 The other half of this presentation is, I'm showing you a video, which needs microphone, but I'm waiting for the microphone, but I'm not stopping. Oh, and Mary, you saw this a lot of times. Why? So I'm not cheering, actually. Thank you. Thank you for coming all the way, I mean. I will stop my presentation. My name is Kenji Renabé from Japan, and this is my first visit to India, and I am from Japan. I did a little bit of research that Japanese tattoos are so well-known in Japan. Yes. How do you call him? Torimo. Torimo. Torimo. Is that correct? He might keep swapping everywhere. Oh really? Yeah, I'm comfortable with that. A little bit of myself. I have been a translator of books, including Jim Coplin's The Cosmos Book, and I've experienced, and the self-development books by Mary's and Hans, and Aja Brody's management, and Aja's development. The Aja's development in those books. And I also wrote Japanese books, including object-oriented things, and UNL, including My Maps. And recently I wrote a book about scrum in Japanese. This is the first scrum book, originally. It's surprising because we have not written any scrum book in Japan yet. So this is the first scrum, originally, written in Japanese. But there are 10 or 12, 10 or 20 scrum books translated from the US. Collaborative software development that connects customers, engineers, and management. It's out this January, so it's new. If there is a publisher in this room, I will be happy to talk. And I'm also running a company named Asta, which is a UML mind mapping integrated tool. By any chance in this room, do you have ever seen this tool? Oh, thank you. Oh, two people. Thank you very much. In Japan and in Brazil, lots of people are using this. Last year I visited Brazil, and how many people are using this tool? 100% have been used. So it's so amazed. But Brazilian people don't pay to pull the tools. I'm not sure here in India, but if you're interested.