 My name is John Omura. I'm the project manager of the Applied Research and Innovation Group at Algonquin, Canada. We're located in Ottawa, Ontario. When my wife tests my kid's temperature by using that little temperature gauge and sticks it in his ear and comes out and, oh, yeah, you've got a fever, right? I see at some point this device being as widely available and as easy to use as a home thermometer for temperature and I guess it's great for domestic North American families, but I think one of the benefits to humanity of this thing is that it'll be widely available to people in developing countries that don't have access to general practitioners. We're going to approach this from a very strong user experience point of view. You can have the best technology in the world and unless people can use it, it remains useless. It's basically the idea to make user interfaces simple and concept conspicuous in value and self-evident in operation. We're constantly being surprised by the talents and the ingenuity and the innovation of our students. They sometimes come up with solutions that we would never have suspected and produce incredible, excellent work that blows us away. You know, we're excited at the opportunity to see what the students can do coming together with a bit of leadership from the more experienced folks around the college. I think our strengths lie in our diversity, the fact that, you know, we have a wide variety of specialties and faculty and students. I think, you know, the whole is greater than some of the parts. We're looking for synergy. We're looking for the youthful innovation aspect from our students that the old guys can't do. Both my parents have passed away and various causes. But I've got to think that if they had the simpler to use technology that could provide earlier warning of what was coming on, then their condition could have been treated earlier or in a better way.