Trump
Republican U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump addresses the crowd during a campaign stop at the Grand Park Events Center in Westfield, Indiana, July 12, 2016. Reuters/John Sommers II

The day of The Donald has arrived. Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump is set to address the crowd Thursday at the Republican Nation Convention in what is assumed to be his speech accepting the nomination.

There are a number of ways you can watch Trump deliver his speech Thursday. There isn't an exact start time just yet, but it's expected the soon-to-be-nominee will close the show. The best way to track who is currently speaking at the convention might be checking in with the official GOP Twitter account, which you can find here.

The GOP convention will be streamed, in its entirety, over here at a YouTube channel that will continually be updated with new clips. The stream will also present a 360-degree view of the convention to try to immerse the viewer in the convention experience.

"YouTube will again be the official live stream provider of both the Republican National Convention, which starts on Monday, July 18 in Cleveland, Ohio, and the Democratic National Convention, kicking off on July 25 in Philadelphia, Pa," YouTube wrote in a blog post. "Not only will you be able to watch gavel-to-gavel coverage of the conventions wherever you are, but for the first time, we’ll live stream the conventions in 360 degrees, so you’ll feel what it’s like to be in the center of the action."

CBSN, the digital live streaming arm of CBS, will also stream the convention in its entirety here, which will run on Twitter, as well. CBS wrote that that coverage will include "real-time metrics, curated Tweets, and live questions tweeted from voters and asked of the candidates."

The network also plans to include reporting in its stream to give context to the viewer. "CBS News will have the highest quality original reporting continuously throughout both conventions — we are very pleased that reporting will be so prominently featured on Twitter's live platform," said CBS News President David Rhodes in a statement.