 I'm particularly interested in innovation, pushing out the boundaries of possibilities and potentially what we are going to be seeing in the future. I certainly want to see a lot more when it comes to women being involved and I'm really interested in what are the projects that you've seen where the use of crypto currency or blockchain has really pushed out the boundaries and inspired you, what has been the most inspired project that you have actually seen yourself that you think could actually help inspire people to think beyond what we are actually witnessing now? That's a tough question. I think a lot of the things I see are boring and quite disappointing. Yet another ICO, yet another person trying to reinvent the existing system only now plus blockchain. It's like, let's build a plan. I'm betting with blockchain. Let's do an investment fund with blockchain. Let's build a transportation company with blockchain. A gaming company with blockchain. It's like, you don't need blockchain for most of those things. Why? That's boring. One of the most inspiring stories I have is from a woman called, and I'm going to probably mispronounce her name, Faresti Farouq. She is a woman from Afghanistan who is running a program called Code to Inspire. It is a program that teaches teenage girls in Afghanistan how to write software, which is something that they can do in the privacy of their own home with a cheap laptop without anybody knowing what they're actually doing, and then how to sell software programming services and earn cryptocurrency that they control in a country where it is illegal for women to own property. That is inspirational. There's a couple of charities that are doing interesting work in Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. One of them is called BitGib Foundation. It's a woman-owned organization which is a non-profit registered charity. They've got a program called GivTrack. What they're doing is they're using the radical transparency of the blockchain in order to give donors the opportunity to watch their donation on the blockchain all the way down to purchasing the bricks that go into the well for the water well project in Kenya. They're basically taking a problem that is fairly big in the charitable world, which is accountability for donors' money. In many charities less than 50% of the money donated actually goes to the charitable causes. A lot of it goes up at administrative costs, etc. Here you can watch your donation and see which part of it ends up, and track it all the way down to the charitable project, so GivTrack. I think that's a really interesting project. There's a number of others like that. They're few and far between at the moment. Most people are trying to make money as fast as they can and get rich. But every now and then I meet some really inspiring, humble individuals who are doing some really fascinating work. Thank you for asking that question. Can I just add another question then? What would you like to see? I think the most important project that people could be working on right now, there's a couple of companies working on it, is to address the issue of international remittances. Remittances is when immigrants, migrant, itinerant workers send money to their home countries while working abroad, often working as illegal or undocumented labourers, farm workers in other countries, including of course the United States, the United Kingdom, the Northern Europe. But also in Southeast Asia, there's a lot of migrant workers in the United Arab Emirates, in Kuwait, in Saudi for example. Sending money home is a $550 billion business here. That $175 billion goes to fees and profits for two or three companies, Western Union, MoneyGram, Wells Fargo and a few others. This is basically taking a significant chunk of money from the world's poorest people. Ironically enough, $175 billion happens to be the total sum of foreign financial aid by all governments in the world donated each year. So, the same amount that governments are spending to support poor people around the world by giving it at the top and none of it gets to the bottom. The money transfer companies are taking from the bottom. So, instead of trying to fix foreign aid, how about letting those people keep their own money? If we can do remittances with cryptocurrencies, which will involve breaking a lot of laws because, you know, no licenses. You have someone here who takes, ring it, buys a cryptocurrency, and then the cryptocurrency gets transmitted to another country, and then that in that other country gets converted to cash and given to the recipient. And you've basically got a system of remittances that is informal and in some cases legal. But what it does is it injects $175 billion directly into the pockets of the poorest people on earth. Not only that, the recipients of remittances are 85% women. The World Bank has estimated that for every $1 that they get, it generates $2.5 of economic activity, primarily in education, healthcare, sanitation, and security, food security, most importantly. So, this is an area where these cryptocurrencies could actually deliver enormous benefits to some of the poorest people in the world. They don't even need to know that they're using cryptocurrencies. In fact, some of the best applications out there just hide that. The cryptocurrency is just a pipe that's being used to convert the money and send it across the borders, which is the hardest part. The fees can be less than 1%, significantly under the country of Western Union. And there's one small downside. If this plan is successful, Western Union, who invented wire transfers in 1996, did you know that? They invented wire transfers in 1996, 1896. Not 1996. Unfortunately, they're going to go out of business. And at least on this side, not a single tear will be shed. So, yeah, that inspires me.