 I was always a maker and a tinkerer. When I was at the Media Lab, I started exploring this idea of how to put the power of engineers in the hands of artists and designers. A few years ago, I started developing little bits. Little bits are electronic modules with each one specific function. Light, sound, motors, and sensors. Cloudbit is a very tiny little Linux computer, and the cloud platform itself leverages a variety of tools. Our open source developer API is available for anybody to use, and you can write your apps on any platform. And we've seen really great projects from developers working on Microsoft Azure. Our schematics and board layouts are all open source. We have a public GitHub repo that you can go in and see all our designs. This is really great, especially for educators who want to expose their students to what's going on underneath the hood. We held a steam summer camp at the Microsoft flagship store. It was a great way for kids to come and learn about little bits and be inspired by the things that you could do with science, technology, engineering, art, and math. The Little Bits community started out with people posting their inventions online, and now we have 315 worldwide community chapters and 60 school chapters. People have posted 3,000 inventions to our website and even people sending in new bit ideas. We're all about fun and being creative, and kind of hidden behind that is the fact that you're actually learning. We want to encourage a world of creators, of inventors, of contributors because this world that we live in, this interactive world is ours. So go ahead and start inventing.