 Can you hear me as well? Your son, your son, it's okay. Yeah. Sorry about that. Okay, it's okay. So, all right. Okay, I try to make this very, because we're not so many people if you want to ask questions at any time you can. I will maybe answer them in two or three questions. But don't interrupt me at any time. Because usually I'm talking too fast. So if you talk too fast, also you can tell me that I should speak slower. Because many people, they don't understand what I'm saying if I'm talking too fast. But I notice that in Singapore, actually, people, they always talk too fast. So I think you have no problem with me. And in Singapore, also, they ask everybody always, what did you say? What did you say? It's like, nobody understands each other, and I'm very, but I still like Singapore a lot. So yeah, it's an amazing city. So actually, I'm here this week and last week because I'm setting up a Singapore office for us. Not with staff right now, but we want to do more in Singapore for our target. So we also set up a Singapore presence right now. And we also have been accredited with .sg, which is SGNIC. So if you go to this page, I'm saying, yeah, SGNIC. Does everybody know what's SGNIC? No. OK, so you have .com. So we are domain name registrar. So domain name registrar, these are the people who help you to register a domain name. The most popular one is probably GoDaddy. Everybody knows them. But they're not very good. We are much better. And unbiased, OK, we are much better. But you also have so-called country top level domain names like .sg for Singapore, .tw for Taiwan, .cn for China, and even .us for the USA, which is not so popular. You won't see any company in the US who's using .us, or not so much, maybe a local company. And even in China, you don't see so many companies who are actually using a .cn, like Taobao uses a .com, Alibaba uses a .com, Baidu is using a .com. So I think the Chinese government is like, why nobody is using .cn? So because I think it's mainly about, OK, how the internet grow, and also what people start to get familiar with. And so for .sg, you can see right now they only have like six, seven, nine registrars, maybe a 12, or more. So we're going to be there. You see there's a spot reserved for us. And so we're going to be there. So we're going to be one of them. And as you can see, all of these companies, they have a Singapore office and a phone number. And sgNIC reports to the so-called IMDA. They used to be made up of something, and they merged to IMDA. IMD authority, right? That's what it means. And they are quite nice to work with. So if you create a company, they have a free service that proposes a registrar where you can register a free .sg domain name. But don't buy one now because you can have to wait until we are really accredited and you can get it from us. And so that's for .sg. And so about Gandhi, I can give you a little introduction about us. So we are mainly a domain name registrar. And that's really 80% of all our business. So we have been created in 1999 in France. And I'm not French, I'm actually German. And I started the Asia Business Unit in 2014. So the Asia Business Unit is based in Taipei. And it was my idea that they should also have a Taipei office. So I met them and told them, hey, maybe you should have a Taiwan office because Asia is kind of cool and it kind of sucks that you're not there. So they say, yeah, we agree. So I do it for them. And since that time, we also have a Taipei office. And we translated the entire website to Chinese. So right now, our website is available in traditional Chinese, simplified Chinese, English, French, and Spanish. And later this year, we will also add Japanese to the website. Because obviously, in Japan, there's many people who like to buy domain names. So even if it's a mature market, it's a very interesting market for us. And so right now, our offices are in Paris, Luxembourg, San Francisco, and Taipei. And our DNS and hosting infrastructure right now is in three countries or cities. But we're probably going to roll out more during the coming years. For us, hosting has not been a very high priority. Hosting means where you can store your websites and where you can store your data and your WordPress and whatever. But even if the website is in Luxembourg, you can use a CDN. And even if you host a website there with some latency, you can still serve it to customers in Singapore or wherever you are. So that's who we are. And our company slogan is no bullshit. So it's a trademark. And the idea of that is that you can, OK, it means we're not making your life too complicated. We're not trying to sell you everything all the time, like, hey, buy this domain name now, because it's so cheap, and we're not going to spam you to death. Meaning you're not going to get an email, hey, buy it now, now it's this offer, now it's this offer. So we have some customers that don't hear us for maybe since one year, because they didn't subscribe to our newsletter. And so for me, the newsletter is really important, because if we wouldn't have the newsletter, we wouldn't talk to our customers. So we are against spam, and we are also against, which I think makes us very different, because we're not acting that commercially like other companies do. So we don't do advertisement, but we mainly rely on the word of mouse. So if I tell someone, hey, use our domain name registrar, and they see like, OK, it works very well, and the service is good, then our gross is from there, because other people will tell other people that they should buy the domain name from us. And yeah. Was it intentional to keep your newsletters on e-text? Like