 With deep appreciation and sincere humility, I accept Purdue University's Distinguished Engineer Award. I am proud of the impact that Purdue has had on the world and I hope that my career serves as a testament of the value and the impact of a Purdue degree. I will keep my remarks brief after all where a university of doers not talkers. After being informed of the award by Abby Deshmann, the first word that came to my mind was gratitude. I am grateful to Purdue University for the lifelong problem-solving skills and the discipline that it imparted in me. I am also grateful for the experiences both during my time and post my time on campus as they allowed me to round out my context and build great collaborations. Finally, I am grateful for Purdue's relentless pursuit of excellence and leadership in academics, innovation, private-public partnerships and fiscal discipline. Thank you to President Daniels and his leadership team for continuing to drive up the value and reputation of a Purdue degree. There are many people to thank. I would like to start with my wife Lily and my children Justin, Emily, Derek and Alex. I appreciate the way they have accepted my love for Purdue University but most importantly for the way they have embraced it as their own. I also would like to thank my brother-in-law Louis Machuca, fellow Purdue alum, for giving me the confidence that a young man from Kawasport Rico could survive freshman engineering at Purdue University. I appreciate the relationship and the friendship developed over the years with my freshman year roommate Kevin Kraft. Finally, I'd like to thank three people for their collaboration with me throughout the year. First, Jerry McCartney, thank you Jerry for trusting Intel Technology, especially during your time as Purdue's Chief Innovation Officer. Thank you, Abby Deshmund, for allowing me to play a role in supporting your efforts to evolve for the better the discipline of industrial engineering. And thank you to Dean Meng Chiang for your relentless pursuit of this platform that we know as Purdue University to develop and evolve big ideas for big impact. Neil Armstrong once said, I believe every human has a finite number of heartbeats. I don't intend to waste any of mine. Well, I am glad that a significant number of my heartbeats have had positive impact. And that's in large part due to the blessing of being a boiler maker. I love the golden black, hail Purdue, and thank you Purdue University for this great honor.