 Let's take a look at what you're doing. We call it the soda machine. It's the shell-on-demand appliance. And what it is is it basically distributes VMs. When you put in a dollar, the display lights up with what available VMs there are. And when you press the button, it will spit out a virtual machine for you. You would jump on the Defcon Wi-Fi network. You can SSH into the IP that we give you. And then you get a username and password. You pop that in. And it should be good to go. All right, let's take a look inside. Not your normal drink machine. I gutted out all the original hardware. And we're left with a server rack with four Dell R630s mounted, roughly 350 Xeon threads of CPU, two terabytes of RAM, about 16-ish terabytes of solid state storage. This is DP. Oh, yeah. The MDB to USB interface that allows us, it's a debugging tool, and it's all custom PHP code. We built a transact. You built that out. Actually, Balsa did, but yeah. I put this together. I was Balsa's remote hands, essentially. He over in New York, me down in LA, we just did this remotely during, I think, the two months lead up to last year's Defcon. This is a great example of your upcycling. These are the thermal printers right here. Like restaurants and stuff, right? Yeah, yeah. Restaurants use this particular one for Uber Eats, I believe. On the other side of this door, that's all the logic for the door panel. Like a Raspberry Pi? That's just a Raspberry Pi 4. There's a din rail switch and a breakout cable. It's a lot of moving parts. It's not just virtual machines in a data center in a cloud. You have DC power. You have networking. You have Raspberry Pies and button matrices. My wife actually wired the loom for all of the LEDs. That's some nice management right there. Thanks for showing us, man. This is a beautiful piece of work.