jmovi itself. Right here, we've got the iris example data. And I've got some charts that are broken down by categories. I got some statistics. Let me show you what those look like when we're in OSF. If you click on this file right here, it's going to open up in your browser. I've got it open already. So I'm just going to move over. And here what you have is an exact reproduction of the results that we have. We have the same table. It looks exactly the same. And we push it down a little bit. We have the same charts. And it's all there. And in fact, even though people can't modify it, they can download it. And then they can open it themselves in Jmovi and start working with the data and see what they can get out of it. And so this is a wonderful way of collaborating and sharing results with people. And Jmovi is one of the few programs that opens its files natively in OSF that makes it so easy to share. One other thing I want to point out is because this is just a web page. Not only does it work on a browser like a Mac Windows or a Chromebook, it even works on smartphones. You can open it on an iPhone or an Android or a tablet, and you'll get the same results and you can explore and share the results that way. So if you want to have a step up in your collaboration and in your sharing and really a way of disseminating the research, OSF, the open science framework, can be an excellent alternative that works so well with Jmovi.