 Electronics are the backbone of today's world. Once you realize what you can do with it, I mean it's just incredibly powerful what you can do. Professor Mark Langstrom, Dean of College of Engineering at that point, so he asked me to think about a program for summer. Immediately it came to my mind that, okay, if the students can go through this, the introduction to semiconductor course, they, what is next? Some are training on awareness and readiness for semiconductors. We have made them curious, but then we have to basically feed them in. We have more than 250 applications. We selected 72 of them. 30 to 40 percent are going to be the students who are historically underrepresented. In these 15 of them are in manufacturing track, which is the IC fabrication. They have been working inside the clean room for how to learn the device fabrication. And in the following weeks, there will be focusing on material characterization, focusing on the device characterization. My colleague, he suggested that we also should have a design track. And that's where we got our colleague, Dr. Mark Johnson. He has been training students on circuit design, chip design for many years. Electronics and integrated circuits tend to be something that's invisible to people. So part of this is really making it visible so that they can imagine what it means to design that. And they can tell other people, hey, you know, that thing you're holding in your hand, I could design a little piece part of that. The students, they do not get an internship opportunity until they are in their junior year. We provide an internship experience in the academic environment. Then they will be much more prepared to be able to go and be productive as interns at the companies. And of course, long term, you'd like to see that turn into students who make careers in this area. I don't want to go to be an intern, but just be like the coffee guy or whatever. And I think this experience will, like, I'll be able to put it on my resume and say, yeah, I can do this. I was able to, you know, design a CPU for my final project and have it actually taped out, which is pretty cool. And that will show that this is a capable person who can, who's used this experience to become a productive part of the company. The semiconductor industry is a very rapidly changing industry. This class is probably going to prepare you very well for most of the stuff you'll see in the future. So if you're at least remotely interested, just give it a shot and see what you can make out of it.