06:17 And, you know, we built up a company in the real estate industry. I developed the software. He he would be testing it. We wrote everything from 360 degree tours of of houses, CRMs, data mining applications. And then we sold that business actually in 2007 just before the housing crisis, to, one of the largest real estates companies in the UK.
26:19 And then when they craft them into NFTs, and we and we kind of call this, build and earn, they now have something that is worth, you know, a real real world money. So they can play the game, grind the game, and all those hours that they're putting in, they're actually now getting something that they can extract some value out of the game and and then go and sell it on, or they can continue to to play it and just just keep grinding and and and building more and more, NFTs for themselves. So so the so there's lots of there's lots of opportunities that way. There's obviously advertising opportunities with within the game because our game is is kind of like a metaverse as as well. There's metaverse elements where we'll have the real world and and b to b and and web 2, as we call them, the the traditional space.
04:08 You know, IBM back in back in the nineties was was massive, and that that was a real, real eye opener, completely different from anything that I'd I'd been used to before. So I left university, again moved down south, and I began working for this really large, electricity utility company. So I had a few years of corporate experience, And that was that was completely, completely different world from from the one that that I knew up north. And, you know, I enjoy being surrounded by these these older, smartly dressed, clever people, but it frustrated the life out of me that all they wanted to do all day was drink coffee and have meetings. And all I wanted to do was was was just learn learn about databases, write code.