 It was fun to be at the Vail Scientific Summit again this year. I was here last year and this year I had the chance to provide an update on our work with the telomere, which is the timekeeper of the cell. The work that we're doing now is work directed toward extending the telomere so that we can rejuvenate cells, extending the lifespan of human cells. What we're going to use that for this year, we're working toward improving cell therapies. So we'll be making our first clinical product this year, clinical grade telomerase that we can use, that RNA we can use to increase the telomere length in cells for improving cell therapies. Cells need to be able to be adaptable, to be able to adapt to a damage, to be able to adapt to an injury, to be able to adapt to a pathogen, and that ability to open up the chromosomal material and access it, access the information and make proteins that the cell hadn't been making previously is important for cellular survival, or a change in the cell phenotype that's important for healing. This has been a great meeting for me. I think I've met even more people this year. There are people with different tool sets. I have a tool set, they have a tool set, and we can, by talking to each other and sharing experience and expertise, I think that we can do something better. The scientific community now, team science is what is required to make transformative discoveries. So I'm meeting people here that I'm going to collaborate with, and maybe next year we can talk about those collaborations. John and Yord puts on a great conference. He is a great scientist himself, so he knows who is in the field is doing good work. He brings us all together. That's one reason why this is such a great conference, because you have someone who's organizing it that understands what the important questions are in the field, understands who is addressing those questions and how he might put those people together in a conference that leads to some insights that are unexpected, leads to some collaborations that are new.