 And at Loxon 8 Tech Field Days, we have Mehdi and a lot of equipment here. Do you want to take us through some of it and how it all works? Sure. Thanks for having me. I'm representing Centec, South Australian based company, Adelaide, established in Adelaide, actually in Riverland in Loxon. We have tens of thousands of these probes around this area in Riverland especially. We're selling to more than 80 countries in the world at the moment. It's not just the soil moisture. It's a moisture salinity as well as the temperature in different levels, calculating anywhere between 10 centimeters to 40 meters. So depending on what type of crops or what type of industry we're working with, it goes from mining to environmental to ag and hort and so on. We also do have a weather station, automatic weather station that probes can connect to that ones as well. Back to the conversation earlier that we had in the sessions in terms of API and ownership of the data. Ownership of data is definitely by the owner of the probe. So that's private and personal and they can decide which integrator or irrigation controller they want to go to if they are working with one. The API also open and we are working with the number of different irrigation controllers. Let's say Swan, let's say Mate, Galcon as well as some other ones. So there's the capacity and potential we're going to work with. In terms of our product, they come in a number of different shapes and forms. Depending on the top of the crops that the producers are planning to utilize the probes in them. We also have our own telemetry, like a Sentech telemetry that's the unit that sends all of the information to the clouds and then all of the information can be accessed by the eREMAX, which is the software that is available to the owners of the probe or the consultants that are working with us. I was just going to say, so it looks like the system is quite scalable to whatever it is, whatever application we want to put it into. Absolutely, yes. So in terms of scalability, so the reason that we come up with the Bluetooth probes, which is a drill and drop, five minutes installation easy, and then within a minute you know you can take it out as soon as you put it in the soil without undisturbed. The data is valid and pretty much it can be used, but normally you give it a week or two to be able to interpret that data that is coming out from the probe. It doesn't need a telemetry unit by the way. So it's a telemetry on its own. Well, it sends the information to the mobile phone that you use and then you can use the mobile phone as the telemetry unit sends it up to the cloud whenever you want and normally holds about 2100 readings. So it depends how often you want it, so it can be varied. So it can hold a lot of information in there, but depends when you go there to grab the information from the probes. But anyway, too much details for now. Yes, so in terms of this session, the API is open for the integrators and we are open to work with any any irrigation controllers. We also do NDVI as well as the weekly forecast, one week in advance forecast, in terms of prediction, in terms of irrigation, what needs to be done. The icing I suppose on top of the whole thing is the quality of the data that's coming out of the probes and it is South Australian and Adelaide based company and we are proud of what we produce. I think you've explained it very well. Mitty, thank you very much. Thank you for having us.