 Right, this one's interesting because it greatly surprised me. I came past this stand earlier and I thought that because I'm not the expert on 3D printers or printing technology in our company, we have a whole team on that, that as chairman of the company I thought I'd come past and express my ignorance and I certainly did it here because I saw that here was something that was seemingly a very basic 3D printer which is not and I thought it must be made in China which it isn't. So please explain, something about the center of the universe being San Diego. Hello, so you're from San Diego, California actually as he said. Kubibot is a consumer based desktop 3D printer that we have been working on for the past three years. Now what basically sets it separate from other printers is that at a price point of about less than 400 US dollars Kubibot comes with features of much more advanced printers such as it comes with a heated bit, it comes with a high-temperature nozzle, it is the only printer that comes with basically a filtered ventilation system so it makes it safer than other non-filtered printers for printing with plastics such as ABS and polycarbon. Yes of course some are quite nasty vapor. Yes, exactly. So also the feature such as the heated bit and the high-temperature nozzle allows it to print basically with a wide range of materials. You can print from PLAs, all the specialty PLAs, you can print ABS, ABS plus, polycarbonate, nylon, PET and you know flexible materials as well. Well flexible materials that's something I don't usually hear do I? I think when we see printers that are not very expensive it's not usual for them to say they do elastomers. Is that what you were saying? Yes, so it basically does you know flexible materials up to a certain hardness. Yes. So again it's a very capable printer for its price point and for its size it's been designed to fit on any desk. Yes, it's much smaller than most. It can't just queue and it can print about half its own size. Half its own size so this that you see here is not the biggest. It's not the biggest. Ah right. You can still do five. Okay and you do much bigger things anyway that assemble obviously. So what's your reason for existence? You've got something that's obviously ahead in many respects you're not stupid enough to try and sell on price alone. Are you trying to get create a large business and if so is it going to be a software business, a services business, a materials business or primarily selling the boxes that really is a box. Tell me do. So we are actually here to stay we are here to build a business of taking this technology into every home and every classroom. So we would like everybody to be able to use 3D printers. Small size really matters there. Small size really matters because you know small size the filtration as well as the capabilities. It's nicely designed. I like the logo and is that a logo? So this is a logo as well as the cartridge fits. It's nice. It's nice industrial design. It's elegant. I like that and I think you're going to sell materials for your machine. We will sell materials for our machine because we have a very tight quality control on the material that we produce for the machine and there it's a really high quality premium filament that we provide for it. Yeah. That doesn't mean you know we won't lock our customers to use our material and we cannot guarantee quality with third party materials. I think that's really robust strategy that's very good. No I seriously not joking. Thank you. The people who think they can lock in a material supply forever and basically screw the customers. A bit of a short game I think and it's a very fast-growing industry. We're truly amazed. Good. Well thank you very much. Extremely impressive. Thank you. You've given all the impressive answers. Thank you.