 I'm at the IoTechX show and I'm here with Aaron from Sensitronix. Nice to meet you, Aaron. Thank you. Good to meet you. Great. So tell us what does your company do? So our company specializes in resistive force sensors. We make anything from completed sensor assemblies with or without electronics down to, this is a material that we make specifically for producing your own resistive force sensors. This could be used to produce a single entry force sensor, like what we're showing here. This is an illustration of, we've got several different variations of the material, different resistances, different thicknesses of PET substrate, and you just apply these over a set of conductors to produce a force-sensing resistor. And off the shelf, do you have different levels of sensitivity or do you customize that for clients depending on their requirements? We do. We have a number of different parts that we sell primarily just to illustrate capability. A lot of what we do, most of what we do really is custom builds. So we'll take a set of specifications from a customer for dimensions, dynamic range, and spatial resolution in the case of one of these matrix type of sensors, and we'll, yes, absolutely, and you're standing on one as well. Okay. Yeah. So that's an illustration. This is actually the very material that's applied here and we've just got a thin polyurethane foam over it as a force spreader. And what are the type of applications where this is being used or where you get interest from? Boy, it's a wide range. So the sensor here on the floor is actually part of a multi-tile runway that might be used for gate analysis for podiatry. Right. And this is actually the same sensor on just a slightly smaller scale here on the desktop. So pressure mapping for medical applications is a big one for us, but we've also got these things being used in keyboards and video game controllers. It really is a wide range of applications. And do customers buy the material or do you provide all the electronics or electronic designs with the materials as well? We do both. We do both. But really what we're showcasing here in the material is the opportunity for people to build their own sensors to their own specifications and we have application notes that describe how to do that, but you simply buy it, cut it to shape and apply it over your own circuit board. Oh, nice. Aaron, thanks very much. Thank you. Appreciate it. Thank you.