 When patents started, they started really as a way for open source to take place. So when you get a patent, you have to open source the designs. You have to tell people what you're doing and how you did it. And then that happens to be under exclusive rights for the next 20 years, and that's where open source hardware differs a little bit. And I think that this is my belief that open source hardware is the 21st century patent. I think that it's not only open sourcing innovation, but it's also democratizing innovation. So instead of having that 20 years of exclusive rights, instead you get an entire community of innovators to work with you and to collaborate with you and to contribute to your hardware. Part of being an open source hardware company is you develop this ecosystem around your product. So we make and we sell some number of hardware products. That's right, but because it's open source, other people can take it and they can make their own versions, they can make their own accessories, they can make the ones that really suit their needs. And as a result, you get this much kind of stronger community, this much bigger sort of movement. And so they were learning to cook. They're cooking the recipe. You have the intro computer program in class that's designing it, and then they put all the students together to actually build the circuits. We wouldn't have dropped out these collaborations. In a way, I find that the projects that are only interesting to me, they will consume me for two or three nights, but I will eventually go like, okay, now I know enough, I don't need to worry about this anymore. But if it's something that other people also want to know, then I'll put more work into it. And I'll document it and I'll really look at the process and all that. One of the ideas of patents is it gives you some time as the creator as the inventor or something to kind of recoup your investment on the thing. And one of the things that's been interesting, I guess for what we know, is again, this stuff is getting easier and easier to make. And so I feel like in some ways it just requires kind of less and less of that investment. So like you said, it's almost like that 20-year period, it's like you really only need six months or a year or something to really recoup what you put into it. And we actually manufacture and build these devices in Boulder, Colorado. So nine years ago it started with me in a bedroom, and then here we are today with 135 employees. We build about 60,000 widgets a month and we ship this stuff all over the world. I believe that throughout civilization we invented the best things, sharing them and building on top of each other's inventions. And then one day the Pat system came and started saying you have to put these blocks around your inventions and prevent other people from building. And that was an interesting tool to protect your business, protect your ideas, but then it started becoming very kind of defensive and counterproductive mechanism because you have companies that are in total lockdown that are preventing other companies from innovating, preventing individuals from innovating, and it's become, I think it's really broken. So by open sourcing our designs, we enable our competitors to copy us, right? So within 12 to 14 weeks our competitors can copy a device that we come up with. Well this means that that forces us to innovate. It forces us to create something new every 12 to 14 weeks. The way I see it is that open source hardware provides you with a clear development structure that gives you speed and agility and low cost. So just being able to kind of not deal, not worry about the IP universe, I mean eliminates a tremendous amount of kind of heartache and time and energy. So you can just kind of get rid of all of that investment to worry about when you think about starting a hardware business. When I started raising money, I started, and this was last June, I started speaking to some investors and there were, there's two reactions you get to that and they're, and in my experience it's sort of, it's really black and white. It's either you're absolutely insane, I don't know what you're talking about, goodbye, or this is awesome, I think, this is awesome, I really want to say. The frustration that you get with open source hardware is that at the moment you really love something and you want to get to know it better, it doesn't love you back, right? Because it's closed and you can't open it, it has nasty labels on it, and you're going to get sued for opening it. The great thing about open source is that it allows people with a passion to really dig into it and peel back as far as they want to get and really do something that sort of adds to the community or does something really cool, like they shoot you a plane, they have airplanes. Even before this became a product, it was a page on the website that I called DreamBids and it was one line of text that you could write in, what is that, what would you like to invent, what is the little bit that you would like to see made and I never thought anybody would really put things in it. I thought I had to seed it and all of that and every day now we have tens and hundreds of submissions, things that really, like you would not even imagine. From people who are retired engineers, people who used to be in the Navy, kids who were doing choir practice and they came up with an idea for something, stay at home moms, there's really all sorts of ideas from like I want to build a triple axis accelerometer or like a hover bit too, I want to make a fire alarm. Every day that I worry about somebody copying me, every day that I go after somebody who's copied my design is one less day that I'm working on the next big thing.