I noticed there were no images. I think it has been more of a technical issue. Nobody ever had the time or the feeling like, hey, it makes sense that we also have an HTML. But usually what we do is we redirect now to the website to show the HTML version. And then we just have it there on the browser, which is easier and better to display. Because having HTML email seems to be a science for itself, especially with images. So in Outlook and Thunderbird and even once upon some old Zimbra clients or whatever, it looks very differently how the HTML email is displayed. Microsoft developed their own Microsoft HTML, which they don't want anyone to use anymore now, but it's still in the market. And once you started something, technically it's there, so you can't really get rid of it. Just like Windows XP took like 20 years to kill, right? So I'm sure they still use it somewhere. So, but. When you look at HTML emails, there's a few specialized software that helps you to create marketing emails. And you look at the HTML it creates, I say you want to want it. This is really, really bad. But it shows in all the email software from 1995 to today, OK-ish. So yeah, it's really a science for itself. The trademark is not registered, it's a trademark, yeah. It's not registered, it's not registered. You can register it and put it out. Oh, maybe, yeah. Some people put an R, some people put a TM, I don't know what's the difference between those. Yeah, you tend to use that trademark, but not the STER is the TM, the STER is the R. Oh, so maybe I should use the R, yeah. But the TM is more nice looking, I think. OK, so as I mentioned, we do that. And the way we also do, we support open source, or the way we do support open source, we support the projects. For example, software developers who work on the Debian project, they can email us from the Debian.org email address, also FreeBSD.org, also NetBSD now, they can email us from the email address if they are a contributor, and we give them a lower rate for registering domain names, so they get our lowest rate. So they don't have to buy millions of domain names to get a very cheap price, but they can contact us and say, OK, hey, I'm working on open source, can I have a cheaper price? We also support Debian, the World Wildlife Fund, which is supporting pandas and someone else, I think. And Spamhouse, Spamhouse is an organization which is against spam. So it's a cooperation between technical engineers, police, who works on fighting professional spam. So there's some people all over the world who professionally helps people to send out billions of emails every day. I'm sure you receive some of them every day. I have them every day, so I spend maybe every day like two minutes deleting emails, which I didn't want. So spam remains a big problem. We support the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the EFF, which not so many people know outside of the US, I think, but they basically support for network neutrality that the operators don't start to cap the bandwidth and say, hey, because you don't pay a higher price, your speed is going to be very low. I think in Singapore you don't have so many operators, maybe one or two. So here it's a bit different, and the bandwidth might be higher than what you can get from some operators in the US or Europe. But in Europe or in the US now, the trend is that you have to pay extra if you want extra data. If you want extra speed, you have to pay extra. So they try to make it more difficult for customers to have the service, which actually the line supports. But online freedom, that there's no limitation, how you express your rights, that there's no website blocking from the government, and things like that. So they fight for that, and we support them. We support VLC, which is a video player. Most people know VLC, but they don't know it's actually from France, the company. And they set up an office in our office. So in our office in France, they have our office inside it. And for most of these projects you see here, they also have their domain names with us. So if you do a whois on debian.org, you will see it's registered with Scandi. And same for Videolan and the EFF. And we also support FOSS Asia. Thank you very much. And we hope all of you, though, I think we have all the authority, different amounts, but I'm not here. Thank you very much for your support. Thank you. Thank you for all of these. Question? Yes? Did you get them to use the services, or was it the other way around they chose? I think that they chose us. Mostly they choose us. Because sometimes in open source they're also a bit jealous, or maybe the people they see are like, hey, you already support Ubuntu, you already support debian. Why don't you also support FreeBSD? And then the NetBSD people see it and say, hey, the FreeBSD people are using Gany. We want to have the discount as well, so they contact us. I think it's like words of mouth as well. Because once people see that the service works and the programmers talk to each other, then they know, OK, we can trust this company and we can also do our service with them. Because it's very hard to, I think it's very hard in the domain name industry to find someone you can trust from the registrar sometimes. Because domain names are a very gray area. Before I joined the domain name industry, I was working as an engineer and as a project manager, a company in Taipei. But for me, domain name registrars, they were always like companies who are selling shoes. So it's like, OK, you can buy them different colors, different size, but afterwards I see, OK, there's some companies who are different, who are a