 Come back for some of the gear in our meeting rather than unenthusiasticity and so on this video, I need to be out of here. Congratulations. It's the longest night I've actually had pictures of myself show up on the screen. You know, it's a magazine, so it's very, very humbling. So I want to start by thanking Tappane, I changed media, Colors, and all the other companies that have made today possible. I also want to congratulate Deepak Prashun and all the other nominees. I do think that each of them is much more deserving than I am. I'm honored to have been given this recognition. But this recognition really isn't about me, it's not about Prashun Anand that I think it's about. It's a recognition for the incredible internet users in India. I'll talk more about that. I think it's a recognition of the amazing products that Google has from that range from search to YouTube to Android. And I think what's important is the recognition of the amazing team that we have at Google India were fortunate to work with, as well as all the amazing ecosystem partners we've been fortunate to work with, many of whom are in this group. So this is really, really for all of them, and not really for me. And from the bottom of my heart, I'm truly appreciative of the opportunity that I've had over the last many years to be at Google, but also really being in the tech industry for now a very, very long time. As all of you know, India has had a very, very interesting time really across the board, but especially when it comes to technology. I think what we're seeing in India when it comes to the consumer internet is unparalleled. What Google is actually now, what we're seeing in India when it comes to the internet, is not seen in the history of the internet. The commercial internet, as we know, is about 20 to 23 years old, depending on where you think the start of the commercial internet is. The growth that we're seeing in terms of users, the consumption of data, the types of things these users are doing, and most importantly actually the new kinds of consumer behavior that we're seeing, we've just not seen before. And I think that's what really makes the internet in India extremely exciting. There are about 400 million internet users in India, and we're adding between 8 to 10 million new internet users in a single month. So just to give you a sense of what that means, you basically add all of France in about six months. You add Singapore every two weeks. That's sort of the scale at which the Indian internet is operating. And not only are these large number of users online, as all of you know, as data has become a lot more affordable, every single one of these users is spending enormous amounts of time on the internet. In fact, the latest data we have for last month is that the average consumption per user per month is now across 10 gigabytes per user per month. And just to give you a sense, two years ago, two and a half years ago, that number was less than one, about one and a half gigabytes. So you've seen a 20x growth in consumption. But that's really not what the story of the internet is in India, right? The story of the internet in India is about all these new user behaviors. You saw some of that on the video. Voice, the new internet user basically wants to speak to the internet as an avatar. You've not seen that before. We just haven't seen this kind of use of behavior where all the access now with these new internet users that are coming online is really driven by voice. It's video. I mean, India today has, I would argue, the most vibrant online video market in the world, where a lot of 300 million online video users is due to have, as a platform, has over 250 billion users on it. And even today at this scale, what's going on is over 100% the audience. And so the last one is local languages. Every single one of these new internet users is accessing the internet only in their local language, in Tamil or Kannada. And you can keep going with every single Indian language. And what's mostly important though is what the internet is really doing for Indians that are coming online. India is a country that, you know, we don't have the basic infrastructure that we need. But if you think about 900 million Indians living in rural India, most of them don't have access to good health care, good education. Most of them would like to make a better living. Most of them struggle with things like transport and so on and so forth. And what we're seeing now, what excites me the most is what the internet is enabling or what I'm calling as the real India, the 900 million Indians that are not connected to the internet. As they come online, they're able to begin to access the kinds of services that let's say all of us have. And I'll give you just one example. There's a startup in Manu, it's called SIGTUPL. And how many of you have heard of SIGTUPL? SIGTUPL basically uses AI and machine learning to essentially deliver world-class medical diagnostics at about 100 of the cost that your regular medical device companies globally produce. And because of connectivity now, they're able to deploy these devices, they're able to deploy the internet world, but they're able to actually deploy these devices in very small Indian villages. And as a result, let's say somebody living in rural Bihar in a very, very small village or rural Maharashtra is able to get access to world-class diagnostics that quite frankly, in fact many of us in this room may also struggle with and it goes back to AI. What AI can do in terms of medical diagnostics and the quality of medical medical diagnostics. Education's been a huge problem. But the reality today is online you can actually deliver education. I don't know how many of you know this, but Sanford's almost an entire curriculum now is available online. So you would theoretically go to Sanford to take all of Sanford's classes by just being connected. So as these children in rural India get connected, they get access to world-class education, they get access to healthcare, they get access to new incomes, etc. The last story I'll leave you with is, we have an initiative called Internet Saabi. It's a partnership that we have with other classes in India where about three years ago we launched this initiative to help women in rural India get connected to the internet. So three years when we launched this, only 10% of internet users in rural India were women. And the digital agenda divide in India was worse than what we had seen anywhere in the world, in the Middle East, all parts of Africa. We had never seen that kind of digital agenda divide. And as we try to understand it, what became very clear is women in rural India really have three constraints. They don't have smart phones, they don't have access to smart phones because either they can't afford it or their families don't want them. Second, they actually didn't understand what the internet would do for them. And third, there were societal pressures where the husband may have a smart phone, maybe the son would have a smart phone, but the woman did not. So we said, look, the only way we can really change this is by really going village to village. So we partnered with other groups and we launched this initiative. Essentially what we've done is we hire women in rural villages, we give them smart phones, we train them on the internet and then we give them a sign so that they have a smart world class. They want to understand more about healthcare, their own healthcare, the healthcare of their families and so on and so forth. So for the first time, I think the internet now is beginning to bring the best of the world to all of India. And I think that makes the internet extremely interesting and extraordinarily relevant for India as we look at the next five or ten years. And I'll give you, find you, end with one last story. So now we've actually taken our internet SAPI initiative to the next phase where we're actually trying to make these women for SAPIs into rural entrepreneurs. Organings actually in rural Maharashtra. We should have you go and visit or have her come and visit you, a minister at some point. Until two years ago, she had never been on the internet. She didn't know what it was. She didn't know how to get on it. She was primarily in a farming consult, mostly in rural India. And she had started a very small meeting here. But once to the internet SAPI initiative, she signed up as a internet SAPI, she started learning about the internet. She actually wanted to learn how she can start a business. And she very quickly learned that honey is actually a pretty large industry. And she learned how to scale up her meaty degree. So she actually increased her meaty degree by a hundred times. She started finding out from the internet how to sell to other villagers around her and so on and so forth. And currently, and actually when we met her a couple of weeks ago, she was now trying to figure out how she can sell online. Because here's somebody who was barely making a living. Now she actually makes ten times more than what the family used to make. This year, she'll ship about 700 kilograms of all-class honey. Because if you like honey, you should actually try it. And this family, you know, just in two years is in such an incredibly different place. And it's because of what the internet was able to do for her and for her family. And what I'd like all of you to think about is where India would be when every single Indian is online. Thank you.