 Tonight it is an opportunity to have fun, to get together, to share common experiences, to have a great time, to strengthen the community of GSAP, to strive together to work to building and designing a better world. Tonight we're also celebrating someone who took architecture and architectural education and architecture as a form of knowledge of bringing things together to make something completely new in the world as an architect. And I think represent why we should continue to call ourselves architects even when we're doing something completely different. Evan Sharp, I think, doesn't need much introduction. He's probably our most famous alumni. Legend has that he was cooking up Pinterest already at the school, you know, in his kind of spare time in the studio, but we're really thrilled to have him tonight kind of representing what is possible with the intelligence of bringing things together as an architect. So please welcome Evan Sharp. I came here today to say that now that I'm sort of a technologist, what I see lacking around me every day is not more engineering, is not more technology or more capability or more of what we could do. There's plenty of technology in Silicon Valley in the world. What's really lacking is design, is suitability, is what we should do with all the technology. There is so little design in Silicon Valley, so little design in our society right now, in my opinion, in my experience. What we need are the people who can draw, who can draw the possibilities for our collective future, who can draft a vision for how all this disruption should fit together, a sort of moral vision that defends human dignity in the midst of dramatic change. I'm a little too deep into my mind to really read my script. But it's true, we need a collective dream. And I say this tonight because I really do feel like that's the essence of what I learned at GISA. I'm not trying to be a hokey, but I learned how to dream and kind of bring others along with me. And in my industry now, that is a rare and an essential skill, and I'm sure it's one that you all have too. You're probably much better than I am at that. With so much change in the world right now, with all the problems that we all see, there are also many, of course, beautiful and tangible ideas we see as well. And I just wanted to let you know, in my opinion, for whatever that's worth, I feel like there's no one better equipped to go make that change real and bring others along than the people I knew at least at GISA.