 I'm here at the Ilitech X show with one of our exhibitors, Dykotech, and I'm here with Dr. Ian Clark. Ian, welcome to the show and thanks for joining us. Thank you very much. Great, tell us a bit about the company, what does Dykotech materials do? Absolutely, so Dykotech is an advanced materials business. We manufacture conductive and resistive inks and pastes. Also insulators, dielectrics, protective overcoat materials. Basically all the things you require to manufacture printed electronic devices. So what you see here is merely the containers that the various inks and pastes arrive in when you order them. And here are some of the devices that our clients have made using our electronic materials. For example at the back there you see sensors, automotive sensors where our carbon pastes have been used for the wiper surfaces on the printed circuit board. Here we have textile heaters. So there's actually a textile that's been treated with conductive polymer. What sort of application is that using? There's a lot of industry very interested for things like seat heaters and such like, but also there's potential for them in clothing, in gloves and so on. At the other end of the spectrum here we see RFID printed with our silver paste directly onto rubber. And that's for a tyre monitoring application. It's a wide range of applications and a wide range of products. So here I see you've got a heated jacket with sensors. So this is coming back to the textile heater and this is the material. So here you have a polyester fabric that's been treated with a conductive polymer. And if this is then connected via silver printed bus bars to a power source it warms up to between 40, 50 degrees centigrade. And it can be incorporated into clothing. In this case all we've done is actually wrap a section of material around the midriff of this jacket. You can see it's actually quite warm in there. It runs off between 5 and 12 volts. A typical battery. I mean this is actually running off the mains at the moment. A typical battery pack like this. It'll give you about two hours of heat. In many of these applications your materials are enabling new products like this one. So how do you find customers in those new areas and tell them about your capabilities? I think one of the main ways, and I'll be very pleased to hear, is actually coming to conferences like ID TechEd. We have a lot of interest at these conferences. And there's a wide range of industries that are represented here. Automotive is very, very big for us. Medical, defence. We're getting a lot of interest. Wearables of course is the other hot topic at the moment. So do a range of conductive inks and pace. This looks like you do custom formulation development for clients. We do indeed. So we have standard products. We have around 50 standard products which cover, as I say, the various conductive pace, the protective overcoats and so on. But around about half or two thirds of our work is actually working in collaboration with our clients and joint development agreements to tailor the products very specifically for their application. And then you have some products here on overcoats and insulators. Yes, that's right. So we sell the whole system. So once you've printed your resistive or your conductive track, you need to protect it from the environment in many cases. So we produce overcoats which are compatible with our inks. Also insulators so that you can produce multi-layer devices. Adhesives so that you can connect to the tracks. We also have a UV reflective coating material as well. So we're growing the range of standard products that, as I say, a large part of our work is in fact involved. Tailoring these to the customer's precise requirement. Great to you and thank you very much. You're very welcome. Thank you.