 It is impossible for me to go to thousands of pages a day and read about every mutation on every single thing, but at the same time we know there are things that are out there for those random mutations. We know their treatments and we know they work. The point is not that these tools will help replace doctors. Yeah, they're like the training wheels or the guardrails for things that are really obscure because the computers fail in different ways than people do. And so it's not that like a self-driving car is going to replace a human driver. The self-driving cars do things that are obviously wrong to a person, but there are times when people get tired and the car doesn't make those mistakes, right? It doesn't get tired. And so it's helpful to have it there. An oncologist doesn't need a computer to tell them what they already know, right? First line, standard of care, second line, third line. They could go look that up. It's sort of the obscure stuff that when you're busy you might not think about. This stuff moves so fast.