 Hey Aura, thank you. Good morning everybody. Good to be here. Entrepreneurship changed my life. It's been my calling for the last 20 years. It's what I've done. I believe it's powerful. I think it unleashes the impact of some of our most talented and dynamic citizens to make a change in the world. This man, Irv Grossbeck, changed my life. He's the one who told me I should be an entrepreneur and I could do it and I should do it right now and not waste any time and that was a really pivotal time for me. That was a pivotal moment in my life and I'm trying to live up to that and do as Irv did and as much as I can offer that inspiration to other people. That's what I've been doing for the last 10 years. I've lived this calling out as an entrepreneur, a founder, an investor, venture capitalist. Generally my focus has been investing in building software. This is more an accident of history. I was born into the time and place where this revolution was taking place and I could have this impact. My dad bought an Apple 2 Plus, this Apple 2 Plus when I was nine years old and I got into computers. I was born in California in the middle of this revolution and it created the tailwind and the opportunity for me to have an impact on the world. I've focused my efforts in a couple of areas. Two of those areas are information, the unleashing of information and markets and their ability to have an impact. Information is trapped, has been historically trapped. It's trapped in these books. They're not searchable. They could be expensive. They could be hard to locate. They could be cumbersome to find and it's trapped in people's heads. They're experts who have deep experience and knowledge but don't either have the desire or the time or the ability to write that down in a way you can find it. The Internet Revolution has freed up a ton of this for access to all of you. Matthew says everything he built was he learned on YouTube on the farm and that information, the ability to do that 20 years ago would have been quite difficult. This has been a massive gift to society and one way in which I lived that out, you saw my old co-founder, fellow Jack Herrick, talk about WikiHow yesterday. This is a practical tool that's educated hundreds of millions of people and he and I founded that, mostly him, a little bit me over 10 years ago and it's had a huge impact. Other ways in which I freed up information, one is I invested in a site called Quora, a big question and answer site. Another information resource I invested in were these plucky little founders in their mid-20s come out from the Midwest of Silicon Valley and gave them some money and they built quite a powerful business and on the back of that everything you see here, so big hand for Matthew and Brian. That's Brian, the lower one's Brian, he's not very recognizable relative to the current look and markets are another area. At their best and they aren't always at their best, I think markets provide a powerful and efficient allocation of resources to attack some of the biggest problems and to make the most change. I believe in markets used correctly and this is where I started my career. I founded this company here, you see making markets here but I've done a lot of other things. This is a giant decentralized prediction market. There's another EHF fellow, Joey, who you'll hear from who is building AUGAR, which might supplant my old business but do it on the blockchain, which would be wonderful. Then I've invested in a ton of markets, things from corporate receivables to making LTL trucking more efficient to collectible sneakers to graphic design. All kinds of markets have been a big theme throughout my investing career. What do I think now? Now I think we're in a problem of walled gardens. Companies and corporations have walled in our information and the original internet revolution decentralized broke that down and shared it back but corporations are resilient in protecting their profits and those walls have been rebuilt by the Googles and the apples and the Facebooks of the world and those companies have done a number of good things but now we're at a state where that open protocol of the internet, which allowed anyone to publish and anyone to share, is being restricted and that's restricting innovation. That power that was granted to individuals is being blocked off again and this pendulum is just swinging back as pendulum goes between centralization and decentralization and within the internet and technology side we've rolled back towards centralization and you've got to go through the Facebook or the App Store or Play Store to access users and I think that's bad. So I'm spending time now while this is another example of that you look the mobile revolution might have interrupted that but instead is co-opted by all the big companies own all of them. I'm spending my time in the blockchain. I think it offers the decentralization opportunity that could break that was walls open again and all the big powerful people are nowhere unlike the last slide on this Apple, Amazon, Facebook, Google or nowhere. So what Matthew, Yosef and the EHF team have done in their part in the beautiful Aroha Valley where we've spent this week they're bringing the best of technology to make the future a better place. I'm proud to be part of that journey and part of the EHF fellows and team trying to make that happen. Thank you.