 I'm Gard Leonhard. I'm a futurist. I live in Switzerland. As a futurist I help companies understand the key things that are going to happen in the next five to seven years. Something I like to say a lot is that science fiction is really becoming science-fabric. The things that have kept the limit on change, the size of a chip or the speed of the network, those things will all be removed. We'll have 5G, LTE, whatever, beyond imagination, connectivity of a terabyte per second. We'll have virtually unlimited computing power in the mobile phone. Hyperconnectivity really is a word for connectivity like air, so essentially to connect to data into the network becomes like breathing in a way. Today, for example, if you're a doctor, you're making the rounds in the hospital, you have to have information with you of the files or maybe a pad, you know, a tablet. But in the future this information travels with you all of the world's information The particular disease of oncology, whatever you're doing, right at your fingertips in an augmented virtuality bubble. It's like being a super doctor. And imagine a world to where language is no longer a barrier. If you're married into a Chinese family, in the future you're basically speaking to an app or an earpiece and they both be hearing you real time. It's literally no longer going to matter where exactly you are working from. You're actually making a sort of a digital copy of yourself and going off to Singapore for a meeting. So when 8 billion people can do this, you can only imagine the possibilities that we'll have. Entertainment is the other thing, right? Literally every TV show known to man, every movie, every commercial, every piece of media, every podcast, every book will be available on demand by just saying that you want to see it. That's going to change the world of application, of entertainment, of creation because the options will be limitless. Our capacity of taking information will be dwarfed by what machines can do for us. But our hearts and minds are not of that nature. Our heart and minds are limited by our body. That will be really important for us to keep that part of life, to keep the part of that we feel as humans, which is not really just a data. How do we stay human? This is the key question of course in technology. What is the purpose of doing this? The purpose should be human happiness. It should not be just profit and growth, which is part of happiness admittedly. It should serve a larger purpose, which is to help us be better humans. As I like to say, technology is not what we seek, but how we seek.