 Our use case is called the Lightbox Gallery and it concerns a new space in the newly renovated Harvard Art Museums which will be opening in November of 2014 in the upcoming academic year and our charge was to essentially figure out what to do with that space in particular to figure out what kinds of digital media could be used to enrich, to broaden the experience of museum goers of students of courses that are using the museum and to reflect that experience out beyond the museum walls to broader communities. So the progress that we've made is to explore the really broad and diverse territory of questions about how museums are used, what they mean to people, the ways in which they produce knowledge, the ways in which they contain or withhold knowledge in the form of collections that are very difficult to easily share and interpret with broader audiences. So we've done a lot of kind of meta-thinking about what museums are and how they work, how that gets expressed in space, how that gets expressed through media and then to take that thinking and apply it to a set of kind of design propositions. The idea being to present the museum leadership with a kind of actionable proposal for actually developing space, developing a curatorial agenda for it, developing display technology and furnishings for it and integrating it into a visitor experience. So in the next month we're going to be offering two presentations to museum leadership, a kind of draft proposal where we're going to show them sketches of design interventions and propose a kind of coordinated program for the space. We'll get feedback from them and then in March we'll present a final presentation, the idea being then that the museum will let us know what they think can be done, what of our proposal can be funded, what we might like to participate in a campaign to fund and ways in which to go forward in programming the space in the year to come and be on.