 It was all quite random that I happened to be seeing the add of this Meetup. In fact, the date that I started Creative Crew was probably before the actual incorporation and it started as an Adobe user group when I was still in Italy in 2006 and I was so curious to expand and share my knowledge about Adobe and I went to ask Adobe how do I set up a user group back in Italy and it took forever to answer me. It took weeks and weeks. Could you put up the slide with the previous logo? Because I have a little story about it. And so I bugged Adobe so much to a point that I told them I remember writing an email saying if you don't tell me how to set up an Adobe user group I will set it up anyway and I will call it Adobe user group whether you endorse it or not, it doesn't matter. And suddenly they replied saying you're welcome to set up a user group. But there was a time when I was moving to Singapore and there was a major problem. I did not speak English and so I had to learn how to speak English first because before I actually made my meetup groups and so I started conducting some training in Photoshop learning English very fast and all the pictures that you see here are actually pictures that I have taken from Singapore Zoo. This one I think was in Bangkok. This one in Cambodia. Of course this is the Merlion. This is the Bird Park in Singapore. This is in Orchard Road opposite Takashimaya. These are all pictures that I have taken and I went back home and I outlined and I put them together. But the first meetup of Leon, January 2009 was actually the version 1.0 of Creative Group because there was an alpha and a beta version of it. And at the beginning it was me trying to get some people to come and listen to me talking about Photoshop. And then illustrators, sometimes in designs, sometimes after effects. And at the beginning it was a real disaster because I just moved to Singapore. I have very few friends. I don't speak much English so I just asked my friends come, I show you how to do some editing with the photos. And I have a few friends that were posting these very, very tiny talks. There was a moment where I was just this little to give up and all that you have seen today would not have happened. When I conducted a presentation and I booked a room and I was so excited and I put it all the way on social media called my friends, write them SMS because there was no WhatsApp back then. I think it was 2007. And I was trying to do it every month. And the audience was very, very small, like one person. I remember running a whole presentation for one person. There was ones that I really nearly gave up. There were only two. And at the end of the presentation I say, I think, guys, thank you so much for coming but I will not carry on. And it was Alex who used to come to the meetings back then and say, trust me, one more time. And they say, how do you know one more time? They say, trust me, one more time, do it one more time. And that month actually happened. It was in, when he told me that was September 2007 and we were running the presentation at Adobe. And Adobe was so kind to sponsor the room and I showed up with two guests. So there was just me and two guests. And it was a beautiful room where you were kept. And they told me, trust me, one more time. I said, okay, let me do it one more time. I remember going back home telling my wife, I'm done with Creative Cruise. Yeah, you should not carry on doing it because you're not making any money or just investing your time and you don't get anything out of it. But I trusted Alex that time and the month after it happened that there was a company here in Singapore that was selling software. That month, I don't know why. I don't know how it happened. I really don't remember but they put us in the mailing list. And I asked Adobe to host one more time and it was so packed, so packed that the room that they have allocated couldn't fit all the guests that came. There were 82 people that attended that presentation and they had to actually open another wing of the Adobe office because there were people literally sitting on the desks and that night I met Carson. It was the first time I met Carson and I asked him, would you like to help me organize the next one and the next one. By the time we reached 2009, I believe, we already incorporated a proper society. So we had Mark Plunkett, Lime Slim and the core group of 10 that actually signed and became a memberability that was still registered with the registry of the society. I'm not really sure about that. But it was how it started. I'm very glad that at the point where I needed to leave Singapore and take a quick break, please call me back in five minutes. At the point where I was supposed to take a break and I stayed away from Singapore for four years, I'm very glad that you guys stopped the Adobe monologues because the market changed so much. There are so many things that you can do now outside of Adobe and they all belong to the same sphere. It's so exciting that now you guys brought it into a totally new dimension. As for me right now, I'm very interested into the blockchain space and I've got a few projects running that are exciting to me. Probably very boring for the majority of the people. The potential outreach of blockchain is quite interesting even for 3D printing, which is something that probably didn't take off as fast as we imagined. We were imagining like ten years ago that everyone would have had a 3D printer at home. But now nobody have a 3D printer at home. And the reason why nobody have a 3D printer at home is because you cannot track what you print. And so if I want to print out a dinosaur from a toy or a movie for my little child at home, I can't print it because there is no model available unless I develop it or I get someone to develop it. But my idea could be a 3D printer that is blockchained and on the blockchain, Toys R Us puts the project as a sort of a smart contract that begins when I start printing it and ends after I print the dinosaur. They get the commission and I get the dinosaur. And all I do I order from home and I blockchain the IP of it. So every time someone wants to print that specific item, it gets rewarded. And so the 3D printer might have you have to refill the ink, you have to top up your wallet and then you are good to print. And in that case you will expand dramatically the usage because you can print whatever you want. Just you have the unlimited library of projects available for sale that you can track and legitimately reward whether it's one of the news that can be done. For other things, I certainly saved the date for the 13. I'll be happy to see what you guys are up to. Thank you.