 I started a few years ago not even knowing what was DHS-2. I have been looking for projects with impact. I was really impressed with the work that DHS-2 and where it does it. DHS-2 is something which is revolutionizing their ministries. As an Android developer I think the DHS-2 is a very attractive project. It really has an impact in real world, in people. It's been something that fulfilled myself working with people from all around the world, creating a product that is beyond their own scope. I think many of us that work here, we have a sense that we belong to a very important project, something that is improving people's lives. That's pretty great to be able to come to the office every day and work on something like that. I joined DHS-2 team back in 2016 as a core Java developer. In 2018 I got a chance to visit Pakistan with our implementation team for a scoping mission. I had the luxury to actually get more into the field and try to understand what the requirement is. We are developing a solution that is going to be used in a very resource-constrained environment. Technology-wise it's similar to what I have done before, but I think what's interesting that I didn't experience before, that we have to really think about the end-user, you have to think about where they have very low internet connectivity or where we have to be offline first, we have to optimize with how we are using the bandwidth. So these are all things that really push the technology stack, which reacts and push TypeScript, JavaScript to its limit. During the Android team we are moving and as a developer you always have to be learning new skills. Its open sourcedness is one of the key for those countries to adopt it and not just adopt it, they are free to develop their own customized app on top of DHS-2 APIs. And when the whole community starts working on these customized apps, then you really see a very interesting project which is developed by the community, not by us. So I'm very happy that we have a very cool and big group of people. We are super close even if we don't live together and we don't see in person. We are a very horizontal team, we discuss almost everything, we do proposals and we try to challenge them and then we take actions of it. We give you a chance to discuss different approaches with different developers. When I was in university then our professor used to call that two persons can never use the same logic to write one program. So having different minds, discussing with them, different approaches comes up and that's actually where you can learn a lot. What I love about the DHS project is that it's beyond yourself. The goal is not for you, it's helping other people. For other developers I would say check it out. We're building a framework that people can use in all kinds of ways which is very interesting technically, very challenging to build as well. It's very fun to develop from just a pure developer point of view. If you're not involved yet then now's a great time to come and be part of something that's much bigger. It's like a life-changing experience.