 Here we are two and a half years or so from the inception of this competition, and it has become something that is a necessity post-pandemic or during the pandemic. Here we are seeing these amazing teams pull together these incredible innovations that they didn't even know we needed so desperately when they started this competition. We're gonna get through semi-finals with some great technical systems, but in order to have a successful finals we're gonna need to take it up to a level where we're building relationships. All teams have approaches and different specialities that they're focused on, but really at the end of the day I think this has the ability to really transform one, how we communicate with one another, and also just transportation in general. The robot team only gets to train the judges for about an hour. Now, some of these robots are very complex and it would take a long time to train, but because that was one of the evaluation criteria we're seeing that a lot of teams are focusing on the human factors and focusing on usability and training, which has been wonderful to see. Being able to go beyond what we do today with telephones and video conferencing and add in this movement element, this touch element, this embodiment, it's about connecting people. And I think that's the biggest misconception is that it's not about people, it's about the robot. The robot should really recede into the background when this is all really done right and it should be about people.