 My name is Pekka Laurela. I am a co-founder of a company called iSci, and we come from Finland. Finnish people are known for being quite direct, so you'll notice that I'll get right to the point. So iSci is a company that does global information services based on satellite imaging, and when I say satellite imaging, I mean literally satellites. This is part of our team of shipping our first satellite to the launch site. The satellite is there on the bottom, and then the team is all happy and relieved. This has happened two weeks ago, so we are very well getting started. So the mission that we are on is about enabling everyone to make better decisions. This is really about making the world a better place, and we are doing this by enabling everyone access to reliable earth observation information, meaning that we are taking pictures from our satellites. And what's so special about our satellites? We are building nothing short of the world's largest SAR imaging constellation, and SAR stands for a synthetic aperture radar. It's an instrument that allows you to image in any condition night and day, and it will be the largest constellation providing the timely access to information on a scale that has never been done before. And so two things about the instrument. One is that our instrument can see in the dark, so it's very useful for the other half of the time of day when the entire world is dark in the night time. And the second thing is that our instrument can see through clouds, which is very useful for the other half of the time or even more here in Finland when it's mostly cloudy all the time. So these are two very important things for satellite imaging if you need to provide reliable information throughout day and night and in any conditions. And now this has been done before. There are satellites that image with cameras, there are satellites that image with radars, but there are not, there hasn't been ability to image day and night with a good enough frequency so that you can actually base operational use cases on top of it. And the comparison is quite drastic. Right now if you were to take the existing radar imaging earth observation and combine that together you'd be able to do images every say two days of a given site. And we are going for imaging these same sites in every two hours. So we are going for a drastic increase in the imaging frequency and this means that you can finally base a lot of new operational use cases making operations on the seas for instance a lot safer. And I guess if we look at the value chain where we are placing ourselves there are, there is the very beginning which is in the instrument part of it. We are a hardware design company from the point of view that we are developing this novel innovative small imaging radar instrument that goes into our own satellites. We are building those satellites and then we are keeping on developing that. This is this is the sort of core IP of our company and core components of our team. But of course now in the very other end where's the business? The business is about selling information and solving big big problems of the world. Here's a few examples. Illegal fishing is a problem that happens in many parts of the world. It's a problem where ships are fishing in areas where they're not supposed to in other countries economic zones and then fishing over quotas and then destroying the fish population of those areas. And now monitoring this type of activity needs a service that can operate day and night and respond in the types of human timescales. Imaging every two days is not enough to prevent this activity from happening but imaging every two hours is. So this is one problem that we are addressing right now with our solution. And then of course when you're imaging the entire world when you have the capability to image the entire world you can respond to a lot of the problems in general in environment. So how does this turn into money? For us it means working with say insurance industry in working in preventing damage before it happens. We can be talking about flood damage tracking the progress of a flood or we can be talking about tracking progress of forest fires or things like this. And this is of course you know the tip of the iceberg so to speak where ice monitoring actually is is funnily enough one of our key use cases as well. And then here's a few other examples so working on surveillance of areas, detecting oil spills, tracking what's happening in agriculture and then responding to disasters for instance for search and rescue. And to get back to the concrete part of it we are right now in a place of our story where we are launching our first satellite called the ICI-X1 still very soon. Rafa will talk about this later today and then continuing to launch more getting into the world's largest constellation in a matter of a couple of years from now. And right now if you want to contact us we're open for business selling capacity, selling the pilot information services and also we are very much growing up and hiring so please join join us in the story. Thank you.