 So we're here at the Cavion booth and you're from Montevista, right? So who are you? I'm Jim Gallagher. I'm a senior marketing team lead. And here you're holding a board which is using Oction TX. Correct. This is for our parent company, Cavion. So this is the Oction TX, the 81XX. It's got four cores. It is the Oction family with the ARM cores, the ARM V8 64-bit ARM cores. So there's Thunder X for more like servers and what is the Oction TX for? It's for embedded. So for people that want more embedded, so lower power but high performance, be able to do offload. This is an extension of the Oction family with ARM cores. So let's check over here. What is this demo that you have? It says secure IoT gateway for always on, always connected devices. Absolutely. So this is our proof of concept demo of an IoT gateway. So the intention is that you're going to have sensors. The device is the end at the edge. This is just a sensor for humidity and temperature. We're reading temperature humidity. We're pushing the data across signal. It could be Wi-Fi. It could be 6L PAN. It could be a CAN bus or a POPI bus. We're feeding it into the 81XX board. This is an engineering board, EVV. It's running Monobus's CGAX 2.0. We're collecting the data and putting in a simple SQL database. And we're displaying it in a web browser. So if you make some changes, you would actually see a graph go up. It's just a simple way of showing that today, if somebody is building an IoT gateway, we can actually get them running within a day or two. The CGAX 2.0. Is that the Linux that's the kind of Linux that you do? Yeah, so it stands for KeriGrid Express 2.0. It's based on a 4.1 or 4.4 Linux kernel. We always long-term support a kernel. That's all we do. So the intention, we support our customers for at least 10 years, both from a GA, a long-term maintenance standpoint. It has got GNU 5.2 toolchain and a lot of different features. IoT is what we're showing here from a connectivity standpoint. So we'll do like Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, cellular modem, Lua Java. Really anything that somebody today would want to get going for an IoT gateway. So Montevista has been working on ARM, Power Linux for a long time? A long time. One of the first ones? I think one of the first ones. Yeah, from a long, probably at least 10, 15 years. And now working together with Kavion is going to be pretty cool, right? Yeah, so we're definitely owned by Kavion. We're a wholly owned subsidiary. So we are a little separate from them, but certainly part of the company. We have a very strong relationship with Kavion. So any of the new processors, whether it be Arcadeon MIPS or Arcadeon ARM, we're typically one of the first ports out. We work hand-in-hand with our engineering to do optimization, inclusion of the SDK, so that enables our customers to have a really true platform to get going to market as quickly as possible. Do you work with Minero? In order to get things optimized? So we are part of Minero. We do a lot of work with them. Kavion as well is part of Minero. They do a lot of work with them. So the intention is that we're hoping to make it a lot easier for our ecosystem from an ARM standpoint. So our customers can take advantage of middleware, other things, especially optimized for the ARM platform. So how big is Kavion right now with the embedded world? Big player? Big player, absolutely. I mean, if you're thinking of ARM, you're thinking of ARM VAs in 64-bit, especially from an embedded standpoint, you should be thinking about Kavion. All right. So looking forward to that. And the Oction TX family has up to 24 cores. Correct. So there's all kinds of different use cases. Absolutely. And keep in mind also it has offload capability. If you want to do encryption from a bulk offload standpoint, from NSSL, the offload engines are there available to you. It takes very minimal. What that means to you is that your encryption standpoint or any security standpoint are offloaded to a separate engine. Therefore, your ARM cores are not attached and they can still do any of your applications. So you could have anything from security, authentication, and then you can still have your applications running from the ARM cores to take advantage of that. It's a highly optimized system that you fully take advantage of and obviously get going with your application. Nice. And all these solutions, shipping, ready for... So ZTX 2.0 is generally available from an Oction TX standpoint. We're in early access. We will be GA by the end of Q4. Oction TX is actually in sample mode. But if anybody's interested in looking at Oction TX, I highly suggest you get a hold of your local Kavion sales rep.