 Four billion people today on earth don't have access to basic healthcare. There's a tremendous need and shortage of physicians everywhere. In the developing world there's just not enough healthcare workers, or the distances are too great and the population's too dispersed. We're still using tools that really haven't changed in decades, but now in our age of digital and mobile health, what if we could connect those together and put those in the hands of each of us, the consumer, the patient. A lot of chronic conditions can be managed on a continuous basis if we deploy the technology. But what we weren't seeing was a catalyst that brought everybody together to build the whole system and to make it easy for a consumer or a lightly skilled healthcare professional to use. When you have a price that's sort of audacious but achievable, a competition element speeds up the whole process, creates a fire. The Qualcomm Tri-Quarter X Prize. Our goal is really to bring the Tri-Quarter technology of Star Trek to life. The doctor just waved the box over you and you knew what was going on. Star Trek is a positive vision of the future. A future where technology empowers man. So the team has to be able to develop a Tri-Quarter device that is less than five pounds. It's able to diagnose up to 13 medical conditions, take five vital signs continuously, and they have a very positive user experience. Now we're really taking the technology out of the sole possession of physicians and putting them into the hands of the community. Tri-Quarter will connect hospital care to home care. We are putting your health back in your own hands. If you're an EMT or if you're a healthcare professional or a mom, what you lack to make better decisions is data. Most medical devices that exist today are developed for healthcare professionals and they diagnose a specific condition and that's it. So this is a first-to-the-world application of these devices. This device monitors respiratory rates, blood oxygen levels. ECG, respiration, temperature. Sleep apnea. Atrial fibrillation. Anemia or hep A. Blood pressure. This prize is extremely challenging. It's been a struggle. Everybody is working on their real full-time jobs and this is still just a part-time endeavor. We're a very small company, but yet we're a very enthusiastic team. We've got MDs, we've got data scientists, we've got biochemists, we've got program managers. We are a full-stack company. We're a machine here. You know, we're machine-building machines. Teams have contributed thousands of hours of R&D and millions of dollars of funding to support their prototype development. This is the last couple years of iterations of different designs. We're building something that no one's ever built before. This is our first prototype, testing software algorithms that they have become. The system consists of five sub-systems. This is our Brata system and I will show you the Brata here. This is the Vitality Necklace. This is the foundation of our platform. These devices have to be embraced by the consumers, so we actually recruit patients as consumer testers who have one of the 13 conditions these devices are intended to diagnose. That required a rather substantial team that included nurses, coordinators and a variety of other clinical experts. You can do all the simulations in the world, but having an active user throws in variables that you can never account for and they see the result right there as they're using it and they're like, that's awesome, where can I get one? People will say, this is where mobile health care started. This project could have an impact on society as a whole. This is going to be a wake-up call for the world. I'm strongly motivated to see this happen. I think together we can solve this problem much easier, much faster. These are people who are committed to global-scale impact. You feel a connection between the world that Star Trek promotes and the people that see a technology that's only suggested in Star Trek and then make it real and then make it better. If this tricorder device can save lives, what a blessing for all of us.