 And as we look outside and see all these big buildings in Silicon Valley when you arrived here, I think it was quite different though. Yeah, I would have been looking at lots of trees of, you know, apricots, walnuts, orchards and all sorts of things, you know, and prunes and so on, right? It was essentially mostly orchards here. San Jose, which is a few blocks away from here, was in those days was probably 150,000 people and mostly, you know, it was in the country, so to speak, in the agricultural area. And so, you know, it was like you wouldn't want to go to San Jose, right? And now it's over a million people. So, you know, 50 years have changed this valley in an unbelievable way. So by 1969 you were still at SGS Fairchild, correct? And then you made a move outside, right? But, you know, at SGS Fairchild, yeah, I was until first of July of 68 because in June, Fairchild decided to sell their interests in SGS Fairchild. So they asked me to stay in those days that was in the middle of developing the Silicon Gate technology, which is, you know, is the technology that really changed the way we do integrated circuits because it eventually surpassed bipolar. And so we place even bipolar that in 68 represented 95% of the sales. So the Silicon Gate really was the way to go. In one shot, we had five times the speed and twice the density with the same power dissipation, same design rules. I mean, that's a big change. That was a game changer. We had what allowed to make microprocessor dynamic RAM because the leakage was about 100 to 1000 times less than metal gate because you could do gathering, which you couldn't do with metal gate. And then the floating gate transistor, so all the non-volatile memories, they needed Silicon Gate because you needed a good oxide to protect the, you know, as an insulator of the few electrons that you could sneak into. But everyone was believing dynamic RAM was the priority, not microprocessor. In those days, most people didn't get it, especially people in the industry, but we'll get it where the customers, they had a problem before they had to make a hardware solution, typically a state machine, to solve the problem. Now they could use the same components and just develop a simple software. So instead of taking two years in order to have a prototype or a year and a half to have a prototype, they could do it in a month. So it changed the game. So you decided to stay in Silicon Valley? I decided to stay in Silicon Valley because here was where the action was. And I also wanted to finish the Silicon Gate technology, it wasn't done yet in June when I decided to stay.