 There's not a lot of devices on the market for teaching children pre-year-old concepts. There are screen readers that are out there, they can range anywhere from $1,000 to $5,000. Too expensive to give to a child who might have peanut butter or something on their fingers. What comes along with blindness is isolation. A blind child is playing with a device, another child might see that, want to come over and say, hey, what's this cool thing? Let me play as well. We keep the cost down though by allowing you to use the toys that you already have. Like a place with a beck dot, her face just lights up and it's so great to watch. We ended up winning an award for that device and a gentleman came up. He said to us, he said, boy, if I only had this when I was a child. Two blind girls came over. One of the girls would take one of the toys and feel it and then the other girl would hold it to see what she thought it was. They would put the toy on the beck dot and the two of them would just crack up laughing and they turned it into a game we hadn't even thought that it could be used for.