 My name is Jens, but it doesn't matter here. Earlier that month I was in Brazil because there was an event called couturedigital.br and I wanted to see the Brazilian hacker spaces. So this is one of the bus which was crowdfunded, not by Kickstarter, but another Brazilian crowdfunding platform that drove the hackers from Sao Paulo to Rio de Janeiro to go to that kind of event which was happening at the Museum of Modern Art in Rio. This is an area which called the Arena and there was like political people coming to that event and then you got the discussion to debate with these people about open data transparency, all these kinds of things. This is one of the reasons why I was also there. You can see there's a difference between culture in here and culture in there. Maybe they're being the same minded people when it comes to hacker spaces, but I don't know if you can see it. Maybe they're being the same minded people when it comes to hacker spaces, but Brazil have much more culture inside of their society. You can see that already with the summer thing, but it's also going into digital culture. This was like the audience. The guy you see from the second from the left is like the former culture minister from Brazil who is very, very famous there. He got really, really good debates on the stage. I skipped that. This is the Museum of Modern Art and it's really, really a nice event because they now are starting to get the idea of building up hacker spaces. Rio de Janeiro not have yet a hacker space while I can say they're just founding another one. This is one of the robots I've seen there which is very impressive and it tries to get the clash with the technology and the culture change in there and the actual society. This is like the only the entrance. It was completely for the conference. It looks like that. They're recording all the talks and streaming them. This is like the posters. Everyone can contribute. Hey, are we doing that event? How do you want to make our event look like? Everyone was able to contribute the poster and they published all of these. This is like you can put little paper things and it's flying in the air. It's very nice for kids. They have a make-up board and so everyone was showing what's happening in their town. Brazil is really, really huge. People had to travel a lot in there. That was on stage and of course there was street music, outside playing music. What you can see here is like 50 people playing music and 200 people around it. It's a completely different feeling to stand there. The evening concert. I was taking that bus which was crowdfunded for hackers back to Sao Paulo to spend some days in Sao Paulo and there's a hacker space in Sao Paulo which is in the Castle de Couture which is that place. This is a former place which was used in the movie but now they use it in the basement to have a space. It's called the Garoua Hacker Space. It's raining there a lot like in Hamburg, like in my town. So they have the umbrella as the sign. This is the reason why this space started because it was like one guy in the university wanted to build his own flipper. The university basically told him hey the university is not a good place to do so. So he started a hacker space a year ago. And now it's becoming bigger and bigger and bigger because they got our ideas. They have been on the camp and they really like that. So what I want to say is there's more hacker spaces between US and Europe. You have to watch over the board to also other countries. When you go to look at hackerspaces.org check out if there is a space. Announce yourself on the IRC and you will figure that out. These people was really really hostile to me. They showed me a lot of things. We partied a lot. One minute call for extension. Like the day I had to drive back they ordered me a special taxi called Jar Taxi which has like you can see on the internet which is his actual position. He has a New York telephone number so when you're being in New York you can call him to catch you up from the airport. He has an iPad in the car and Wi-Fi for free. That's basically it. Thank you very much. Thank you.