 So I knew that I can't become an entrepreneur, but I became a social entrepreneur. I joined VeePro, and I completed 20 years in this company. But I wanted to be an entrepreneur, so the only way is to do some work for a country by using the technologist in me. So I happened to meet up with a very old scholar who is right now is in 98 years. He showed me a piece of ancient document of the country. It's the old palm leaf manuscript. This is about 350 year old. And he showed me, you guys working in software companies, you earn a lot of money, but why are you doing for your country? And that is one inflection point which changed the mindset, the thinking. So I started going, looking into my own life. Now, why we are born at all? Like, what is the purpose of the life? And it so happened that as soon as he showed me, he saw the value in that. What are the things that have been written in that? And as we see, all ancient scripts, we've seen the discovery that a lot of scholars going and deciphering the ancient scripts and the epigraphy written on these stones there. So at least in India, we have some people who can currently read some of the ancient scripts. So we thought we will develop a technology which will kind of document that and then put it into a national repository. This was in way back in 1995. And then I started learning about image processing. And through that, we started a group in Vipro to work on imaging and digital signal processing. So I did not learn from Vipro to do something on my nonprofit, but I learned from the nonprofit and created a group in Vipro. So this is about the belief that you have on a certain idea. It puts you on a firm foundation to create something. So there are two things which I concentrated. One is, how do I get into the source of the knowledge, basically the ancient manuscripts? And how do we bring it to the current context, contextualizing to the current time? And I couldn't find within my vicinity any organization that shared my vision. So we landed up a couple of my friends working in IBM, Intel, and Vipro. We got together and created an organization called Mahabharata Research Foundation. And this concentrated on the developing, I would say, tools and technologies for preserving the ancient heritage of India, basically the knowledge, intangible knowledge heritage. And in this process, I went, I traveled across India from Himalayas to Kanyakumari and found one of the different kinds of scripts. I don't know how many of you know that India has got the largest collection of the manuscripts in the world. It's more than, I mean, at least the estimate says that it is, we have roughly about 30 to 50 million manuscripts in this country scattered across, and written in about 30 art scripts and hundreds of languages. When we visit the place where the manuscript is available, they're not willing to give it to us because they have a tendency that it's been, you know, like preserved from their generation, handed it from generation to generation. So in this process, we found it is becoming very difficult for us to convince them and get it. So we thought, we will take the technology through their doorstep, and I devised a mobile laboratory through the organization and we got the support, believe me, we got the support from all government than the private companies. And this facility is worth about, at that point of time, this was created in 2005, about 70 lakhs, and this has the satellite given by ISRO, Indian Space Research Organization. Then a whole lot of other things, and we have developed a robotic scanner to scan the manuscripts. And this is the part A of the whole story, and there's a part B, and that also I'm going to tell. The part B is how do we take as a proof of concept a certain knowledge available in this country to contextualize? So we chose the biggest epic in this region, or I would say the biggest epic poem of the world, the Mahabharata, itself as one of the thing. It is said that the Mahabharata is everything for human life. So we took that as the main idea because we can't do everything for the whole lot of knowledge that we have in this country, and we started creating what is called an encyclopedia of the Mahabharata. So that is part B of the whole thing. So this, as I keep telling, when you dream something, the belief in the dream makes, I started as a small dream of digitizing the manuscripts, started developing tools, but then the president of India came down to integrate these two concepts, which we started in 2005. And in 2007, I got a presidential honor by Abdul Kalam in Rasupati Bhavan for the work that I did in digitizing these manuscripts. We have digitized till there are a million manuscripts in the one state of South India and Tamil Nadu itself on ancient Siddha medicinal manuscripts. This is about the second part. The Mahabharata, Shri Vedavyasa's 3,000-year-old literary masterpiece with 18 chapters and around 100,000 verses, four times longer than the Bible, seven times longer than the Iliad or the Odyssey. The Mahabharata, a historical saga of treachery, intrigue and war, vastly profound and deeply philosophical. Two brothers there were Pandu and Dhritarashtra, a story of noble characters wedged by dilemmas. On the battlefield of Kurukshetra, Arjuna succumbs to grief, an account of a fratricidal battle, a gripping plot intertwined with intricate subplots, complex twists and turns, wheels within wheels, tales within tales, layers upon layers. The Mahabharata, Vishvakosha, an attempt to unravel the great epic, put together its various interpretations, analyze it, collate it and categorize it, a comprehensive encyclopedia culled from over a thousand works of literature in over 15 languages. Everything about the Mahabharata will now come together in 18 volumes. Conflicting theories, little-known facts, events, places and people. Index scholars and subject specialists will work on this encyclopedia for the next five years to present an authentic, insightful, critical and contemporary view aimed at preserving and furthering the reach of the epic. The Bhagavad Gita, the Vishnu Sahasranama, Krishna Vittara, and the story of the Great Wall itself. We take pride in launching the Mahabharata, Vishvakosha. The last one which we moved from the intangible, we moved to tangible. This is what I presented in Ted last year. This is about Hampi. And in order to achieve this, in fact, when we announced our CTO was in the audience and we ended up creating an institution along with these partners, we created an India Innovations Lab this year. And to close up, when a person really desires something, all the universe conspires to help the person to realize the dream. This is what is my experience. Thank you.