little bit more real to the world and say, OK, you can register your domain name. And it's basically just a registration service, not something which is like you have to buy so many things additionally to make it work. So we try to include a lot of services with a domain name. And the basic services like email, they are free with us. If you apply for Google Suite, for example, like Google also does Gmail, with the client is kind of OK on the web, I think, but you can also use iMap. But once you want to use your own domain name, Google will charge you for the service monthly. And it might be OK as well, but with our service, you already have it included with the domain name. So you can already register aliases, unlimited aliases. And you have two mailboxes included. And for most people, that's enough for the small businesses or for small companies. So the product we have is we have 720 plus TLDs. Does anyone have an idea what TLDs means? Wow. Smart people play. So top level domain name is like .com, .net, .org, .sg. So that's top level. And usually I try to avoid this to use the abbreviations, but we always use them because we are exposed to them every day. And we manage 2 million domain names. Since because we exist since 1999, so 2 million domain names sounds like a lot. But in the world, there's maybe totally of 300 million domain names. And there's 200 millions .com. But most of these domain names are actually not used. So there's many people who just register, I think, like broadcast.com. And they're just hoping that at some day, they'll find someone who will buy the domain name. So there's a very big aftermarket, there's a very big back order market where companies, at one day, they want to have it. For example, Apple used to have apple.co.uk. And the guy who owned apple.co.uk, he was not giving it away because he himself registered a computer repair shop, which was called Apple Computers. And Apple could have no legitimate reason that he should give away his domain name because Apple arrived after him with their trademark in the UK. But at some point, I think maybe three or four years ago, he gave it away for some undisclosed sum. But if you own a domain name of a company, and you have the legitimate use, and maybe you also have a trademark in your country, then you have no problems even to register some international brand name. Because the thing is with brands and also with trademarks is you can only register them in specific classes. Classes means a so-called niece class, which means like there's a convention for trademarks called niece convention. T-shirts have a different registration number than, for example, mouse pads or computers. So it would be totally OK if you make a computer brand, which is called NoBullshit, you register the trademark. And we register a T-shirt at the same time which has NoBullshit, and it's also a trademark. Because it will not be confusing, and it will not be the customer will know, OK, there's a NoBullshit computer, there's NoBullshit T-shirts, and maybe there's NoBullshit real estate or whatever. But if you want to register a domain name, there's only one NoBullshit.com. So that's why it's tricky with trademarks and with the different domain names. And that's also why there are so many domain names. Because trademarks hold us, they need to protect themselves in almost every space. And we also do SSL, SSL certificates. We are a sub-authority of Komodo. And every domain name you register comes with a free SSL certificate for one year. And for the hosting side, we have simple hosting. So it's platform as a service. You can use it to install WordPress, basically. And it's with MySQL PHP, what you need for WordPress. Or you can have it with different databases like MongoDB or Postgres for other type of CMS, like Drupal, Django, or even for your own web-based apps. If you want to use some mpqq service, some messaging services, or whatever. So you can use all simple hosting for that. And we also have VPS, so you can install a server using our API or using our website. And there's some details here. We also have low-balance, multiple-network interface with VLANs. And some of this stuff is also open-sourced. But I'm not talking too much about hosting today, because it's a very, very big topic for itself. Any question about our product? What would you agree on the Git? Git? So you can access your simple hosting instance with Git, or you can deploy a Git object on the simple hosting instance. That means you save the Git object on our Git server. And if you use the common Git deploy, you will deploy it to a V host on the platform as a service. So you can basically have a website, like a pyramid or maybe even a Django app, which you updated using Git. And once you enter the common deploy, it will unzip the directory from the Git repository directly on our platform as a service. So you have Git integration into our pass. Like you can use it for Heroku, I think, is similar. Any question about Heroku, ask me, I work for Salesforce. Heroku, what? Any question about Heroku, ask me, I work for Salesforce. I don't know if it's compatible in some way, but yeah, you can use it. And I'll say, if you get this pretty cool, for instance, I just threw out my database for the block. When you comment on my block, you actually create a Git commit in the background. And the pull request, and if I like your comment, I approve it, if not, I reject it. I didn't straight away deploy that. So he's getting all the merge requests all day. Oh, gosh, I think people don't talk that much on the block. OK. But it's open source. We use open source for all of this. So actually, all this