 How do you keep up? How does the lab keep up and all these labs around the world now? There's the doubling of scientific papers is just so fast now. There's not enough eyeballs to scan them and understand them. How do you keep up? Well, in a way, our task is worse, or harder, because we're trying to be interdisciplinary. We don't know where the next idiosyncratic oddity from physics or ethics or chemistry could impact our lab. So we have to constantly have a lot of antennae out there. So part of the reason for having a large interdisciplinary group is that each individual is an antenna for their specialties, plural for each person. And they may not be the best in the world at any particular task, some of them are, but they're good enough that they can talk to the world's experts. So that's one way. We don't need everything because we're mainly doing this for engineering. So we need things that are capable of turning into something that the rest of the world could benefit from. So that's a luxury. And just in general, when you have a lot of things working, a lot of balls in the air that nobody else has, we're not catching up with other groups. We're kind of staying ahead. And in a way that's kind of easier in a certain way. It means we'll probably make a few more mistakes than the average group, but we'll have a lot more warning when new things are coming down the pipe because a lot of those new things came from our lab.