 My name is John O'Connor, I'm the Director of African Operations for IOHK. I've been working on the Cardano project since before it launched. I previously had roles at the Foundation, I just had a strategy and running communications there as well. I've shifted over to the Africa side, IOHK, because I think this is the really exciting stuff and this is the stuff I'm really passionate about. My mother's Ethiopian and my father's Irish, so I've had this, you know, great background which has given me an interest in Africa and in development here. So yeah, so what have I been doing? So I came to Ethiopia two months ago with a mandate to discover whether or not this would be a good location for us to train and hire Haskell developers. This is a course that we run in Athens and Barbados, very successfully. We've hired 70% of the people who've come out of that course. An idea was that this was a model which we could try here in Ethiopia. Over the course of exploring this option, I realized that there was much more potential than just hiring and training Haskell developers. I realized that there was real potential here to deploy Cardano's technology in a variety of industries. So I began to engage in conversations with the government and with ministries over exploring where and which areas Cardano might be useful in. The conference which I organized yesterday was really a summary of that work and the culmination of that work. In the MOU which we signed, we've agreed to train and hire Haskell developers out of the model in Barbados and Athens, but also we've agreed to work proactively with the government to explore implementing blockchain in a number of areas. So coffee is a big one. We've also discussed a biodiversity project and I'm also in discussions over a number of other areas with both this ministry and some other actors within the government. So really what we achieved yesterday was buy-in and validation of the work that IOHK and Cardano has done up till now. I can't tell you how excited we all were at the signing because it's been a few years of hard work to get here and at the point when you've got governments buying in and signing off on the work that you've done, I think you're in a pretty special place. What I'd say is it's not just Egypt yet. The role is obviously pan-African and I've been having a number of high-level conversations with ministries across Africa and starting the conversations and explaining the technology, talking about what we can do for these countries. I think that the feedback has been uniformly positive. We're flying to Rwanda on Sunday to explore some other opportunities over land registries and building a blockchain, Cardano enterprise-based land registry system for Rwanda. And yeah, we're excited about that project. But the key thing I probably emphasise is how fantastic the community and individuals have been in enabling all this to happen. I've had so many key individuals getting in contact with me to help me start these relationships with key decision-makers, help inform us about what the real problems are for each specific country because without that we can't get anywhere. We are subject matter experts on building blockchains and on engineering and technology, but we can't work alone. When we operate in a country, we need to have local partners who have expert knowledge. We need to engage with the community. And yeah, I think that the last two days have been validation of all of that. So yeah, I'm incredibly excited.