infrastructure, you see here, there's nothing like, nothing is using a commercial software. We have some commercial software which we use for anti-DDoS. Some of our core routers, they're not open sourced. Or some of the critical network infrastructure is not having open source on it. But for our products itself, we are always using open source. And some of our scripts, of course, they're proprietary, and we don't publish them. Because maybe they're not because they're too sensitive, but they are maybe too not interesting enough because you can't really replicate the same thing if you wanted to build it again. So our website, for example, the Hulu website, is not open sourced right now. But actually, we kind of want it. So at one point, maybe we make our website open source as well. So we are very open with open source. And for example, if you go to status.gandy.net, the website which is showing our status, like infrastructure status, that one is open sourced as well. We have our internal HR management tool. That one is open sourced. So I try a lot or we try a lot to have everything we develop internally to have it open sourced as well. And it's not just to give back, but mainly also because we are already involved with open source. So for us, it's naturally that we send some patches or that we make some modifications. For example, we use a webmail which is called Sogo. I don't know if anyone wants to use Sogo. Some people use roundcube. Roundcube, you know roundcube? OK, so there's two webmails. One is, let me see if I can show you. So this is roundcube. It looks very old because it's very old. But there's support like hundreds of languages. And this one is not responsive. So then there's Sogo. This is another webmail client. And you can see, OK, you have it in French. You have it in English. And so what we did is we added Chinese translation to this one. And we gave it to the company which is developing this one in their base in Montreal. So in Canada. And we gave them the Chinese translation file for this one. So we translate it to Chinese. And they're very happy that we provided them a Chinese version. And so you can see, this is the web client. Looks like Gmail, right? No, it's actually better than Gmail. Because I mean, you also have a calendar. You also have all the integration you need. So this is our webmail client. And it's open source. So actually, if you want, you can install this software yourself. And you say, hey, some features Gandhi is using. I also want to use it. So maybe in the end, you install your own VPS. And maybe you install this one, a user with a domain name. So but if you want it, you can build it yourself or run it yourself. So it's not like some proprietary system which we're using. OK, let's go back to this. OK. So as I mentioned, each domain name comes with one gigabyte of space and five mailboxes. So that's for the mailbox. You have 1,000 mail forwarding addresses, 1,000. But you can actually create more. You have a basic website included, private domain registration with most top level domain names. It always changes. For example, .io, they remove that you can have a private domain name service. So they don't want people to use a private domain name service anymore. I don't know why, but that's what I said. It means basically that your information is not shown into who is. And we have free customer service, obviously, by email. We try to support DNSSEC on most top level domain names. This is for better security of the domain name itself. So everything which you send as a DNS record, if the client support is that the records are signed. So you know that it's really coming from them because it's signed by the root top level domain name. It's a bit technical. And how many of you are developers on how to do software? OK. Maybe four? So you two? OK. I was not surprised. Your email address and your sign will be I mean dot whatever. Sure. And the thing is, many people, when they buy a domain name, they think it's only for a website. But you can actually use a domain name also for your email. So especially even in Europe, or maybe even in some very developed markets, you always see the people where you still use the email address like gmail.com, or they still use the email address of their own local provider, maybe singtel.sg, or I don't know what's the email address people use. Or yahoo.fr, gmail.com. I don't know what's the most common here. Is it singtel or maybe gmail? Probably gmail. So you can use a domain name also for email. And you can have your own aliases. The good thing about the aliases is that sometimes maybe you want to sign up for some event. And maybe you know, hey, these people, they are so marketing oriented, or you receive 20 emails to subscribe to the event. So you can create an alias, like not for Asia, this not like this, but maybe you can create, I don't know something like Cloud Expo, HK, and then use your own domain name dot com, or dot shop, or whatever. And then if you register it, you can always get the emails redirected there. And once the conference is over, and you use it, I do that all the time. Or you can create a domain name only for receiving spam mail. Yeah. But that's what the aliases are for. OK, so any more questions about the product? I mean, the topic is making money with FOSS, right? So I think it covers that part, because that's who we are. The thing is also you can use our APIs. So that's what we go on with. So our APIs is we have a comment line interface, and we have API. So comment line interface is you can type the comment, and our system using your API key will execute the comment. And it's using the API as