 So we're here with Viewfine and who are you? I'm Doug Lee. I'm the chief product designer here at Viewfine. And who are you? I'm Daniel Rogan. I'm the marketing manager. So what are we looking at here? This is Viewfine. It's a high definition wearable display. So it's basically a little micro monitor. Anything that outputs HDMI can be connected. So that way... So we can... so there's HD. What resolution? Can you hold it right here? Oh yeah, it's a 720p display. 720p display in there. It's L-Cos, right? Yep. That's crazy. It's a tiny micro display. What is it showing? Is it Android? So this is connected to the iPhone right now. Right now it's just running a video. So is it like air play or something? It's actually just a little micro HDMI monitor. It's our biggest use cases of all drones and cameras. So with a live video feed you can't add any kind of wireless without getting a latency. Any wireless? Currently no wireless. So that way... Oh cable. Yep. It also saves on battery life. It's for us we've been trying to figure out a perfect solution for wireless. But right now because we do have our biggest use as drones it is difficult to sort of make the transition without radically changing the product. That way you kind of have a battery pack and then the price goes up quite a bit. So right now we're starting sort of with the most basic feature and bringing on as many backers, getting as many people's hands as possible and then building out what the features they're most interested in. Basically it's HDMI. So you could just dock let's say a cheap Miracast dongle if you want. Yeah. And then you have wireless. Yep. So anything that outputs a 720p signal it'll connect to. So say a GoPro, a computer, essentially anything. Anything. Almost anything. So all the iOS devices have those docks that can do it? Yeah. Oh yes. And many androids have output? Many androids do. It's either a Slimport or MHL compatible. So as long as it has one of those two you can do it. How about display link? Display link. We'll see. Yeah. But maybe there could be a little dock or something. And it'd be nice to know how long is battery life. It's roughly about 90 minutes. You can also connect it through a USB and connect it to a power bank. Let's see. Let's look around how it looks. Can you hold it? Yeah. So there's micro USB right there. So there's an internal battery that runs for 90 minutes but you can connect it to a power bank to run it much longer. Forever basically. Yeah almost. And what's this color here? Oh so this is just the LED indicator. It means it's part on? Yeah this means it's on. It's making a connection. And yeah. And so you fund it on Kickstarter? So how many backers? A thousand something. Is this actually our second Kickstarter? Our first Kickstarter we had about 1,300 backers and our second one we had another 1,000 plus. And are you shipping? Yes we are actually. I think most of our backers at this point have received it except for international. We just went live with retail through our store two days ago for $1.99. That's awesome. Thank you. Because basically you ship more than Google. Yeah. You ship more than Google Glass. I mean those Google guys. I didn't think about it in terms of those numbers. Yeah. Those Google guys they showed something cool but they never shipped it except to a few internal developer kind of people. And this is how much? $1.99 the cost. That's crazy. Yeah. That's awesome right? Do you use this every day? At work? Yeah. But well here you plug into your laptop and you can have Netflix or Reddit going. So it's very helpful. Can we see a little bit? How does it adjust? Is it for sure having the right angle? How do you adjust the angle? So the adjustability comes from... So it has a docking station. So you can move that back and forth however you want. It docks like so. And you can angle it up and down or in and out. Nice. And we also have another docking station which is a little more complex, a little less discrete. But this one has a lot more adjustability. So yeah, like he said, moving forward. And this one has a pivoting arm so that way you can get a lot more out of it. We also have a hat mount. So back here you can kind of see that. That's cool. Clips into the hat. So you can just use with a hat. So right there. No need for glasses. That's great. That's really awesome. All right. Google glasses back. That's cool. Where are you based? Sunnyvale, California. And do you have backers at Google or something? No. Haven't you checked the address where you ship? I'm sure there's some Google addresses. We definitely have some Apple addresses. They're thinking about Apple Glass. Yeah. I'm sure they're checking out everything. But now you have all the patents. I'm joking. But you can... All right. That's great. And how is it stable? Are people happy because you said you shipped already? Yes. The people that have received it so far have been happy. We haven't had too many problems or anything. Our first campaign, we did have a few issues with our initial product. I think like any company figuring out a manufacturing for the first time. This time, things went a lot more smoothly. We delivered a lot quicker. We've definitely come a long way since the beginning. So where's it going? I think now it's just getting into more people's hands, spreading the word and kind of figuring out the big questions. Like how are we going to do wireless? When are we going to do wireless? What kind of use cases? What verticals are we most interested in? Because it's so simple. We've had a lot of interest across a really wide array of stuff. So just figuring out what makes the most sense for us to pursue. Cool. I think everybody needs something like this. Camera? That's another one we are thinking about. Is we wanted to avoid all those privacy concerns that Google had. The kind of big brother-esque sensors and cameras vibe that people were getting. But I think we have heard about a camera. So it's definitely in consideration. But nothing settled at this point.