 Kia ora Minister Curran, thank you so much for your time and there's a lot of good messages in there for us about collaboration, digitisation and the difference we can make for New Zealanders. The Minister and the Mayor have done such a wonderful job of welcoming you all here and setting the energy and tone for this conference. Andy, if there's a labour of love for a small committee scattered around the country, and I'm still pinching myself that I'm standing here and talking to you all right now, and that we have amazing keynotes, Andrea, Kea, Harkinwall, Claire, Ariana, Pia, who have travelled far and wide and not so far in some cases to teach and learn and share their knowledge and experience and expertise. I want to acknowledge Matariki and Ashley for their support with the mihi whakatau this morning and Ashley's korero for us. It was beautiful, thank you. Now to some housekeeping. Emergency procedures. If you hear continuous alarms, please leave the building quickly and calmly and there'll be people showing us the way out, the assembly point is in front of Te Papa or over in Waitangi Park. If the earth starts to shake, which it won't in touch with, please drop, cover and hold, do the turtle drop and wait, wait instructions, keep away from the windows and wait instructions. There are bathrooms and they're well signposted. There's some just out here and around there but you'll find them all around the building. If you have cell phones, which you all probably do because it's the National Digital Forum, have them on silent if you haven't already, when you're in soundings, that is. If you have food will be served up in Oceania, so up and around, it's well signposted and follow the crowds during morning tea and food shouldn't be taken out of that room because we are in a museum after all. If you use the car park today, you can get your car park, you can get a discount and you can get that your card validated at the registration desk. Wifi, probably should have mentioned that first, right? Te Papa events is the wifi signal and events is the password. We are being filmed. Hi out there, hello to the rest of New Zealand watching NDF and being live streamed as well in this room throughout the conference. So something really important, if you're speaking or if you're asking a question, make sure you've got a mic in front of you because we need the people that are around New Zealand hearing you as well. And it's being recorded too. Sponsors, without our sponsors, you would not be here. I want to acknowledge our car responses to Papa Tongarewa and Manatū Taunga Ministry for Culture and Heritage, to Puna Mataranga o Aotearoa National Library of New Zealand, Tāmaki Painga, Hira Auckland War Memorial Museum, who put some investment into this conference in lots of different ways, not least a lot of the conference committee work for those organisations and there's quite a bit of time that we spend making this happen. So thank you so much. Other sponsors, we've got Internet New Zealand in the house and they have sponsored three people who would not otherwise be here to be in this room. Thank you, Internet New Zealand. They're also sponsoring our drinks tonight, so awesome. Story Box has sponsored the ice creams. Hey, there's ice creams again and thank you Story Box. Go have a chat to them, they're next to the ice cream stand. The DAS Art Museum has supported some of Care's Travel to be here today, Care Winesmith's Travel. And Museums Aotearoa have also sponsored some people who wouldn't otherwise be here to be here and that's so important that we get such a wide, diverse range of people here. We have exhibitors and you should all go check them out because they are a big part of this conference too. So we've got Gavin and the team at Boost. We've got Andy and the team at New Zealand Micrographic Services, NZMS. We've got Glen and his team from Authentic Limited with MyTourism Curtis, Paul Rowe and Vernon Systems and his team. Marsha from Property 3D with her team and Catherine and the Catalyst team are all part of the exhibit as well as our Kodi supporters have got. So please take the time to go and check out what they've got to show us. Finally, the program is all live and up to date on SHED. So ndf2017.shed.com or go to the ndf website and it's live there. That's the latest program info. There's a couple of changes which I'll cover a little bit later. If you don't have a device, we've got printouts for you at the registration desk and there's some large posters around the building as well. But if you are looking at what's happening next, go to SHED and check it out. Now Pia. I first heard about Pia Andrews. Now it was war, now Andrews, Pia Andrews back in 2011 when the late and much missed Julian Carver told me about her. But I wasn't expecting that to happen. We were looking for judges for the mix and mash competition which was, do you remember that? You tried to encourage people to open up their data and content for reuse and he said, if you want someone who's doing great stuff in this space, there's Pia War in Canberra. She's doing amazing things and she's leading the charge in the open data space and particularly in open government and she's making good shit happen. And here we are six or so years later and she's living in Wellington, working for the Department of Internal Affairs as a service integration lead and she's making really good shit happen for the people of New Zealand and we've got her here today to talk to you about that. So today Pia's going to take us through an exploration of paradigm shifts, considerations for the future and the importance of grasping the opportunity before we accidentally reinvent the past. Pia's appearance today is supported by Tamaki Paingahira, the Auckland War Memorial Museum. Thank you again to our car sponsor and Kia ora Pia, welcome, come on up.