 You're from Columbia. Go ahead, Columbia. Good morning, Bill. You are welcome into the cabin, if you want. Oh, good morning, Mauricio. Thank you. We'll try to set that up. And thanks, Mauricio. We do have live TV into the cabin. Columbia, I would like to give you a brief summary of what's happened since the DDCS came back online. Each of the experiments have ground-commanded their own checkouts and verifications. You may have noticed currently Sets 3 Bravo has just ended. We do have times for the Sets F-O4 Alpha and for Bravo when you're ready to copy. Since 26, we should board now. That'll give you a timeline up until the point you enter a nominal deploy timeline on page 318. That does assume that we will deploy on time. It's going to meet with over there. Ali will be here in MCC. We'll conference with Dick Richards over in Marshall about 20 minutes from now. The MMT here will meet about two hours from now and give us a decision on whether to deploy on time or not. The encoder problem we will take another look at during the DACA cycle and during boom extension. Clearly, payload communications is the problem they were working. That's the primary, the only problem that leads into whether or not to deploy on time. We do plan to do a smart flex, a dump later. We are working up a matrix to cover what happens if there is a core swap or a warm start during deploy and flyaway procedure. So that'll cover the quick responses. We're also studying very hard. We're coming up with a plan to cover a one-day late deploy. I think that's what we have for right now. Dory, thanks for those good words. And we'll go down and get that message. A minute and a half to the tinderous LOS. We'll be back at 17 hours, two minutes. OK, Dory, see you next time. You can come in the side deck. OK, we are on board flight deck. Thank you. Hi, Ratio. It looks like a coffee grinder, Jeff. Actually, this is what we use to give eye exams. In Columbia, MMT has decided to delay the TSS deploy for 24 hours. That will allow us to get more confidence in payload communications and in the smart flex. It will also allow the scientists to catch up more on their science, which was delayed due to those payload communications problems. Your mission has been extended an additional day to get USMP all their data. So you're now a 15-day mission. Pre-flight, it had been looked into. And maybe you were expecting to do it. Orbit adjust burns. If we slipped, but there will be no orbit adjust burns, we will take whatever overflights that we get. On 22 hours and 15 minutes, we'll pick up with a deploy minus 24-hour timeline. We'll be basing into that ourselves in Marshall. Do not do, as per your updated flight plan, at 19 hours and 15 minutes. Do not perform that DACA power cycle or the DACA profile update. We will plan on doing the IMU alignment at 20 hours and 25 minutes. We'll also be planning to do the supply waste water dump at 20 hours and 45 minutes. We will plan to have the PMC, if that fits with you, at 19 hours and 25 minutes. Sorry, I copied all and understand. The PMC at 19.25 is fine. And as far as our flight plan goes, do you want us to go back and just run the flight plan with a 24-hour delay, or are you going to send up a new flight plan for us? We are working those details. But we're planning on picking up deploy minus 24-hour timeline at around 22 hours and 15 minutes. We are working those details right now. And we're on the flight deck now. Good morning. OK, sir. Yeah, sorry, it takes so long to get back to you. The folks that are concerned with that have been reworking your flight plan. When you update the SPOC, that data has got to be coming from an A colon backslash uplink directory. So you've got a floppy there, which has got that directory. Or you can simply take a floppy and make that directory on it. But the SPOC update has got to come from an A colon backslash uplink directory. OK, that's what I tried last night. This morning I did something a little bit different. But let me try it again and we'll see how it goes. Files need to come from that directory. That's where it's going to look. OK, and that's what I was doing. And also I was putting it on the drive, the floppy that we have that says Panam on it. And I started to understand that those folks are real busy, so there's not a real big plan they can. And I'll let you know how it works. I'll try it again. Camera be there. That's a nice shot. Just go over some of the clouds in the Pacific. Yeah, the white of the water plays really well with the white of the clouds. It's almost like a snowstorm in space. That's a nice shot of the Terminator, too.