 Hello, I'm Dr. John Feller. I'm the founder and medical director of Desert Medical Imaging, outpatient imaging centers in Southern California in the Palm Springs area, and recently have transitioned over to Chief Medical Officer of Halo Diagnostics. I'd like to talk a little bit about my excitement and why this transition has occurred. Halo Diagnostics is a startup company in the Silicon Valley area that's looking at developing a tech platform potentially to alter the outpatient imaging center industry in a way that's analogous to what Uber has done to the taxi industry and what Amazon has done with online shopping. There's two points that are very exciting to me about this potential. One is as the owner and operator of imaging centers for over 20 years, I've been very frustrated by the lack of interoperability of software solutions to perform the business of outpatient imaging. And what I mean by that is that the scheduling software doesn't talk well to the PACs. The PACs doesn't necessarily talk too well to the imaging modalities. The software that our sales and marketing team doesn't talk well to any of that. We have to rely on human beings to create Excel spreadsheets so that I can get business dashboards. And there are many different databases that we're dealing with. Halo DX is one of its goals is to develop a tech platform that improves the operational efficiency of these imaging centers. The way that they're going to attain this is by using a cloud-based solution that they're developing and APIs which touch these different software solutions to get the data that they need to improve this interoperability. But at the same time, the existing imaging centers do not have to replace their legacy equipment. So their existing software and hardware solutions can stay in place. But the Halo tech platform can be overlaid to significantly improve operational efficiency. Examples would be improving denial rates from the payers, improving the pre-authorization process, improving the content of reports that we provide to referring doctors and patients alike. At the other end of the spectrum, personally as a radiologist in the last 20 years, I'm reading at least 75% more images per FTE for the same or less reimbursement. And this has resulted in significant burnout among radiologists and other issues that Halo DX is actually going to try and approach with a different solution. And that's by validating and bringing on board artificial intelligence or machine learning solutions that actually improve the efficiency and the accuracy of the interpretation of imaging studies by radiologists. So instead of doing computer-aided detection, these new types of solutions based on artificial intelligence allow us to do computer-aided diagnosis. This is very exciting as a radiologist because this will improve the efficiency of what I do and it will improve my accuracy, almost like providing a second interpretation of what I'm doing. This will also free me up to do other activities. It will give me time to spend more time doing consultations with patients, more time for consultations with referring doctors, participating in things like tumor boards, and also more time to do image-guided procedures, which are called theranostics. So overall, in a world where there's this huge shift in many industries towards using tech platforms, machine learning, and artificial intelligence to improve operations, we're going to do that with Halo DX. But in addition, we're going to help to validate new solutions that will improve the accuracy and the efficiency of the radiologist.