 So, I'm going to start this out a little bit odd, but I was going to the bathroom at CES and the most amazing marketing campaign I've ever seen was a sticker on the inside of the door that said, are you texting right now? Do you know what's on your phone? And it invited us to go to the Fooche booth and I'm here with Dr. Kurt, a PhD in microbiology who's been instrumental in the development of an interesting product for your cellular devices or your portable devices. Why don't you tell us about what we're looking at here? Now, listen, we've worked real hard at understanding the marketplace, the needs and wants of people right down to the consumer level. Then how can we get that through the distribution channels in a way that's got some flash, but that also brings technology right forward because we're talking about tech hygiene as a theme of Fooche and the tech hygiene allows us a banner to work under that goes from everything from cleaning the machines with products that are safe to the machines, safe to the environment, and safe to people. That's our stewardship triad that Fooche lives by and that of course translates really well to the big box companies, to the bed bath and beyonds, to the staples, to the people that would sell these products, but what we've developed is a perfect screen cleaner that has no VOCs and doesn't have any kind of harmful chemicals with it, but cleans the screen and makes it resistant to fingerprints afterwards. I didn't realize that. They did clean my screen and it looked fabulous, but I didn't know it was also going to resist future fingerprints. It does. And then you'll find as you use that microfiber cloth, which is antimicrobial treated, so we're not transferring germs from one place to another. Oh, I actually thought about that when she cleaned my phone and then she cleaned my husband's phone. Was he getting my cooties on his phone? Good for you because think about a doctor looking at an iPad with a patient and he's doing his recordings and then a nurse comes and looks at it. What just happened? So we're trying to anticipate some of that too, but on the personal level, I've got my four-year-old grandchild who's... He's made of cooties. Yeah, she. She does it and she's using it, then her older sister uses it, and then it does all that. And then it daycare and all that, yeah. Exactly. And they're so competent with this, but so we added an antimicrobial treatment. We have a disinfectant treatment and then we have an antimicrobial preservative that gives you 24 hours of protection. Let's bring this down to the practical level. They handed me a little packet of some juice of some sort and a little cloth, so you spray the juice onto the screen and then wipe it off and then that's all three pieces that you just described? No, it's step one, step two, step three. Okay. So it's mingobangobanga. We start with the cleaner. So he's got... Yeah. This is audio too, so he's got a little squirt bottle like a binocca kind of a thing, you know, a little breath freshener size and then antimicrobial cloth. Right. And then that cleans and shines the phone from your experience, you know, it's unbelievable. Yeah, it's nice. I mean, how much time do you spend trying to rub it off and you feel like you're just smearing it around? Exactly. Let's just took it right off. I've got greasy skin, so I'm worst of all. You love it. So what's step three? Okay, so no. Now, step two, we can disinfect that. So there's lots of use environments where you would love to be able to disinfect that surface. Now, that's a specific legal term to the EPA. These products have to be regulated, they have to be put together carefully and registered, and we've gone through all that process, and that's expensive million and a half dollars, three years. Yikes. Yeah. So, but is that happening with these two pieces that we have here? We've got the squirt and the cloth, and we've got, we are actually disinfecting for real. Right. And then we have a protective antimicrobial treatment that preserves that surface for over 24 hours. So that's a second squirt. A second squirt. Oh, okay. Okay, I got you now. Now, wait a minute. We're going to add one more. And then we encase it in kryptonite. Well, one of the things we're going to do is one of the failures we found in the marketplace were the screen protectors that people are using. There's different plastic strips, there's different glass covers, there's different kinds of coatings. They all tend to brittle eyes and or peel to much too easily. I agree. So we developed a technology that can cushion, it's not, it can cushion the impact of stuff. And so it's got resilience and that resilience keeps it from scratching and it keeps it from being nicked. And the video we have is actually a demonstration on a car window where we shoot gravel at it and it doesn't, it doesn't break the windshield. So you're talking about if someone does have a screen protector, adding your product makes it less impact or more impact resistant. Right. We've actually been talking with some of the screen protector companies who are saying, yeah, we need that. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Okay, so that's a whole nother market to go into there. Well, this is really cool and I appreciate the technical understanding as well from a, from a, wait, what was your, microbiologist, right? That's fantastic. So the company name is Woosh with an exclamation point. And what's your URL? How do they find, where are you on the web? It's Woosh. Okay, woosh.com. Yep. All right, great. Thank you very much. Couldn't have asked me business things, Allison.