 Let me ask you a couple of questions about IT on your campus. To what extent are you involved in using IT to innovate on your campus? And how can we help you further that innovation? That's exactly what you're going to explore at the E-Car Symposium with peers of yours throughout the country, with innovation partners from your own institution and led by some truly dynamic innovative speakers. We've gone through several decades where when we think about collaboration, what we're really thinking about is, oh, what did your campus do? Maybe I'll do that too. Oh, my campus did this. Let me share it with you. It's all my campus as an island. I don't think that's going to serve us well. It 100% comes down to leadership in helping your provosts and your chancellors and your presidents to understand the role that technology really can have in actually leading the change. If you were thinking about flight, in the early days when people tried to build machines that would fly, they tried to replicate nature, and the wings would flap. But it turns out that there are better solutions like Jennings. And so I think this is what we are doing right now, where there's all these amazing technologies. But quite frankly, we're not leveraging them in particularly interesting ways. What are the unanswered questions that need to be answered for you to really become effective in using IT as a game changer on your campus? I can't wait to see you at the symposium. Keep your mind open about the ways in which you can use IT on your campus as a game changer.