 Hi, I'm Daniel. I'm the CMO of Toradex and we are proud to show here at Embedded World first time our new board. This is a Verdin with an i.mx8 mini and it's also available with an option with the i.mx8m nano. And here we show it on our Dahlia development board. So it's a very convenient to develop a board on. It supports USB-C for power delivery, so very easy to connect of course as USB. Also some really industrial interfaces like can interface, camera, CSI. Here we allow for different display interfaces such as HDMI, LVDS, parallel and DSI. We have ethernet of course and over the USB ports you also can get access to the UARTs, to the debug UARTs or even to JTAG for example if you want to use the heterogeneous multicore. And then we have extension connectors for low-speed signals. And then we also have a mini PCIe card where you for example can add a modem or another Wi-Fi solution if you don't like the one we have or you need special signal. Of course you have button, LED, just everything which makes it easy to develop on. And here you can even see our bigger development board. So if you're maybe a hardware developer or you have to reconfigure the pin-moxing or you have a complex system then you can do that here. Here you can see our LVDS adapter and we have here running Qt which is a close partner of Toradex with touchscreen running on the Verdin IMX 8M mini. Here of course even more interfaces are as 485, dual ethernet, HDMI and so on. And it also has a very interesting power concept so it allows you to really granular manage the power in an easy way from all the peripherals so not just the module. So this is a very nice application. And working with Qt gives a lot of opportunity for many different projects. Exactly, so we closely work with Qt. We really provide a very very easy out-of-the-box experience so you get the module, you see something booting up called Toradex ease installer. You select what you want to rise and boot to Qt. It's a one-click installation and you basically see immediately these demos but it also includes everything you need to connect with your development pieces. All the debug clients in there the only thing you have to put in is to put the IP in your Qt IDE and you're ready for your hello world, you can debug, you can set break points so that's very easy to develop on. And the UI looks really good and with touch, how do you implement all these different things? Yeah, I mean this comes really exactly, it comes really from Toradex. It's included in our off-the-shelf images so you really don't have to worry about all these basic things. You can really worry on your Qt application, on your added value and all the basic stuff which basically everybody needs that's taken care of by Toradex. So here the embedded world is busy show for you, there's lots of talk about the verdict? Lots of talk about the verdict, of course this year embedded world is a little bit special with a lot of people not being here but for us it's still very successful, I think driven really by Verdin, by Torizon so people are super excited about it and we are very confident it's going to be a very successful product for us and via our Toradex booth we already have first products with integrating Verdin so you can already buy products from Toradex like this and partners using Verdin so our partners couldn't wait to implement it and basically went ahead before we even publicly launched so at the public launch we had already acquired an ecosystem. How can they do it so fast? Yeah we work very close with them, we have Toradex has a proven partner network, they're very experienced to work with our engineer, they're very experienced to work with our Apalis and Colibri modules so we understand them and we gave them early access to basically just the specification of Verdin to also get feedback and they implemented it basically on our theoretical implementation we also have something called Pinout Designer which makes it very easy and we have Verdin fully supported so that's how they could do it and then it was very easy for them to bring it up as soon as they get the hands on a real module and we have it now running on our booth. And here at the Qt booth there's a talking about accelerated Qt development, Torizon, there's a lot of uptake with Torizon and all the stuff you do around that. Yes, we first time talked about Torizon a year ago at Embedded World in the meantime we really had it in a beta, we got a lot of feedback, we got quite some partner like Codesys, we worked with Qt, we also worked with Crank to add that and we have first customer actually beginning to deploy beta system and people are very excited, a lot of people we know they struggle with Yocto and Torizon really simplifies that. We also see a lot of uptake people coming not from traditional Embedded Linux, they come maybe from application development, they come from Windows development, they come maybe even from microcontroller and for them Torizon makes it much much easier but they can still take advantage of the Linux ecosystem and the Linux ecosystem provides a lot of framework, a lot of drivers such as AI stuff, vision and so on so this is they can really take advantage of both ease of use and large ecosystem. And here the Qt booth there's a couple other demos. Yeah, this is this demo which is already a little bit older but it's really a crowd pleaser, it's our fast boot so here we have an optimized Linux optimized boot loader and we can boot it in less than 1.5 seconds about 1.2 seconds and brings up Qt so if people really want to go that fast we can do that and we can help you. Because you are in a bunch of cars, you aren't so special. Yes, we are in cars, we are in many luxury cars, high performance cars, so we don't do super high volume cars but all special cars we do, we have a lot of tractors, if you go to our booth you see some application, construction machine, mining equipment and so on so all these special vehicle trains and all that, we are very strong. And there's more here too? Yeah, so this is really running Qt on top of Toryzen, that's a demo that uses our IMX8 called Maxx, one of our highest performance module from NXP, so that's basically the demo here.