 So your library is at work for you. The Bloomberg Library Committee is not only this amazing web vision and working with Christy Jarvis and everything else, but we are also actually a physical site. You should all know about us on the fifth floor. And two new things that I want to make sure you realize is that we've got two shelves now that are beautifully displayed with the books our faculty have written. And today we just got a copy of Joe Hatch's Pony Express book, and it will be put on one of these shelves in the Bloomberg Library. If your book is not on here, we want a copy of your book. So we can show when we have residents coming through, people who are looking for fellowships and residencies, that we can show what Moran faculty are already doing. The other thing is we've started a little Moran Museum on a couple of our shelves. We've received some donations, and when people hear about a Shi'at's tenometer, we want to be able to show what that actually looked like. Now, the Bloomberg Library is not just the physical site, although we encourage you to visit the library itself. We also want you to realize that we have lots of other resources on the Bloomberg site web. First, we have the vision resources, which point to the web vision as well as novel. We also have a site that you can go to and see all the articles that have been written by the Moran faculty. It's an up-to-the-second PubMed search so that you can actually see every article a Moran faculty have written in the last month. We also have the Moran Virtual Educational Center, and I want to thank everyone who's donated their lectures that they've given the residents. This is a partially an ACGME requirement that we have a way for our residents to access these lectures. This is an intranet, so a password is required to enter into this site. It's not a hard password, and we give it to our faculty and residents and fellows, but this is where the homepage of this Moran Virtual Educational Center is. You'll notice across the top that you can search by authors. We've also filed it by the basic curriculum, the BCSC series from Ophthalmology from AAO. We filed it by lectures, we filed it by Grand Rounds, we filed it by conferences, we have a search part, and you can submit to it. This, for example, is a screen-page shot of the number of authors. Every resident is listed as an author, and you can see some people have donated a lot. Dr. Olson, for example, has six items. Scott Larson gave us about eight, and we're trying to gather more items from our authors. Then you can search it by topics, and this really helps with the residents when they have OCAPS, et cetera, that each book of the BCSC is represented. For example, if you go to Neuroophthalmology, these are the chapters in the BCSC and Neuroophthalmology, and it tells you how many items of lectures go with that particular chapter. For the most part, we have a lecture at least for each chapter. If you click on, let's say, Pupil, you can see that we've got some resources from Grand Rounds, from didactic lectures, and a conference that's under the Pupil abnormalities. The lectures, we have over 15 to 20 pages of lectures. These are just the ones that were held in the first part of March that have been uploaded. If you click on it, you'll go straight to that person's lecture in a PDF format. We have got Grand Rounds almost up to date. The last Grand Rounds that was posted was the personalized healthcare at the University of Utah on March 28th. So if you miss a Grand Rounds, this Grand Rounds will be posted as well. You can actually listen to the whole thing. I want to point out that you can access ophthalmology journals from our site as well. It just shows us what journals we have, over 100 ophthalmology e-journals that are available, and you can access from the Bloomberg site. And then I want to mention the book plate program that's ongoing. This is a great way for you to honor a colleague, a friend, a family member, or a great way for your patients to, you know, they can't donate thousands of dollars to Moran, but they might be able to donate funding for a book. And we have this book plate program, and this has allowed us to purchase many books, and all of you who donate a book to this will get a receipt for that donation to this book plate program. I want to spend just the last two minutes because I want to have time for a couple questions, but I want to tell you and remind you that there is the Neuroophthalmology Virtual Education Library. This is a partnership between NANOS, the North American Neuroophthalmology Society, the University of Utah Eccles Hills Sciences Library, and I've been involved in the development of this library. Currently we have all of these collections. I do want to point out a couple things. We have a patient portal you can see on the left here, which actually has sites for patient handouts. They're all in about five or six different languages. The Moran Eye Center has its own series of collections as well. The Journal of Neuroophthalmology is online for free with a one-year embargo. The Walsh and Hoyt textbook is electronically available in complete PDF searchable format, and you can download it as well. We have numerous videos. Many of them are how to use something, how to do something, so our new technicians that come on if they don't know what an affer and pupillary defect is, you can easily access these videos. We posted one video on YouTube, and we've had 23,000 hits on how to use the direct ophthalmoscope. We also have mobile novel right now that you can download to your device, and we also have had quite a few hits of visitors and have covered a lot of the globe except for a lot of Africa. So with this, I'd like to open this up for any questions from all of you. I hope this gives you an idea of how Moran is involved, not only in research, but we are becoming sort of informational go-to people, and we're so glad that we can have some of the staff here to hear what we're doing so that you can help your faculty members with some of the resources that we have here at Moran. Any questions? I personally think that you've got to know this these days, otherwise you're left behind, right? This is really important to stay up on what current databases are out there for us to be using to improve our research here at Moran. So thanks for coming.