 Well, I heard a lot of noise coming from the base egg booth and Adam Mifferson says he's going to show us what this base egg actually is. Yeah, so what we have here is a portable Bluetooth speaker, except it's actually not a speaker. It's a transducer. So it's got no actuators in it or anything? Yeah. So there's no speaker cone. Instead, you have this vibrating foot here on the bottom. Those of you at home can't see, but there's a small circular foot on the bottom that's rapidly vibrating. That's not a thing. So there is an actuator actually. So that's known as a transducer or a voice coil, the part that's typically moving the speaker cone. So the thing he's got in his hand is it's not really an egg. It's sort of like if you cut an egg in half and flip the two ends around. That's right. If you can picture that. So you're going to connect it with any phone, computer, tablet, MP3 player, anything with Bluetooth or with a line-in capability. And once you're streaming your audio, this piece here on the bottom that's rapidly vibrating, when you apply that to a surface, it's going to turn that entire surface into the speaker. Oh, wow. So that's sort of difficult to understand if you've never seen it in person. But imagine banging a tuning fork and then applying it to water and seeing the ripples or to a surface and transferring sound through vibration. I like it. The engineering explanation. So right next to us, we've got a giant, what looks like cardboard box. Yeah. It's a plywood box. Yeah. Okay. And he's going to log in here. And he's got music playing on his iPhone. I'm actually playing the music right now, but you can't really hear much. I'm going to put this real quick. So if I put it here, you'll probably hear some sound coming out, but nothing impressive because there's no speaker cone. So if we come over here and I set it on this wooden box, now you'll notice that the entire box has began amplifying. I could pick up something else like this is just a small little wooden tray, for instance. The acoustics are going to change because the surface area is smaller and it doesn't have the same makeup as the plywood. So you're getting a full range of sound out of a small little device because you're not limited to a small speaker cone. So imagine now your entire dining room table or the hood of your car, thousands of other objects in your everyday life becoming a speaker, allowing you to get a bigger, fuller sound because a typical Bluetooth speaker is only going to provide a small little speaker cone. Right, right. So let's see. Wait, he wants me to go around the front? Okay, now we're just playing, Steve. Okay, let's go ahead and pull it off so we can hear better. So how much does the bass egg cost? They retail for $99.95. You can get them on our website, which is basseg.com, as well as Amazon and a couple other online sites. This looks very, very cool. Thank you for taking the time, Adam. I appreciate it. I appreciate that. Bye. Bye.