So I've known the Markforged team since 2014 or 2015. David and Greg are two of the smartest people on the planet, as far as I'm concerned or aware. I am not a mechanical engineer. It's not space that I knew well, and certainly not a space that I continue to know well enough to claim being an expert by any stretch the imagination. So my initial investment was really just a bet on the team and on the market. And on this fundamental belief that supply chains would need to get shortened, that just-in-time manufacturing means just in time for every component. And that 3D printing in its various forms was inevitable. I prepared some talking points on my favorite books, because, as I said at the beginning, I think everybody comes into this industry via sci-fi in some way, shape or form. So it was Neal Stephenson, however you say his name. He's my boy. So Cryptonomicon is the thing that kind of created my interest in cybersecurity, certainly, but startups and venture capital more broadly. He had a follow-on-work Diamond Age, which, which is the thing that taught me a lot about 3D printing, but it exposed me to the fantasy of what could be possible in the not too distant future. So yeah, invested in Markforged. And been with them on the ride of our lives for the last six years. And of course, they're in the process of SPACing, which is pretty cool. And then I have another cybersecurity investment company out of Israel called Nanofabrica, which is doing nanoscale 3D printing using a twist on a Vat Polymerization technique. So teeny tiny parts that need to be incredibly accurate. Look, for both Markforged and Nanofabrica, whether you're talking about a shift lever on a motorcycle, like the one that Markforged has always had in the front of their office, or you're talking about something that's part of a medical device, or a component that's going to get embedded somewhere in your body or threaded up a vein or an artery somewhere. You know, historically, the process for manufacturing these things was... I think the Markforged deck used to have this picture of this guy working a CNC machine, and he was in his 70s, wearing the blue overalls, and they always called him Frank, right? The answer was always Frank, right? You've got this custom part, and you send it off, and that person sends it off, and that person sends it off. And at the end of this chain of sending off these designs, and these parts was Frank in workshop operating the CNC machine. And we think about scale in every component of the technology industry, it's always about scaling the work that we do, and you can't scale manufacturing if you can't digitize the process. So an overarching theme of all of our investment activities is digital transformation, and why shouldn't manufacturing be digitally transformed? And digital transformation manufacturing doesn't just mean cooler Kanban boards or touch screens on the line? Like why can't some of these actual actions be taken by machines? And why can't these machines be kind of operating in a recurring fashion? Just just like a just like a lambda function, right? Or just like a microservice somewhere? Why can't manufacturing be a microservice's architecture? So that's what inspired my interest in the space; beyond that, it's been very kind of team driven, looking for new technologies and the teams that are capable of executing on them, trying to ignore the 3D printing market size — I think that's the most common objection we hear to investments and say, look, this is not about 3D printing, this is about manufacturing and what is the market market size of manufacturing? Well, it's everything right? Everything that isn't software is manufacturing in some way, shape or form. So looking at the CNC market, looking at the EDI market... looking at the EDM market, excuse me. 3D printing will grow the pie, right? All of these are grow-the-pie technologies. Cybersecurity for 3D printing is a cool topic. I get yelled at whenever I use this term, but DRM for designs, right? DRM for CAD models. Everybody hates the word DRM and so they get all touchy when I when I use the phrase. When I lhear the pitch, I'm like, oh, god, so you're building a DRM for CAD models.