 you. Uh, Gary from Ohio. How you doing today, Gary? Not bad and you, Dave? Uh, well, we're in the throws of a global cooling down here. Maybe 50 tonight. So we're really looking, uh, you know, going out and buying a coat today. You know, you know, you know, you know, you know, you know, you know, you know, you know, I'm here and I think pretty warm in Florida for the winter. So I'm all about the temperature in the sun, but that's that's generally how I look at life. But, uh, you want to look at M X, huh? Magnet chip. So I'm about this last week, and I know you had an abbreviated show, and I always listen to the replace. I don't know if you address it or not. I just it's taking off again today and you know a lot about this stuff, and I don't necessarily have anything about this company. It just seems to be, you know, taking off here again today. Well, it certainly is on a breakout. Um, I haven't looked at the news at it today. I'm not a big huge fan. Generally of analog semi conductor stocks. They just never make it. It's generally feast or famine. The reason is that most of those chips can be made by other people are copied. Fairly cheaply. There's not a big mode around it. Um, so generally it's take the money fairly quickly. Uh, on a chart basis, you've got a you've got a breakout. Um, but this is company that makes mixed signal chips, and I think everybody now knows. I hope they all know the difference between analog and digital, but they make mixed chips for a variety of markets. My guess is that I didn't see anything during the break. My guess is they must have got a big contract from somebody. Have you heard anything about it? No, I haven't. I didn't do a lot of research on either. I just thought and you know a lot about just these kind of tech companies, and I just thought just get your take on it. So well, especially what I was looking for. Well, there's kind of like three tiers of companies. There's kind of like the Texas instruments and that kind of stuff. They make a bunch of cheap chips that engineers and engineers and engineers and engineers and engineers and engineers and engineers and engineers and and and hardware generally called glue right? It's trying. It plugs one thing to the next gene kind of need to have it. It's well known. The stuff has been around for 20 or 30 years, maybe 50 years and same of Texas instruments and the stuff is cheap, right? It's a it comes in chips. You drop it on there. It's a nickel, a dime, a quarter, a quarter, a quarter, a quarter, a quarter. It's kind of the Texas instrument business. Then this is kind of like the second tier, which is they kind of make specialized stuff. It's not glue. It's not common. It's got a specific purpose. Sometimes whoever is their guess is right about what the product what the market is going to need or what other people are going to need. Sometimes the product is going to be selling. Which is this and of course it's such a small company that you really don't see the insides of these and it's so it's kind of they're kind of hard to forecast. It's not like Samsung. You can tell for a variety of people how many the phones are selling, right? It's kind of tough to find out where these chips are used. Not a lot of people cover these chips, but it's kind of hard to judge other than just the chart. Yeah, and then of course, you've got the big companies like AMD and Intel. These guys are making huge margins in comparison to companies like MX MX probably making 30% margin on its chips. Texas instruments probably making 10 or 15% pretty low. This is kind of on the second rung of those and they're making lots of money like Nvidia Intel AMD. Those guys are making 5060 in the case of some of Intel's chips to 300% margin on their chips for the for the big guys in the data centers, the big servers. So you really kind of have to look at it and the problem is that you really don't get a lot of money from these companies unless you listen and really pay attention to the earnings calls. I don't know when the next one is on this one. I'll put it down on my calendar. Maybe they'll start talking about what kind of margins they're making. Maybe they're moving upscale. Maybe they're trying to move from a two to a three. Right. Which would be interesting. Some some chip companies do. Some of these chip companies are actually playing in and if their chip is a commodity or not, Texas Instruments Commodities. This is kind of a mid range chip. But remember this isn't like Intel or AMD where people want to buy a computer and then they're going to buy one of the two. This is a kind of all or nothing business. Where they got designed into somebody and that company basically holds the reins to their future. Right. Yeah, you know no matter what these guys do that's just some insight and yeah, whatever they do, it's not going to change the amount of units that they sell. And you're probably going to have a hard time finding out what where their products go. So again, as far as knowing something in word about the products that are on the chart business here, you probably can make a case that they recently have gotten a big contract with somebody. But those contracts come and go and some of never play out the way that they are. And I'm going to say that a lot of the companies on the low end, like Texas Instruments kind of predictable. The ones on the big end kind of predictable. The ones in the big end kind of predictable. The ones in the big end kind of biotechs because there's a lot of people don't know a lot what's going on inside and it makes it tough for them to do it. So I tend to look at companies like a mat and Texas Instruments as what the general market's doing. And then the bigger companies you know, they're kind of trying to figure it out. But it takes a lot of work. It's not it's just like a biotech. You got to find out everything about what that drug does the competitors and everything else to really have kind of an edge other than just straight reading of the chart. Okay, I got it. Well, thank you for your information. I