 What is your definition of digital scholarship, and how do you feel about people defining terms like that? Oh, Jerry, I think the preferred term is now I-Cyber-Digital-E Scholarship, so I think we should be clear on these things. But humor aside, I think all of these prefixes are vestigial or will soon be. Digital scholarship is about scholarship, systematic work to develop generalizable knowledge for teaching, for engagement, for better understanding or explanation of the world or of us. And the forms have changed, but I think the goals and the ultimate forms of measuring that are the same, even though the technical details vary and are causing some kerfuffles. One of the things that going digital has done is disentangle a lot of things that were bound up. Like, when you have a book and it's on the shelf, it's persistent in a way because that shelf is in the library, that library is around, people can read it, so it's accessible. It's vetted because it went through a particular publisher. And so now that it's digital, you can start to separate all of these affordances, all these properties out, and so you can re-bundle these properties. And so that's part of, it's not that the goal of digital scholarship is essentially different from that, but because of the possibility of unbundling, I think it makes people think a lot more about what were the underlying properties and reasons that made things scholarship to begin with, and some people have a sort of comfort in the sort of known bundle. But I think that's a transitional phrase. For most digital works, there are versions. You can point to a particular version or manifestation of a work and say, this is the one I mean. But the ability to unbundle all of these things means you have to be more precise about talking about what properties you're promising in this bundle of digital scholarship because you can't now assume that this bundle, which came together in not necessarily an intentional way. The fact that libraries preserve things was in some ways a side effect. As we can see with electronic journal subscriptions and people and institutions are now taking different approaches to preserve that content or not doing it. This is not just a problem for digital scholarship, but for scholarship in traditional form that's being now disseminated in digital, which everything is, and that unbundling is affecting all sorts of institutions, not just scholarship or research.