 Something that concerns me is that the deployment of connected vehicles and automated vehicles is going to be gradual. It's not going to happen overnight, so we're going to have a mix of vehicles in the fleet, old and new, interacting. How can we assure that this transition is going to go smoothly and safely? Yeah, well that is that is going to be the challenge of any kind of deployment. If it's consumer-led, then consumers will pick the technologies that they think best helps them, best assist them in their driving mission. However, they're looking at it. The sensors and the computer capability on the vehicle will be able, as discussed, to sense the environment around even a vehicle that's not similarly equipped. Clearly, if the cars were similarly equipped, that helps. If they can talk to each other, that helps even more. If there's an ecosystem that they can all operate in, that's wonderful, right? But that's kind of an in-state to get to. So, as we walk into it, I believe the cars have to have an individual capability to be able to live in that world and provide the safe drive that the consumer is looking for. Will that mean a fully autonomous vehicle? Probably not, right, without that ecosystem to go around it. But will you be able to automate certain portions of your drive to make it safer, to never get distracted, even if you are as the weak element in the driving equation? Absolutely. Absolutely will be able to do that and be able to sense the dangers or the threats that could come from any number of angles in the driving mission.