Welcome everyone. Together with my colleague Ashley, we are proud to present our project Vera, which we originally put together for the FEMA Coders Hackathon yesterday, organized by Dynatrace, and we were honored to be invited to present it here today, too. Our third team member, Irini, couldn't be be here today as well as our mentor Megda but we're sending our thanks to them. We really wanted to focus on a real big societal problem so we decided to focus on endometriosis which while being one of the most painful diseases in the world, is very stigmatized. So let me give you a quick overview. Endometriosis is the condition where the endometrium, also known as the uterine lining, grows outside of the uterus. Then the body tries to shed that tissue during the monthly period, and that causes internal bleeding. during the monthly period, and that causes internal bleeding. This condition impacts 10% of all reproductive age women in the world, roughly 200 million people. The symptoms include severe pain during and outside the period, very intense blood flow, as well as infertility and any number of other conditions, as dendometrium, similar to cancer, can travel in your body and can grow on your intestines, your lungs, your brain, in one reported case on someone's eyeball. So while the symptoms are severe, doctors often don't believe women and dismiss their symptoms as just a regular period. This makes it so that a diagnosis often takes on average seven years. And this while also has the obvious human impact, also has economic drawbacks. Austria, on average, spends 7,000 to 8,000 euros on patients, and that means annually 320 million euros. Meet Vera, our solution to the problem. Vera is a variable that is accompanied by an app, and it allows the patients to record their symptoms, such as pain intensity and period product usage. And the variable then turns it into indisputable hard data that doctors cannot dismiss anymore. It would be better if they just believed the patients, but until then. Unlike commercial period trackers, your data never leaves your device. Your data is never bought and sold. And the app shows stats and summaries. How does it work? You can try it out yourself with our basic prototype. If you press the button on the left side, if you press it short, it's a low level, one level in pain intensity. If you press it longer, it can reach up to level five. If you click the right side button, it records your period product usage. So every time you change your tampon or pad. And a little shake to the device displays your data, such as your median pain level and your period product counter. So we have the device going around. The device is called Microbit. We coded it a little bit with some data for showcasing. But for the wearable, these are some of the examples. I'm sure everyone in the room, including men, you have something on your hand, on your neck, either a necklace, a ring, or a watch. So that's what we plan to have the device embedded into. This is a little bit of the code that went into embedding the system. Next slide please. And this is how the internal components will look like. Say for example it's embedded into a necklace pendant. And then for the app of course you'd need to visualize the data and then when presenting it to the doctor this is how the mobile view will look like and the laptop view. And yeah that's the team that we created this with and in conclusion in Austria up to roughly 300,000 women are affected by endometriosis, yet diagnosis can take care, as my colleague Greta has mentioned. So here in Linz and across the country, this reflects not just a medical issue, but also an awareness and data gap. With Vera, we're not just tracking symptoms. We are translating invisible pain into data that doctors can no longer ignore. So as young women, we're also students, we are part of the same generation that has experienced these symptoms. We have some personal stories that often without being heard early enough. We believe that technology can change this by making women's health data visible, actionable, and taken seriously. Thank you for listening. Thank you.