well. So our comment line interface is also open sourced. And you can find it on cli.gandy.net. And also on GitHub. And so you download it with, OK, I get to the steps. So the first thing you have to do to activate the API, you need to go to our website. This is our old website. So I used our old website. The website is just shiny one, fancy one. I showed you before. That one is the new one we rolled out earlier last year. And this is our old one, which is a bit easier right now to create the API key. So you basically log into the website. It's clear enough. You create a handle. So handle is a username on a new website. You say, OK, which language you speak. So we see we support only five languages right now. And once you're inside, you can activate OT&E and production API. So this may be too technical for some of you. But once you have created this, let's go through this, you're going to get the API key. And if you copy the API key, you will be able to use it with the command line interface. Because once you set up the command line interface, the Gandy CLI, you can use it for all the operations. What are some use cases you see for the CLI? So we have, OK, this is the installation process. And I'm not sure if it's so interesting for you. It's just basically you use Python to download it, set up, enter your API key. And for example, the command you can use is Gandy VM Create or Gandy Pass Create to create a new hosting instance. One is a VPS. And the other one is for like installing a WordPress or setting up a WordPress on the command line. So if you say like, OK, hey, I have an app which my company uses, but sometimes the website is always the same. But we have the same event maybe in different places. Or we have our calendar system or any kind of system you can think of which you need to regularly deploy on different websites. Or maybe you have customers on your own which use our website, like this was mainly done for our resellers. Maybe you also want to create a VPS or platform as a service in some way. So you can use our CLI to create those, but also to maintain them. So maybe you need to reboot it. Maybe you need to add more space. Maybe you need to check something on it if it's working or you need to configure load balancer. So that's what the CLI is for. That's supposed to go into the website. Yeah, correct. So I don't think we have to complete mapping of all the functions from our website inside the CLI. And it's not really our goal, because we don't have enough people to focus on it. But I think the CLI is quite complete right now. So one area where you want to use the CLIs, if you have a bit of a more complex application, you want to test. So you were a good boy, and you wrote your unit tests. And you were a good boy, and you built your integration tests, and then you realize, oh, fuck, it doesn't work if you don't have the same data all the time. So you use the CLI, put it into your Jenkins server or into your Travis or wherever, and then always start with the same set of data, with the same set environment, and then you can run your integration tests fully automated. And I say, even if you very happily use the UI for, as a user, the very moment you want to automate something, you have to use the CLI. And I say, when the software gets a little bit more complex, you will be very, very happy that you have this capability. Sure. You can also use it to, let's say, you run a web server, and you know that every Saturday, Sunday, the traffic is going up, or it's peaking, or maybe you run some other operations, which needs a lot of CPU, maybe like, OK, you upload images to a server, and the images need to be resized, or maybe some image detection used for machine vision, then maybe you need to change the CPU course as well. So you can use the CLI to modify on the fly how many cores of CPU you want to use. And of course, if you use more, we will charge you more. If you use less, then you will charge you less. So it's maybe in your interest to say, OK, hey, I'm using the CLI to detect how is the CPU load. And if it's getting too high, I'm just using a comment to reduce it. So you can put this into a cron, you can put this into a monitoring script, and you can dynamically allocate your resources. And, yeah, it's basically it. So if you use, for example, if you use the comment VM info, you can see what is the information about the VM. So this was a Hong Kong Open Source conference last year. So I show, OK, there is the 256 memory only. It's a very small server with two cores. And you can see the IPv4 and IPv6 address. And what is the network interface speed? So it's like 1 gigabit, no, 1 megabit. And the disk, which is on the system disk. So it's a 3 gigabyte disk in that case. Is it a Docker or something? Yeah, yeah, yeah. You can use it with Docker images as well. So what you saw here is if you call Gandhi VM create and you select the right image, you can actually say, OK, you can name the image, what's the basic image you want. And with dash dash run, you can say what is the image you want to deploy. So you can actually have your own kernel images. You can have your own modified customized images. And if you find a Docker image somewhere, you can use it directly. So any Docker app, which is compatible with our images, which are mostly Linux, they will work right away. So if you have a Docker images or sales post Docker image, then you could use them. I think there's a lot of Docker images for all kind of stuff, like maybe some, I don't know how popular Docker is right now, as it is, but we have a. There's an image for that. There's probably an image for that if you need it. We celebrate