 My name is Matt Johnson. I'm the team leader for Fraser from Duluth, Minnesota, USA. I have a very eclectic background, ranging from playing professional hockey to being an engineer working on components that are now in the space station. We've been at this for a few years now and so we've had an opportunity to work with the U.S. military. Our device has been in use on five separate continents now and we've had an opportunity to see how it works with real people, seeing thousands of different patients and helping caregivers. There's been a lot of rapid movement in the consumer device space so computers and tablets and phones have been coming on so quickly that people start to believe that they can do things that they shouldn't be doing. One of the analogies we use is, hey, my kid has a leftover scissors from preschool. Maybe you can use it in surgery. Well, that's absurd. I don't think you can take the doctor-nurse aspect out of the equation because you still have to have a trained, validated professional determine exactly what's wrong in the proper application of pharmaceuticals, therapies, and other tests. So even if it's 100% patient facing, at some point this data needs to reach out appropriately to a professional, present itself appropriately so that the proper application of medical care can be delivered back to the patient. We have a handheld device that a patient holds with both hands that picks up their vital signs and then interacts with them in their own language with cultural relevance and interviews them to get medical history triage while simultaneously gathering vital sign information and critical data for the caregivers to help make better decisions. If you're born in the wrong part of the world, you're going to have poor health care. If you happen to be the wrong race, religion, gender, you're going to have a different type of health care and so these seem to be unfair things. We think that health care should be equally applied in spite of language, literacy, culture, race, religion and the reality is it's not. A lot of experiences in both technology and culture that come from different places in the world and understanding people and cultural differences plays a significant role in our understanding of solutions for the sex price. We're utilizing invention and innovation to solve large compelling health care problems around the world.