 and point out people asking, and maybe I'll ask our speakers to just approach the microphone or just stand around it. I mean, it's pretty informal gathering. Yeah, or we can sit there if that's good, yeah, sure. As you wish. So any questions? Let me just ask, and I'll do this part without a microphone. Are there any questions? Yeah, there are, as well as the key components in the, if we could call it an ecosystem, which is a fashionable, quite nice phrase, there's pretty much everything in Cambridge. You name it, and the support is there for the students. I was teasing a little bit before, but I was talking with the posters because I think the balancing Cambridge is really very good. All of this support is free, so Marnie isn't paying anything extra. It's all of these extra themes are actually included, and there's no extra cost, but that sort of thing, it would usually be available for nothing. Yeah, I think, I mean, in terms of the financial models that you just interjected, I mean, I think for a lot of these universities, especially those with the big network, big alumni, big brand, a lot of firepower in terms of pipeline, potential pipelines of science and technology. I mean, it makes a lot of sense for you to be free. It's a great investment in value creation. And then as far as the question, I think there's a lot of, and these are new and very experimental, and I think tactically there's a lot of different approaches on how do you, you know, calibrate and aerate and kind of that creative destruction and all the various approaches that startups may take before they actually coalesce with their ideas and all. So I think there's a lot that's ever-growing field, and I think the final word hasn't been, a lot of experimentation, I guess, as well. Other questions, yeah? I have an equation for a lot of, well, you're already building a startup. What do you want to produce this particular business that you are going to be producing with your audience in Vienna? Okay, okay. I think I was a bit worried about that, because if I were to talk it through, so the material itself, as I've already mentioned, is coffee. Essentially, each one layer of coffee, right now, you have the technology to grow it. Basically, it can incorporate the deposition process. The technology itself of the gop is very expensive, but the material itself is like, it's cheap because it's carbon based, and the carbon is divided all around the gop, right? So right now, I think a lot of research centers, they can grow if they have that technology and they have an expertise. So that's about the graphic. So the patent itself is actually the structure of the one tiny pixel of the desktop. So that's what we paint. So far, if you take every display all around industry, everything is based on metal oxide, mainly heavily in Indian thin oxide, but Indian thin oxide is not reliable for the technology going ahead. So that's why we are proposing new materials like working in this kind of a new set of characters. And there is another interesting aspect of wrapping, so you can be foldable, bendable kind of wearable displays and that kind of thing you can't do with Indian thin oxide or any other like chunky structures, right? Because whatever you do, it's still crystalline material. So you can damage it throughout the time the compulsion from the oxide and there are a lot of aspects. So in terms of startup that you mentioned, right now working on development of this patent to make it even better. And I'm hoping at some point, if I see that the device is the level that I want, I think we're going to find another patent. And if it is successful in my eyes, I will probably sign the business. But it's very, very early stages to talk about it. Any other questions? Yes. You mentioned about this third pillar, in addition to research, how much of it is associated with the fundraising goals of the university and how much of it should be motivation to develop the future donors of the university? It's a big topic for you. Yeah, I think that's a good question. I'm Director of Development and Alumni Relations. I think my full title is a slightly up to a second slide, a bit like the N in Jacqueline's slide. Yeah, if you're talking about to a degree alumni relations, I think that is important. The big source of funding for Cambridge entrepreneurs is other Cambridge entrepreneurs who've been through the system, and they know it's rigorous. And actually, if you look right to the quality of the technology, it is wonderful. How many people have been to Cambridge? You went to Oxford, so I won't have. I'm not talking to you. It is an Oxford saying it's a wonderful experience, so people buy into the whole story of Cambridge. And so you're right. It is, of course, it's a way of attracting new funding on business funding, but it's also a way of making the distinction of attracting philanthropic funding. So to hear you all go away and understand it. Actually, on a related subject, it's quite interesting that the university, what the university can return to the university receives, who's thought for, in a modest case, that there will be a university return, because that is some sort of a share. But for other students who have passed beyond the walls of Cambridge University or any other university who develop harmless things, then the university, presumably the university experience has been a large component, pretty much inevitably, of their success. And yet what is the university getting anything back? We hope they will get something back in the form of donations, unless you were to propose that some sort of agreement was signed with the outset with all students when you matriculate and say this isn't efficient also when you're in speculation that you might sign an agreement with students. Does the university do that? The university universities do that now. If I could just add a quick statement to that. So even locally speaking, I can speak on behalf of AUA as an example when Pepec was announced, I don't know, through AUA's own fundraising, someone did step up and commit approximately a million dollars in a form of a public foundation. And I think she may not have donated to AUA, had it not been for Pepec's announcement in the promise of job creation. So, I mean, that's a very local example, but maybe it doesn't quite translate into sort of larger infrastructural or larger scale sort of initiatives at places like Cambridge, but after all, we are here in Armenia. That's a very, I think, relevant example to say, you know, from a fundraising standpoint that, you know, if you build it, they will come, kind of an approach. Concept of environments, new environments. Traditionally, of the life of the young, right, we use, and then as you move on to your active life and professional, you may visit people in the wild, but not as you're fully as it is now. Because as we are all aware, it's constant to learn it. Now we have to learn how to learn, keep up with all the progress. So, I think what's interesting in living in universities, and I'm happy to see now this happening at AUA, and that's why I wanted to sort of connect together, is this notion of environment, so that even the moment your Cadney of People come back to the university to get energized, to exchange their experience with the new comic ideas, and at this intersection, for example, Abaya had the two things, the ignite passion or interest. Having this outside the regular lectures, where the university becomes a place where you just want to go and hang out. You said there was this other university who was saying just come here if you don't have a project. Actually, in some ways, part of it, I think has that too. Because there are a lot of people who at the end of the day, they go to say nights. It's fun, it's also to say nights. They go and they send it to all these young people to express their ideas. They are inspired. They are inspired, and then they may come back and say, I don't have an idea, but I'm a great CEO. I've been here 10 hours of my time for months to help you get off your feet. And then here you go with a very nice collaboration. So I think the epic center comes to life.