 We're seeing Tevis keeping you running today. It's about to say that. Good morning. Linus Houston, we copy. Looks like the foot switch is working well. Like a charm for a simian like me. Space habit Linus for BioRack. Ashes I'm nine green pistons on my mark. Linus Houston, Linus for the internet. Now this question was from Jeff Fox in Buffalo Grove, Illinois. And he'd like to know what kind of temporary data storage devices do we have on board. And Jeff, we actually have just about every kind of data storage device on board at Linus. We have tape drives in the orbiter. We have floppy disk drives we use in our portable computers as well as hard drives. We also have some optical storage drives, optical drives on board, and some CD-ROMs. So we use just about everything that one might use on planet Earth. And a lot of flayed data file too. We copy. Thanks. Linus Houston Bakes, we're in the hab with you. Linus Houston Bakes has begun the protocol and is at walking speed on the treadmill now. Roger, we're about to lose the TV. Great work everybody. It was a long and difficult road to get that thing rolling, but we're happy to see it coming down now. Here's the question. Thank you. Say again, Chris. Disregard. Copy that. Down in the mid-deck of Atlantis, Commander Mike Baker swaps places with Jerry Leninger, the soon-to-be Mirra 22 crew member. The manager now will take a shot at the treadmill vibration isolation system. He then will yield his place on the treadmill to pilot Brent Jett as all three attempt to take a run for brief periods of time to collect as much data as possible in an abbreviated session. Mike, first of all, I want to talk to you about the smoothness of this mission. We all watch the countdown together. Ground-based managers say it's never been this smooth before. It doesn't jinx you to talk about it. So what do you attribute the remarkable smoothness and success of your mission so far? I think we were also a little bit surprised. It was a great countdown. No problems whatsoever during ascent. I mean, the only thing I can think of is that this is an airplane, and the more you fly them, the better they work. Good well. So if we keep flying Atlantis like we've been doing, hopefully they'll still keep working better and better. Yeah, Jerry, let me talk to you for a couple of minutes. You're about to do something that's only been done by three other Americans. Live away from the Earth on another country's spaceship for a long period of time. What has been the hardest part of getting ready for this for you? It's been actually a very good experience. I don't know if I could say one hard thing. Russian language is a tough language, so that's a barrier to some degree. But we had a great reception. My wife and one-year-old son were over in Russia for about a year and a half. And I've been doing solid space training, and I love training, so it's been a good experience and nothing really too hard about it. You think life on Earth, Jerry, is going to be better because of what you were doing in space between now and the end of May? I think, you know, it's a bunch of incremental steps, and we kind of lose sight when you're in the middle of it. You see these small increments, and they just kind of blend together, and it's, you know, for example, this flight, they say, well, you already did that on 79, but when you step back and take a look at it and think maybe five years ago and look forward, you never believe that we'd be flying up to a space station docking, you know, Mike making it kind of look like a routine thing, even though, of course, it isn't. So I think we get, little by little, we're making progress, moving forward, we're making the world, I think, a better place for our children as we keep pushing the envelope a bit. You know, I was at the launch of STS-81 on Sunday morning, and I was there with General Glashkov and Valerie Ryuman, and they told me the Russians are really happy with the arrangement on your flight, and they thought you were doing just a super job up there, and they're very proud to have you work with them. Well, thank you very much. I've been very happy to work with Valerie and Glash, I think. I've made it 22 crew, and it's had a great mission.