 I'm in the wireless power consortium booth with John Purzow, and he claims he can have a way for us to charge things without wires. Moving electricity without wires is what we do, safely and efficiently. This is your iPhone 5, you set it on a charger, and it charges. It's charging. This is out of a Ford, what? By the way, I didn't tell you this is audio and video. What he just took was, he took Steve's iPhone 5S, and he popped it into a case, and then he just set it on a charger, and it's charging inductively? Yes, this one's charging inductively, we have others that charge using a resonant technology. This uses inductive technology also. Now he's got it in kind of a big black box, I'm not sure what that is. This is out of a Ford Fusion, so this is center console of a Ford Fusion. So it's designed into a number of cars now. The Toyota Avalon, the Toyota Camry, the Prius, the Cherokee Jeep Cherokee, there's a lot of cars. BMW, Audi, there's a lot of cars that have this design in, because people hate getting out of their cars with a dead cell phone. Right, right, but I also hate plugging it in, because then I have to switch the input on the stereo and all that kind of nonsense. Exactly, this is the last wire that enables you to do that. So I'm grabbing the case, it's very thin and small, it looks kind of like a Mofi, but it's a lot thinner. It's thinner. This has just a little coil in it, that's all it is, and an integrated circuit to manage the power, and it'll pick it up. Now the wireless power consortium is a group of about 200, more than 200 companies that have agreed to work together, many of them competitors, so we call it a co-opetition. Folks compete directly with each other in the open market, but in an R&D sense they work together to create the world's best standard for moving power without wires. So that's probably the most impressive thing is that you've got all these companies working together, right? I think, yes, it's taken a number of years to get everyone, what's impressive is competitors working in collaboration. So who isn't in the consortium? Of note. AT&T is not, Verizon is, Apple is not, and we would love them to be in our camp. So if they were in your camp we wouldn't need a case for it separately like that? That's right, you wouldn't need a case and the phone would be as thin as it already is. I mean the Apple is a beautiful product, beautifully designed product, it just needs wireless charging. Yeah, yeah, I think we could all agree to that. So when would products like this be available? They are available now. So these are all in the market now. This is what Verizon sells on their website, for example, for the Apple phone. So what he held up was the case I was just talking about, so how much does it sell for? I think that's $45. And then you have to buy something to set it in, right? Right, you would get any number, there's 600 different products that have been registered. This is one, this is made by a company called Tilt. Oh I love Tilt, it's basically just a little red bent thing that you set it down in, that's really cool. So there is a phone that has it built in, no case. This is the Google Nexus 5, they come out of the box with Qi. So this is Qi wireless charging? Ah, that was the word I was looking for, it was to hear if it was part of Qi. Took me that long to say it, didn't it? This is the Qi standard. Can you spell Qi? Qi. Ah, nice, nice. I wasn't sure if it was a Q or an X. So basically the phone either comes with it or you sell a case that gives it to you. That's right. There's another option, there are several other options for phones. One is this little dongle, you would carry this instead of a charger. It's just a little wrap-around piece with a lightning connector, so you plug it in. You plug it in? Say I'm a USB guy. Yeah, I don't think that's an iPhone, so it's not going to fit. Oh I'm sorry. This is a micro-U. This is a micro-U. Sorry. Imagine it was Steve's iPhone. Oh that's a Nexus, you're right. Right, right. So if this was Steve's iPhone, would you put it back? Which is over there. This actually changes it. Oh no, that's micro-USB also. Okay. But anyway, so you could plug this dongle in. One way to do it is plug the dongle in, and then you would put this on the charger. So you put that on the car charger or the tilt, or whatever you get. And the other way is you have these patches, it's a very thin inductor that goes over the battery and under the case, and they make these particularly for the Samsung Galaxy series. Very, very cool. So if somebody wanted to learn more about this, where would they go? At wirelesspowerconsortium.com. Very good. Thank you very much, Sean. My pleasure.