 And what I always like to do is find a picture, an image that actually fits my mood, a situation or whatever. And I came up with this image just the other day and I thought that would be pretty fitting. This is me as a whole a bit, yeah, I've been trying, absolutely. All as you can see, trying to be as strong as I can be, shooting my vision and my ideas at you from a wheelchair. But really, it's been quite amazing the things that I've been hearing from people here today. What I find is that everyone's so enthusiastic about what they're telling us and it's been so diverse as well. I've heard about shitty client radars being developed and then there's this whole design process that really helps get insightful what a client needs. And then there's this JavaScript that I don't know anything about which was really inspiring as well because in the end, in the basis of it all, it's about creating stuff. And that's actually something that I can really relate to. Everyone's a creative. I honestly believe this. And if I dissect it, the most important word here is probably creative. But in this word in itself, I would say, oh, sorry guys, create. And I think everyone here, maybe a few exceptions left can identify with this because this is what we all do. We create. Therefore, we are all creatives. This is me, the guy on the left. And this is my daughter. She was two years old at that time. And me, being the art director that I am, I'm trying to correct her drawings, which I shouldn't. But the reason for me to show you this picture is because I find children so remarkable. And they're wonderful and horrible for all the same reasons. But two things that really stand out for me. One is they have this undeniable urge to create. Almost every child you'll ever come across will want to make you a drawing. In the end, we all did this. Everyone's made these drawings for their moms, for their dads, for whoever. My nephew the other day, he came up to me, he showed me this book and he's drawing all these monsters. And he's asking me, how should I draw my next monster? And asking me, well, should I draw a big eye or a small eye or whatever? It was so fascinating because it was a collection of all these, this whole book was filled with monsters. He's just six years old. The other reason why I find children so interesting, or something that they have is interesting actually, is they never stop asking you why? Why? The other day, we wanted to go outside and the weather was fine. My daughter and I, I'm talking about, the weather was fine, but it was still cold. So I said to my daughter, well, you have to put on a coat. And she says, well, why, daddy? Well, because it's, you're gonna, you're gonna get a cold, but why? Well, because it's cold outside, but why, daddy? So then I contemplated whether or not I should actually start explaining the weather. But then I realized I don't know anything about that myself. So I just said because and then that was that. But in the end, that wasn't really the response that I should have had. Because her asking me why is so valuable, I should have actually just gone into that. So creativity for me consists out of three very important pillars. Three, now I have to look at my speaking out here because I can't, right. The three important speak pillars that reflect creativity. First, the first one is diversity. Everyone has his or her own expertise. Everyone has their own affinities, their own way of looking at life in general. We are all as good as we are ourselves. But if we start combining that diversity, then that will make us stronger, not us. But in the end, what we're all here for, our product, curiosity. Now this is what I just spoke about, which happened with my daughter. But curiosity is at the foundation of creativity. If you can master the ability to keep on exploring, keep on looking further, asking why, how is that, why is that, show your curiosity in things, you're going to find new insights. That will blow your mind. And the third one is environment. Now, environment is something that which beholds a certain, sorry, lost for the word. Environment is something that is the basis for something to grow in an environment. Something can excel. And I have this wonderful quote from Sir Ken Robinson. If you don't know him, he's a professor and an expert on education and creativity, he's on the TED Talks. Look him up, he's great. So Ken Robinson has this quote, this mention of where he lives. And he lives near Death Alley. And Death Alley, in Death Alley, nothing grows there. And he explains that in the winter of 2004, I believe, it poured. It rained, seven inches of rain. And in spring of 2005, the whole floor was covered in all these wonderful flowers. Now that never happened before. But that means that those seas of those flowers were underneath the sea surface all that time. They just needed an environment to get them out. Now the point of my story is that we all need to create an environment for ourselves so we can excel, so we can get the best out of ourselves. And therefore, start making these wonderful products. I truly believe that we are all very good at something. You just need to find, what? Sorry, what? And start focusing on that. So this is something we like to work in this way at our company called Burst. And that's mainly just focusing on what you're good at and combining efforts. And these efforts can be front-end development, back-end development, visual design, content creation, whatever, UX design, obviously. But what's important is that all those elements come together and create one product. So I can go on about that. But I thought, well, I could also just show you what I mean. So I picked a few cases that illustrate this train of thought. This is a platform. Sorry, it's not. Yes. So, these are lawyers. It's a Dutch law firm. This website is actually a WordPress-based platform, which was convenient for this talk. But the end result could never have been made just by design or by strategy or by front-end or back-end. It's really a joint effort. We have multilingual options. We have all these page transitions that design never came up with, but motion design did. I see there's a hiccup in the movie. So this is an example where everything really came together. Another one, Chupa Chups. You may know them. They're the manufacturer of candies that will make your teeth fall out. We try to warn the user by creating these wonderful falling elements in the background. Again, this one is very much a joint effort. And this really fits the talk we just heard from Level Level just a moment ago. Here, also, design came up with a few very important key components. And then we went to front-end and really just started developing this platform. I took it from there. And then motion designers came in and made it even better. Sorry, guys, this is actually a Drupal platform. And then this one I think is really fun to show as well. Corny is a product from the Hero line. Hero, we all know them from the Jam. This is actually a Finnish website. This came in also referring to your talk from Level Level just a moment ago. No time, no budget. What was the other one? No time, no budget, and budget scope, right. An enormous scope. We wanted to be a really cool brand platform. This is really, it's quite a small platform. But what was really fun is that we made this in just under three weeks, I think. And it was just an effort of design, motion design, front-end, all getting cramping together and just going at it. Just working diligently and getting a real feel for what we're doing as we're doing it. So basically a few point-outs that I'd like to mention is never stop exploring. Very important. Always keep asking yourself why. Find your colleagues, find other disciplines that will make your product stronger. And I have to look here. Right, and then there's the environment story, which is so important. Environment really makes you, really will enable you to excel. And that will leave me to my final create and be creative. I think we all are. And I realize I've gone through this whole presentation quite quickly. A bit too quick, but that's what I wanted to tell you all.