 So in Hong Kong, I did a bunch of things. I did a machine learning-based hedge fund. I did this research with Gino, and then I had a good friend named David Hansen, who was in Texas doing humanoid robotics. I introduced him to some people in Hong Kong who ultimately got him funding for his company. He moved to Hong Kong and brought Hansen robots to Hong Kong, which is a beautiful place to do robotics because across the border in Shenzhen, you have the world's hotbed of consumer electronics manufacturing and hardware generally. So I became Chief Scientist of Hansen Robotics, and at that time David was creating the original Sophia robot. He had a bunch of other cool robots before that. I think he was the time Stampus is 20. Sophia was launched in 2015. I think the original sculpture might have been 2014. At that time he had some other robots. We were experimenting with first Robot Einstein and Philip K. Dick and Bina48 and so forth. Then we decided it would be interesting to use the open cog engine as sort of a beefed up control system for the Hansen robots. We started working on that in 2014, and now as of the last month, we're starting to really use open cog within the Hansen robots in public appearances and so forth. It was a bit of a journey to get there, just because we'd never used open cog for a real-time control thing before. We'd used it to analyze genetics data or to analyze stock market data for the stock market, and we used it for research and advanced machine reasoning. Controlling the robots was the first time we'd used the open cog AI system to control a real-time system, which required a lot of changes. David and I had a lot of common interests, and a common interest in the benevolent singularity in Philip K. Dick. We also had a common interest in making a robot mind cloud, like a cloud-based framework for storing the knowledge of many, many different AIs and robots so they could all share information. Which became singularity. Yeah, yeah, and that grew into singularity in it. We could see that Ethereum-based smart contracts and the blockchain and quantum computing should all feed into this. And then I met Simone Giacomelli, a young blockchain guru from Italy due to David Hansen basically introducing me to a friend of Simone's who then brought Simone to Hong Kong. And when Simone and I met, we immediately saw how to create the singularity net. That was May 2017, then we raised some seed funding for that in July 2017 and then did a whole bunch of publicity and software development and concept refinement. Did a token generation event, token sale in December 2017. And now, basically, that's been going full speed ahead. We're launching the beta of the singularity net, you know, blockchain-based, decentralized AI mind cloud project in February of next year. And we're now, we're doing a spin-off of singularity net called Singularity Studio, aimed at basically building enterprise software applications for pharma, fintech, IoT and so on, leveraging the singularity net platform. So this is now exploding in all different directions. I mean, the underlying goal is to catalyze the emergence of beneficial general intelligence. And I mean, this just has a bunch of different aspects, making a decentralized AI platform that's owned by everyone and no one and can't be controlled by the power elite is one aspect. Making compassionate, loving robots that can be meditation assistants, you know, elder care workers, teachers and carry out other good works in the world. This is another piece of it. The use of our AI technology to try to cure aging and disease by analyzing genomic and medical data. That's another aspect of it. I mean, I started doing cloud-based machine learning for longevity genomics in 2003 before it was possible, before it was popular, rather. And, you know, now we're progressing much further with that. So it's a lot of different projects, but actually they're all connected together in a common core. Totally.