 My name is Neil Jain. I am a team member of Team Gen Z and I'm from Seattle, Washington. If I'm talking to 11 year old kids, I would say imagine that iPhone you had in your pocket. Next time you're feeling sick, you could just touch it to yourself and tell you exactly what you'd have, what little pills to take, and then you'd be feeling better. I think being the youngest team does give us a unique perspective. I think one that everyone wants to help us, first of all, but also I think just the way young people think, the way we think is different than the way a lot of the other teams think. Teenagers to 30 year olds are coming up with all these new innovations. When I heard about the tricorder that just hit me specifically. I think there was just something so interesting about using that phone that I always have in my pocket in such a profound way that can only affect all the lives of people in our country but in the third world it can affect billions of people who just have no access to health care. Around here there's an environment of supporting but outside it's kind of hard to say I'm a teenager and I want to solve a global health problem and everyone's gonna be like okay sure maybe in ten years you'll go to college and you'll figure something out but no one really took us seriously and I think it's nice to actually have such a supportive group of people here and I think the whole environment is changing to realize that young people are gonna be the innovators of today not even tomorrow. I think what's really cool is that the power our device could have on the lives of so many people so a mother at home doesn't have to worry about her sick newborn crying in the middle of the night worrying if sick she can literally just take out her phone and diagnose him right there and see if she actually needs to go to the doctor if he's just tired or if he's in a village where they just they have never had access to mental care care to provide diagnoses for some of these world's common diseases because they're called common diseases for a reason it's just all of these can be diagnosed or treated if diagnosed early and I think that's what we're trying to do. Since I'm 16 I'm still in high school and some teachers just blatantly called they're like you know what Neil if you want to skip school come up with a more reasonable response to actually leave school for these three days and I have to actually take up and show them that I'm part of a tricorder team. Some of my friends still think I'm making up the whole thing.