Ah yes, here it is... Thank you Spoetnik..
Marshall Long: Sure. So, you know, Final Hash, we're pretty diverse. But in China exclusively what we're doing is two things. We're helping tape out new chips because miners are feeling the crunch right now for power efficiency on their mining machines and these kind of things. We do a lot of chip tape outs. We do a lot of deployments. We help consultant make things automated for them. Because, I mean, the Chinese business model is let's throw something up and then just hire a bunch of guys to run through the aisles and turn machines off. You know, a lot of folks are feeling the financial squeeze and they're looking to save money on a bunch of different areas.
Since the difficulty is really high. So, we'll come in. We'll implement some software so they don't have to have 20 guys run up and down the aisles of the data center. We also just recently signed some contracts to move a rather large exchange to China. That's an exchange called Cryptsy. So, they're expanding to China to kind of serve this under-served population that's, you know, a billion and a half people that are hungry for something. So, in China I would say it's a lot of hardware stuff, a lot of financial stuff and a lot of folks have problems getting into China just because the economies of scale in China are very different than they are virtually anywhere else so.
Marshall Long: It's interesting and this is a big primary pushing mechanism for Cryptsy going to China actually is. This is the first time in history that it's truly easy and openly accessible for anybody to do truly global commerce. So, if I wanted to order something from a US company and I'm in China, outside of customs, regulations and these kinds of things, you can physically order something real-time, instantaneously without having to go through any kind of regulatory roadblocks.
And from a country that's had a full history of full repression economically, financially totalitarianism is a great place to kind of see bitcoin take off. And that coupled with Xi Jinping being -- I'm not going to say an extremely laxed premier, but he's definitely more open to some new opportunities makes it -- outside of China just kind of chopping the internet from the outside.
It's a really interesting case study to see what happens when you suddenly give a totalitarian system and repressed population the open access to really interact with the whole world.
Dear Mr. Long, would you care to explain WTF is going on with Cryptsy if you would be so kind?
Since you are the CTO and co-founder, and by these statements seem to know things that have been hidden from all us poor folk, you would be of great service to set the record straight in this regard..