 This is a transition we've been working on over the course of the last year. We have had statistics over the last two weeks that show that a majority of the populists are actually qualifying a sharpshooter as opposed to larger numbers of experts. We've also seen a reduction in unqualified names. The greatest change that the Marine Corps has gone to specifically with marksmanship is the transition from 1, 2, 3, 500 yard line to a more tactical 5, 3, 2, 1, and then 25 to 15 meter movement. There's shooter preference, so from each of the firing positions there's options for the Marines to take up from the standing, kneeling, or prone based off the shooter preference that each yard line rather than being told you'll be standing or kneeling or sitting. And you actually have a magazine that has a set number of rounds, you're actually keeping track of that so you anticipate the changing of magazines where they need to while in an engagement. We will see some minor changes just like anything new that the Marine Corps adopts. The first couple of years of implementation is the refining points. Over the course of the next year or two we'll get a lot of feedback and a lot of information and data from the ranges themselves and from the Marines input. We'll gather the information and from there we'll make even more refined course of fire which will then in turn create more lethality. With the time frame we were given the Marines were very successful in understanding and now applying what they learned for the ARQ itself.