 Rockchip booth and Mobile World Congress. This product was launched all over the US in the last month. Yes, yes. In the CES, actually, Google and Samsung announced this new Chromebook Plus. And this actually, you'll see the processor called OP1. This is actually the Rockchip Arcade 3399. And this chip is really optimized for the Chrome OS. Rockchip will have working with Google for the last three years to optimize the CPU for the Chrome OS. We can probably say we're probably the only one actually doing this optimization for the Chrome OS in the world right now. So all the other processors that are used for Chromebooks is like a second use. It's not the main use. You are optimizing really for the Chromebook. It's a 3399C, right? Yes, 3399, but it's also called OP1 because just trying to make an average consumer know. Because otherwise, your Arcade 3399 or other processors, you don't know what's really the performance of that. And this time, it's also optimized the CPU for the Chrome OS. You know, Intel is probably actually the many optimized for the Windows. And so we are doing this and trying to offer the best performance toward the end user for the Chrome OS. Because this product, the Chrome OS with Android apps, that is Android app support, your CPU is optimized in terms of its exact core ARM processor. And Android is for ARM. It's not for XCD6. Yeah, exactly. I think for the Android, because there are so many native applications. And then you know, on the phone side, there are like 90 or 99% probably for most of the phone using the ARM processors. And so for the Chrome, we actually also didn't optimize it. And for the Android, it's a very native for the ARM CPU. So actually, on this OP1 CPU, you have the Mali T860, right? Yeah, T860 Mp4. And we also put in quite a few efforts with ARM and Google to optimize. Because the actual performance of the machine, not just depending on the single core CPU performance, it's really everything added up. And the CPU, the GPU, the memory bandwidth, and the peripherals. So we are trying to integrate all this seamlessly for the actual good user experience for the Chrome. I hope ARM is very enthusiastic to help you also and to help you optimize GPU compute on their Mali to enhance the performance even more than what you would measure in octane score. Not only the octane score, but. Yeah, I think octane score is just very, very, just one side of the story. And if you're actually using this machine and if you see the opening the web page, we're actually launching the application and also the scrolling, you can see the performance very smoothly. Very smoothly, I think as far as I've seen, even though many reviews were doing reviews about the Chromebook Pro for some reason, but the reviews that I've seen about the Plus and on the Verge, Dieter Bohm was talking about, this is actually really fast enough for most people. Yeah, definitely it is. And also the current class is on the market. I don't know where the other one is yet. We'll see if it even comes out. No, I'm sure it's coming out. I won't comment on that. No, probably. Yeah, but this product and this thin form factor like this, it seems to me, I would guess, it's really. Yeah, this actually can go to 360 and the best thing or not the best thing is actually, if you can see there, you can have a stylus. You can put it on and then you write on or something. Actually, the Google actually put a very good software that can also do the OCR and then incorporate with the Google Assistant to help you for the daily activities. So you can do, okay, Google to it. You can talk to it. And say, you can write down the, say, today I have the meeting with, shooting this video and they show me the note what I did for that day, then it will coming up. This is maybe the ultimate two in one form factor. It's so thin, it's so crazy thin. It seems, it seems to me, I'm just guessing, it seems the whole design of the hardware is optimized for OP1. Yeah, and also it's like a lot of things really have a very big panel. It's like three to two ratios. And I thought 16 by nine ratio. So they're actually viewing of the content, it's much easier. And Google, I guess, is really enthusiastic about getting Android support. Now every Chromebook will do Android in 2017. So this is like the reference design. This is the, this is the superstar product. Yeah, I think currently it's a represent the state of the art technology for the Chrome, currently. And it's also optimized price because the Chromebook Pixel is like $1,000. This is less than half. Yeah, this is very, I think for the average users, now in the US market, like $449, no, $449. Personally, I love it. Yeah, and the battery life is very good, very long. Yeah, very long, it's about 10 hours. So I hope that you're in your collaboration with Samsung and Google, that they are very happy with your heat, right? Oh yeah, I think the power consumption, you know, is always good. And it's like you can do the 10 hours every time and so. And it doesn't get hot, is it hard? Yeah, yeah, yeah. ExaCore, is that the best, is that the best configuration for this kind of product? You have two big, four small cores. Yeah, we got, I think because sometimes you need the performance that it was two big cores for. And also sometimes like the power consumption, if you can allocate those like background application to those smaller cores, so they are very good for the balancing on the product. Because you know, the big little is actually very common platform for the mobile. Although I won't say for a notebook, it's a best, but it's a new point maybe for power optimization. And actually when people do an Octane score, it's only measuring one core performance, right? Yeah, it is. And you have six. Oh yeah, right. So, and if people have Android apps and multiple tabs and et cetera and they're scrolling a lot and they have many fonts, they're zooming in, zooming out. All this is not an Octane score. Yeah, it's also like you also like depending on the GPU performance because like on the other like a memory bandwidth and there's a lot of things actually determined at the end of the user experience of a machine. So I think there need to be a more comprehensive benchmark for the PC. And also this is just the beginning of Android for productivity. It's just the first kind of real product for this. So far there's two million apps in Android, but it will be very interesting to see what will come in the future. Maybe video editing, maybe photo editing, maybe office apps, and they will probably be optimized for ARM because all the developers will make very advanced features. They don't want to optimize for an architecture that nobody's using, X86 Android. Yeah, the good thing I think is really for the huge Android ecosystem, there's billions of phones already in the market and people are already getting used to it and so many developers, maybe they are also going to not just existing application, but also a lot of newer apps for people will no longer doing other things, but maybe focus on the Android or the Mac or the iOS thing. I think that's really very good moving forward for the ARM processors. Because on Intel, they're emulating ARM. They have to emulate ARM to make it, for these, maybe thousands of apps that are optimized for the ARM, they have to emulate. It's just losing a lot of overhead, right? Yeah, it's not a native code. And especially, let's say, for games also. And this is a very high resolution display, but the OP1 is good at supporting it. Yeah, that's actually the effortlessly, yeah. And you can output to a 4K display, no problem with the display port. Yeah, the display port, the full type C support. It's actually got the display port and you can also, it's actually the port also, if you have converted to that DMI also. Nice. I'm hoping that there's a way that this will get sold in China. Maybe with Trump, he will force China to get Chrome OS. We'll see what happens. We'll see what happens. It will be good. All right, okay.