 Thank you, Sandhika. Thanks for the lovely intro. Good morning, everyone. I hope you all have a fantastic morning. So can I have the presentation, please? Is it? Yeah. Perfect. Thanks. So without any further ado, I'll just dive into the presentation. But before getting into presentation, I just want to ask a very quick question. Of course, you don't need to answer it, but yeah. Is AI truly unleashing your writing potential? So this is like one common question that we have whenever we are working with AI. Some people believe that AI is taking on our people jobs, and some people are thinking that it still needs human to help grow, right? So with this question, so we also have this follow-up questions which may come across and say that what specific aspects of writing the AI is helping out? And if AI is complimenting someone's creative writing journey, or did AI help some writers writing writer's block? So if someone believed that, if AI is redefining the future of writing, then how would it be? So we have questions like these, like so many questions, but we don't have answers to them right away. So today we are trying to get into the talk, trying to answer these questions in a more simplified manner. So this is the segue to introduce the presentation. So the enchanting key is a way to unleash the power of AI in the mobile keyboards. So before the actual topic, I just want to tell you a very small story that happened with me very recently. So I was in Hyderabad waiting one of my friends, and the place where he lives is right next to a railway track. So since it is right next to the track, so there are like a lot of trains that pass by and every time I train passes, all the things at his house just do a very little dance. So I'm so fascinated and I asked him and say that like, oh, how often does this happen? Like, is this a lot? And he was like, it is so often that you don't even notice it. And he was right. So the next day, so I was there and I was taking some call and suddenly another train passed by and some photo frame of the wall, it just fell off and I noticed it. I went there. I picked up the frame. I put it on the wall and I just kept talking on my phone and I didn't understand like what just happened. And later in the day, I realized I just got habituated. So that's how we are sort of habituated, like there are problems around us. So after some time, so we often get habituated to the problem in such a way that you always ignore it. You don't even consider it as a problem anymore. So similarly, there is one other space like where we have problems, but we often ignore. That is where the writing comes. So not the writing on this one, but the writing on this one. So we are entering the digital space and we want everyone to use keyboards. The keyboard is a daily feature of any smartphone, but there are pros and cons, like it is one of the greatest dimensions after the smartphones, but we often try to use it to make communications easier and better, but there are a lot of issues alongside it. So since this is the only way you can communicate, you just got habituated to the problems and you just ignore the problems and just go ahead with it. Let me just quickly give you some stats over the mobile smartphone usage across the world. So currently, a latest data from Statista says that we have, by the end of 2023, we may have like the total population on the planet would go around 8 billion. And of that, so if I say 6.92 billion users are using smartphones, so that is a really good number. So it is probably like 85% of the total audience. So these audience, so if we bifurcate these audience into different radical verticals or personas, so we have native English speakers. We have speakers who have English as their second language. And we have also English speakers from regional dialects. And also there are other personas which are like not very specific, but they are everywhere. These are dyslexic writers, academic writers, influencing, influencer writers, technical novelists. So there are a lot of other personas we can consider. So but what if I say out of 6.92 billion, there are only 4 million native English speakers. And the rest of them like 6.52 billion are people with English as a second language or third language. All the current keyboards that we currently have, so probably Apple's keyboard, Google's keyboard or any other keyboard that we have, they are primarily focused on these 400 million users who are primarily native speakers of English. What about the biggest chunk here, which is 6.52 billion? So they are not being addressed. So they believe that everyone should know English and they give their best experience of keyboard in English only. So there are keyboards who support different languages, but not proficient enough. So they just focus on English much better than any other languages or any other languages. So let me take a quick pause and let me tell you like why I had to think about the keyboard in the first place. So I was working at this company called Quilbott. So Quilbott has this vision of making writing painless for everyone and Quilbott offers different features specialized in paraphrasing, grammar checking, summarizing, citation generator, plagiarism. So a bunch of tools which is specifically made for the writing use cases. So I work at Quilbott under extension division. So we have different squads in it. So there's a web app team and there's an extension team. So under extension, we have this one specific motor we work with to bring Quilbott where users write. So we have created Chrome extensions. We have created desktop extensions to address the needs of the users in different areas. Now we wanted to unlock our expertise on the mobile space as well. But there was a challenge. So we wanted to enter the space, but we cannot go with a traditional app approach. Because it deviates from the motor we have under extensions. We want our extensions to work where users write. But if we have a traditional app, user must have to come back to the app from different third party apps and do paraphrasing or grammar checking in our app and then go back. So we don't want that. So that's how the idea has begun. That's a keyboard. So build a keyboard that works on every single app that is there on the phone and help users write much better than what the current keywords does. So we have a bunch of really good players in the market. So they have done a really good job in terms of helping users write better using the keyboards. But they're good, they're evolving, but they're not there yet. So there are still opportunity areas for them to work with and improvise. I believe keyboard is one of the greatest inventions for sure. And probably in an early stage we were not expecting to see pain points in this keyboard because this is one of the greatest inventions. But we were also in the same belief. Then we connected a study. We did some primary research and the secondary research. We have conducted interviews and we have been looking at different