 Our final speaker for closing remarks, Dr. Eric Green, the director of NHGRI will now address us. I'm not really the final speaker. I'm just here to just a very brief wrap up. It's been a terrific symposium and I don't want to keep people from lunch. I would make the observation. I can't believe we just had a panel discussion with Minolas and he barely got a word in edgewise. So I'm actually worried about him now. So the second thing, I had meetings this morning and I tuned into a couple of the talks between them and what I really wanted to do, but didn't arrange. I wanted my phone to go off about now so I could hand it to Ross and say that it's his mother calling. Because I did catch that part of his, it was a terrific talk that I heard the last part of and then heard the thing about the phone. But I just wanted to make really three comments. First, I wanted to thank the obviously all the folks that participated in this, including those among my staff that organized it, but also all the speakers. I mean, this has been terrific. And I think as I predicted what happened, you should have been overwhelmed by the amount of impressive data that's been generated by modern code and it really gives you new views. I think the theme of this, I think we're just sort of new views of genome function. The complexity makes you sort of awestruck. It also should motivate us to recognize that the work is far from done. That just is what we've discovered in the last handful of years I predict we'll be discovering for decades to come similar complexities. The second point I really wanted to make was that it really illustrated something that Elise introduced in her talk. And that is that modern code by design, like encode and like many of the things NHGRI does, really is a community resource. And I think what's particularly gratifying is watching members of the community, some of which were our speakers, really embrace this as a community resource. And I wrote down several of them said, all of a sudden I looked at modern code data and dot dot dot and then interplayed it with the kinds of studies they were doing. And I think this is exactly accomplishing of what we sought to do with projects like that. And I just think we illustrated it just in the most highlighted kind of way in some of the talks we heard at the symposium. But I guarantee you if you follow literature already or you certainly follow it in the future, you're gonna see this plane over and over again. And we're encouraging these investigators and these consortium to make those connections, to facilitate it and it even relates to how the databases are portrayed and so forth. But I really do believe that this community resource model is the right one and it is absolutely bearing fruit already and will continue to. And the last thing I really wanna say is, please again, I mentioned this, we are video recording this and we know from the numbers already that there's many more people watching this live than are here in the auditorium. Hundreds of people are watching this live. But what we know from experience is that by video archiving this and then making it available through our Genome TV channel on YouTube that this plays out in many, many people's computers for many months to come. And by that, I also wanna encourage all of you who have sat here and watched these talks or anybody listening now to please spread the word among trainees, postdocs, graduate students, other members of your faculty and elsewhere about these talks. It'll probably be a couple, maybe a week or two before we get them posted and video archiving available. But once they are, you know, this is a great resource and we know that probably thousands and thousands of people will watch these talks. And so, but I also hope people will get the word out about them. So with that, I will draw this symposium to a close. I wish everybody safe travels. If you're even walking outside of this building, stay cool. It's a crazy hot day out there today. But I hope everyone gets home safely wherever your travels might bring you. Thank you very much.