 Hello, my name is Abhid and I'm from Kapilwadi, Oulu. We work an operating system, right? So we don't do any of the problems of staff that we've been discussing today. So the reason why I'm here is to show you a new SDK that we've been working on, especially for JavaScript and HTML CSS developers, so that they can make, so you guys can make native applications across various platforms, including your windows, Mac, Linux, and all of your operating systems. So I'm going to quickly show a demo of what it can do. It's very early stages, so it's just like really alpha or beta, you can say. So essentially you write code in your JavaScript, it runs on Node.js, so I think everybody is familiar with it. So we use Node.js as an interpreter now, and if you interpret the code, what are we writing in your HTML JavaScript or CSS? And we have a module which you include in your code, which gives you a lot of the native features that you require to make a native application. Including creating the UI, user interface, we have integration for box 2D so that you can make any good games, etc. So let me just start in this example for you here. It's a very simple example. So I run it exactly like how you run your regular JavaScript, regular Node code. It renders a native application, and then it's loaded this image onto the screen. You can see all the touchy, all the click events that are coming here. It has a full gesture API written, so you can do native gestures, touch gestures, pinch to zoom, all of it. Let me show you some more examples. This is a second more complex example. You have two images written in this. I'm grouping them together, and then I'm moving both of them in one. I'm going to make a list of them. I'm also rotating these images in the grid, and I'm setting some positions there. And let's say how it is. So you can see two images. I'm rotating it, and the other is not. I'm going to move both of them. You can do really complex things, but I'm just showing you very simple examples. You could make active version JavaScript. This is text, for example. So let's say I have it. So it's interpreted, so as you know, so I could just make changes in my time, and then we'll see that. So what this would give is, you could make really cool applications really quickly, on native platforms like your Windows 9, any of these devices. So I'm here mainly to get your feedback, see how this interests you, as a JavaScript developer, and then next probably have a chat about it. So we have time for questions. We have questions on which device this SDK is working on. Right now, we have this working on all your regular desktop operating systems. We're now trying to get it working on Android. Challenge on mobile devices, because Node doesn't really exist. So we're trying to see how best to do that, that particular problem. But other than that, all the major operating systems, like the one on the desktop, is easily supported. We do large tablets. We do large tablets. Running on Android? No, no, no. Okay, so it's primarily for this? Well, we did this primarily for R, so we make a lot of applications on this. But I think it can be extended to other devices. So I think probably we can just release this, so that more people can make applications using this. So we're also running a CSS, so the styling can be done in CSS, which is making some modifications to this. HTML templating is possible. All the Node modules work by this. So if you're running a Twitter app, you can create a Node module for Twitter, and then work that. So most of the Node modules are supported. And you know, it becomes really easy for server-side. So if you can load content from the server, etc., all in JavaScript. We think it has some potential. Let's see how. But internally we use it, so it works. So we used to do C++ before. We have C++, so it just takes a long time to get that done. So now we move to this. It's really cool. Any more questions?