 have a health tech venture where you're planning to give advice to patients as to how they recuperate and how they sort of feel better. So please tell us a little more about it. Yeah, so thanks for asking. For 20 years of my life, I practiced as an art surgeon and we would fill the gap. We would take care of people when they were the sickest and try to bring them back from the abyss and fortunately with the techniques we used and science the way it is in medicine, in most cases they would do great, but I couldn't turn back the clock. No matter how hard I work, I couldn't undo what they'd done their whole lives. The same thing is, I think as a thing what we're envisioning is what is it that every person needs from healthcare, right? It's when you don't have it and a catastrophe happens, no matter what else you have in your life, you're in jeopardy. So what we have cooked up is something which is personalized precision healthcare which really focuses on individuals and tries to create an entity which protects them from cradle to grave and is aligned with their well-being forever and their families and all that. So it looks at their different variables including their lifestyle and what they have to go through because no two people are like and the disease can be similar. How you manipulate the variables is very different. I mean your life is going to be very different than mine than hers and so we're actually looking at that sort of thing and it's a combination of media technology and brick and mortar which serves to educate the patient and take care of them, give them the building blocks of cloud-based MMR which is smart and then a smart services marketplace and so in the end with all the IoT devices, all the other things that we'll have, it's going to be a feedback loop which continuously monitors you. It's almost like in a car when you have a check engine light. That's what you'll end up having, not a check engine but you'll have something which links and fills the gap between the patient and the medical community because let's face it in India alone there's 1.8 million docs, 1.33 billion people and not enough medical expertise to go around and that includes the allopathic NIU stocks and the only way we can do it is to build something more than that and the pandemic has taught us that more than ever. I would say edutic and health tech are the two big things. We've been working on them for years but now all of a sudden they've blossomed and well they should, right? I think we need them badly. Yeah, I totally agree with you.