 In Lebanon, there are two million refugees living below the poverty line. They are facing lack of access to channels to communicate their problems. They are also facing extremely cold weather conditions. UN agencies who serve these communities use labor-intensive data collection practices and outdated technologies to determine who is most in need of support. Clearly, there is a problem, and I'm here with my team to solve it. Hi, I'm George, and I represent QuickSense. We empower agencies to monitor, analyze, and predict the real-time environmental conditions of the refugees in their camps by transmitting data from customizable QuickSense devices to our easy-to-use cloud-based dashboard. Our devices can last for up to two months without electricity. Our dashboard can also generate reports, trigger alarms, and make predictions. Let's talk numbers. UNHCR spends $236 million annually on winter assistance kits, and yet they are inefficient in their process. UNHCR is deploying 300 devices all across Lebanon this upcoming Monday. Our first contract with UNHCR is an achievement that humbles us. It's turning our purpose to life. Data collected from QuickSense devices will protect children from the harsh cold upcoming winter. Our business model is simple and transparent. Devices assembly is modular. As we price our devices through our sensor combinations. Beyond our first contract with UNHCR, we are testing water composition sensors with UNICEF for the water tanks remotely. We are seeking for $250,000 to be able to achieve our next milestone, which is selling 5,000 devices during the upcoming year. We are reaching for our slash audience to connect with us and to meet industry experts and to do corporate partnerships with them. We have tested and validated our product over the last year, and we have stand in the shoes of the refugees trying to understand their daily struggles. We have joined a first-of-its-kind accelerator funded by a UN agency, Elevate Impact Accelerator. We are a team of four entrepreneurs, Ryan Maywan and I. Hassan is our Chief Product Officer. He joined our team since he is a refugee himself, and he believes and trusts in QuickSense. Thank you. Perfect. Thank you so much. Another idea with great impact. Let's see what the jury thinks. So, a question about your sales and customers. I mean, are you selling to UN and NGO institutions, or is there private customers, and how do you plan to do that sales? All right. So, as you already have a contract with UNHCR of deploying 300 devices, all across Lebanon, this upcoming Monday, we are planning to renew our contract with them, and hopefully to expand this contract to a much bigger number, since we already have 2 million refugees in Lebanon, and the number is increasing every year. Second, we are hoping to lock down the contract with UNICEF and to secure this contract with them. Third, if everything goes right, and we hope that it's going to go right, we are planning to target for-profit organizations to optimize their efficiencies and operations in their day-to-day operations. And how is your idea helping to find answers for the refugee crisis in the long run? We are hoping to help them, to help protecting them, through preventing living conditions, through monitoring the environmental conditions in their shelters through our dashboard, by collecting the information and the monitoring temperature, and getting some support from the UN agencies to them. Right, but it's just optimizing immediate age, right? Yes, directly, yes. Well, I'm curious about the industry experts and larger corporations that you're looking for. Can you be a bit more specific of what kind of expertise you're looking for and what kind of large corporates? All right, so since we are an IoT company, we are looking for industry experts in that field. That means we are looking for maybe factories that can build boards like Arduino's or Raspberry Pi that can help us. Industries that are currently doing batteries. And our vision is to start deploying our devices with solar panels so it can recharge themselves and help us doing that business with us. So do you have any plans for how the greater data collection when you get a lot of essentials out can help you predict and improve things beyond kind of instant action? I'm not sure I understood your question, but if we're talking about sensor combinations, expanding our sensor combinations, we are now securing the contact of water composition in water tanks for UNICEF since they would like to know if the water the refugees are drinking is portable or not. If they are showering with the good water for their children and saving them through protecting them. So we hope through one device we can detect many environmental conditions and save as much refugees as we can. Thank you. I would think more about if you have a thousand sensors all around or like ten thousand and having more data over time to predict more preventative things instead of kind of instant fixing problems when they occur. So the data can be automated to help like UN service providers to help their refugees. Yes we are planning to do that through mesh networks, through our devices so that can be linked to like the service providers and the firefighters for example if in case a fire can happen so that can be helped and save more refugees more quickly and to save their lives. So it's all about the team right that makes this happen and it looks like you got a great team but what makes you unique your specific combination of members? Since we met at the hackathon we saw that we have a perfect combination between us and three months ago Hasan who's a refugee himself joined our team because he believes and shares the same purpose as we do. We plan on growing our team and infrastructure with the money that we are looking for so hopefully there are many people who believe in the same purpose as QuickSense does. And with that we are ending your session. Thank you so much George Nadar from Lebanon. Thank you.