 Hi, my name is Marius Danachel. I'm from Romania. I studied electronics engineering at Saxon and I've graduated in 2004 Kings. Looking back at the time I had in Saxon, one of the most memorable experiences I had was testing one water cannon. I had to build the electronics for the water cannon and basically you put water bottles in this big box and they launched them really up in the air and I had to figure out how to test it so I took it to the parking lot. I think by today you have about 50 water bottles on the rooftop of Saxon. The most valuable thing I learned at Saxon was actually entrepreneurship. On an early stage the teachers teach you how to think as a company. So all the projects we did were established with a secretary, there was a CEO, there was a CTO, everything was done in an entrepreneurial way. For the cost I think it's quite easy to cover because of the Dutch labor market. We're now in Amsterdam and the pricing are much higher than it was in Esfade. I came from Romania where I already studied for two years but I was looking for something more practical and Saxon offered just that. You had your own toolbox, you had all kinds of machinery, you could use an all kind of equipment and the teachers saw that you put that effort and they rewarded you for that. They gave you even more interesting things to do. So it was definitely worth the effort. So the curriculum that I studied was quite broad. You could have went into straight technical things then you would have been specialized but you also had an overview. So I had a course in business management, I had a course in also economics. So you have also an overview and that really helps me what I'm doing now is now I'm doing consultancy for smart city applications and I can go really technical and I can build prototypes in group of concepts which I did and I can also have an overview and discuss with a client the bigger project.