 In terms of fundraising for technology companies here in startups, it's difficult because you're not in a technology hub and Funding markets actually develop backwards. People think like oh, I'm gonna have angel investors and then series A and series B But that's not how the market develops. The way the market develops is some company bootstraps its way to an IPO Creates a whole bunch of millionaire angels Then those angels the smart ones actually don't invest in seed stage companies They actually invest in companies that are about to go public and then those ones then they form little firms and invest in the ones That are just stepped before that step before that so you de-risk all the way back down to seed level and when you see seed Investing crop up in an area where there's no series A or series B or series C market Then those companies run out of money very fast or you get brain drain where those companies the winners get exported out And they go to Silicon Valley to raise money and they never come back The good news is that Silicon Valley has gotten insanely expensive and we've been saying that for a long time But now it really is experience and the expensive like it might be twice the cost of Manhattan to run a company in Silicon Valley So it's becoming much more accepted now for companies to raise money in Silicon Valley and then go back to their hometowns and spend it You still have the burden and challenge of standing out So it might make sense to have a Silicon Valley or New York office with one founder or key executive there who can build Relationships so you can put to the so you can be part of the trust network in Silicon Valley Which is really what makes financing and capital work there But then build a company here in terms of expansion. I think every Large company in Silicon Valley and every venture investors looking for the next place that has tech talent And so to the extent that you have a strong university system You have a digitally literate populace. You have young people coming up who are Programming and I hope older people who are programming. I think that's very very attractive So in the Bay Area, it's now well accepted that for example, University of Waterloo In Canada stamps out all these amazing engineering students Vancouver has become like a legitimate acceptable hub to have startups or have most of the operations of a startup same with Toronto There are a few of these kinds of places forming and I don't see why Wellington can't be one of those I think it just it takes a little bit of focus and effort But I think Wellington is well within striking range of being a great place to build a startup And you just funnel the money in from Silicon Valley