 It follows the philosophy of a starfish organization. We have independent working cells that are all subscribed to a given philosophy about how to get things done. There is a format for how things get organized, how things get put together, and it's up to that community to organize and decide how to represent that spark. These are organizing groups that also come out with key content areas. SparkCon is definitely a bit on the open source platform because it allows us to bring in folks with smaller expertise to create something much bigger than we could by programming or planning it all ourselves. We have a lot of collaborations happening with artists. This with us, it's with artists and engineers or artists and programmers and stuff like that. So it's kind of, or technology and artistry is kind of converging together. But even within the sparks, there's a lot of collaborations. So artists are getting with musicians and creating something, or graffiti artists are getting together with the bar people so they can have some kind of explosion event or something like that. So there's a lot of cross-pollination going on, so I think that's the most exciting thing is kind of seeing these people coming from different areas and coming together. I think at first it was sort of hard for people to understand. It was hard for us to describe, sometimes it was embarrassing, you know, this commitment to process over content. Open source has been great for us that the idea that the community decides ultimately what the content is that gets generated and that's what we've been dedicated to, that same spirit. And I think now because there's other people doing that in different strata, it's been great because I think people are beginning to understand that we're dedicated towards process. Open is something new every day during SparkCon because there's no way I can even imagine what folks are out there doing in the creative community so they can bring their little bit and add it to what happens over those four days. Openness is very important to SparkCon because we want to see what's out there. We want to use it as a showcase of the Triangles talent. So if we're open to new ideas and new artists and new performers and new organizers, that showcase just becomes more real and a better storytelling arm of what the creative community is doing. The more people we have locally that are helping us, the better. And it's not only being involved as a volunteer or as an organizer, it's, you know, participate with your work. If you're an artist or, you know, you have some kind of creative talent that you want to express, get involved that way and participate in the call for talents.