Docker's birthday as in the end of this month in our office as well. And they get a birthday cake and some people come. We know some people from there. This is the comment you can use for a domain. For the domain is quite simple to comments. You can just get the information of a domain name and you can create a domain name. That's what CLI right now. I forgot if we already added a new comment. Maybe we did. But you can also use the comment line interface to create domain names. So let's say. Just a bit confused. Actually, you're doing a hosting domain, right? So just when we move to the Docker images, how are you going to relate to things? With our CLI, you can use every product. That means you can use domain names. You can use hosting. You can use certificates. You can use mailboxes. So you can use the API also to create a mailbox, which is attached to a domain name. But the mailbox itself doesn't have anything to do with a domain name. The service, like the hosting of the email and so on, has nothing to do with a domain name or the DNS itself. So that's what we added all these comments inside our comment line interface. And one API key is enough to manage all of them. So to manage your account is just one API key. And you can access all the different services which are under the account. So for the certificate, you can list your certificate. You can delete them. You can create them. This is for the SSL certificates. And for the VM, you have a start, stop, delete, create. So these are all the comments you can use to manage your virtual machines. And other comments. So we have Gandhi pass, Gandhi vlan, Gandhi mail. And some maintenance comments like a Gandhi opera to see what are the ongoing operations to query what is maybe some comment fail, or you want to see if the comment already is finished. So you can use Gandhi opera to see if there's an operation to increase the CPU if it has really finished. OK. So that's part. Any question about the CLI? I'm just curious how long does development give to write a CLI? We already had an API. So it wasn't that complicated, I think. But we can look at GitHub and see how much is the history. I think releasing the first alpha version and the real release version, maybe two years, totally. It was open source from the beginning? Yeah. But it didn't have its own website. CLI.Gandhya.net only exists since like two years, maybe. But it was always available before on GitHub. Oh. And so you can just get it from GitHub directly and you can see what is the changes to it. If you go to, let me see, before we go to domain API. So this is our GitHub account. And if we look at the CLI, so it hasn't been modified for a long time. Generally, 35. So you can also see the history of the community. OK, there's some parameters for the domain control validation have been changed. So you can use Gandhya record update to update the domain record. And if you go to, I don't think there's a way to show the oldest. But you can see it's quite mature and quite long time that we work on it. December 2015, it goes way back. OK. Yeah, OK. OK, so this is our GitHub account. You can also check it. I recently added this one. This is an open search plugin. You can use it yourself, actually. If you look at the XML file, this is open source, but actually it's just a script. Oops, no. This is, sorry, this looks like this because this is an image. OK, so basically the most important part is over here, which is the URL to search for a domain name. So what I added is, if you click on Firefox, you click over here in the right corner on the top. And for example, you search for a first Asia. Here you have the suggestion to use Gandhi.net to search. So you have Google and here you have Gandhi.net. So this is what I added. So if you know any service where you can query for some information, you can use this kind of plugin or you can even make your own for Firefox to search for whatever you need. I think it also works with Internet Explorer and Chrome. I'm not sure if they're supported. But this open search is a new standard. I think maybe around since a while, since a year or two. And they have a specific XML description. I mean, you see. Do you have one search engine? Are you using that search engine? We saw our own. Really? That's cool. It's actually a very complicated thing because we have a guy in our office. He made his PhD with the domain search engine. But we are not giving so much suggestion based on what is the cheapest domain or what is the best domain name. If you just search for a domain name, for example, let's say you look for Hacker, Fos. What we do is we use the location you are currently at. For example, you're in Singapore and we just suggest what are the most used domain names in Singapore. And it will change a little bit over time as well because I expect that more people will buy the SG domain name with us. But here you can see what are the most popular domain names in Singapore. So .com.io.eu.pw.club.online. Those are the most popular ones of our customers here. At T16, though, it's just like a few Singapore centers. I don't know how much it's in Singapore, though. I don't even know why it shows in. OK, of course, I'm locked in. So let me see. 200 is 12, like almost 13 Singapore dollars. So it's 16. So here I can just say, OK, I added to my basket. And then when I added them, I can just say, check out. OK, you're going to buy them on my behalf. You can create a new organization. And you see the differences to other operators as now. If you work with another registrar, they would ask now, OK, do you want to add this and that? Do you already add this? They already added