 Hi, this is Brandon Rohr. I'm going to tell you about a trick you can use to solve any technical problem. It's called the piranha method. When you're working, if your next step is obvious, then do it. Most often this is not the case. When that happens, take a step back, think about what it is that you need to figure out or do or work through next and write down a question about a narrow part of that. Make it as specific as you can. Then answer that question and repeat. For example, if you ask me to deliver you a pizza, there are a lot of things that I don't know. I don't know what you want on it. I don't know where you live. I don't know how to make a pizza crust. It can be overwhelming to know where to start. So in this case, I take a step back and focus on one piece of this that I don't know. What time would you like it at your door? I write that question down on a piece of paper. I have focus now. I can solve that. I send you a text. You send me an answer, 8 30 p.m. I can move on now to the next part of this problem. I find that the act of writing the question down is indispensable. Until I put pen to paper or fingers to keys, I often don't realize what I don't know. I usually have two or three questions in my mind at once. Writing down one helps me to focus. When a piranha goes to eat a wildebeest, it doesn't swallow the whole thing in one bite. It takes lots of little bites, but given enough time, can eat and digest the entire thing. Using the piranha method, I've been able to figure out small things like how to create a debugging print statement in an unfamiliar computer language. And much bigger things like fundamental research topics and artificial intelligence. It's worked pretty well for me. I hope it works as well for you. If it does, let me know. And if you find something that works better, I'd love to hear that too. Thanks for tuning in.