 We talked about the whole Y Combinator deal. Can you, for those who don't know about it, talk about what DST did recently and how they're basically throwing hundreds of people? It was the guy as an individual from DST, Yuri, I forget his last name, but he and Ron Conway, our Silicon Valley Angel group, basically went to the Y Combinator, which essentially is like a community college for entrepreneurs. They come in and they get a class and it's a great way to get access to Silicon Valley. Used to be bicoastal, right? And they said, screw that, we're just going away. Used to be Boston and now they're only in Silicon Valley. But the founder is a guy named Paul Graham, who's a technical guy, and he basically has an algorithm. It's all numbers game to him. And he creates a pool and he does some vetting. So he has the secret sauce to vet startups. So this past week, the 40 entrepreneurs that were selected for the class for Y Combinator all received checks, opportunity checks for $150,000. Just no due diligence. Convertible note. No due diligence, no. Convertible note. No strings attached. Yeah, so it's really a boon for entrepreneurship. So Y Combinator is the community college of entrepreneurship. Access, you can get access to Y Combinator through applications. They really don't discriminate, they have a formula. So what do you do out here if you're an angel? I feel like an angel. Really super angels and you see that kind of activity. It's a squashed earth strategy. It's basically like a hedge fund. You're scratching your head going. The guy just land grabs all 40 startups. It's a great way. It's $6 million. It's like one funding, one big company that may or may not lose.