 Hello, Claude and Jeff, we're with you on the flight deck. Okay, we're getting ready to work on some DSO A-2 sequences here on the flight deck. Thank you, Claude. In the tether is the yellow material. I'll hold it against my shirt, hopefully you can see it there. This is Kevlar. Kevlar is one of the strongest materials that we have. It has very good state. At least 8 minutes 45 seconds on the satellite till the ZOE. A few words also about the international nature of this mission, because we have several space agencies that are contributing to this mission and of course we have a Latin American involvement that is very significant to the CPCG. As far as the space agencies are concerned, we obviously have NASA and the Italian Space Agency which are dominant in the tether satellite program. We have also ESO that in a way lends to astronauts on this mission. I must say that ESO astronauts and speaking also from Russia are very grateful. Nice cinematography. Great to see you all together there. You've got a downlink of the flight deck. You're smiling a lot up there. I got you loud and clear, Andy. How are you doing? We're just... Give us one and we'll try to join up about... Hey Kelly, we're back with you. We'll lie to you there for a couple minutes. We're over top of Tampa, so we'll be right over top of you guys looking down on you here in a couple minutes. We also have an exciting time to get strapped into a vehicle down there at KSC especially when you're just close to launch. Best wishes to you. Here's your new filters. And we see them. We've got the serial number. The Amazon River of Brazil, clearly visible with the sun glint off of the water. Columbia continues its south-easterly track across Brazil. And the Brazilian coastline on the east coast of the country falling away beneath Columbia, the altitude of the orbiter, 176 statute miles looking toward the south, toward Rio de Janeiro. And at Columbia approaching an orbital sunset looking back toward the west, the orbiter is tracking across the southern tip of Africa as it looks back now across the Atlantic Ocean. A myriad of colors of the Earth's atmosphere, a thin layer. As Columbia itself is now in darkness looking back across the direction from which it came.