 It does trouble me when we talk about a knowledge economy because I don't think it should be driven by economic principles. I mean, there is a reality to the fact that resources are required to produce scholarship, to do the research, and to sort of produce research outputs that are consumable by others who would then build on it and be informed by it. Whether that's, you know, I'm going to do a kind of MIT thing here and say whether that's by humans or by machines. There are resources that are involved in doing that, but the resource consideration shouldn't drive the structure and the norms and the ways that we exchange knowledge. So that's a long way of saying sort of my perspective as a library director is to kind of get out of the business of acquiring resources and then letting certain people have them for certain periods of time and get more into the business of building platforms on which information and knowledge exchange can happen freely and naturally and productively.