research papers. So from all of that, we found some really interesting problem statements which people are following and quite frustrated about. But they also see that no one is solving it for them. So we have documented something which are more interesting and caught our eyes. So we have predictive text inaccuracy. Everyone here might have seen this. You always try to write something out of three options you get on the keyboard. Two of them are not meaningful at all. So and also limited context awareness. So if you're writing a message and you have some word in it and if it has a grammar suggestion, the grammar suggestion is specific to that word but not the context. It doesn't know what's happening before and after the word. And there are annoying autocorrects. So we were looking at the numbers and there were like 6.52 billion users who are not speaking English as the native language. For these people, their primary language of communication is something else. For all these people who look at, they try to use the keyboard and they try to communicate in the native language and this autocorrect functionality of the keyboard believes that they are writing in English and corrects to something else. So that is quite annoying and everyone must have faced this once in a while for sure. And in terms of emoji and GIF selections, so every keyboard recently they've been supporting this feature because people believe that this is a way of communication to add personality to your messaging. But we have to rely on third party integrations to get the right GIFs or the trending GIFs which are very much intuitive and engaging and contextual to the conversion you're having on with your friend or colleague. So the lack of finding the right GIF or with the limited resources, you cannot find the right emotion that you want to share with your friend. So that's one problem and the lack of personalization. So we want a keyboard that understands us. We have the data and it is looking at every single day. It can learn how we are writing and it can improve our writing. It can help us with some beautiful suggestions and it helps me write faster, but it is not happening right now. And also accessibility challenges. So in one of the target users we have dyslexic writers. So they have some really different use cases which are not really addressed by most of these keyboards that we currently have. Probably this could be some privacy concerns, data users concerns, but there are a lot of things they could have done, but they haven't done it for some reason, which we are not sure yet. And the lack of live translation, again based on the same number, 6.52 billion users who are not speaking the native English, so they need some sort of translation. So if they are not good at the English language or any other second language, so they want the translation to be available right away, so which is not there on every keyboard. There are only specific keyboard like Gboard introduce translation as part of the native keyboard, but rest of them are the ASOP keyboards doesn't have any of this. So these problems are not new. We have seen them, but we just got habituated. So that's why we ignore them and we start to live with it. So we thought like these problems are very straightforward and we thought we can give the solution right away, but we didn't want to do that. We wanted to take a step back and understand what is a problem or the value that user is expecting from this. So if you are installing a keyboard, what is something you would expect? So that is what something we wanted to know, because we wanted to build a keyboard that serves the user needs and the current keyboard that we have, it serves the needs, but there are problems. We want to take a step back and understand in detail like what exactly the current workflows are and how it can be enhanced. So that's how we landed on a few values that overall covers a keyboard usage. There could be more, but for a better user experience in a very short run, I think this justifies a lot of user needs that we can address, but it is not. So if we can detect that in this context, this is what makes more sense and it can give this suggestions to the user for the people with dyslexic writing. So if we imagine sending this message versus this message, this is quite an improvement. So this functionality is something like not every keyboard, I don't think any keyboard is supporting right now. And coming back to the very same question that we started off with, is AI truly unleashing your writing potential? How is it helping your writing workflow? So most of these slides answer the question already, but if you want me to put it in a very simple manner, I would say AI should improve the human writing but not replace it with the platforms like chat, GPT, Bard, Copilot. So they are very good at content generation. But as we were speaking before, we don't want content to be generated by an AI. It has to be validated by a human because AI can give anything they want. But if human is not capable of validating the right thing, it would be really hard. So how do we do that? We have learned English in our schools, but now we cannot go back to our schools and learn English once again. So we can learn from internet. AI knows a lot of stuff. AI can help us write better on the keyboard itself. While we write, AI corrects it and that's how we learn by writing it. When we rely on content generation platforms like chat, GPT, it writes on your behalf but it doesn't allow you to learn. If you're writing a letter, if you don't know what is the pattern of the letter, then it would be hard for you to decide like whatever content generated by the chat GPT is right or not, which format is the right format. There's a good format for the cover letter, there's a different format for the leave letter. So how would you differentiate it? So that sense of knowledge is something like you should know it as a user. So with all these things in the mind, at Quillboard we have been working on the keyboard which covers all the values and which covers most of the features which we have seen right now. Along with the traditional keyboard, we also have all these features coming in and the pipeline and we are releasing it on an iterative basis. If you are a curious person like me and want to get an early access, you can scan this QR code to join the wait list and you will get an email of the beta version as soon as we are there. Yeah, with this slide, I just want to conclude and say that end the talk by welcoming the new beginning and if you'd like to talk more about this topic or enhancing the keyboards for a better user experience, feel free to reach out, I am there after the talk here. If you want to know more about me, you can visit my profile on my website which is avinashgoosa.com. Yeah, that's all. Thank you. And also please try to use Quillboard. It's a very fantastic tool. It's been serving a lot of audience and we are doing a really good job. So yeah, just give it a try. Thank you.