 And next it locks in AgTech Field Days, Matt Cooper, you've got the product in your hand, take us through it. I do indeed, thanks Matt. So I work for D3 Ag and we are the Australian distributor for Aroble and their flagship product, which is the Mark II. As Mark mentioned in the field earlier this afternoon, it's a weather station but we also have some crop sensing capabilities in there as well, primarily to look around the overall water balance of a crop, what's coming in, what's going in, a rainfall reference CT, a crop ET and a couple of other bells and whistles as well, such as looking at overall peak greenness, NDVI and things like that. So how does it actually do that? Well we use spectroscopy. So we measure about seven different wavelengths which correspond to plant growth. We also use infrared canopy temperature to get those measurements as well and we use very simple ratios to get those NDVI calculations, which we deliver on a daily basis. So how does the data go from there to something that we can use? So we transmit to two places, a web app and a mobile app via cloud services and look, the data that we see coming from this thing in the field provides us with all the information about obviously everything that, you know, the weather drives our crop production. We can tie things to growth stages and phenological stages and there's a little bit of extra capability in there to look at our irrigation scheduling as well. So what have been some implementations that people have used this for to better their farm? Well we see a lot of success in short season crops such as vegetables because it's very portable, it's easy to move around and particularly in viticulture as well. So it was very popular in the commercial research space in agriculture as well and yeah it's really just a tool, a valuable tool that they can have on the toolkit which provides, you know, all the relevant field data that they need to run their operations basically. We also have the capability to plug into other systems as well, you know, for growers that might be have more of an on the boots, sort of, you know, on the ground boots approach. You know, it's useful to have, you know, a series of these things deployed across their operation where we can just check in, see what the local conditions are, what the forecasted conditions are or we can scale up from that and if we want to dive deeper we can send our data to people like swan systems, you know, deep planet, pear tree intelligence and a whole range of others so we've got great interoperability with other platforms that are out there and that's where we see a lot of success as well. Excellent Matt, thank you. Nice, thanks Matt.