 here the Nikomatic and who are you? Well, Nikomatic is a French company and they're right outside of Geneva, Switzerland area. They're very good at making small, very small components and so we make electronic components for the printed electronics industry. So this. They put connectors to LEDs, that type of thing. Is this mass produced? Yes it is. Use in many places, on the road? Yeah, well, you know, anything that has an interface where you exercise equipment, appliances, anything that might have an interface with. Is this one of your robot factory robots or what is this? It's more just a proof of concept so that we can show folks how they can use robotics to work with our crimp equipment. Can I actually have crimps over doing this machine? Just because we don't want any, it's a jam up or anything. So we're just going through the motions on this just to show proof of concept. So as Nikomatic is a big company? As far as employees, we're about 350, but. And mostly in Switzerland or? Worldwide. Worldwide? Yeah. Doing all these kinds of things here. Where is this? It shows some of our flex circuits that we manufacture and we need to fix them in. And then it's showing our surface mount LEDs which are used predominantly in printed electronics. And here you're showing some, you can heat up the jackets so you can make a ski jacket or that. Have heating? Yeah, Nikomatic provides connector solutions for wearables. So that's one of the target industries. It's the growing industry and so we're one of the dominant players as far as providing connector solutions for wearable technology. So you connect the flexible stuff to a chip? To power? Power. Most often to power, sometimes it goes directly to a PCB for data download and that sort of thing. Is it hard to do a connector? It is. It's one of the biggest challenges in that industry. In the whole flexible electronics, printed electronics industry, there's a lot of printed stuff but they need to connect to batteries or to another SOC chip. PCB, yes. And that connector needs to be strong, right? Yes. It has to be strong, they want it to be waterproof, they want it to be robust. So you have solutions for all that? Yes. All right. And you're already making millions of those? Oh yeah. We've been in business 40 years. Doing this kind of stuff already. So what do you think about the future of the printed electronics business? I think it's outstanding, especially with the oncoming markets of sensors and wearables. So that means you're going to be very busy doing all kinds of solutions for that? Yeah. Our main business for years has been supplying membrane switch manufacturers with interconnect solutions. Those kinds of connectors? Yeah, that's more for military. That's a different division. But we have three divisions and we have ADS, which is military and aerospace. We have PIMS, which is printed electronics and membrane switches. And then we also have our Flexible. And in particular, like, connectors for wearables. I saw that. And you can't have a flat-listed circuit. Let's do a flat-listed circuit with a military and tonic connector on it. Screw-Bound connector, which is a high demand in a military application.