 So, you know, more or less, this program is, I don't know, the work hours are different from our work hours. I'm Sonar Tech, first class, Reynaldo Reyes. I've been in the Navy for seven years now. Sonar Tech's students use a lot of electronic equipment and I never understood the breakup of each piece that actually sits inside a cabinet. So when I look at these cabinets, I think of them as an oversized computer. I grew up in Santa Ana, California, grew up with two immigrant parents. My parents struggle a lot just because they lack the capability to understand how computers work. It was all struggles that they definitely didn't need to go through or could have easily been surpassed because of understanding how, you know, the internet works or how a computer works, how to type up a resume. So I started volunteering when I got back to California, was in 2014. I definitely wanted to give back, especially to those people that I see struggling with the same things that I struggled with or my parents struggled with when I was growing up. I want to see what I could do with computers and see what programs were open and that's when I found computers to San Diego kids and they do everything from refurbishing computers to help needy families and, you know, they give them out at a discounted rate. They also hold trainings for computer literacy at the county libraries, which I take part in. The age groups really vary at every class, but some people show up not knowing how to set up an email. Some people show up knowing how to work Microsoft Office and Internet Explorer. Every time I've taught a class it's been beneficial to the learners. It's been beneficial to every student that shows up. They definitely leave there knowing a lot more than they came in.