 Okay. And it looks like we're live here from Cambridge and I am Dazza Greenwood joined by Mr. Poppers, Mr. David Poppers, co-organizers of the Boston MIT node of the Computational Law and Blockchain Festival, which just completed this weekend. And we wanted to thank a few people for all they did to make it such a great event. Mr. Poppers, you want to get us started? Yeah, there were many teams that I've presented. And so I just wanted to thank the teams that presented. We have Edjuki, Hago, Vibechain, which I think was a was a favorite of many. We, the customers, sanctioned.io and myutopia.id. Yeah, so many great teams. I'm running some photos now and some event information in the background. We had some slick challenge teams as well, sovereign legal identity challenge and some transactive energy challenge teams. And we were fortunate to have among us with the co-organizers, TMA, Roguere, who was the organizer for the transactive energy challenge. We also had someone who is owed a lot of thanks, Chris Mondalane, who just did so much for this event. So thank you. Thank you, Chris. Yes, logistics master. Yeah, and Vibe master truly. We also had Elizabeth Reneres, and she was in the DC node, but she joined us in Boston to help co-facilitate with me and others a nice discussion session on developing principles for sovereign legal identity. Daria joined us. She's a local business school student and she facilitated a dialogue on principle or basically scenario-based planning, more or less, for the coming of AI. And that was a terrific session as well. We had an amazing keynote on Friday, Mr. Christian Smith of Stranger Labs. Thank you, Christian, as always for your contribution. And among people that came in from out of town, Bob Craig, CIO Baker Hostetler, just delivered his A game and helped get us started. So thank you, Bob, as always. And also coming down from out of state, we had Kames of the consensus U port team. And they also put together some nice resources on sovereign identity using U port. And Kames helped some of the teams to actually work with that technology for the slick challenge and other teams as well. Vibe chain team and others. So thank you very much, consensus and the U port spoke. You know, perhaps last but certainly not least, I think we both want to give a major thanks to fellow legal hacker and also the sponsor for our pizza. You can't hack without pizza, everybody knows. And of our event, Thomson Reuters Labs and Brian Ulyssany, who made the uncanny observation that if it's a festival, I suppose we should have balloons. And so this is for you, Brian. We finally got the balloon and we want to really thank you for coming out and making it such a great event and thank everybody that participated. I'm told by the way by one of our collaborators and an organizer of the San Francisco note, Tony Lye, that there may well be, in fact, inside information is that there is another distributed computational law and blockchain type event perc lighting up, perhaps focusing on some other topics in the broad field, maybe some legal operations, maybe some dispute resolution, maybe a little bit of this, a little bit of that. But the idea is a decentralized conference, so more decon on the way, listen up world, we're just beginning. So David, I want to thank you for being such a great hacker and helping us co-organize this event and coming out with your, really your A game with your project, the sanction.id and flying out from California. Thanks, Ben. And to one and all, happy hacking. We'll see you next time. Happy hacking.