 We are announcing the nation's first comprehensive early alert system for earthquakes. We're announcing the ability for millions and millions of Californians to download an app, My Shake. Download the app, My Shake. Millions of people do that. We will have points of contact, the ability to crowdsource information, the likes of which no country in the world has advanced. I say that knowingly that Japan and Mexico have systems already in place in this space. But because of the extraordinary, complementary work that was done by UC Berkeley, by Caltech, by USGS, and by our own Office of Emergency Service, we feel we are on the leading and cutting edge in terms of the ability to utilize this technology. But it is only as good as you. If you download that app, we now have another point of contact, and we are now all part of this remarkable capacity to iterate, to experiment, to advance science in real time to make us all more safe. I'm a seismologist. I live earthquakes. And we have been working on this problem for over a decade at this point, so it's great to see this finally coming to fruition. At UC Berkeley, we're very proud of the contributions that we've made over the years. We started working on this problem back in 2005, when we started developing and testing the algorithms to generate the alerts, the algorithms that are generating the alerts today. We've then worked to build the collaboration that UC represented to here today over the years to build the system. And then we're very proud today to be going that last mile and be providing the My Shake app, which can actually deliver this warning to everybody across California. One of the things that we really try to do at Berkeley, of course, is come up with solutions for society, for the state that we're in. And this is a great example where we went and we were doing the science and we saw an opportunity to create a product that could actually save lives. We followed through on that over the course of the last 15 years, and today everybody gets early warning. We're very confident about the system. Now, it's not perfect. It's still a prototype, but we're ready. We think we can reduce the impact of earthquakes. And by rolling this out today, we're going to better understand the system and the system will only get better with time.