 Without much ado, I would like to invite the next speaker to the podium. Let's listen to the video. Okay, let me share my screen. Hi everybody. I'm sorry that I couldn't be there in person. My name is Maya, and I'm going to tell you about a newer module called Population from Wikidata that I worked on last year. So I worked on this as a part of a Wikidata fellowship through Wikimedia Australia, and I'm very new to contributing to Wikimedia projects, so luckily I had a massive, very talented mentor team, and shout out to Sam and Alex who are at Wikinania, so go and talk to them if you want to hear more about this project. Then we wrote a really good blog post to summarize this whole project from start to finish, and of course all the documentation is with the module, so go and check that out and I'll put this presentation on commons as well if you could grab those links. So what was the challenge? Our challenge is that there are about 15,000 Australian taste articles in English Wikipedia, and about 12,300 of those have population values in the info box. So the status at last year was that all these population values for all these articles needed to be manually updated whenever there was new census data say, or population data released that could be used. So you can imagine that this is a huge amount of manual work and prone to error through such compliment pasting. So we figured that we could make use of Wikidata to semi-automate this process. This is possible because all the Australian taste articles are linked to their equivalent Wikidata items, and a couple of users have done a huge amount of work of adding population values and statements to these items and developing bulk upload methods so that there is a huge amount of really good population data in these place items. So what we needed to do was to write a newer module that would grab these population values and the reference data and give it to the info box Australian place template. So most of the work that I was involved in was designing how are we going to choose which population value is the best one for any given article. So what we decided was some criteria that had to be met. Mainly we needed to have good reference information so that we could reference the value we were using. We needed to also check that the population value we were selecting had a geographic area matched what was being described in the Wikipedia article because, for example, you don't want to use a suburb population value if you describe a city. And of course we wanted to get the most recent value of all the possible population values we had in the item. The module then crunches around these criteria against these rules and gives as an output the population value and the reference data that goes with it back to the info box template. So the way we've settled up is that the module is only called from the template if you manually remove the pop value. This was so we didn't want to automatically override everybody's work and potentially cause a whole lot of mistakes and problems. So at the moment you have to go through and do this manually but of course this is just the one-time thing because after that it will always draw the population value from Wikidata and you can always bulk upload. One minute, let's... So it is a much more efficient and less error-prone method than the manual updating per each article. So it's been live for a year now. There's over 3,000 articles successfully using this module. We are keeping track of some of how many articles and what changes are happening. So we're going to check out the graphs and the tables and things that are happening. Of course there's a whole lot of documentation and here are a couple of links to the module and to that blog post and go and talk to Sam and Alex if you want to ask any more questions. I love hearing about Wiki Functions project because maybe this sort of module could then be used in other contexts, in other Wikipedia's, in other languages, in other countries which would be great. Thanks everybody. Thank you very much. That was an amazing...