 I was walking past the Wonder Workshop booth when I saw an odd little robot running around on the ground. It looks like four blue balls, it's got an eyeball, it was riving around, and so I decided to talk to Vikas Gupta about it. Hi, I'm Vikas Gupta. I'm one of the founders in the CEO of Wonder Workshop, and this is Dash. We designed robots Dash and Dot to help kids as young as five and 20 years above that to learn to code and have a lot of fun. Learn to code with a robot. That's right. The robots come with four applications that sit on an iOS device like an iPad or a tablet, and using these applications, kids can program the robot to do anything they want it to do, and it's ranges from something that kids don't even need to learn, need to read or write to the level where they can do using visual programming languages like Blockly, they can program the robot and have access to all the capabilities of the robot with very simple tools. And this what language did you say they're writing in? It's called Blockly, which is a visual programming tool. Oh, okay. Yeah. But you say before they can read or write, they can still program? Yes, that's right. We have application that before even kids know how to read or write, they can use visual tools to program the robots. Oh, I like it. I like it. So, can you show us doing something here? All right, he's grabbing another one of these that has a, it's got a xylophone attached to it. So, this one is an accessory that comes with a robot that you can buy in addition, and it attaches to the robot, and I'm going to use an application to program the robot to play music. So, I'm going to connect wirelessly to this robot. So, he just held a button down, and it's talking to the robot, evidently. So, I'm going to connect the two robots at the same time, and we're going to fix that. So, he's pressing and holding on a button that says Mason. All right. But this is really a programming tool as well. So, I can start tweaking this robot's code in real time, and the robot will keep responding to that as I change it, until I'm actually happy with it. So, he's tapping on a diagram that looks like the xylophone, and he's moving the dots around. It's changing what the robot's doing. Yeah. So, the goal is to make music, the language or the coding language, a way the kids are coding, but they don't even realize they're coding, and it's a way for kids us to draw the kids into the world of coding by making it a lot more fun than it has been ever before. Very, very cool. And would you expect this to be available? It's already available. We've already shipped about 30,000 of these robots to customers around the world. You can buy Dash and Dot on our website, makewonder.com, and also on Amazon.com. They're available now. All right. And how much do they cost? Dash is $199, and Dash and Dot together are $259. All right. Thank you very much. Thank you.