 Historically, the way first responders get notified of fires doesn't matter where you are in the world, it's typically the incident gets called in. It goes to a dispatch center, somebody calls it in and says, I see smoke in a given area. Then they need to physically go in and send out an engine or send out a plane to confirm that incident. Those things could take 20 minutes to an hour if not longer depending on where it is. What we're doing in our solution is really pulling in multiple data sources, starting off with cameras that we deploy to look through a landscape and we can look 5, 10, 15 miles out to detect smoke. We've trained an AI algorithm to distinguish smoke among a canopy to say is it smoke or not smoke. We also use satellite imagery to figure out where a fire starts, pinpoint the location of it so we're able to give that visual intelligence to responding agencies, to multiple stakeholders to really help stop the spread of these fires and also limit the impact. It was the 31st of December in 2019, I remember picking up the New York Times and there's this vivid image of a kangaroo in a burdened landscape. I grew up in Sydney as a kid and I heard stories of friends and family members that were evacuated as a result of these fires. It was nothing like what I'd seen as a child and these were horrific scenes of just the devastation. I also had a one month old son at that time and I was thinking what is the future going to look like for Aiden 10 years from now, 20 years from now. So drove the sense of urgency to say are we doing enough?