 It's my pleasure to welcome you to this Tech Connect. You know entrepreneurs are idea farmers. Our job is to harvest ideas, but in order to harvest ideas you have to plant seeds of ideas, water and feed them and hope that some of them will grow. I think all ideas, all successful businesses, are ultimately about solving problems that nobody has solved or solving them in a differentiated way. Getting your idea at the right time is really important, because if it's the wrong time, all you can do is wait. Like right now, I think if I were to try to do my robot company again, I think it would be a massive success. In fact, I might do it. In fact, I might join you. So the whole concept of brewstrapping is finding ways to do more with less at every turn. You come as an entrepreneur with a lot of passion and an idea and you think this idea is perfect and it's going to work. And what bootstrapping forces you to do, because you're really relying on few resources, is to really find out is there a market for this? Is it practical? Will it work? One of our students who actually did bootstrap building a rocket. Over the four years that he was doing his undergraduate degree, he has three patents in his name. He built an 18-foot rocket for under $30,000. I can't think of a single thing where you couldn't bootstrap in some way. Space, the last frontier of bootstrapping. That's right. Are you networking towards investors? Are you networking towards potential clients? Hone in on what it is that you want to get out of this networking. It's all about effective communication. Formulate your message properly. Figure out what you need to say to the appropriate audience. The ability to really shape any idea or thing that you're having about not only why it matters macroly, but why it matters to the person or group that you're talking to is incredibly important. Where we're seeing crowdfunding fit are really allowing me to get from an idea or concept to a prototype, or I have a prototype. Now I want to see if there are actually customers who are willing to purchase my product. The whole notion of crowdfunding came out of a problem in the marketplace. Access to capital has been an enduring challenge. You have to be able to demonstrate that you've got that traction, that this is a good idea and other people can be part of that. This initiative to help youth around the world to power up their dreams and turn their technology ideas into reality. I've been exposed to so many amazing opportunities here. The sessions with Jim, Chuck, Scott, Ovidio, I don't know what they did or how they did it, but they pulled out the one I wanted to be and that I wasn't sure that I can be. Now I am braver than I was three days ago. The more powerful thing that you could gain is a network of entrepreneurs and mentors from prestigious US institutions like Stanford, MIT and so on. We just want to say that yes, we are proud to be a part of this family. In the end is the ideas that translate into action and values and ventures are those that matter.