 So Anna, who are you? What do you do? So I'm Anna Laura, I'm working for MSEF Sweden Innovation Units, I'm a project manager there. Fantastic. And why are you here? What are you showing us today? So I'm showing this piece of work. That's very small. Yeah. So it's a cold chain indicator. A cold chain indicator, all right. So what it does, it monitors quite a complex process. At MSEF, the process we use to bring medicines, lab products, vaccines into the field, really to the furthest, most remote areas. It's quite a complex model. It involves a lot of information, a lot of people, and a lot of little steps. What we have right now is a set of tools that in fact are quite inconsistent and insufficient to properly monitor. So these are the existing tools. As the next loggy, I know these tools very well. This is the 3M, the log tag and the freeze tag. So this is what MSEF currently uses, and you're proposing to replace these by this. I am. I am, at least in a stage way. So what you're looking here is at an indicator, a monitoring device, that is attached to single packages. Okay. So this you've before, this is to be just one group of monitoring devices for the whole box or something like that. Right. What they do is they fit in here and they represent sort of representative to all the boxes that are inside of the whole box. And this is now down to the individual package, too. Yes. Which allows us two things. One, much more specific data, because now you're monitoring and providing an indication of so what's happening in reality and what that means for that specific product. This is now possible. And another thing is we can monitor the whole process. From A to Z. So right from the manufacturer. From normally the manufacturer. Into the arm. Yeah, absolutely. Or mouth or however it's demonstrated. Anna, can you show me, I mean, I'm a simple doctor and I don't really understand the logistics aspects of the cold chain, but can you maybe just show me what you're actually collecting on this? Sure. Put information there. Let me show you actually the backside. It looks like this. You can feel it and touch it. So this is printed electronics, whatever that is. Yes. It's a demonstrator, so it's not a complete product just yet. But we're working on that. We've been doing together with, I mean, leading partners on the field of printed electronics and printing labels. We've been working together with them to develop this technology. So does it cost the earth or does it cost not much? We're working so that it costs just not much. Okay, okay. And I'm going to spend a bit of money now and then we get the process down later. All right. Okay. And it does prove a lot of better things we're doing now is a lot of blind medication. With the current system. We don't have a good idea of what's happening with specific medications. You as a medic, as a doctor, as a nurse are about to use this medication and you don't know what happened. And although our logistics are doing the best they can, it's really difficult to keep track on that. These are about 200 different products that we're transporting to the field. And so there's still a couple of challenges to deal with, namely how you actually use the specific information of each product, something that manufacturers know that we still don't. And so that's part of our advocacy as well. So where are you in the development of the project? This is a prototype. You're going to the field soon to play with it? Yes, we will. So as we speak, you're now printing the integrated version of this. What we're missing is you can see here the interface. It's a pretty simple interface. We've been going iteratively talking to the field staff. Do I press it? How does it work? No, you don't press it. It's just it's going to be programmed in the cell phone. Okay. Oh, look at that. Yes. I'll see you just put your specific information that it needs to react to. And then it's going to be attached to the box and goes its own way, all the way to the endpoint of use. Okay. So how do you see this being used? Do you see one of these being attached to every box or a handful of boxes? No, no. One to every box, one to every product. That's the idea, that the nurse in the end of the way knows what the quality of this process is. And then at the end of the cold chain, how do you get that information back? How do you know? In the end, we're setting up an antenna so that we can actually know what happens. So we know pretty much the same information as you have here. And we're doing an extra step forward on how to actually communicate that information in an easy way to make decision making easier. So we're transforming the way we're presenting this information. It's fantastic. Great. All right. Well, good luck with the first test. Where are you going? We don't know yet. We're looking for partnership. Okay. So anybody want to test this in the field? Now is your time to... Well, I hope today during the networking session you'll find somebody sufficiently excited to accept some interested partners but no answers just yet. Fantastic. Great. Good luck. Thanks a lot. All right.