 This is part one of my research demo. Our research works a bit like Rep. Let me show you here with Rep. I'm going to search for domain names, so simple domain names. There are just a sequence of letters that end with .com. Here you have the text version of the Mendent APD1 report. This is a DREP. It doesn't work with complex regular expressions by default, so extended you have to use option minus E. Then it selects the lines that contain domain names like this one, manjan.com. Option minus O allows you to select only the matching text, so not a complete line, but only the matching text like this. We can make this a unique list like this. Here you have domains that you find in the Mendent report. Our research does the same like this. You don't have to specify any options. It will select the matched text and not the complete line. If you want to have a unique list, just use option minus U like this. You can see that the list is not sorted, but this is made unique. Here you can see so who and so who, one with lowercase s and one with uppercase letter s. You can also instruct our research to use lowercase, and then those domain names will only appear once, like this here, only once. The main reason why I developed our research is that I would be able to select, to use complex regular expressions without having to remember them bad, but by just having to provide a name. If you look at the help of our research, you have the options, and here in the beginning, you have a couple of regular expressions that are inside the library of our research, and it's easy to extend. So I have one for email addresses, I have one for IPv4 addresses, and I have one for URLs. So I can run our research. So I name now my regular expression, it's URL, and I look for it in Mendent report, and here I have all the URLs that you can find in the Mendent report. With option minus U, you can make this list unique, like this, and we can search for email addresses, like this, and we can search for IPv4 addresses, like this.