 So we're here at KORU, and who are you? Hey, I'm Christian Lindholm, the CEO of KORU. We are a wearable UI framework creator. We built a small, optimized wearable OS that enables manufacturers to get faster to market, enables longer battery life, and we can then provide through our framework is architected so that presentation and logic is separated, which allows that we can easily have different types of interfaces running and we can get smooth graphics and have different types of experiences through using different layers in the graphics. So can you do this on a Cortex-M4? Absolutely. All this? Yes, we can run at 60 frames per second on a Cortex-M4. Our whole OS on the ST Microsystem STM32F4 development board boots in less than 500 milliseconds. So from power-up to a complete UI and application running, that's 500 milliseconds. So this UI right now, this watch is an ARM V7 based Motorola from a couple of years ago. How do you run your software in there? So we run the device in boot mode and we use this to prototype and experiment with. So we can then load a different experience. So here's an experience that's done by a company in northern Finland called Creole. So they designed the interface for their smartwatch concept for women. And here you then have essentially four sections. So up, down, left, and right. So if you go into messaging, one of the enablers our platform provides is this type of very smooth scrolling where you use content in the background. We have these types of bounce backs. We have this kinetic type of scrolling and use physics to create the smoothness in graphics. So subsequently, again, changing the design from the one I showed previously to this is really mainly effort in changing the style sheet and the graphics. What is the platform that Motorola ships? The base platform here is Android Linux. So we're running on the Android kernel. But our platform is liquid. So we work on FreeRTOS, on Android, on Linux, NetBSD, Raspberry Pi, Mac, PC. So you can run on Android and you can also make it run on no need for Android. No need for Android. Because Cortex-M4 cannot run Android. No. And that's what wearable makers leverage now increasingly FreeRTOS as a base. And we think we're the only platform that provides 60 frames per second smooth graphics. We have a component library of 60 components ready to build any kind of interface. So our vision is really that, you know, let's have millions of different experiences on wearable so that it really can become lifestyle driven, fashion driven and beautiful for the end users. So if you want millions, do you have to make it open source and free? No, I think the model can be a licensing model as well. Because I think there will be lots of makers of wearables going forward. Can you make it open source and licensable? I don't know. The business model really, the market will determine the right business model. Right now we are using a licensing model because we really want to make sure that we can provide good service to our customers. So you say it's a scalable operating system. So it's not just a new UI layer? Well, technically speaking, it's a UI framework. So it is the top layer of the OS. But you need a lot of different things there. Do you have everything already? Well, the kernel level would provide the connectivity layers to Bluetooth, to sensors. They either get implemented using Linux, Android Linux or FreeRTOS increasingly. But I guess there's a lot of UI requirements or ideas and all that. Can you implement all the stuff that people would like to have on a smartwatch, for example? Well, having already 70 different building blocks, you can actually have imagination as your limit. So I think if somebody of our customers would come up with an idea for a component, then we'd be happy to implement that. Because in OS sometimes you want to be able to add some apps, right? Is that something you can do? So yes, of course, apps then can be built on top of this. So that's what our customers are doing, they're building the apps on top. And they typically want to own them and control them and that's what they can do. They could also open it up with third-party apps? Well, we can open it up and even our customers could open it up. So what do you think is going to be the market for wearable? Is it going to be a lot of Android? And will there be something like this below cheaper than Android? Well, I hope that in this paradigm when the computer migrates from the pocket to the body, that we actually do take into account lifestyle and fashion and personal taste. And this is the vision that KORU is all built on. And this is the vision that we would like the world to adopt. Because we think that way we can really amplify our personal flair and our personal style with the electronics we wear.