 Hi, I'm Brad Bramey, I'm the Vice-President of Marketing for HDMI Licensing Administrator. So there's lots of stuff happening at the show, the 8K, the HDMI 2.1, and you're talking about some of the latest stuff with the cables? Right, so in our booth we have lots of demonstrations of the HDMI 2.1 enabled products, and right here we have the first prototype HDMI cables from the HDMI 2.1 specification. These are ultra high-speed HDMI cables, and these are going to be supporting up to 48-gig bandwidth, and these will support the full suite of HDMI 2.1 features. And again, the compliance test specification that covers these cables isn't released yet, but these are all prototypes and they represent everything from passive cables. We have active copper cables, and then we also have what are called active optical cables. So three different types of cables are represented here. So when you do optical it can be a thinner? Yeah, the opticals go a very long length, they're going to be very dandy for the hand of the 48-gig, what we call the ultra high-speed bandwidth. And this one just sends it? This is a wire cable, it's active, so it has a chip inside, and inside here these are just modules, that's another way to do the active optical cable, so you can see how thin that wire is there, and then you just plug HDMI in and HDMI out, and you can see how long that one is here. How about if I take this off, you can see it a little bit better? So it gets to be very, very long, very thin, and this is with your partners. So you have these partners right here? Yeah, we have Elka, Inyos, JCB, Silicon Line, and La Grande. And for example, JCB is showing this demo right here? Yeah, this is just a display that JCB put together. Part of it shows the interior of their cable construction, and then interestingly, although the compliance test specification for 2.1 was released in August, it hasn't come out yet for cables, but it has come out for the connector. So this is actually the world's first ultra HD certified connector right there. So that's ready to go. And really what this is in general is just showing that as HDMI 2.1-enabled products. You can see all the announcements around CES, so they are hitting the market, and now the cables are needed. That's the last piece to tie in the infrastructure and make the ecosystem ready for this. This kind of awesome to get 48 gigabits per second going through the cables. That's a lot of bandwidth. I mean, the previous specification supported 18 gigs, and now it's going up to 48 gig, that's quite a jump. And that way you can support the full uncompressed AK-60 or 4K-120 resolution and frame rate. And compressed it even goes to 10K, and there's all these other, it's compression. Yeah, HDMI 2.1, this is the first version of the spec that actually supports compression too. And so some companies may be initiating that or implementing that. We don't really have the manufacturer's plans, but under compression you can go a lot longer.