 of entrepreneurs who have successfully created new markets with their products. What about entrepreneurs who failed? What can we learn from them? Let's start with you, Hemi, on this one. Well, I think the classic example out here in biotech is really Genentech, which is now a huge company, but it really started out with a couple of entrepreneurs who believed that they could create proteins in a new way. We used to make insulin by basically purifying it out of animals, and now we're able to synthesize and produce it. So that vision for wants of a better word and a fundamental new technology has really changed the way biotech exists today. Excellent. So Shintaro, what are your thoughts on this question? Well, so I have an example on where entrepreneurs failed. And this particular example that I'm thinking of, it's a sensor technology that would detect certain molecules and samples and it can diagnose very quickly and cheaply. And the target application was for hospitals to detect infection or any kind of bacteria in the samples. But the way that the startup formed in making a product, the value proposition wasn't vetted with the hospital administration. So how the hospital measures itself in terms of performance and readmission, internal infection control, those things were not vetted into the product or the revenue model of the product. So even though it was resting on top of what we considered to be an excellent technology, it had a disconnect with the customer. Interesting.