 The X-Prize Foundation runs incredible large-scale competitions around the world that set very clear, measurable, objective goals. The first person to build, demonstrate this capability wins the prize money. And the world gets the benefits. Competitions and prizes can actually bring innovation to solve not just any problem, but really big, challenging problems. I think we're about setting a high bar and want to set a goal for people that's inspiring, but it's also hard. When we're designing an X-Prize, we're looking for something that is audacious and achievable. Goals that are far beyond where the industry is. Problems that the markets have failed to solve. To help people really now dig into their imagination, creativity is everywhere. We are leveraging the genius of folks from all over the world. The tinkers, the entrepreneurs, the engineers. People who are not satisfied with the way things are and know that it can be better. It's all around hopefulness. It's all about collaboration. The long-tail effect of a prize has probably as much value as the prize itself. At every single level. I've seen things go from a paper plane to an actual spaceship. We've seen a private spaceflight revolution. $300 million invested into the lunar economy. Over 10 million kids integrated in STEM education work. Technology that increased the rate of cleaning up oil spills. Technology to help keep people safe. To make sure everyone is healthy. Feeding people, educating people, cleaning the air, exploring the oceans or a space. We're changing what people believe is possible. We want to have an ideal future and it's up to us to build that. We don't care who you are or where you come from. If you're able to accomplish this task, you win. And that's it.