Thanks a lot for the invitation. It's definitely not my time of the day so excuse me if I'm a little bit… Right, next the track. I'm always really happy to speak in front of people who are dealing with IT and stuff because I'm so much not an IT person. You saw that I wasn't even able to start my presentation alone. I'm from CADUS. CADUS is a humanitarian NGO that was founded 3 years ago in Berlin. It was founded out of a kind of subculture that is strongly related to the CCC, but to the musical and festival subculture as well. What I want to talk about today is our crisis response makerspace in Berlin. Holger (Levsen) invited me after we saw each other again at Datengarten in Berlin and he asked if I can make the presentation in english as well. My english is shit, so please excuse me if I have to search some words from time to time. Do you have an idea what this is? It's a huge truck, it's a medical sign on it, so this is a kind of mobile hospital. Mobile hospital which you can use if other hospitals are broken down or if there are no hospitals. Do you have an idea how much such an hospital would cost you to buy? 3 millions, 2 millions, 3 millions, 4 millions, hum… This is a picture of a destroyed hospital in Syria. You all see a lot of pictures on the TV, stuff like that. Can you relate these 3 to 4 millions mobile hospitals to these destroyed hospitals. Do you normally see in the media that if a hospital is destroyed then this fancy stuff is deployed to there? Do you have an idea why? It's "fucking expensive"? Something more? "Who's gonna pay for it?" "Is help wanted?" More? It is a question of safety from time to time. But on top you have to imagine Syria, war country, dust, heat, no supply chain, nothing like that, so bringing there a 4 million mobile hospital might end in two weeks of working and after that nothing is working anymore because you don't have the technicians who can repair this kind of stuff for example. Next example, I'm sure you know. What it is is a pretty fancy fire truck. You have them in Germany in all the bigger villages and all the cities, stuff like that. If you take a look inside this firetruck, you see plenty of fancy stuff. I love this stuff, there is stuff to put out fire, there's stuff to lift things with hydrolics. There is normal stuff like shovels and stuff like that. But if you relate this to pictures in disaster areas, this is from Haiti, then you see that you have plenty of people but no equipment at all. All's pretty clear because normally, after a disaster, people from all over the world come as fast as possible to the disaster area the so-called "urban search and rescue teams". They're coming by plane, so all the fancy stuff that we have in our societies stays here, and a few people that typically ??? go to the disaster areas to help the poor people. You understand this was cynical. And there's a third example. Have you ever seen what this is? This is a tourniquet. A tourniquet is one meter of nylon strap and a little bit of plastic. A tourniquet is the best way to stop severe bleeding immediately. We know this since the second world war. At least it's twenty years it's totally clear and it's validated, this is the best way to stop severe bleeding. Spoiler, you won't see this in the media if you see like people in Syria getting hurt like losing legs after explosions and stuff like that. Do you have an idea how expensive is such a thing? One meter of nylon, a little piece of plastic? Not so expensive, but it goes in that direction: 55 dollars for one of these. 55 dollars for fucking one meter of nylon strap. And, I don't know, less than 10g of plastic. The last example, I don't know if you have a pet. I had a dog, if I would like to, I could add a GPS to my dog and this GPS would say when my dog is sleeping, where my dog is, where I can find my dog if it's gone, stuff like that. But again if you went Haiti directly after the earthquake, people search for other people in collapsed building with their bare hands. So, obviously, we have a lot of technical solutions for everything. I can look for my fucking dog in Hamburg where it is via my app on my iPhone but on the other hand, in a disaster area it's not even possible to search for people who are buried in collapsed buildings. There are several reasons for that.