 So being here in Silicon Valley for 50 years, I mean, how have you seen it evolve? I mean, we've seen one of the founders like Hewlett Packard, you know, start up here and certainly HP is a different company today than they were back then. You have, you know, Apple came left, came back in a big way, obviously. How have you seen the Valley here evolve over time? The Valley evolved by fundamentally picking up everything adjacent to semiconductors. Because even HP, HP was instrumentations essentially in those days. Test and measurement, yeah. They had begun to use, to make calculators, you know, they made the first slide rule. But they were essentially an engineering company, but the culture of the company was not really one to spin out companies. And so, you know, so I don't think that in those days there was a single company that came out of people that work for, you know, for HP. But Fairchild was one of the first companies that was financed by venture capital, but also by, you know, it was a division of a Fairchild camera and instrument in those days. And so he had a little bit of money from outside Fairchild camera, the parent company, and money from the parent company. So it was a more entrepreneurial environment and it was really Fairchild the span of many children. And so, so, so Fairchild became, and also the technology was moving so fast that the Fairchild could not keep up with it. So, so people were disgruntled, they said, I mean, this is important, we got, you know, so they would start a new company exactly like I did later myself. And this was because of the venture capital or because of the venture capital, you know, they co-evolved, right? Venture capital co-evolved with the success of these companies. And so, so the whole thing grew out of there. But then, you know, then the microprocessor came and that really, again, created enormous number of new applications, new possibilities, you know, with personal computer being one of them early on. And so all these ecosystem of personal computers, software, software, there was no software industry for because, because, you know, there were a few companies that were selling computers and you either develop your own software or you would have the software from IBM. There was no commercial software, no shrink wrap software, right? So, so that, that was, that was, again, so that was a big deal. Then there was another thing that started in the early seventies. It was was Genentech, the first company in biotech. So the, a new, this came out of, out of Stanford work, Stanford University work. And so that was a new major wave that spun all kinds of, you know, biotech and, and Stanford, I think, medicine, said a lot of this, as a university, you know, because sun microsystems and others, and in some way Stanford, you know, there was a professor called Thurman, Fred Thurman, he was the dean of, of, of, of the University of One Point in, in he won, it was actually, actually encouraging the, the students, you know, to, to stay here, to start activities here. In fact, you know, he encouraged, he encouraged Yuliton Packard, Bill Yuliton and David Packard to start Yuliton Packard in 1939. So, so, so, so the culture he had developed, and with the success and the opportunities that were mushrooming, you know, by the, by the end of the seventies, it was, you know, it was really booming, right? And now, you know, from a portion of Santa Clara County, now Silicon Valley is the entire Bay Area, seven million people, San Francisco, East Bay, South Bay, it's everywhere around here, everywhere around here, you know, so you find buildings like you, you have outside, you see outside here, you know, all over. And, you know, one thing that I could never have imagined, it would have happened, is that this, the valley innovated even in the cars. Yes. Tesla was born here. Exactly. And Tesla did the right thing, meaning you start with a fresh piece of paper. Exactly. And when you're bolting an electrical engine on a car that was designed for a gas engine, you start over. Over. You say, this is a new technology. This is how you disrupt. That's right. You're not, you're not tied to the past. A lot of the German car makers couldn't start with a clean slate. But even the Americans, I mean, you know, they couldn't because, you know, the mindset has to change. And this is the mindset that made the valley successful. Yeah. The capacity to innovate started here. Yeah. Not to start with something and figuring out what to add to something that exists. You start here. Yeah. So being an entrepreneur and mentioning Tesla, you have, you know, Elon Musk, you have in the past, you know, different, different types of entrepreneurs making big contribution. Is there fundamental things that entrepreneurs share together? Or are there different things depending on the timing, the technology being here in the valley and being an entrepreneur yourself? What are those ingredients that you see? Well, I mean, is this desire to innovate, you know, and the pleasure to innovate because, you know, it isn't just the desire, you know, and through innovation, you can change the world. Yeah. And so, you know, it's not just making money. I mean, some want to be entrepreneurs because they, you know, that's the only way to get rich. But that's a minority. Here people come here with their eyes, you know, you know, illuminated. What I can do. What I can do. Right. And how can I change, how can I make something that nobody has ever made before? You know, that is what made the valley, you know, the spirit of called entrepreneurship, but also a deeper sense that you can do it. You can make it, you know, and everything is here to allow you to make it, which unfortunately very few other parts in the world have, you know, the money, the infrastructure, the services, the, you know, the people that you can hire and take from other people. Sorry. Yeah. Exactly. And so on. Right. But there's very few obstacles. I mean, you want to start your own company. You can do that in a few days. You know, there are very few places where there's the bureaucracy is completely removed. Everything helps you, instead of hindering you in some countries, you know, you're a hinder, you know, you can, you know, you cannot do anything new because just to incorporate a company takes three months and come on, you know, too long.