 I'm Anil Vaidia, the founder for Scanners based in London. I'm an engineer by background and a medical engineer. If you're kind of excited by science and engineering, the tricorders are a natural sort of thing to be excited about. The idea of just building something that doesn't exist. My background in the commercial world for the last 10 to 15 years has been in consultancy. Working with pharma, bio, medtech, device companies, helping them commercialise their products. I've seen hundreds, thousands of different kind of products and technologies over the years. Some you think are really going to fly and some you think really just aren't going to make it. And I think it was really that where I thought, well I know where I can get different pieces of technology from who I can kind of use to build that piece of technology, those pieces of technology. Healthcare is just becoming just too expensive. If we can help bring a device to the patient or to a user that can manage and monitor their own health, then I think there's going to be a true benefit, not only for the patient but also for governments as well. We've got partners based from Australia, Japan, across the UK. We're looking at working with those different partners across the world to help develop that technology into a commercial piece of kit. If we take for example something like taking a blood pressure reading, we're probably going to take two or three measurements because each measurements came to vary. If you have something like scanners that's going to be able to take those measurements over a continuous period of time, then the opportunities for the physician to better make a better diagnosis. The device that we're looking at creating is not going to take the patient away from the physician in any way. It's actually going to hopefully bring them closer to the physician. The challenge is that most people think we're just absolutely barking mad.