 Neon is an observatory. Unlike a telescopic observatory, one big instrument pointed at the sky, the Neon Observatory is distributed across the United States, Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and it collects data and samples to address big environmental questions. So we're here for researchers. Yep, it's a community resource. It was designed by the community, fully funded by the National Science Foundation. We generate such a diversity of data that I think we have a lot of relevance throughout a diversity of disciplines. And so we're really interested in trying to reach all of those people. I would like to offer that this is frontier science and it's at a very, very foundational time. So Neon has been in full operations only two years. This is about long-term data, about trends, about baselines, about its standardization, and about really changing the face of environmental science through these data. We are looking to scale up Neon. So many researchers, so many agencies come to us looking for partnership to address pressing environmental questions. And it's simply more than Neon can handle. We need an active group of people who can grab these opportunities, who we can pan them off to, who can run with them and develop their own interests and careers using Neon data. I really see that individual ambassadors can have a huge influence. So we're looking for a set of users who will basically be really interested in making sure that their vision for how these data can connect with each other and with the important, difficult problems of our world right now can gather a group of people together and they can be ambassadors at a national and even international level. And I guess we envision ambassadors at a variety of different levels, according to what they're passionate about. So we want people to follow their own interests. The call is very broad. I think we're looking for anyone that is really excited about the potential of Neon to really help drive forward new discoveries as well as new opportunities for education and increasing the diversity, equity, and inclusion of the environmental science community and the STEM community more broadly. We are targeting this initial call to folks who have a PhD and are actively doing engaged in research and educational activities, but really it's just about a passion for some area of Neon and a desire and willingness to engage with some new communities. Yes, absolutely, absolutely. I think people who also like working with other people doing team science are totally welcome here. These are the people we need because I think when you've worked in the team you realize that some of your best ideas come from other people. And so it's a fantastic opportunity to grow your career.