to you this project. We ask you to try our hosting as well, and you can add it. But it's not like pre-checked. Most operators, they will pre-check. It's like, buy extra security, have extra mailboxes, have extra stuff, SSL included, whatever. So we don't do that. So if I just accept the contracts here, and I will say, check out. Don't ask for any other bullshit. So because it's no bullshit. And we support credit cards from the prepaid account, AMEX. We don't support nets. Does nets work online, actually? It's a pain in the butt. Don't bother. OK. Is old school, or is it bank? I know the banks are very expensive here, I know this. It's like all the services there. Everything costs extra, right? Yeah. If you like, maybe there's something here from nets that you can use, I'm not sure if it's that you need to register a team or it. And now, if it works, actually, if you permit your own Gandhi website, it's like you can generate that QR code, and then people can use it. So it's a bit like WeChat Pay or Alipay, or? That's probably easier. We use a third party director, people, for them. Oh, OK. But it's still complicated many times. Because for every API you use, you need to pass some tests and some integration. So it's not easy. We also support Bitcoin. In Singapore, is Bitcoin real, or is it OK, or they don't know? They're technically not regulated. Technically, yeah. OK, it sounds like most countries. But we support Bitcoin Cash and Bitcoin, the normal Bitcoin. I don't know if it's split again. Sometimes they do. So we support Bitcoin. I think Bitcoin Cash is now also supported with BitPay. So we use BitPay as our payment operator for Bitcoin. So we don't actually support Bitcoin, but it's routed through BitPay. And they will give us US dollar, so right away. So we are happy with Bitcoins. OK, let's, yeah. I'm already over time, or is it still OK? I think I'm over time. Hong-Fuk, it's your turn. I think I'm almost done. Yeah. But OK, so just to show you, we have a, so after you register domain name with us, you find your domain names in the domain dashboard. So this is our new website. And here I can see all the domain names I own. So for example, I own the domain night.market. Is it inspired over time and time? Maybe, I have night.market and night.markets. So there's new top level domain names, maybe over 500 now. So one of them is .market. So I just thought night.market would have a funny name. I haven't used it yet in any way. I also have type.beer and Munich.beer. So maybe it's going to be valuable someday, but maybe use it. I was thinking about using type.beer. Maybe I'm just going to say, which beer you can buy at which restaurant? Because some restaurants, maybe they have a Duval, some other restaurants, it's usually cheaper than buying it in, so that's my plan. I'm a German, so we focus a lot on beer products. So that's how you can use a domain name. And if you click on a domain name here, you can change the name servers. You can change the domain contacts. And you can also configure the email boxes. So it's quite easy to set up. And nothing like, OK, there's no extra steps, no extra frills, or no things which I ask you to pay extra for any service if you want to. If I click on Create here, it's not going to ask me to buy a mailbox. It's already included. And if you want to buy additional mailboxes, you can go on the, where was that? Actually, I don't know. I don't know how to buy more mailboxes, because the ones who are included, they show you here. Maybe it was an overview. OK, well, that's it. OK. So that's the basic introduction for our product. I could also show you the domain API. But I think it's not so interesting for the audience over here, basically. But what you can do is if you say, OK, I want to sell my own domain names through Gandhi, you can also use our API to offer other people on your website to buy a domain name. So you can become a reseller of us. And so this is the basic sample code to have to see if a domain name is available and to register it. So this is in Python, I think? Yeah, it's Python. So you just say, OK, what is your currency using? What is your API key? And you just call API domain price to get the price from our website. Then you check if the domain name is available. Domain price actually will tell you if the domain is available. And this sample just prints the result if it found it. So this is a simple check, OK, how to buy the domain name. And you can see, OK, the face is go live. So right now it's already existing. You can register it. And it will tell you if it's available. And this is the parameter. This is the array. People who are not programmers here don't be shocked. This is just like an Excel file, but it's shown a different way. And it's just showing you, OK, the price is this. And then you could register it. This is simplified. Normally, you would have to do much more checks to make sure that everything in the arrays is correct. And this is how it looks on the comment line in this sample. OK, and maybe I'll show you this as well. So on doc.rpc.ganti.net, we have information on how to use our API. So for the domain creation is this little warp flow. You just call domain available. And if it's available, then you have to create a contact to make a contact create over here. And once the contact has been created, come back to here. You call the function domain create with the attached owners. And you check if the operation is running, if it's working, and if it's in this step done. The domain name is registered. You can call domain name info. And the domain name is there. It's basically it. And that's all for my talk, I think, for now.