 Nobody is starting a company in manufacturing. Manufacturing in that time was totally unsexy. And so when I declared I was going to start a business, that writing software for manufacturing, and everybody go like, why? You're in the center of internet technology. Why would you start a business in manufacturing? It was just totally not something that venture capital would be interested in investing in or anything. So I thought about why. And I thought about that I wanted to bring something of value. And what if we can combine the craftsmanship that we human has been able to do for thousands of years with the internet technology? If we could combine those, what happens? And at that time I called it personal factory. And I was thinking about how if we can make manufacturing as customizable and as easy as desktop publishing. And so I got some PhD student together. I said, I'm going to start this company and I'm going to do software for personal factory. And they go like, why? I said, well, it's more intuitive for people to want a personal factory at home than a personal computer. When PC came out, everybody thought nobody would want that. And one of the PhD students said, yeah, cute. You just made it after your own name. So my name is Pink Foods P.F., right? Personal Factory versus PC and P.F. That was a coincidence. So I had many people told me that was a bad idea. But every entrepreneur knows when you start a business, when you're very passionate about something that no one can tell you no. Because my mind worked like southern crane. Southern crane is a symbolic good fortune in China. People talk about longevity, good fortune, prosperity, whatever. But there is not a bad news in that southern crane. That's how my mind was working. Like everything I was thinking about personal factory or customization or customized manufacturing, I could only think about good news. So I went to raise money. I said, imagine walking into orthodontics office, watching the animation of your daughter's tees for the next two years and watching the beautiful smile. Imagine walking into Nike town, get your foot measured, and the next day come back to pick up a customized hiking boots. And I said, imagine, imagine, imagine. Then I said, those are ideas and geomagic, which is the company that I give the name to, to turn those dreams into reality. And that was 1997. I give a presentation and I immediately raised that money. And it's almost like I hit a nerve. Many people come in to tell me how they hate it, to go to dentist and how their shoes never fit their foot or their left and right foot are not the same. I saw the great. If you have a technology that could really solve people's problem, that's got to be a good business. And so that's how I started Geomagic. And this is one of the applications really touched me. In the early days of Geomagic, I got a call from NASA and said, would you help us to detect and repair the damaged tile for the space shuttle? Because we create the software which can image the world and then we create a digital model and not get sent to the manufacturing machines. So in this case, because Columbia crashed when we entered the earth, and they didn't detect the underwing tile damage and there was hole on it, and then the heat went in and space shuttle blew up. So when Arlene Collins, the first female commander was commanding Discovery, he put one of the payload on the NASA space shuttle for the guarantee of safety return of astronauts. So the company that I started participated in that payload. We would put 3D scanner on the space shuttle. It will scan the entire surface of the shuttle and detect the damage. And when the damage was captured, the data gets sent down from the satellite into the ground station. We will compute the repair of that damage and that data gets sent up to the space shuttle or space station and then they will cut out the insulation tile exactly in the shape of the damage and the space worker can go out there, put it in, seal it and down. You all do dental care. It's kind of like a dental cavity and dental filling, just bigger. And so we did that. And when this payload was in the space, when this technology was demonstrated, the CNN, CNBC, many of the big news media came to interview us, this was a big deal. Right around that time, my father was dying and he was in China. He was watching CNN and he was watching it when I was watching it in the United States. And he called me and said, Ping, I am so proud of you. And that was the last word I heard from my father. That little girl who was told she was nobody. That little girl who wanted to be astronaut could never be. Never saw that she could actually start a business and contribute to technology to guarantee the safety return of astronauts. The life will come back in full circle.