 This is JSATV, the newsroom for tech and telecom professionals. I'm Dean Perine, and welcome to JSATV. We are coming at you on location at Metro Connect 2019 in beautiful Miami Beach, Florida. And I'm here with Mr. Judd Carruthers and Mr. John Schmidt. They are co-founders and co-CEOs of Dark Fiber and Infrastructure LLC, D, F, and I. Gentlemen, welcome to JSATV. Thank you. Thank you. You bet, you bet. So we're just going to jump right in here. For our viewers that don't already know, why don't you tell them a little bit about the company? Sure. So it's going to be hard for a lot of people to follow, but Dark Fiber and Infrastructure actually is a provider of Dark Fiber and Infrastructure. So we are a pure play provider. We don't do any lit services. We don't do any wavelengths. All we do is satisfy the infrastructure demands in areas where we see there's a gap that needs to be filled. Fantastic. Anything more to add there? That's it is all. OK, fantastic. So your initial networks are currently being constructed in Ashburn, Virginia, and Montgomery County, Maryland. Why those locations, guys? So having built networks in the area for the last 20 years, we know there's a very steady demand for diversity getting into Ashburn in particular. A lot of that is currently being solved for within the northern Virginia side. But right now, from the Maryland side, the routes that hit those major data centers really take a very circuitous path. We were able to bore under the Potomac River, create a very direct low latency route to connect not just those facilities in Montgomery County, Maryland, but also ultimately to intercept with the long haul routes on the eastern seaboard. So from an infrastructure perspective, we know there's been a tremendous amount of investment in that area. What we're looking at is just augment those networks and just make everybody a little bit better where we can. I love it. So I know that these things don't happen overnight, and there's a lot of things that go into play when creating these networks. How is the build going to this point? The build is going exactly as we expected it to go. We've, as John said, we've been building, owning, and operating infrastructure in the northern Virginia, southern Maryland, geography for the last 20 years. It's going exactly as we expected it to go, and we're very excited about wrapping up here in the next week or so. That's great. That's what's happening right now. But what can our viewers expect to see from you folks, say, in the next six to 12 months? Six to 12 months, that path is going to stay pretty consistent. But one of the things that won't be lost on people that know us is 70 miles of network is hardly intellectually stimulating. It's creative. We know there's a demand, but we've got experience building in the southeastern United States. So everything that we've done throughout our careers kind of helps us see where additional gaps need to be filled. We're letting our customers tell us where to go in that regard. This is a piece that we recognized. We made a speculative bet on it. And it was really predicated on our inability to get what we wanted there in Ashburn. When we set out to do this river crossing, we wanted to go ahead and buy conduit and couldn't find anybody to sell it to us. So having built that network four times previously, Judd just told me, he said, don't worry. I got it. We'll solve for it ourselves, right? I mean, we're really trying to differentiate ourselves by not betting on the demand that is continuing to be evident every day. We're solving for the supply, which we couldn't solve for via third party. So we had to create it ourselves. So build it, and they will come, so to speak, yeah? More or less. I love it. I love it, guys. And thank you for being with us on JSA TV today. We appreciate it. Thanks for having us. Thank you very much. You got it. You got it. And thank you viewers for watching JSA TV. We'll see you soon.