 Sometimes you can kind of gauge about where you're at and kind of get lost in the simulation a little bit and kind of act like you're on watch, but then you look at it and you realize it does kind of feel like a video game, especially for the younger generations who kind of grow up on video games. The simulator here is unlike any other. It's very realistic, a lot easier to simulate, bridge standing and watch standing on this particular simulator than it is to send junior personnel out to sea and put them on million-dollar warships where we can come here, learn, make mistakes and learn from those mistakes here so that when we do get out to our ships we can actually perform well and do our jobs to the standard that the Navy expects from us. My navigator and my electronics material officer, both second tour division officers came to me during the last off-haul period and they had gone through the training and we got underway last month with both of them having never been underway on Fort Worth standing OOD and they did a fabulous job at it. This is the future of bridge watch standing on minimally manned ships, absolutely. It doesn't get any better than this for simulation, that's for sure.