 So I heard about STARS through an email list. I'm involved in the Minority Engineering program, and they love to send us a bunch of emails about opportunities. And it was this opportunity for this program, STARS, over the summer. It really didn't have anything to do with what I'm currently studying, but honestly, I'm like, why not? The best thing about STARS is that it starts from the very base level. Even if you have no experience with electrical and computer engineering, you start at the very bottom. It's been a learning opportunity to go through lots of ECE labs and just get the fundamentals of how semiconductors work, how they're being applied in the industry. You start breadboarding, like using wires. Like, you're literally plugging wires into the breadboard using resistors for the first time. And you start at a very low level, and you work your way up. Eventually, we're going to be doing chip design, so I think it's super cool. Being in semiconductors, transistors, MOSFETs, a lot of complicated terms that you probably aren't familiar with, but as you go into the program, you'll learn very quickly about what those mean. I think I never really knew before STARS exactly what a semiconductor engineer would really do and how I could use my background, especially as a mechanical engineering student, to go into semiconductors. And after these past few weeks, I've really been able to see exactly what I can do with so much of this education and this experience. Well, in STARS, there's two tracks. There's the design track and the manufacturing track. A lot of companies, they need both manufacturing and they need design. They need people to first make the chips and then they need people to program those chips. It's very rare to be able to see manufacturing in person in a lab, especially at our very own school, so being able to go into the plant and talk to people of different backgrounds and different educations. We've spoken with a lot of industry experts. We've spoken with L3Harris, we've spoken with Intel, we've spoken with Texas Instruments, and we've learned what it's like to be working at those companies. If it was just work, I don't know if I could survive, but with the balance of work and all the friends that I've made, it's totally worth it, 100%. And I feel like the people that you meet in STARS are gonna be the people that you interact with most in the next couple of years since they're doing the same kind of focus on semiconductor, just you. Definitely produce efforts in relation to the semiconductor industry with this effort with STARS has definitely been something that's been one of a kind. They really emphasize how we are the first really to be doing something like this. I feel like there's so much more growth and so many more opportunities for me and future people to see.