 Wisconsin wish you, and especially Mark Lee, a good morning. Good morning, sir. Good morning. Copy. Good work, Mark and Steve, a liveness test in work. Discover Houston, D.I.U., a liveness test successful. That's okay, sir. The Hubble Space Telescope, Shark's Bay, is the moon in my view. What a great place to be. Where's the moon? And these good-looking guys over here. The moon is over the Port Wing, right above Shark's Bay. You guys enjoy it. That's great up there. Just one more word on this MLI business. What we want to do is to avoid doing anything that will distract anybody's mind from the current EVA at hand, because that's the number one priority, and we will be scheduling time later on to talk about this whole issue so that you can get your inputs to us, and we will have a full discussion on the whole issue. Got some good news. The commands have gone through to the Esther, and it will be ready for you when you get there, and you'll be glad to know that all the commanding has been done through the new D.I.U., which you just finished installing, so complete success. Good work. Great hands, Mark. It's a little different on this side because of the constant exposure to the sun. The web cracks in it. Looks like they've got a really good sun tan. Fantastic job supporting us. We appreciate it. Hey, why don't you pitch down just a little bit? All right, stop right there. You see all four connectors? Yes, we can. Just a little bit. Hold your shot right there. It has a solid state tape recorder. The telescope pushed it head me towards F.R. Swap down here at the loop. Okay, that's from headed. Step straight once, seriously. The thermal shield repair kits. The thermal shield repair kits yet, but we're going to do that right now. We do that. Okay, copy. But I can't confirm that the tethers requested are in the airlock. The tape caddy is with Mark. The MLI repair patch is in the airlock. And the thermal kit will be there soon.