Five stars for the product itself. It's exactly the invention I've been wanting to make for years but never got around to it. Installation, in my circumstance, took quite a bit of brainstorming. But in the end, it all worked out, and aside from not getting a bowl grommet in my packet, everything went (mostly) smooth.I live in TX and we don't have basements. Some old houses around here have a crawlspace, but anything built in the last 30yrs is on slab; so no easy access to drain plumbing. Our kitchen sink is plumbed up from the slab into our island, which also houses the dishwasher to its left. In order to connect it to the sink drain, I would have needed to mount the unit taller than my dogs and cats can reach, that wasn't going to work. So my dad, an HVAC tech, suggested using a condensate evacuation pump to drain the overflow... so that's what I did.Simple in concept, yet quite the project in getting it assembled. Specifically getting everything to fit behind the dishwasher where you can't reach to make any adjustments once starting to push the dishwasher back into place. I had to get the low-profile version of the Little Giant pump to fit in the space. Someone else's review on here said to be prepared for several trips to the hardware store; I would 2nd that statement for sure.So far, everything is working correctly. The bowl is filling and the overflow is draining and the pump is pumping it over into a vent stack on the sink drain, which will need to be secured in place at some point when I have time, and then the only other thing left to do is find a grommet or other solution to fix the leakage between the fill float and the bowl. All together, took me about 2 days, but I am slow and take lots of breaks when working for myself ?.P.S. the tube hanging down off the counter has nothing to do with this. I just forgot to move it for the pic.