 Images connect us to information and each other. Images are always front and center when breaking news tell stories of what's happening. For example, with gay rights, what happened last night on the red carpet and who scored the winning goal. It's remarkable that 1.8 billion images are shared on the internet every day and that's growing at a massive scale. And what that means is that we're really no longer able to manually select and organize images by hand. So publishers and companies that want to be able to scale their images are really going to need to start looking at automated ways to organize and handle their images. At Neon, we filtered through massive amounts of imagery, whether that's frames from a video or photos from a database, in order to serve as the most compelling image for our customers that they can then use to drive engagement on their site. I think for me, innovation is as much about consistency as it is about vision. You start with a vision of the future looking different than it does today, but you're consistently working towards that vision. Before forming the company, we spent almost 10 years in the lab really digging into the neural mechanisms that give rise to visual perception. So we've taken this deep science research on how the human brain responds to images and we've used that to build a product that we have in the market today. Seeing Neon images tell the stories of worldwide events and knowing that those images are connecting people to information, educating them and changing their lives through the information that they're consuming not only feels like a huge impact, but I think really is changing the way that images are seen and shared on the internet.