 Before we go ahead and use NoseLab to run simulations, let me give you a quick tour of the user interface. So first of all, today what I'm going to be demoing to you is version 2.5.0. You can always see the version number displayed on the top left corner of the screen. And as we've mentioned, we're evolving NoseLab based on tester feedback. So you can expect this number to be incremented in the future as we incorporate new features to address tester feedback. Those three important parts in NoseLab are first of all the parameter panel, this left panel where you can go ahead and tweak all of the parameters you want to tweak. And once you're happy with these, you're gonna click the blue button to simulate. This is the second important part of the user interface. When I click that button, NoseLab is going to go ahead and run a simulation for me. Once I do that, what you can see here on the right side in this main area, we've seen a new simulation appear. We're always displaying a little timestamp here just so you can differentiate two simulations. You run one after the other. Then within each simulation, you're going to have first of all, a summary of the parameters you've been inputting over here. So what you can see here, this is really just a summary of what I had here in the left panel. This is to help me remember what are the parameters I just input. And the second piece that's really the one we're interested in for today is the output of the simulation and the actual summary reports NoseLab has been generating for me based on the parameters I inputted here. So here we can see in the output here a summary of the noise ratios for these specific parameters in this orange box. This is the one we're going to be looking at today. And all these noise ratios are actually calculated based on data that's been simulated by NoseLab. We're not displaying it by default because there would be a lot of data to display. But if you're interested, you can look at the actual data table, the actual summary reports that were stimulated by NoseLab based on the parameters I input here. And you can also score through that table using here this table navigation. All right, one important thing here for NoseLab is that none of the data we can see here is actually persisted in the backend. So if you want to save the results of your simulations, what you're going to want to do is download all of your data tables over here. So here they're going to be downloaded in an XLS format, which you can come back to later. So I can go ahead and do that. Right, one last thing. We have two modes in NoseLab, simple mode and events. I will describe these further in the rest of this presentation. But just so you know, this would be the way for you to switch between these two modes.