 Wendy, it was a complete pleasure doing this pioneering session of picture is playing with you, really, really fun. And in particular, kind of the last thing you said, which was a sort of amazement about how parallel your tapestry ideas, my mosaic ideas, and open-full mind ideas are, and how we seem to be on parallel paths, or we've been on parallel paths. And now that we're starting to exchange information and see how this stuff all fits together, it seems like we're heading into the very thing we're trying to build to tell our stories and share what we know. So that's really exciting, and I love that. What I've got here is the thought I shared with you at the end of the call. I'm going to also paste the video recording here on YouTube. I'll add it to this thought so you'll see a little YouTube icon, sort of like these up here. But then up here in just an alphabetic order, because that's the sort order I've chosen for the brain, but are a lot of the things that we talked about, including, hey, we are all drowning in the info torrent. So why create a better shared memory? Why build a tapestry? Well, we don't have information curated into places that get better. We're busy making our way through increasing feeds. Every year it seems somebody had something new this year. Last year it was TikTok. The year before it was Snapchat. And who knows what it's going to be next year. But Campfire was somewhere in between now. But Campfire doesn't really record much. So there's no byproducts of Campfire. And I'm not sure that not recording things is actually the better answer. Anyway, we're busy drowning information while striving for wisdom as a quote I didn't connect to recall. But that would be why we might want to create our different sorts of projects. So here's your tapestry project. And I added a thought above that called helping communities see themselves. And I connected my open global mind multi-plane camera mosaic idea, which you've seen. But I think we hadn't actually gone through any of the drawings together. So I figured I would just give you a refresh of what those were. The idea was that there were different layers. This layer is the entity layer. And then there would be a participants layer that would kind of be above that. And these participants are in fact meant to fit above the projects that they're in. So Tom is Tom Atley, who is part of the wise democracy pattern language, for example, and so forth. And then there would be infrastructure layer, which is more conceptual about how information comes in. This is the info flood. We curate nuggets out of the info flood. We receive them as videos or transcripts of conversations or links. We then add metadata and put these things in public stores. And then through a variety of narrative techniques, map making techniques, techniques create this shared memory. And my ax, my tool is this brain thing. And then this magic square in the middle here, I think is what we referred to a whole bunch of times in our call. This idea of, what is the space within which we compare narratives and maps? And then which we find useful representations of who's talking to whom, what projects are they working on, what might I do next, what do I believe, those kinds of things. And so how do we create safe spaces within which to have these kinds of conversations? I think that's on the table as well. And then there was also a layer here of projects. And this dates back to September of 2021. So it's a little older. There would probably be a few new projects featured here, I think a whole bunch that I can think of, including your tapestry. But this is a different layer in how people are busy committing their time. And so let me go back to my brain. And so that seems to map to the kinds of things that you're talking about creating in the tapestry project. We covered user interfaces, fork pull and merge, the process whereby GitHub works and manages to create social connections while improving the bodies of code or books or whatever else you put into a GitHub repo. And then we talked about Trove quite a bit and Vincent's project to create. Let me actually connect Vincent to Trove as well, because that's kind of the name out of Catalyst. And here's Vincent in my brain, along with a lot of the kinds of things that he's been working on. And then a bunch of the conversation was about how do we see ourselves and what might this artifact be like and how do we prototype our way into it and how do we keep it from becoming only one thing and allowing it to preserve different individuals' points of view, but still making it a not too confusing shared memory object. And I know that this brain thing can be confusing to people who are not accustomed to it. Also, it's not just a matter of familiarity, but different people have very different visual sort of representational styles. Some people like calendars, some people like to-do lists or checklists, other people like maps and mind maps. And they're really, really happy when they see mind maps, but not all mind mappers like all mind maps, that's for sure. So it's complicated how to display these sorts of things. And one of the suggestions I made was to do, to basically take the viewmaster approach of that toy where you click and you see different scenes come through in stereoscopic vision, it's a stereoscope. And to think of these different ways of handling information as some combination of what's appropriate for the thing I'm trying to do right now and what is my preferred method for representing information or understanding information. And I think that's a useful framing for how we build a tapestry kind of app that's good for all of us. There's a bunch of other threads going on in here, including how you might create. So in the tapestry project, I added a potential tapestry architecture components thought which I will connect to this call, because similar to how I'm using OGM architectural component thoughts, you might actually want to do that as well, but you're not a brain user. So thank you very much. This has been really a terrific experiment and eager to hear your feedback and eager to see what this turns into over time. But thank you very, very much.