 I'm Rich Boto. This is the second sequel, so it's got to be good. Space Base Part 3, The Tech. Just when you thought it couldn't get any nerdy-er. I come from a place of great nerdy-ness. This is me conducting high-level negotiations with Starfleet. They ended well. I have many cultural dealings with the humans. I'm a collaboration enthusiast on your primitive internet. I've managed many technical projects, and I'm just generally a scrappy technical contributor and the junior member of this team. I have some capabilities too. I've deployed smart contracts. I love to document stuff and implement anything that will help collaboration, and I can also really care about my work. In my ship, the IKV FireDagger, when I was a Klingon, they forbade aesthetics, so my slides reflect that. They are interesting. I'm to implement a funding platform and to implement a networking platform. These are two things. They're kind of together. There's really three things that you do there. Three main things. You find people and projects. You fund things if you need to, and you get together and have gatherings. I'm going to focus on funding today. We're basically building real things for people we have relationships with that we know they need and using some proceeds that are generated by those to fund primarily educational projects and get together. We have a partnership with Hilo, who's got an open source platform. We're working with them to expand that, to meet the capabilities of the networking platform. I'm going to talk about one case study, something that we want to build soon. Eric mentioned hyperspectral imaging satellites. He's on the advisory board of a hyperspectral imaging company. There was a failed $7 billion project. This is going to be a successful $2 million project, so things have moved along. They're ready to launch, so we're going to try to build something they need and launch that satellite. There will be explosions. This is the second sequel after all, right? Step one, they need to fund their satellite. The way that satellite service is generally sold, or they intend to sell, is like selling a seat on an airplane. You get an hour of use of the satellite. You just buy that. You're going to buy this token. You're going to give them some cryptocurrency. They're going to pre-sell these before the launch. They'll have the money then to launch the satellite. They launch it. It's in space. You redeem your token for the hour that you choose and save the world with your great research. Then they're on a market. So these tokens, if you didn't use it, you have it. The satellite didn't blow up. We assume now that it's worth more, right? Because less risk, new features. So that's great. That's a mechanism for funding things. Blockchain isn't the only way to implement that. It just happens to be the best, I think. It's the kind of toolset I like to work with. We're very excited about it. There are a lot of big ecosystem that we can leverage for that. They can fundraise, pre-launch. They're very happy about that. They can join forces with other satellite services. I just got Ashley to be our advisor. She can help me figure out how to do consortia of that. They're just generally more opportunities for automation for them of some of these processes. Customers also get to resell their token if they bought in advance, trade it for another token at a different time. You can do this kind of yield management pricing that airlines do and get things at a lower price or make more revenue. Generally, this is the type of thing that we'd like to build. Satellite businesses could just build these things themselves. There could be a million of them, but we support collaborating. This is all open-source software we're building. We think we might be able to get some collaborators on things like this. The idea of how do we fund things, how do we fund educational projects, just doing that? I didn't really explain anything. There are people who want stuff and investors might want to get in early because they need a lot of satellite time. They would have to buy our token in exchange for currency. We use that revenue to fund educational projects. There are people who may want to make a job posting on our site if our networking platform is good. They have to buy our token. We use that to fund educational projects. There are ways to use gating tokens for impact. Look, Ma, no ICO. That's it. That's the type of stuff I want to build. We're in early days. We know what some companies need. We know that we can build some of that stuff. Honestly, I'm the super junior person in this group. I'm still learning from Eric. I'm still learning from Em. I really need to learn more about products that we can build that the space industry needs. We want to bring local communities onto our board so that we can build the right educational projects. We want the local governments to have a seat on the board and have some skin in the game too. Those are people that we want to talk to a lot.