 Next up on stage is Kalia Cohen on Electoral Euro. So I participated in the GE International Hackathon, Mides and Machines, and we're going to talk about our solution and our mission. So, we created the Elagio Euro, which is... The idea behind it was uniting Europe through a centralized currency. I serve as the CEO, I'm closely through the team. Basically, the Elagio Euro is a decentralized virtual currency which is capable of transferring energy within Europe in an equalized manner. And the whole idea of this was to drive a low-carbon economy. Our model is very simple, very similar to Bitcoin, it's universal, there's a finite amount of the transaction of energy is carried through a trade-off event. Basically, you can only buy goods that don't promote harmonization and our cost is taken into account with the difference in quantity. We generated a market which is per country and they have an energy source and we use machine learning to predict production consumption and cost. We had an intricate bidding process which was done anonymously where we wanted to prioritize green and stable energies so we had to kind of dispose of the consumer after the supplier. We looked at different sources of green energy, we ranked them based on how green they are and how stable they are. We had a simple implementation, we collect data from a sensor network, put it into the product. This gives rise to the markets and then we have user interaction and pricing. Here is a view of the demo that we had. Basically, we offer different benefits. We have hybridization so we can combine energy from different sources. We have mobility, we can transport energy from the nearest European Union rather than relying on OPEC. The key to this is the concept of decentralization, creating a pure free market and preventing a monopoly. We also are bridging worlds and we're allowing for big data optimality where we have a large-scale sensor network which generates volumes of data for optimality and we can also make this more efficient. We also have some practical implications, the idea of actually generating a free market, relying less on OPEC, not having production be politically driven and allowing for the autonomy of countries. OPEC had penalties, the low volume of producing countries had limited negotiation power and the overproducing countries were fine. It gave rise to the prisoners' dilemma where each nation individually discounted its own price and exceeded the quota. I'm now interested in rolling the silver into a start-up. Thank you.