 about the smart assistants from the big three and four, but there's an open source alternative coming out here from a company called Mycroft AI and I'm here with Eric Juergensen to tell us about it. Yeah, so I'm Eric, I'm VP of Business Development at Mycroft AI. We are the open alternative to Siri and Alexa. We know that we can build a great voice experience without storing every single recording, every single interaction that a consumer will have with our smart speaker. So we don't do that. We don't store those recordings. We don't store that data and so there's nothing to be hacked and exposed. There's nothing to data mine and sell to third parties or sell to marketers. So the open source assistant's been out in the world for about three years now. We had a Kickstarter back in 2015 for our Mark I smart speaker and then shortly thereafter released a Raspberry Pi image that made it real easy for people to come and start developing for Mycroft. But what we're doing with the Mark II here is taking that software, taking that learning that we've done over the last few years and putting it in a really easy to use awesome experience consumer package that anyone can have in their home, trust that it's respecting them and their privacy, but still get a great experience comparable with Alexa, Google Assistant, Siri or Cortana. So everything in this smart speaker is stored locally? So really there's just nothing stored. We use a bit of a hybrid approach just because of the necessity of doing STT on a powerful engine for STT, speech recognition. So wakeward spotting happens on the device. That's software that we built called Precise. We send up an audio recording to our servers, transcribe it and send the text file back down. Once the audio file is done with that, we delete it, we're working to bring that back in service into people's homes through an open source personal backend, but then the natural language processing, all the skills on the device and then you've got a choice between an on device voice to respond in or a cloud voice that sounds a little better is a little bit faster. Nice, nice. So when do you hope to have this to market? Sure, so we know that people are going to care less about the date that it's delivered and more about whether or not it works. Our goal is the end of Q1, but it might be a little later than that. It is still on any go-go in demand, so we're working on the crowdfunding aspects and getting a few more orders in. We'd love to have your support. That sounds good. So what are you picturing a price point on this? On Indiegogo right now it's $189. That's the pre-order price. MSRP is going to be $199. So is this Linux based? Yeah, yeah. So we run on Raspbian, we run on Ubuntu, we run on KDE, and this one's going to be a little combo of Ubuntu 1804 plus some KDE QT visuals. Okay, so I've got a Raspberry Pi at home. Can I run your open source alternative here? Absolutely. Our PyCraft image works out of the box. You grab a Raspberry Pi USB microphone, a speaker, monitor, set it up, and you can be running in 20 or 30 minutes. Oh man, I've finally found something to do with my Raspberry Pi. So if people want to learn more about Minecraft AI, where would they go? They can go to mycroft.ai. All right, that's very good. By the way, I was corrected. This is not the Minecraft from... From Sherlock Holmes. From Sherlock Holmes. Right? Yeah, so transitive property, Mike, the essentially computer in the moon is a harsh mistress, named himself after mycroft Holmes from the Conan Doyle. Oh, okay, okay. So it's all a big happy family. It all comes around. All right, very good.