 I'm going to present Autism Connect to you. How many of you know here what autism is? Oh, that's the biggest number I've ever seen. In a crowd where people say, yes, I know one. So for those who don't know, autism is a developmental disorder and it manifests mostly in the form of an inhibition of social behaviour and an ability to recognise emotions from facial expressions, body gestures. And there are a lot of, it's diagnosed mostly using social and emotional reciprocity and there's usually a lesser amount of peer relationship between friends and people with autism. But it's not like everything's going to be hampered if you have autism. It can be, a lot of its effects can be reduced through therapy. But then again, that's very expensive. In the USA, a person can spend around 2 million US dollars on therapy in his life if he's autistic. Now that's something that's not affordable for most people. And autism is not a big set of symptoms. It varies across the spectrum. For some people, it might just be very little disabilities in social areas. For some, it's very huge. For some, some people might be able to go through this for the normal life quite well without facing a lot of problems in moving in their border capabilities or mental health. But for some people, they are purely dependent on others for their basic needs like moving from one place to other or going out, going out in public. But one thing that's nice is that almost every autistic person has some area in which they are much more gifted than anyone else around them. Like a lot of autistic people, most autistic people have a very nice flair for poetry and almost all of them write very nice poetry which now people won't usually do without having to focus, without reading a lot of literature. A lot of them are very good at pattern recognition, mathematical capabilities. But okay, in the developed countries, especially in Singapore, you will find a lot of therapy clinics affordable. You find special schools for people, for autistic children who need special care. But in India, there are around 12 million autistic people and there are 4,000 therapists. So that's like, it's almost lived compared to the population. And the therapy cost is very high and it's located in only big cities and most of the India's population lives in small cities and villages. So there are three problems. There are two problems, first, in accessibility and affordability. Now in India, because there's not much awareness about mental health, so any sort of problem in your mental health is just, you just characterize as insane and that's where everything ends, no treatment, nothing. And there's a lot of social stigma around autism as well. Our idea is that if we would ought to be a part of the therapy, we are making a little bit of therapy available to everyone at an affordable cost. The cost is very less. It's like 100 rupees per year. We have three... Our solution is based in three parts. First is the social networking platform, where you can connect to people with autism, their friends, those people who have already gone through therapy, those who are diagnosed too late for therapy, where they already developed the coping mechanism. Then there's this online training portal where we tell the youth... Our primary user is a child who is fully diagnosed with autism. So we take it on ourselves to inform his parents and teachers on what can be the effects of autism, how autism is going to manifest itself in the child's behavior. Then we try to train the child in recognizing emotions from facial expressions and body gestures because he cannot recognize, he cannot also mirror it. That means he cannot... He can't express it using his face or a lot of things. He might not be able to connect his feelings with the word. So that becomes very difficult to express. So we try to train the user how to express the feelings. There is an automated test to be able to do it. So we are currently trying to build the backend. In the advanced training, your test, how you are expressing and how good you are at recognizing emotions, all this is evaluated by the therapist and the nurses, and then you get feedback. Then there's also... We also have a possible thing in practice arena where we give you a lot of tasks ranging from mathematical puzzles to poetry and creative writing. And the area in which you show the best pair, we focus on that area because you might be limited in other areas, but if you're very good at some area, it makes things to... make that your strength. And this will also make sure that people around all the children and the parents, they don't start thinking, oh my God, my child is absolutely useless. What is he going to do after me who is going to care for him? So we want to make the child self-dependent and we want the parents and teachers and friends to be aware of his special needs. We also try to make the child aware that the parents and teachers are aware of sensory overload. A lot of most autistic individuals, they have one sense, usually one which is very sensitive. So it's like, if an auditory sense is very sensitive, then a little bit change in the TV volume can be very irritating to them. So they always want the sound to be at a particular level or below the particular level. Anything beyond that just irritates them so much that they're going to throw... that some of them might throw tantrums or they might just become very irritated. Right now we are reaching out to teachers and general physicians because they're usually the first ones who are in a position to identify a learning disorder. So we are currently reaching out to some villages near our college. We are reaching out to the primary schools there and making them aware about autism. We are also planning to have offline centres in a lot of cities and villages so that autistic children can perform the extracurricular activities irrespective of the environment background. It can be available to them. It can hand-gift them a platform to interact with other children. And I must say there are a lot of children who can be very clear when it comes to people who are different today. That's how people are. You see in a lot of forms that's one of the primary reasons for bullying in schools. So we want to reduce this attitude and we want to make... we are making this open source because we want everybody to contribute. We want everybody's expertise to be realized for a better cause. And because this is not a problem that's specific to India it's something that's specific to a lot of developing countries and we want to reach out to as many people as possible. So we'll be posting details on the Positions speakers' group very soon. So please feel free to contribute to our product. Thank you. Any questions? What are the various open source technologies which have actually went behind the product that people are using? Right now we are in the phase of within the back-end because the technology that's available for facial-emotional recognition, it either uses your eyebrows or either uses your lips. There's no other way. Beauty has done the work of integrating that but it needs to be integrated. So currently we're working on that. That's what we're working on right now and we're also reaching out to teachers, doctors and therapists to make you aware of what we're trying to do. So you can talk more about this in the breakout room at 2.30. And I'd also like to just one minute more. We're also developing Hamara Linux. So it's not just a Linux distro. It's aimed at introducing... It's aimed at making technology accessible to everyone in a developing country. We are currently focusing on India. So we are building very cheap hardware and we... So we are getting support for DIY hardware and electronics so that... We have developed laptops which you can buy for less than 10,000 rupees which is like quite cheap, less than 100 US dollars. So you can take the 4G, the water boot will bend right from me at the breakout room at 2.30 and the stickers as well. Thank you.