 Okay, good morning from Minneapolis. I'm here at the Galaxy Community Conference 2022 and I'm here with Kyle Erot from OHSU. Hello, Kyle. Welcome to Minneapolis. So today we're going to talk with Kyle because he was a session chair and a session 7 on Science Talks. Kyle, I just wanted to know from you what were your impressions about the sessions, any great talks that you heard, anything that you learned or anything that you would like to share with the viewers. Well, I really like this session because it was Science First. It was very much about what was science is going on and then after talking about the science then it was about how does galaxy improve that. So I really like that Science First perspective. Me personally, the stuff that I'm excited in, actually Dr. Gex's presentation on deep learning and machine learning, very interesting stuff to me. So I'm interested to really to see how galaxy kind of advances and you know, which is everybody, you know, machine learning is a hot topic right now. Everybody wants to be doing deep learning to see that in the galaxy framework make usable for users in a very easy to kind of manage fashions. Very exciting. Any other notes? Oh, I also really like the, it is really interesting to see when galaxy is on that cutting edge of almost human health facing stuff. So yeah, again, Jeremy's work is on cancer, but then we also saw like the COVID talk, which is again, very important for like what's going on right now and very translational. You know, bringing galaxy into like, you know, where it can actually help human health and I think that's really interesting to see. Thanks for attending this in person. I just wanted to ask a question on, for people who are attending this online, what is that they are missing by not attending in person? The biggest thing is the spontaneity of just meeting random people and also people that you forgot that you met, you know, five years ago. And it's like, oh, I remember this person and then you could just have a random conversation catch up. And I think, you know, online forms, it's easy to miss that kind of interactivity and spontaneity. And I think that is really valuable for generating new science. I think, especially, you know, a lot of like, you know, up and coming researchers, people that are getting started, the ability to network, talk to new people, get outside of their field of comfort, really helps catalyze new research ideas and kind of move people forward. So I think that's one of the things that's been missing from the online, things that I'm really happy to see come back. Very well said. And thanks again, Kyle, for attending in person and for this interview. We'll sign off right now.