 I'm Peter François. I'm a post-doctoral research fellow at the Institute of Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology at Oxford University. I did a PhD in history looking at Victorian travellers to Europe and Belgium and France in specific. I trained as a traditional historian. I was interested in reading sources and interpreting them and looking up for trends. Afterwards I moved to the social sciences where they have a very different approach to data. What I'm currently doing for the British Library is bringing in my background as a 19th century historian with a skill set which focuses much more on humanities as data and thinking very much about the representativity of sources. The British Library Labs invited people to come forward with ideas for a digital tool that you always wanted to be there. So in my case I felt strongly that I do not want to work with the whole collection. I do want to get access to structured unbiased samples. And I did not have the right programming skills to work with the metadata from the British Library. But the British Library Labs allowed me to work together with Ben Oostin who has these skills. The overall aim of the sample generator is not necessarily focusing on the 19th century but thinking more on how we can connect paper collections with digital collections through the metadata. So its applicability is universal. What I appreciated most was the environment that allowed me to bring people together with very different skill sets. So it was really collaborative work. Now the next challenge is for us to provide users access to it. We're still looking at ways how to integrate it in the workings of the British Library.