 as a person for two years now. We will give a brief introduction of my personal talk, but I'm going to talk about today. The overview of our program is basically history, usage, and features. And after that, I'm going to give a brief introduction of technical background for program risk, the architecture, the technology that you use, and the operating score and its modules, and how to get involved with operating risk if you'd like to do it. So I will start with our own performance. So operating risk is basically MRS, means medical record system. It's all about healthcare ID system. Operating risk is also healthcare systems of our platform. We are starting from developing countries, and our target is to deal with healthcare ID system, which can implement for any part of the world. And it's a great project. It has supported and funded by lots of organizations in the world, like World Health Organization, Google, CDC, IRC, and lots of others. Operators were spent live in Kenya already in 2006, February in Angpa. So it has been around 10 years now, and it has a very major record base now. So information is caring. As I mentioned earlier, you can help writing tools and saving flags. So earlier, these people were based on paper-based systems, and they were using papers to collect healthcare information and giving them our files. Afterwards, they have migrated to our primary space systems. They are very easy, and they can quickly manage those patients and bring information and close the door to healthcare information. So basically, our primary is electronic medical record system and data model, an ABI, HIV, TB system, a primary care system, and a great developer community and the implementer community as well. So these are some of the screenshots of Operational Rights Data Application. We also have Android Application and IOS application for mobile usage. So I will tell you more about the system later on. And these are the places where it's being used. It's been used in almost every part of the world. It's actually used mainly in African countries, the resource, a lot of resource environments, and also in lots of Asian countries as well. These are the features basically of Operational Rights, the central concept dictionary. It's actually the heart of Operational Rights system. It's very extensible because of this concept dictionary. And it has a security of the individual systems and privilege-based access for various roles like doctors, nurse, and other healthcare workers. And patient repository. I will tell you the other important ones. The standard support like HR Healthcare 7 and FHIR interoperability between systems and things like that and globalization for various languages. I will give you a brief technical background of Operational Rights system now. It's basically written, if you're already involved, it's basically written J2W and related to technologies. It's using Spring MVC and hybrid object relational mapping. And it has a service where it's using Java and it has a separate development framework built upon Java APIs. And it has a REST API for web services, connected to web services and just for coding. For the form collection, it has separate modules like XForms and HTMLForms. So basically, Operational Rights is very extensible. It has a module architecture and some of the functions of Operational Rights is pulled onto modules instead of being written into a core application. You can implement from PNX to highly complex hospitals. Five minutes. It's over now? Yeah, five minutes. So from small companies to highly complex hospitals, you can operate at any hospital using Operational Rights system. For small companies, you can install the Operational Rights code in the OPD module and set up other modules. For complex hospitals, you can install the Operational Rights with other sections you need like laboratory, operation data, pharmacy modules, and etc. So if you need a new function, you can use your own developers and you can develop your own module and integrate with Operational Rights code. So if you'd like to get involved with our project, these are the ways you can contribute to Operational Rights not only coding, you can do things like testing, quality assurance, documentation, user interface. If you are a UI UX guy, you can help with our user interface team and project infrastructure, localization, and things like that. So for the more information, you can visit our website www.operational.org and if you'd like to learn more about our project Operational Rights, join with our hands-on session today at 3.30 to 4.00 at all the space. Thank you very much. So my question is also something called Open Health, and I was just wondering how does it relate to other competitors? Do you know about the Open Health funding? I think it's based on the ERP, the fighting. Yeah, I don't know. There are some projects like... Can you mention those names? I'm sorry, I couldn't hear. So I was asking how does it compare or compete with Open Health, which is based on, it's a triton based... Oh, New Health. New Health, sorry. New Health. The difference is New Health is more of a turnkey out-of-the-box system where we build more of an enterprise system that's customized to workloads that's specific to our characters. So if you want something very quick, good about this, if you want something more comprehensive, you might want to get open press, get the necessary modules and look at your...