 Hi, I'm here at the ID Tech X show at the PST booth with David Britton David the CTO and co-founder of the company So you make printed temperature sensors and we've profiled you in the past, but how is business going? He's been going fairly well. It's as you know, we've also moved into the UK as well with a Same company, but with a slightly different focus using various temperature sensing technologies Very sensing technologies not just temperature sensor some of our own and also others and integrating that to do edge-to-gateway solutions for the Internet of Things great with applications in medical stuff and in Automotive battery automotive mattress great. Let's take a look at some of your latest devices What is actually new and that this is our technology of the two humidity sensors, right? Both are resistive the one on the left as you on the right as you can see there is Actually, most a traditional type of humidity sensors got a very high changing conductivity as you go through around about 50% humidity and The other one on the left is based on our silicon technology and it works similar to a wet bulb thermometer So you actually have two temperature measurements when you calibrate against a changing humidity right the rest as are all based on our normal or our Well established now silicon temperature technology So we have the misters in any size any shape Going through to temperature-sensing arrays Which you've seen before our heater sensor system Turn to the chip on sensor technology, which of course is much better than having a sensor on chip Right the sensor on chip measures the temperature of the chip the putting the chip on the sensor means you have all the form Factor advantages that you have with with printed electronics flexible conformable low thermal mass Optimum size for temperature sensitivity good thermal contact But all the advantages of having a digital measurement including communication by art with RF so we also have then the mean And our list about the part which is in the project we're doing with the UK which is for Okay