 I want to talk a little bit with Malesh. I am about his story and he comes from a weaver family and they make, this is, they make pochampalli saris. So this is what they make. It is from a little village in Andhra. His mother is the inspiration for what the invention that he has come up with. So what is your mother doing there? My mother tells me to go to Asubheda. To go to Asubheda means to do the first step of the first step of the design of this jeera. Okay. If you want to do a jeera, it takes 5 hours. It takes 9000 years to do it. With that, I came up with a very good idea. What did your mother tell you? She told me to do something different. She told me to do something different. She told me to do something different. She told me to do something different. She told me to do something different. Okay. So to make a saree, you have to, you know, put the thread. You know, basically you have to do this back and forth. And you do it for about over 5 hours every day. And so one day his mother said that, I just can't do this anymore. So you do, you find something else to do. Because I just am not able to do it because my hands are hurting. Okay. Okay. So he said that, why should I leave this profession? I have to find some way, some invention so my mother doesn't have to do this. So he said, even though I was only 7th class graduate, I wanted to come up with an invention to help her. Okay. Okay. So what he said is that to, he wanted to invent a machine so that his mother doesn't have to do it. So he put 4 poles in the hole and put a thread around it and he started, you know, experimenting with it. Then all the neighbors said that, you know, an uneducated person cannot do this. Some engineer has to do it. And they all started laughing and saying, you're trying to get out of weaving. That's why you're doing this. So they started giving me hard time. He's tried it for about 5 years trying to come up with this invention. So I wanted to do it. So I was able to do it. They asked me, they gave me some advice. So I went to Hyderabad without their help. I went there and took the machine with me. I kept the building there. I came to the evening time and worked part-time. After 2 years, I went to work in a company. Many of the machines were new there. I saw the machine there. After seeing it, I was observing it there. I didn't know what to do with it. After 2 hours, I saw it. I took it with me. I asked, did you come to work or to see the machine? I said no, I didn't know what to do with it. I said I'll do it. After 2 hours of observing it, I took the technology with me and took it with me to the machine. So that's how the machine works? That's the final stage. After 2 hours, I saw it. After seeing it, I was okay with it. I took it with me and kept it there. After 7 years of working, I took it with me to work or to study something else. But he observed how those machines were built. After 2 years, he completed it and the machine was ready. After 7 years of working. After 7 years of working, I took it with me. After 7 years, I took it with me. and on an ongoing basis, they sell about 2, 3 a month so they sell it at about 16,000 rupees and he said that, between 2 districts that are neighbouring, there is about 30,000 weavers now that is his, you know, market and they all want it now so he is working on the machines to sell it now the machine took over so that is the you know this is how it used to be done and Now the machine took over about 500 machines 9 years seven years of working And you're continuing to do that Yeah