 Yeah, I think it is relevant to us in the decisions that obviously the faculty makes. What I was going to touch on, and it might go a little bit off base on student perspective, is the faculty freedom as far as in the state of Tennessee is actually within law. That those, the staff members should have academic freedom. However, within research that I did, what's happening is of course like the department head is actually deciding the books for everyone. And so therefore, lower staff really doesn't seem to have as much academic freedom. Perhaps they don't realize they have that academic freedom that it is actually in law that they are allowed to choose something else. Or maybe it's just, well they reviewed it for us, therefore we're going to take it. The other thing is, is I've noticed one time a department head actually made a whole course. And this was actually in a college experience, so one credit class, and they made the course, but now they're charging $50 a student to take that as a textbook. And I actually said, hey, there are free alternatives out there for students, you know, that actually with my involvement in OpenStacks, there was a college success book that I was aware of. I'm actually in it. And said, you know, why don't you guys consider this? And they're like, well, we already did this. And I get their time and their effort, but we're talking $50 for one credit class. And I know that might not sound a lot, but when you think let's pretend like it's 10 hours, or $10 an hour that a student works, that's five hours. They're having to work for that one textbook when there's a free copy out there that they really wouldn't even look at. And so what I ended up doing was actually contacting a few of the individual teachers and said, hey, there's this alternative, would you take a look at it? And it's almost, it's a weird thing, like even if they know they have academic freedom, they're scared to go against it. I've seen more, it seems like they're scared versus some, I had one professor last year that I'm actually trying to help him switch to OpenEd or whatever. And he was like, you know what, guys, biology is biology. I don't care what book you get, it's all the same topic, whatever. His problem is, and I noticed someone had put this in the chat, is the other resources that are needed. For instance, the labs. And so we're trying to come up with components for him to possibly replace those labs, especially now that we're online and stuff. But yeah, it's kind of, you know, where does academic freedom, where does that really stand with teachers to be able to go ahead and pick what they want?