 Okay, so we're here at wearable technology Europe in Berlin and I'm here with a new wearable technology exhibitor Benesha and I'd like to introduce it to Patrick van der Viere. Hi. So Patrick, tell us about your company and products. Tell us about what you do. Well actually we are a B2B company so our products is what our customer want them to be. Actually we have been working on a number of these concepts as we call it and one of the most astonishing concepts is the one over here which is a completely integrated back sensor that has a number of very very important aspects to it. The most important one for medical applications is because it's on skin it provides an absolute body reference frame which is quite important for medical applications. Two other very important points are the hyper accuracy, it's 0.3% of the displacement and the very very high sampling rate. We go to 1,000 hertz which is quite quite fast, 100 times faster than is required for human applications but anyway we can come down from that. That's the main issue as a matter of fact. So how would you say your products are helping wearable technology move forward? Well we are actually in a specific niche of wearable technologies. First place we are on body which is a specific family of wearable technology and moreover I would even call it an invisible wearable technology. Again also some sort of sub-family. Why invisible? Because as you can see here because it's on skin you necessarily need to wear clothes afterwards. Unless you go bathing and stuff like that. But invisible because it is on skin and because you can wear your clothes over it. So the issue about water resistance has that made it a challenge? The issue you mentioned about as long as you don't go bathing? No no no that's not an issue. I mean when I'm saying it's an invisible wearable technology as long as you're not go bathing then it becomes visible of course as you can see here. That's what I'm saying. And so what are the opportunities do you think in the wearable technology market for this? You mentioned the healthcare sector, that's a big area for you. Any other opportunities you're seeing? Well we are talking to a lot of parties at the moment. And an important number of these parties are in top sports. So professional sports. There you need a higher level of body motion capturing and you would usually need in a consumer market. Where you rather talk about church and approximate results and indicative measurements and stuff like that. This is much more for high level measurements for really getting that last extra hundreds of a second from a top athlete in some sort of discipline. Be it a tennis player or a volleyball player or whatever other sports. Everywhere, any sports where body motion capturing and the advancement you can expect as a professional sportsman is any relevance at all. So that's a lot of sports of course. And this is your first time at Wearable Technology Europe. How have you found it? Overwhelming yeah. We are as a matter of fact stampeded a little bit. But that's okay. That's a good thing. Nice problem to have. Yeah absolutely. Thanks very much.