 Good morning, everyone. So everyone in this room has a lot of energy, but no one is using it. Every day, we walk several thousand steps. Imagine if with these steps, we could charge a mobile, a laptop, or a house. So we live in a world where we are highly dependent on our mobile devices. So what happens when we run out of battery, when we need it most? For example, you are at slash here in Helsinki, and you use a mobile a lot to navigate one location to the other, from one event to the other. You are exchanging contacts with other startups, with investors, and taking video of the pitches. And when you are sending your deck to the investor, your mobile dies. That's really frustrating. So what if I told you that we can make your mobile invincible that doesn't run out of battery? It's a power bank that keeps you independent from the plug, from the wall. So next time, you can connect with more people and more investors. So there are 460 million power banks out there, one every three smartphones. Around 8% of them are solar power banks. The market is huge, and it's growing with 22.5% CAGR. But what makes us so special is that Stepchart is a power bank that charges with the movement and with the light, being that artificial or solar. And you grab it and go. You grab it, you put it in your backpack or your pocket, and you go. We sell it at 99 euro, both on the shelves and online. So we have both B2B and B2C. There are computers out there, and we have the solar ones, and the ones that exploit kinetic movements. What we do, we combine both. And we took the best from each of them. So that allows our product to have high independence and get charged in a shorter time. Our fair advantage is the high level of autonomy, as I just said. So it means you don't depend on external factors, such as only the sun or the plug, and the high level of convenience. So you don't have to think about pre-charging your power bank before picking it up. So you have it, but it's not charged, right? So the team is composed by Nikolai, Andrian, and Valentin, who are not here. They are the developing team. They are PhD students working for the National Space Center in Moldova and myself. The next steps are to launch our first product on Kickstarter, the 6th of March, 2018. And we just opened the fundraising campaign. We are collecting 50,000 euro for 10% of step charge. The investment opportunity is limited. So if you want to know more or to get a demo of the product, call me or write at getslashie at stepcharge.com. So let's start, I have just one second, using some of the energy that we all have to accelerate the world transition to sustainable energy, step by step. Thank you. Thank you, Anne, for the jury. Thank you. Firstly, I want one, very cool. Can you explain more the grab and go? So how is it actually, how is it working, how is it charging as you walk and how is it? You simply put it in your backpack. And so I have it here. That's way bigger than what it's going to be. But you know, you simply, you're going to move. Oh, it's the movement, OK. This is just to explain the concept. Of course, it's not going to light. It's going to charge your mobile. Sure. And is that the kind of size that it will be? Is that the project I got? As I said, this is just a first rough prototype. It's going to be way smaller. OK, very cool. So is this some sort of, you know, we talked a lot about defensibility today, but I think is this something you can defend in terms of IP or patents or something, or do you basically need to create sort of more of a consumer brand and just run really, really fast to beat the competitors? So you need to be on the edge with the IP, right? So we find a patent in September 2016, and we changed the technology, so we have to find a new one. We are in the process of finding a new one. And do you see that being sort of the new sort of patent you filed? Do you see that it's being sort of likely to go through, through your sort of patent discovery? That's a really good question. We have a good, you know, development team, so we're in good lawyer, so we're trying to find a way to do it, yeah. Cool. Just quickly. So how many steps does it take to charge a mobile phone? So roughly, the estimate, so we are doing the test now on the road, so we did it in laboratory. There's nothing on the slide, but it's one hour of steps, approximately three hours of charging. OK. And my second quick question, so what about the, like, short-term roadmap, like six months, 12 months? Yeah, the roadmap, so after the Kickstarter campaign, OK. If you want, I can put it in the slide. So then we go to production in May, and then the idea is to go on the shelf in September. And then we will use that numbers to partner with other brands, such as the Backpad Brands. But we have to get some numbers first, you know, too. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you.