 Okay. Okay, I'm Kendrick and this talk is titled You Too Can't Build a Deer in Mesa. So just a little bit about me. I'm based in Australia, Brisbane, Australia. I'm a software developer. If you want to check out my social links, there's my GitHub and my Twitter. Before we start, I would like to emphasize that this isn't... I have two important announcements to make. One, this is not a technical talk. This is not going to teach you how to build mixes. So if you want to do that, I think workshop B10 would be a better place. And two, my cat has an Instagram. So if you guys could follow it, like at nista.meesa.osie, it would be pretty good enough. So this talk is mainly about imposter syndrome. And I think we as a tech community should really talk about it and acknowledge it primarily because it's just so prominent in the tech industry. And if we don't acknowledge it, we can be the best community we can be. I would like to share a little story that I've been through a little roller coaster ride in my life for the past three months. And essentially what happened in July was that I quit my job in Brisbane, Australia. And I had a one month offer gap before my next job. I was a bit bored and I decided to browse the Ethereum software. And turns out there was a list of projects that the Ethereum Foundation wanted to happen. One of them was a Ethereum Mixer, which I thought was quite interesting. Actually building an Ethereum Mixer isn't that easy. You actually have to go into quite in-depth cryptography, software design patterns, and currently smart contract designs. At one point I was copying and pasting prime field orders into etherscan.com and finding contracts that verify contracts with the same prime number to extract certain pieces of logic to kind of make my smart contract work. Occasionally you kind of find it on GitHub, you find it on Pastein, and you find verified contracts on Etherscan. So that's how deep I had to dive and there was no real reference materials. But I got it done anyway. I built the Mixer, I got the UI out, I built the MVP, and I launched it on Robson. I was quite happy on it, so I made it this week. I actually had like 15 of this, so I wasn't expecting much traffic, but Vitalik actually retweeted it and kind of canopolded my Twitter follow accounts. Now I actually know how influenced people are. I have like a thousand followers now, so I say like 20x, 20x, better than the ICO I participated. But yeah, actually because of this I got invited to a workshop, a zero-knowledge proof workshop, sponsored by the Ethereum Foundation. And some of the world's best engineers in cryptography and specifying zero-knowledge proof in abstract maths, I would. But something to take away of the conference was that the best of the best engineers, who I wasn't even sure if they were speaking English at the time, acknowledged the fact that everyone at the workshop was at different technical levels and everyone should share their perspective and their opinions regardless of the background or their experience in the field. Like your insight is as valuable as anyone's. So I guess if I had to give a conclusion, a couple takeaways, is that it's okay to not know everything and different perspectives in the Ethereum community are welcome and it helps us to kind of be the best version or the best community we can be. I apologize if this isn't technical as you guys wanted, but yeah. You guys got any questions? Those are my social links and my cat's Instagram, which would be really nice if you guys could follow it. Thanks.