 Last week, I made an announcement about a project that has been in the works for more than four months now. My team has been working very hard. The project was a big donation of free books that was donated to high school hacking organizations, driven by a company called Hack Club. Hack Club helps students organize their own hackathons and computer science clubs within high schools, and supports them with various monetary resources, but as well as text resources and things like that. Let me tell you a bit about how this project came about. Don't worry, we will run a bit long on the Q&A, but I want to tell you a bit about the things that you have been able to do with your Patreon support and what we are doing with it. This year, I have hired two people to help me with various projects, including spreading education. One of those projects is getting more of these books translated in more languages, as well as getting them distributed more broadly. One of the really big targets for me is South America, and another really big target for me is Southeast Asia. These are places where it is difficult to get Amazon, yet my books are primarily distributed by Amazon. Independent bookstores and distributors can buy them and distribute them, but it is very difficult to get into those channels. We are trying harder. Our first idea was, why don't we send free copies to libraries, community libraries, city libraries, university libraries, etc., so that they can put them on the shelves and make them available to their students, readers, and library patrons? Great idea, right? It doesn't actually work. We got this hilarious result where I sent books, and then I got letters back from libraries. Thank you so much for donating the books. We have too many books. We are selling your books in our local store. We have donated them to a bookstore to sell, so that we can use the proceeds to support our library, which in a way supports the library, which is great. I want to support community libraries, but that means they didn't actually make those books available to their readers, their patrons. They simply sold them to one individual who took them home, and kept the money and funded library activities. I should have seen this coming. Obviously, libraries want to choose their own books, so that project was a mess. We changed HAC, and we collaborated with HAC Club, which is a fantastic organization. It is student-led, and it is targeted as high schools, which is an even better audience for beginners in this space. We made an agreement, and as a first-run, we are distributing 247 books to HAC clubs, not just in the U.S., but in the U.S., Europe, India, and South America. That is just the first wave. Those books have already shipped, and they are reaching destinations now, just in time for the beginning of the school year. We are very excited about this collaboration. What we would like to do is see how it goes, and if it is successful, expand that out. As I talked about that on Twitter and told everyone about these wonderful contributions, I got a contact from Colombia, where they asked me to ship 600 copies of internet del Teneros, so they could distribute to people attending a conference. This is exactly the kind of thing we want to do, especially for Spanish-speaking countries, where it is difficult to buy books from Amazon, and especially for South America, where we now know there are all of these currency crises.